the current state of historiography on the Thirty Years War offers us an ironically reversed invented a novel literary genre, the so-called books of consolation
S H Steinberg, "The Not So Destructive, Not So Religious and Not Primarily German War', ibid pp 25-32 3 Geoflrey Parker, The Thirty Years' War (London,
13 déc 2017 · The Thirty Years War (1618–1648) remains a defining event in early Though the exact scale of destruction remains controversial, all are who died in 1611, and his son and successor, John George, refused to take part in
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destructive wars in European history, responsible for the deaths of at least eight million The debate so far has posed a number of fundamental questions First, how Fourthly, was the Thirty Years War a war of religion, or was it shaped more
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Today: set up the Thirty Years' War - Work on our notes so far on 30 Years' War The Holy Roman Emperor had very little power destructive, burning
Thirty Years War
under the title "The Not So Destructive Not So Religious
the social history of the Thirty Years War to a greater extent than almost any war or they were exaggerated and so should be dismissed as unreliable.
Steinberg "The Not So Destructive
May 5 2559 BE makeup of Europe and especially the so-called “German-speaking lands. ... Destruction in the Thirty Years War
destruction to the cities of the belligerents so that the horrors of the the treatment of the 'Thirty Years War' question by Dr P. H. M. Bell in his ...
destructive wars in European history responsible for the deaths of at least eight million people at a time when the continent numbered only.
accentuated by the Thirty Years' War which was fairly destructive in the south of Germany
https://www.jstor.org/stable/40110988
S. H. Steinberg 'The Not So Destructive
The thesis must take a position on whether the Thirty Years' War was fought primarily for religious or primarily for political reasons with some indication of