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No more Napoleons : how Britain managed Europe from Waterloo to World War One / Andrew Lambert.

Loaned to Another Library D34.G7 L36 2025
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Lambert, Andrew D., 1956- author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Europe--Foreign relations--Great Britain.
Europe.
Great Britain--History, Naval--19th century.
Great Britain.
Great Britain--History--19th century.
Great Britain--History--Edward VII, 1901-1910.
Great Britain--History--George V, 1910-1936.
Great Britain--Foreign relations--Europe.
Physical Description:
x, 571 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), maps (some color) ; 24 cm
Place of Publication:
New Haven : Yale University Press, [2025]
Summary:
"How, for just over a century, Britain ensured it would not face another Napoleon Bonaparte -- manipulating European powers while building a global maritime empire. At the conclusion of the Napoleonic Wars, a fragile peace emerged in Europe. The continent's borders were redrawn, and the French Empire, once a significant threat to British security, was for now cut down to size. But after decades of ceaseless conflict, Britain's economy was beset by a crippling debt. How could this small, insular sea power state secure order across the Channel? Andrew Lambert argues for a dynamic new understanding of the nineteenth century, showing how British policymakers shaped a stable European system that it could balance from offshore. Through judicious deployment of naval power against continental forces, and the defence strategy of statesmen such as the Duke of Wellington, Britain ensured that no single European state could rise to pose a threat, rebuilt its economy, and established naval and trade dominance across the globe. This is the remarkable story of how Britain kept a whole continent in check--until the final collapse of this delicately balanced order at the outset of World War One."-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Introduction: Ordering and offshore balancing: Britain, Europe and global power
Sea power, strategy and the Scheldt: Shaping British policy
Culture, ideas and cash: Shaping post-war agendas
Lord Liverpool and European order, 1812-27
The 'Wellington System' and national strategy, 1814-52
Steam warfare
Engineering security: Harbours, canals, roads and railways
Neutralising the Schedlt: Belgian independence, Antwerp and the 'Offshore Balance'
France and the impact of relative decline
Cherbourg, 1815-58: Chancing geography
Identifying the French threat, 1815-56
Fading glory: Post Napoleonic France and the art of war
The denouement: Cherbourg, 1858
Military manpower: Invasion scares, expeditionary forces and militia
Commanding the sea and creating strategy: The royal Navy, 1815-70
Antwerp and the Scheldt from 1870 to 1914.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
9780300275551
0300275552
OCLC:
1464949243
Publisher Number:
CIPO000243944

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