The Age of the Democratic Revolution. A Political History of Europe and America, 1760-1800
658 Chapter XXVII outlook, the South Italian “Jacobins” had little idea of a unitary all- Italian state or nation. The Cisalpine ...
The Republics at Rome and Naples 659 who edited the Monitore napoletano. Her view was that “the people distrust the patriots bec ...
660 Chapter XXVII Royal Army. Since this host was sometimes also called the Army of the Holy Faith (San Fede) the ensuing moveme ...
The Republics at Rome and Naples 661 observed: “Your news of the hanging of thirteen Jacobins gave us great pleasure; and the th ...
662 Chapter XXVII Revolution of the triennio was neither as passive nor as abstract as it seemed to the disillusioned exile. The ...
CHAPTER XXVIII THE HELVETIC REPUBLIC To preserve the independence and welfare of Switzerland is our highest goal. Both are threa ...
664 Chapter XXVIII called Switzerland. They were associated for external defense in a perpetual “oath- fellowship” or Eidgenosse ...
The Helvetic Republic 665 in its shell.”^3 There was religious variety from place to place, but no religious free- dom for indiv ...
666 Chapter XXVIII the borders of a group of people who had some sense of identity as a nation. The idea of a Swiss people was i ...
The Helvetic Republic 667 itself as Catholic, made it possible for a few Genevese, despite their Calvinist background, to see in ...
668 Chapter XXVIII continued the old assemblies called “circles,” but some of the clubs modeled them- selves on those in France, ...
The Helvetic Republic 669 asm by the Swiss. Under modern conditions as they were developing, with uni- form territorial organiza ...
670 Chapter XXVIII Protestant pastors who had expressed patriot views at the same banquet were removed from their churches; one ...
The Helvetic Republic 671 The revolution of 1798 was for most of the Helvetic republicans a brief and not even especially memora ...
672 Chapter XXVIII their cause best advanced by peace, and hardly even saw a chance for Swiss revolu- tion until the treaty of C ...
The Helvetic Republic 673 inside and outside the governing group, were convinced that the existing order in Switzerland was no l ...
674 Chapter XXVIII figures, and even colleagues, in the Swiss revolution, entered upon curiously diver- gent lines of developmen ...
The Helvetic Republic 675 geois in the city, so that the conservatives yielded, equality of town and country was proclaimed, Fre ...
676 Chapter XXVIII lutionaries said they wanted the Paris constitution, which provided for “represen- tative democracy” in a uni ...
The Helvetic Republic 677 “invited” the eastern region (the Grisons or Dreibünde) to enter the Helvetic Re- public as a new cant ...
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