The Age of the Democratic Revolution. A Political History of Europe and America, 1760-1800
678 Chapter XXVIII The French influence lasted long enough for Swiss revolutionaries to proceed with internal changes. Internal ...
The Helvetic Republic 679 All this went on during military occupation by the French, while the French were at war with Britain a ...
680 Chapter XXVIII older conception reflected a dislike for government itself, so far as it was distant, or possessed of signifi ...
The Helvetic Republic 681 French army that the new Helvetic government, which had no armed force of its own, could look for the ...
682 Chapter XXVIII an army of their own (in addition to the old militia) to the extent of 18,000 men, as an auxiliary force to o ...
The Helvetic Republic 683 French.”^28 The predominant feeling in Switzerland, even with Russian, Austrian, and French troops ope ...
CHAPTER XXIX GERMANY: THE REVOLUTION OF THE MIND In republicanism it is rightly accepted that all men as rational beings are fre ...
Germany 685 the French Revolution with enthusiasm, and to believe that in French hands, thanks to French faults, these principle ...
686 Chapter XXIX modern states; and these changes were brought about by German governments themselves, when the rulers of Baden, ...
Germany 687 prominent elements in the middle class were not lawyers in private practice, nor wealthy men of affairs, with except ...
688 Chapter XXIX more concerned with worldly affairs than in England, and more perversely myste- rious than in France. From the ...
Germany 689 history of ideas. The conception of a Categorical Imperative, an absolute sense of duty in general, without much att ...
690 Chapter XXIX lightened and a more backward part of Europe or the world. No treason was in- volved; there was no German natio ...
Germany 691 “foreigners” (Germans from outside the Prussian dominions) and draw more on “actual citizens,” wirkliche Bürger des ...
692 Chapter XXIX view not only of excited German republicans, or of the kind of liberals who did not see in the British parliame ...
Germany 693 the peasantry, probably inspired by Kosciuszko’s proclamation at Polaniec, that the new Prussian code would abolish ...
694 Chapter XXIX versity towns, or courtly and governmental centers, in which the leading persons of economic importance were ol ...
Germany 695 association could resemble the Paris Jacobins is impossible to understand. In Oc- tober 1792, a month after Valmy, t ...
696 Chapter XXIX In March 1793 Forster assembled at Mainz a gathering of patriots from other clubs in the neighborhood, the “Rhe ...
Germany 697 late in 1797, and initiated the steps which led to complete annexation by 1800. Petitions requesting annexation circ ...
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