12 books found
by Charles Wesley Tuttle, John Ward Dean
1889 · Boston : Printed by J. Wilson
by Charles Edward Banks, Charles Edwin Allen, Edward Payson Burnham, Ephraim Chamberlain Cummings, Henry Otis Thayer, Henry Sweetser Burrage, Henry Warren Wheeler, Horatio King, James Phinney Baxter, John Francis Sprague, Joseph Moody, Joseph Williamson, Josiah Hayden Drummond, Kittery (Me.), Leonard Bond Chapman, Maine Historical Society, Percival Bonney, Samuel Adams Drake, Samuel Thomas Pickard, William Berry Lapham
1892
A two days' steamer trip on the lower Kennebec.
by Emory Washburn, John Wurts
1902 · Boston : Little, Brown, and Company
The 'Defenestration of Prague', the coup d'etat staged by Protestant Bohemian nobles against officials of the Hapsburg Emperor triggered the Thirty Years War. When Habsburg Spain intervened in support of their Holy Roman Emperor relative, what had started as a localised political and religious dispute in Germany, transformed into a European and global conflict. In seeking to exploit the Bohemian revolt, Spanish Habsburg revanchist ambitions directed by the Spanish Count of Olivarez at the economically powerful Dutch Republic were allied with the Habsburg Emperor’s counter-reformation ambitions. After the Bohemian defeat at the White Mountain in 1620 the war widened as the Dutch Republic, England, Transylvania, Denmark, Sweden, and Richelieu’s France all intervened to roll back Habsburg hegemony and restore the balance power. There was extensive fighting across the globe, as the Dutch and English sought to challenge the Spanish Habsburg global monopoly. These colonial wars were a major factor in the Iberian revolutions with brought down the Habsburg Imperium. Professor Charles Boxer called it: “the first world war”. It was a tragic war of attrition but also an epic story of remarkable individuals including the 'titans’ of the era,' Imperial General Wallenstein, warrior King Gustavus, sinister Count Olivarez, and the masters of international intrigue, realpolitik and diplomacy- Cardinals Richelieu and Mazarin. Above all there were the decisive victories of the under-sung military genius of the era, Lennart Torstensson. The Treaties of Westphalia followed a war which not only changed the global balance of power, but accelerated over thirty years the transformation of the European continent from a world characterized by dynasties and the medieval concept of United Christendom to a European order that was recognisably modern.
by Benson John Lossing
2010 · Applewood Books
Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes claimed that historian Benson J. Lossing did more than any other man to make history interesting and popular. Lossing wrote his comprehensive three-volume history of the Civil War at a time when the facts were still fresh. Originally published in 1868, Volume Three covers the period from midsummer 1863 to the war's end in the spring of 1865. Lossing accompanies his narratives of marches, battles, and sieges with maps and plans, includes biographical sketches of the prominent people from both sides of the conflict, and illustrates his history with hundreds of drawings and engravings by the author and others.