Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY SUMMARY
- CHAPTER II THE GROWTH OF OVERSEAS COMMERCE AND EUROPEAN MANUFACTURE
- CHAPTER III THE SOCIAL CLASSES AND THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE STATES
- CHAPTER IV THE VISUAL ARTS AND IMAGINATIVE LITERATURE
- CHAPTER V THE ENLIGHTENMENT
- CHAPTER VI RELIGION
- CHAPTER VII MONARCHY AND ADMINISTRATION
- CHAPTER VIII THE ARMED FORCES AND THE ART OF WAR
- CHAPTER IX INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
- CHAPTER X THE DECLINE OF DIVINE-RIGHT MONARCHY IN FRANCE
- CHAPTER XI ENGLAND
- CHAPTER XII THE WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN AND ITALY
- CHAPTER XIII THE ORGANISATION AND RISE OF PRUSSIA
- CHAPTER XIV RUSSIA
- CHAPTER XV SCANDINAVIA AND THE BALTIC
- CHAPTER XVI POLAND UNDER THE SAXON KINGS
- CHAPTER XVII THE HABSBURG DOMINIONS
- CHAPTER XVIII THE WAR OF THE AUSTRIAN SUCCESSION
- CHAPTER XIX THE DIPLOMATIC REVOLUTION
- CHAPTER XX THE SEVEN YEARS WAR
- CHAPTER XXI THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE AMERICAN COMMUNITIES
- CHAPTER XXII RIVALRIES IN AMERICA
- CHAPTER XXIII RIVALRIES IN INDIA
- CHAPTER XXIV ECONOMIC RELATIONS IN AFRICA AND THE FAR EAST
- References
CHAPTER III - THE SOCIAL CLASSES AND THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE STATES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY SUMMARY
- CHAPTER II THE GROWTH OF OVERSEAS COMMERCE AND EUROPEAN MANUFACTURE
- CHAPTER III THE SOCIAL CLASSES AND THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE STATES
- CHAPTER IV THE VISUAL ARTS AND IMAGINATIVE LITERATURE
- CHAPTER V THE ENLIGHTENMENT
- CHAPTER VI RELIGION
- CHAPTER VII MONARCHY AND ADMINISTRATION
- CHAPTER VIII THE ARMED FORCES AND THE ART OF WAR
- CHAPTER IX INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
- CHAPTER X THE DECLINE OF DIVINE-RIGHT MONARCHY IN FRANCE
- CHAPTER XI ENGLAND
- CHAPTER XII THE WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN AND ITALY
- CHAPTER XIII THE ORGANISATION AND RISE OF PRUSSIA
- CHAPTER XIV RUSSIA
- CHAPTER XV SCANDINAVIA AND THE BALTIC
- CHAPTER XVI POLAND UNDER THE SAXON KINGS
- CHAPTER XVII THE HABSBURG DOMINIONS
- CHAPTER XVIII THE WAR OF THE AUSTRIAN SUCCESSION
- CHAPTER XIX THE DIPLOMATIC REVOLUTION
- CHAPTER XX THE SEVEN YEARS WAR
- CHAPTER XXI THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE AMERICAN COMMUNITIES
- CHAPTER XXII RIVALRIES IN AMERICA
- CHAPTER XXIII RIVALRIES IN INDIA
- CHAPTER XXIV ECONOMIC RELATIONS IN AFRICA AND THE FAR EAST
- References
Summary
Early eighteenth-century society, as mirrored by Saint Simon and Lord Harvey, by the family papers of the Russells or the Wyndhams, by the correspondence of the duke of Berwick or Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, seemed predominantly aristocratic and French. This impression is supported by castles in Sweden and palaces in and around Vienna, by portraits and libraries and famous collections of porcelain in England and in Russia. However, the impression is rather different if one considers Fleet Street, Liverpool and Bristol rather than St James's, Welbeck and Woburn; Rennes and Marseilles rather than Versailles; or Hamburg and Frankfurt-am-Main rather than Potsdam, Karlsruhe and Mannheim. It then appears that, even in the first half of the eighteenth century, economic forces were already in operation which tended to make the urban middle class increasingly numerous and powerful, and that French ideas and fashions were already being challenged from England, the German cities and even from the non-European world.
The social prestige of the aristocrats in the early eighteenth century was, however, undoubtedly very great. In most countries high office in the army, at court and in the diplomatic service was filled almost exclusively by members of that order. In most of Europe the aristocrats were marked off from the third estate by the right to display armorial bearings, as for example on the panels of their carriages, or, as in Spain, carved conspicuously over the main entrance to a town house. In most countries, though here the practice in England was peculiar, all descendants of aristocrats were still further differentiated from other people by the hereditary use of a title.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The New Cambridge Modern History , pp. 50 - 65Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1957
References
- 1
- Cited by