The City and The Crown

PURDUE UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781557536655

Vienna and the Imperial Court, 1600-1740

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By John P. Spielman
Imprint:
PURDUE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
241 x 159 mm
Weight:

Pages:
280

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Description

John P. Spielman is the author of Leopold I of Austria and coeditor of Quellen und Darstellungen aus deutscher Geschichte.

". . . the best introduction available for students of one of the most important philosophers of this century." American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly "Spielman has given us an important study that opens up new vistas into pre-Theresian Austrian history. . . . a soundly reasoned, engagingly written, and an intellectually stimulating work." American Historical Review "Spielman presents the role of the Hapsburg court in the rise of Vienna in the early modern period, showing the extraordinary complex web of interrelationships and interdependencies between the court its servants, and the city as each strove to protect its privileges." Book News "Currently there are two basic theories regarding the rise of the modern Hapsburg Monarchy: (1) it rose because of a growing centralized government that created a modern army and bureaucracy, or (2) it rose because of the rise of the Counterreformation and the emergency of the Baroque. Professor Spielman combines both approaches in an understated but masterful way. He documents the emergence of the bureaucracy not only by pointing out the increase in numbers but also by discussing in detail the need for Vienna to provide housing for these officials. Then he shows how the court encouraged the city's property owners to increase the size of their houses and, not incidentally, to do so in the Baroque style that would bring glory to the city as a whole. The rise of the bureaucracy and the rise of the Baroque thus went hand-in-hand and together made Vienna a great city. For anyone who knows Vienna, this book is a must. It documents not how Vienna became a great city but why it did. One can always complain about growing bureaucracies, but now and then they give us monuments of lasting beauty and importance. The city of Vienna is one of these monuments." --Karl A. Roider, Louisiana State University

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