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MARC record from Internet Archive

LEADER: 08284cam 2200421 4500
001 ocm00090411
003 OCoLC
005 20201005200530.0
008 700821s1970 nyu b 000 0 eng
010 $a 73107052
040 $aDLC$beng$cDLC$dBTCTA$dLVB$dNYP$dOCLCO$dOCLCF$dOCLCQ$dOCLCO$dOCLCQ$dLENOT$dVTJ
019 $a640032296$a964602631
035 $a(OCoLC)90411$z(OCoLC)640032296$z(OCoLC)964602631
043 $ae------
050 00 $aCB358$b.C55 1970
082 00 $a914/.03
100 1 $aClough, Shepard B.$q(Shepard Bancroft),$d1901-1990,$eeditor.
245 14 $aThe European past.$cEdited by Shepard B. Clough [and others].
250 $a2d ed.
260 $a[New York]$bMacmillan$c[1970]
300 $a2 volumes$c24 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references.
505 0 $av. 1. Reappraisals in history from the Renaissance through Waterloo.--v. 2. Reappraisals in history since Waterloo.
505 00 $gv.1.$tIntellectual currents --$tThe problem of the Renaissance --$tRenaissance or prenaissance? /$rLynn Thorndike --$tThe concept of the Renaissance /$rFederico Chabood -$tThe Reformation --$tCatholic and Protestant views --$tLuther's faith /$rWillhelm Pauck --$tMartin Luther: a monk who lacked humility /$rJacques Maritain --$tThe Reformation: nothing less than catastrophic /$rPhilip Hughes --$tThe Reformation: a much-needed one /$rE.G. Scheweibert -$tThe scientific revolution -$tThe problem of the origins --$tThe historical importance of a theory of impetus /$rHerbert Butterfield --$tThe search for truth /$rLeonardo Olschki --$tThe Enlightenment: a break with the past? --$tThe laws of nature and the new history /$rCarl L. Becker --$tCarl Becker's heavenly city /$rPeter Gay --$tEconomic and social transformations --$tProtestantism and the rise of capitalism: Max Weber and his critics --$tMax Weber: an evaluation /$rR.H. Tawney --$tThe spirit of capitalism /$rMax Weber --$tThe Weber thesis: controversy and consensus /$rV.A. Demant --$tThe expansion of Europe: the profit motive or missionary zeal? --$tThe role of monopoly in the overseas expansion and colonial trade of Europe before 1800 /$rEarl J. Hamilton --$tThe expansion of Europe overseas, 1415-1715 /$rJ.H. Parry --$tThe crisis of the seventeenth century --$tThe general crisis of the seventeenth century /$rH.R. Trevor-Roper --$tTrevor-Roper's general crisis /$rRoland Mousnier, J.H. Elliott, H.R. Trevor-Roper --$tThe Industrial Revolution: misery or well-being for the working classes? --$tInterpretations of the industrial revolution in England: a methodological inquiry /$rR.M. Hartwell --$tThe English working class /$rE.P. Thompson --$tThe age of state building --$tReason of state: the legacy of Machiavelli, Machiavelli /$rFriedrich Meinecke --$tThe state as a work of art and its rationality /$rC.J. Friedrich --$tLouis XIV: despot or state builder --$tLouis XIV: the ruler of France /$rDavid Ogg --$tLouis XIV as state builder /$rRoland Mousnier --$tSome reflections on absolutism and despotism /$rRoland Mousnier --$tThe origins of the English Civil War: socio-economic crisis or a conflict of "faith and freedom" --$tThe English aristocracy, its crises and the English revolution, 1558-1660 /$rJ.H. Hexter --$tPostscript to eight hundred and forty-one pages /$rJ.H. Hexter --$tPostscript to an awfully long review /$rJ.H. Hexter --$tPolitics in the reign of King George III: the controversy around Sir Lewis Namier's history --$tThe biography of ordinary men /$rSir Lewis Namier --$tGeorge III and the Namier school /$rHerbert Butterfield --$tParty, purpose, and pattern: Sir Lewis Namier and his critics /$rJacob M. Price --$tThe age of revolution --$tTowards the origins of modern revolutions: crowds, millenarianism populism --$tMessianism: its historical origin and morphology /$rVittorio Lanternari -$tArchaic forms of social agitation /$rE.J. Hobsbawm --$tThe crowd: the subject and its problems /$rGeorge Rude --$tTo define populism: symposium /$rPeter Worsley, Ghita Ionescu, and Maurice Cranston --$tThe origins of the French revolution: three recent views --$tClasses and class struggles during the French revolution /$rAlbert Soboul --$tThe fiscal and economic crises at the end of the Ancien regime /$rErnest Labrousse -$tWorld Revolution or French revolution /$rJacques Godechot --$tNapoleon: an argument without end -$tNapoleon /$rGeorges Lefebvre --$tNapoleon /$rLouis Madelin.
