Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER II THE ECONOMY OF EUROPE 1559–1609
- CHAPTER III THE PAPACY, CATHOLIC REFORM, AND CHRISTIAN MISSIONS
- CHAPTER IV PROTESTANTISM AND CONFESSIONAL STRIFE
- CHAPTER V SOCIAL STRUCTURE, OFFICE-HOLDING AND POLITICS, CHIEFLY IN WESTERN EUROPE
- CHAPTER VI INTERNATIONAL DIPLOMACY AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
- CHAPTER VII ARMIES, NAVIES AND THE ART OF WAR
- CHAPTER VIII THE BRITISH QUESTION 1559–69
- CHAPTER IX WESTERN EUROPE AND THE POWER OF SPAIN
- CHAPTER X THE AUSTRIAN HABSBURGS AND THE EMPIRE
- CHAPTER XI THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE 1566–1617
- CHAPTER XII POLAND AND LITHUANIA
- CHAPTER XIII SWEDEN AND THE BALTIC
- CHAPTER XIV EDUCATION AND LEARNING
- CHAPTER XV SCIENCE
- CHAPTER XVI POLITICAL THOUGHT AND THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF TOLERATION
- CHAPTER XVII COLONIAL DEVELOPMENT AND INTERNATIONAL RIVALRIES OUTSIDE EUROPE
CHAPTER I - INTRODUCTION
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER II THE ECONOMY OF EUROPE 1559–1609
- CHAPTER III THE PAPACY, CATHOLIC REFORM, AND CHRISTIAN MISSIONS
- CHAPTER IV PROTESTANTISM AND CONFESSIONAL STRIFE
- CHAPTER V SOCIAL STRUCTURE, OFFICE-HOLDING AND POLITICS, CHIEFLY IN WESTERN EUROPE
- CHAPTER VI INTERNATIONAL DIPLOMACY AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
- CHAPTER VII ARMIES, NAVIES AND THE ART OF WAR
- CHAPTER VIII THE BRITISH QUESTION 1559–69
- CHAPTER IX WESTERN EUROPE AND THE POWER OF SPAIN
- CHAPTER X THE AUSTRIAN HABSBURGS AND THE EMPIRE
- CHAPTER XI THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE 1566–1617
- CHAPTER XII POLAND AND LITHUANIA
- CHAPTER XIII SWEDEN AND THE BALTIC
- CHAPTER XIV EDUCATION AND LEARNING
- CHAPTER XV SCIENCE
- CHAPTER XVI POLITICAL THOUGHT AND THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF TOLERATION
- CHAPTER XVII COLONIAL DEVELOPMENT AND INTERNATIONAL RIVALRIES OUTSIDE EUROPE
Summary
The half century between 1559 and 1610 must assuredly rank as one of the most brutal and bigoted in the history of modern Europe. The massacre in Paris on St Bartholomew's day in 1572; the calculated savagery of the duke of Alba's Council of Blood and the wild atrocities of the Calvinistic Beggars in the Netherlands; the persecution of the Moriscos in Spain—these were merely the more spectacular barbarities of an age unsurpassed for cruelty until our own day.
Yet what, in the history of the later sixteenth century, is just as striking as man's inhumanity to man is man's impotence before events, his inability to control his circumstances or to dominate his destiny. Thus in the political field the greatest monarch of his time, Philip II of Spain, was unable to conquer a weak England or a disunited France; could hold only half his rebellious Netherlands; and ended his reign, as he had begun it, in bankruptcy. His noblest opponent, William the Silent, died knowing that a union of his beloved fatherland upon a basis of mutual toleration between rival religions was a dream as remote as the hopes that Sir Edward Kelley and Marco Bragadino cherished of transmuting base metals into gold. With others the gap between aspiration and achievement was narrower only because they pitched their ambitions lower, and indeed for the most part the rulers of this time did pitch their ambitions much lower than those of the preceding generation. Was not one of the most successful of them, Elizabeth I of England, renowned above all for her chronic indecision and her dexterity in avoiding action?
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- Information
- The New Cambridge Modern History , pp. 1 - 13Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1968