The Age of the Democratic Revolution. A Political History of Europe and America, 1760-1800
638 Chapter XXVI It is hard to believe that some of the most insistently professing church people, at the close of the eighteent ...
High Tide of Revolutionary Democracy 639 there were many who regarded it as an expression of Christian doctrine. In Swit- zerlan ...
640 Chapter XXVI Archbishop of Naples accepted the Neapolitan Republic of 1799. The Archbishop of Scutari was willing to assist ...
High Tide of Revolutionary Democracy 641 the American clergy were not unduly shocked by the Reign of Terror. In the French Dechr ...
CHAPTER XXVII THE REPUBLICS AT ROME AND NAPLES Before going further in the discussion allow me to support my opinion against you ...
The Republics at Rome and Naples 643 Anglo- French conflict to the Mediterranean and the Near East. This in turn simpli- fied th ...
644 Chapter XXVII governments of the old order. In France the democrats remained very vociferous, were indignant when the Direct ...
The Republics at Rome and Naples 645 exploited as conquered peoples; and while conceding a certain right of orderly requisition ...
646 Chapter XXVII Austrians might receive German territory (as eventually they did, in the archbish- opric of Salzburg and elsew ...
The Republics at Rome and Naples 647 shown by the French extreme democrats for crusading war and foreign revolution. The pacifyi ...
648 Chapter XXVII Malta, the defense of Switzerland, the opening of the markets of South America, the capture of Brest.”^9 It is ...
The Republics at Rome and Naples 649 otry. He was of “the school that believed revolution to be caused by ignorant and desperate ...
650 Chapter XXVII specifying that the “spiritual authority of the Pope should subsist intact,” abolished his temporal power.^14 ...
The Republics at Rome and Naples 651 mere opportunism or timidity. Cardinal Chiaramonti, the later Pius VII, it should be recall ...
652 Chapter XXVII force, and the “departments,” as drawn by the constitution, proved recalcitrant vil- lage republics, when they ...
The Republics at Rome and Naples 653 tenure of office in their own city. As in other revolutionary republics, primogeni- ture an ...
654 Chapter XXVII bided their time until all the revolutionary republics in Italy might be destroyed. For a while it seemed that ...
The Republics at Rome and Naples 655 Meanwhile the British signed a treaty with Russia. The Ottoman Empire, at war with France s ...
656 Chapter XXVII ways shone with some magnitude in historical literature. It produced the best re- membered book to come out of ...
The Republics at Rome and Naples 657 The educated classes—those of the higher clergy, the professions of law and medicine, and t ...
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