Crimean War: 1853 - 1856 (Modern Wars)

Crimean War: 1853 - 1856 (Modern Wars)

by WinfriedBaumgart (Author)

Synopsis

The Crimean War (1853-6) was the only conflict of European dimensions in the century between the Napoleonic Wars and World War I. There were not only the five great European powers that were directly or indirectly involved; all the smaller European states that had remained neutral sooner or later confronted the question of whether to join the fray or stay outside. This text considers the origins and diplomacy of the war; the war aims and general attitudes of the belligerent powers, Russia, France, and Britain, of the two non-belligerent German powers, Austria and Prussia, and of a selected number of neutral powers, among them the United States; and the nature and capacity of the armies of the belligerents, including Turkey and Sardinia. The central chapters describe the war on the Danube front 1853-4, in the Black Sea 1854-6, in the Baltic, on the Caucasian battlefield and in the minor theatres of war, the White Sea and the Pacific. A final chapter is devoted to the end of the war marked by the Paris peace congress of 1856, and to the significance of the war for international relations and for arms development.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Publisher: Hodder Arnold
Published: 01 Sep 1999

ISBN 10: 034061465X
ISBN 13: 9780340614655
Book Overview: A comprehensive and authoritative account of the war Emphasises European and world setting rather than narrow traditional contexts The author has edited a major 12-volume project on documents of the war

Media Reviews
This is a splendid volume. One of the many strengths is that it takes a truly international perspective...a masterly account of the origins and diplomacy of the war. For any British student still of the view that the Crimean War was a meaningless muddle, Baumgart's excellent volume is the antidote. Journal of Diplomacy and Statecraft No one previously has used such a judicious selection of the archive-based secondary literature to integrate the varying accounts of each stage and each encounter involving the three major powers. His crisp and straight forward sketches analyses of the campaigns, battles and sieges may be the best of this genre and should serve as excellent introductions for any reader. This volume is ideal for a college course. The International History Review