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Book
Maria Theresa
Author:
ISBN: 9780691179063 9780691219851 0691179069 0691219850 Year: 2022 Publisher: Princeton, NJ

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Abstract

"In her time, Maria Theresa (1717-1780) was the most powerful woman in the world. She ruled the Habsburg Empire from 1740-1780, an era when empires dominated Europe. She was the sovereign of a vast empire, ruling Austria, Hungary, Croatia, Bohemia, Transylvania, Flanders, and other Habsburg territories, and by marriage she was, among other titles, the Holy Roman Empress. Maria Theresa began her reign at the age of 23 after her father, Emperor Charles VI, died. Immediately after his death, her right to inherit the throne was challenged by most of the sovereign rulers of Europe. Despite setbacks such as the loss of Silesia, her richest province, to her life-long enemy Frederick II of Prussia, Maria Theresa proved to be a highly effective ruler. She initiated financial and educational reforms, promoted commerce, and reorganized the army, all of which strengthened Austria's resources. She was a key figure in the power politics of eighteenth-century Europe and she brought unity to the Habsburg Monarchy and was considered one of its most capable leaders. Maria Theresa and her husband Francis I also had sixteen children, most famously Marie Antoinette. Stollberg-Rilinger's biography challenges many of the myths that surround Maria Theresa's reign, such as that she came to the throne completely naïve and unprepared. Stollberg-Rilinger shows that from early childhood on, Maria Theresa carefully observed what went on in court and how her father acted as a monarch dealing with sovereigns across Europe. She clears away the gendered misconceptions surrounding Maria Theresa's life and, through fresh, critical readings of the source material, reveals the historical reality. She also refutes anachronistic narratives that assume a false continuity between Maria Theresa's time and later periods. Unlike previous biographers, Stollberg-Rilinger is able to paint a detailed portrait of Maria Theresa as Empress, "king," and reformer, and as a mother and master manipulator, by reconstructing the world in which the Austrian Empress lived and reigned"--

Keywords

Maria Theresa [Archduchess of Austria] --- Maria Theresa, --- Maria Theresia --- Marie-Therèse --- Marii︠a︡ Terezii︠a︡, --- Maria Theresia, --- Maria Teresa, --- Mária Terézia, --- Austria --- History --- Kings and rulers --- HISTORY / Europe / Austria & Hungary. --- Adviser. --- Anschluss. --- Apathy. --- Archduke. --- Aristocracy. --- Aulic Council. --- Cabinet noir. --- Censorship. --- Civilian. --- Clementia. --- Consummation. --- Court painter. --- Courtesy. --- Courtier. --- Criticism. --- Deportation. --- Despotism. --- Dissolution of the Monasteries. --- Distrust. --- Edict of toleration. --- Edict. --- Education. --- Egocentrism. --- Elector of Mainz. --- Electorate of Saxony. --- Excommunication. --- Flattery. --- Foot the bill. --- Formality. --- Giacomo Casanova. --- God. --- Godparent. --- Grandee. --- Great power. --- Heresy. --- Hofburg Palace. --- Holy Roman Empire. --- House of Bourbon. --- House of Habsburg. --- House of Wittelsbach. --- Hypocrisy. --- Imperial Diet (Holy Roman Empire). --- Imperial State. --- Imperial Throne (micronation). --- Impossibility. --- Infanticide. --- Jansenism. --- Johann Jakob Moser. --- Johann Joseph Gassner. --- King of the Romans. --- Landgrave. --- Limbo. --- Lord High Steward. --- Louis Philippe I. --- Madame de Pompadour. --- Majesty. --- Maria Amalia of Saxony. --- Maria Carolina of Austria. --- Martin van Meytens. --- Messalina. --- Military Frontier. --- Military Order of Maria Theresa. --- Mirrors for princes. --- Mortal Fear (novel). --- Mourning. --- Narcissism. --- Necromancy. --- Nobility. --- Oppression. --- Partitions of Poland. --- Peasant. --- Perfidious Albion. --- Persecution. --- Piety. --- Politique. --- Pope Benedict XIV. --- Potentate. --- Prince-bishop. --- Prince-elector. --- Protestantism. --- Prussia. --- Reichskrieg. --- Religion. --- Ridicule. --- Ruler. --- Secret treaty. --- Society of Jesus. --- Sovereignty. --- Spanish Netherlands. --- Spoils system. --- Superiority (short story). --- Suppression of the Society of Jesus. --- The Other Hand. --- Tsarina. --- War of succession. --- War of the Austrian Succession. --- War of the Polish Succession. --- War. --- Warfare. --- Writing. --- Austria-History-Maria Theresa, 1740-1780. --- Austria-Kings and rulers-Biography. --- Maria Theresa,-Empress of Austria,-1717-1780.


Book
The Shaping of the Elizabethan Regime : Elizabethan Politics, 1558-1572
Author:
ISBN: 069160472X 0691633762 1400872847 Year: 2015 Publisher: Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press,

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Abstract

The fifteen years between the accession of Elizabeth I to the throne and the death of the Duke of Norfolk were a true time of testing for the new regime.Originally published in 1971.The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.

Keywords

Politics and government. --- Queens --- Queens. --- Great Britain --- History --- Abolitionism. --- Amy Robsart. --- Ancien Régime. --- Annals (Tacitus). --- Anne Boleyn. --- Archduke. --- Aristocracy. --- Attainder. --- Bill of attainder. --- Boleyn. --- Catherine de' Medici. --- Catherine of Aragon. --- Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. --- Chancellor of the Exchequer. --- Charles IX of France. --- Council of the North. --- Counter-Reformation. --- Court of Augmentations. --- Courtier. --- Crown Matrimonial. --- David Rizzio. --- Duchy. --- Earl of Cumberland. --- Earl of Northumberland. --- Earl. --- Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset. --- Elizabeth May. --- English Reformation. --- English independence. --- Foreign policy. --- Forward Policy. --- Frances Grey, Duchess of Suffolk. --- Francis Walsingham. --- Geoffrey Pole. --- Heir presumptive. --- Henry Percy (Hotspur). --- Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley. --- Henry VII of England. --- Historian. --- House of Guise. --- House of Habsburg. --- House of Tudor. --- House of York. --- Huguenot. --- Ideology. --- Imperialism. --- Invasion of England (1326). --- James Stewart, 1st Earl of Moray. --- Kenilworth Castle. --- Kingdom of England. --- Lady Catherine Grey. --- Legislation. --- Lord Chamberlain. --- Lord High Steward. --- Lord John Grey (Tudor nobleman). --- Magnate. --- Majesty. --- Margaret Douglas. --- Marshalsea. --- Mary of Guise. --- Monroe Doctrine. --- Morganatic marriage. --- Mr. --- National Policy. --- Nicholas Throckmorton. --- Nobility. --- Oath of Supremacy. --- Oliver Cromwell. --- Order of succession. --- Peer of the realm. --- Peerage of England. --- Pilgrimage of Grace. --- Politician. --- Politique. --- Praemunire. --- Proclamation. --- Protestant Ascendancy. --- Protestant Revolution (Maryland). --- Protestantism. --- Puritans. --- Purveyance. --- Queen regnant. --- Queen's Consent. --- Radicalism (historical). --- Recusancy. --- Reginald Pole. --- Regnans in Excelsis. --- Revolt of the Earls. --- Ridolfi plot. --- Robert Dudley (explorer). --- Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester. --- Statute. --- The Tudors. --- Treaty of Berwick (1639). --- Treaty of Edinburgh. --- Treaty of Troyes. --- Tudor Crown. --- V. --- William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley. --- William Cobbett.

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