Rebellious Prussians
Urban Political Culture under Frederick the Great and his Successors
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:14th Mar '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Prussian discipline is legendary. Central to debates about modern German history is the view that an oppressive Prussian state cast a shadow on the development of civil society. In particular, historians have seen the absence of a revolution in the eighteenth century as a symptom of a delayed and incomplete emancipation of the Prussian bourgeoisie. Prussia's urban dwellers have often been portrayed as poor relations of the self-reliant and assertive bourgeois of Western Europe and the Atlantic world. Economically backward and politically oppressed, they were allegedly in no position to challenge the iron grip of the state and question the authority of the Hohenzollern dynasty. Drawing from extensive and original research, Florian Schui challenges the accepted view and argues that Prussians in the eighteenth century were much more willing to challenge the state than has been recognised. Schui explores several instances where urban Prussians successfully resisted government policies and forced Frederick the Great and his successors to give in to their demands. Rebellious Prussians thus sheds light on a little-known historical reality in which weak Hohenzollern monarchs - and a still weaker Prussian bureaucracy - were confronted with prosperous, fearless, argumentative, and occasionally violent Prussian burghers. Such conflicts between state and citizens were by no means unique to Prussia. Rather the events in Prussia were, on many levels, connected to similar contemporary developments in other parts of Europe and North America. Florian Schui systematically explores these links and thus develops a new European and Atlantic perspective on Prussian history in the eighteenth century.
Schui has successfully shown that examining resistance to fiscal and religious policy, rather than simply the glamour of eighteenth-century political radicalism, can inform us about Prussian and European history on a deep, engaging and critical level. * David Taylor (University of Tasmania), European History Quarterly, Vol. 47 *
ISBN: 9780199593965
Dimensions: 241mm x 162mm x 20mm
Weight: 516g
236 pages