The Age of the Democratic Revolution. A Political History of Europe and America, 1760-1800
698 Chapter XXIX Mainz Jacobins were imprisoned at the citadel of Erfurt, so that Rebmann came to know something of their revolu ...
Germany 699 Southwest Germany, east of the Rhine, was also the scene of considerable unrest during the years from 1796 to 1800.^ ...
700 Chapter XXIX Joy, written several years earlier, was a favorite with German republicans of the 1790’s: Seid umschlungen, Mil ...
Germany 701 might be threatened. For this “humanist” school, while their critique fell on the betrayals of liberty, it was essen ...
702 Chapter XXIX historian Droz is seconded by a recent American writer, is that, despite his un- doubted knowledge of current e ...
Germany 703 in the evolution of freedom. He never turned against the French Revolution. He did not have to, since his dialectic ...
704 Chapter XXIX freedom of teaching. The university was in the grand duchy of Weimar, and it hap- pened that the grand duke’s m ...
Germany 705 the idea of liberty from actual individual persons, and lodged it in a collective group, which in later years, after ...
706 Chapter XXIX group of Pietists among the nobles of Holstein, where they defended the privileges of the noble estates, resist ...
Germany 707 against Republicans and Levellers. “Levellers” significantly became Aufklärer in German.^59 Reichard and others, in ...
708 Chapter XXIX life of its own.^62 In an empirical view, the Revolution could be seen as an episode, a crisis in affairs, mome ...
CHAPTER XXX BRITAIN: REPUBLICANISM AND THE ESTABLISHMENT I disapprove of monarchical and aristocratical governments, however mod ...
710 Chapter XXX the European counter- revolution was England, which supplied conservative Eu- rope with an example of perseveran ...
Britain 711 and overcome by the Establishment, to use a modern term, which then referred only to the establishment of religion i ...
712 Chapter XXX persons in the families of artisans and mechanics, and almost 400,000 in those of tradesmen and shopkeepers. A m ...
Britain 713 vented, still required an income from landed property of £300 a year for the bur- gesses, and of £600 a year for the ...
714 Chapter XXX Horsa, in a remote age of Saxon liberty before the Norman Conquest. In a country so conscious of its own history ...
Britain 715 On the Continent the professional classes, including the clergy, furnished many sympathizers with the French Revolut ...
716 Chapter XXX raise questions of principle concerning the state, public authority and justice, may all help to explain the inc ...
Britain 717 Well- to- do business men in England, however, had too much to lose to persist indefinitely in opposition. They were ...
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