505 00 $gv.2.$tEurope and the aftermath of Napoleon --$tThe Congress of Vienna and the Metternich era --$tThe Congress of Vienna: a reappraisal /$rHenry A. Kissinger --$tMetternich: a reappraisal of his impact on international relations /$rRobert A. Kann --$t1848: an opportunity lost? --$tThe pattern of urban revolution in 1848 /$rWilliam Langer --$tThe year 1848 in German history: reflections on a centenary /$rFriedrich Meinecke --$tIntellectual currents --$tThe two problems of romanticism --$tWho are the romanticists? /$rJacques Barzun --$tRomanticism and Nazism /$rPeter Viereck --$tGerman romanticism and political thought /$rRobert W. Lougee --$tSocial Darwinism and Darwin: Are They Related? --$tWhat was Darwin’s theory? /$rBasil Willey --$tHuxley and the reception of the ‘origin’ /$rCyril Bebbey --$tDarwin and social Darwinism /$rGeorge E. Simpson --$tMarx and Marxism: three recent evaluations --$tFrom utopianism to Marxism /$rSamuel Bernstein --$tThe doctrine of revolution /$rGeorge Lichtheim --$tCapital and the nature of capitalist crisis /$rJohn Lewis --$tThe new statesmen --$tNapoleon III: some conflicting verdicts --$tThe judgement of posterity /$rAlbert Guerard --$tThe first Mountebank dictator /$rSir Lewis Namier --$tThe good Napoleon III /$rAlan B. Spitzer --$tCavour and the moderates: creators of a united Italy or saboteurs of democratic revolution? --$tNeglected agrarian revolution /$rAntonio Gramsci --$tLiberal-capitalist rebuttal to Gramsci’s thesis /$rRosario Romeo --$tThe Gramsci-Romeo debate /$rJohn M. Cammett --$tOtto Von Bismarck: “The Bismarck Problem” --$tProblems of a Bismarck biography /$rHans Rothfels --$tThe Bismarck problem /$rFranz Schnabel --$tBismarck and ourselves /$rAlfred von Martin --$tDisraeli and Gladstone: “’Empirical Realism’ versus ‘Righteous Passion’” --$tTalking turkey /$rPhilip Magnus --$tDisraeli: first modern conservative? /$rPaul Smith --$tThe “new imperialism” --$tThe economic aspects of imperialism /$rJ. A. Hobson --$tImperialism: an historiographical revision /$rD. K. Fieldhouse --$tEconomic expansion and world power /$rFritz Fischer --$tEurope in the twentieth century --$tThe origins of World War I: a survey and a return to the Krigsschuldfrage --$tEurope on the eve: how deep the trouble? /$rJoachim Remak --$tThe outbreak of the first World War and German war arms /$rImmanuel Geiss --$tThe treaty of Versailles: a Carthaginian peace? --$tThe case against the Versailles treaty /$rJohn Maynard Keynes --$tThe question of reparations /$rEtienne Mantoux -–$tFascism --$tNational socialism: totalitarianism or fascism? /$rWolfgang Sauer --$tThe third Reich, social opportunity and society /$rDavid Schoenbaum --$tStalin and the Soviet Union: the fulfillment or perversion of Marxism-Leninism? --$tIndustrialization of the Soviet Union 1929-1940 /$rJ. P. Nettl --$tStalin /$rLeonard Schapiro --$tThe origins of World War II: a controversial interpretation --$tWar for Danzig /$rA. J. P. Taylor --$tA. J. P. Taylor and the origins of World War II /$rZygmundt Kulak --$tThe problem of twentieth century revolutions --$tTheories of revolution /$rLawrence Stone --$tThe unknown Marx /$rMartin Nicolous --$tWhy we fear peasants in revolt /$rBarrington Moore Jr.
651 0 $aEurope$xCivilization.
651 6 $aEurope$xCivilisation.
650 7 $aCivilization.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00862898
651 7 $aEurope.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01245064
651 4 $aEurope$xCivilization.
938 $aBaker and Taylor$bBTCP$n73107052 //r94
029 1 $aAU@$b000000533146
029 1 $aAU@$b000045095490
994 $aZ0$bP4A
948 $hNO HOLDINGS IN P4A - 390 OTHER HOLDINGS