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Frontmatter
Preface
I. The Issues and the Adversaries
Bastille Day, 1792
Ideological War
The Adversaries
Shades of Doctrine
II. The Revolutionizing of the Revolution
The "Second" French Revolution
Popular Revolutionism
International Revolutionism
III. Liberation and Annexation: 1792-1793
The Storm in the Low Countries
The Submersion of Poland
IV. The Survival of the Revolution in France
Gouvernement revolutionnaire
Reaction against Popular and International Revolutionism
The Moral Republic
The Meaning of Thermidor
V. Victories of the Counter-Revolution in Eastern Europe
The Problem of Eastern Europe
The Impact of the Western Revolution in Russia
The Abortive Polish Revolution of 1794
Agitations in the Hapsburg Empire
The Jacobin Conspiracies at Vienna and in Hungary, 1794
An Addendum on Southeast Europe
VI. The Batavian Republic
The Dutch Revolution of 1794-1795
The Frustration of the Conciliators
Federalists and Democrats
The Coup d'Etat of January 22, 1798: Dutch Democracy at Its Height
A Word on the Dutch in South Africa
VII. The French Directory: Mirage of the Moderates
After Thermidor
The Directory
The Sources of Moderate Strength
VIII. The French Directory between Extremes
Democracy and Communism
The Throne and the Altar
Fructidor and Floreal
IX. The Revolution Comes to Italy
"World Revolution" as Seen from Paris, 1796
The Beginning of French Action in Italy
Italy before 1796
The Kingdom of Corsica
X. The Cisalpine Republic
The Val Padana and the Bridge at Lodi
The Cispadane Republic
The Venetian Revolution and the Treaty of Campo Formio
The Cisalpine Republic: Sketch of a Modern State
Politics and Vicissitudes of the Cisalpine
XI. 1798: The High Tide of Revolutionary Democracy
The Great Nation, the Sister-Republics, and the Wave of Cisalpinization
A Comparative View of the New Republican Order
The Republican Constitutions
Religion and Revolution: Christianity and Democracy
XII. The Republics at Rome and Naples
The Politics of the Semi-Peace
The Roman Republic
The Neapolitan Republic
XIII. The Helvetic Republic
Switzerland before 1798
Geneva: Revolution and Annexation
The Swiss Revolutionaries
Swiss Unity vs. External Pressures
Internal Stresses in the Helvetic Republic
XIV. Germany: The Revolution of the Mind
The Ambiguous Revolution
Mainz Jacobins and Cisrhenane Republicans
The Colossi of the Goethezeit
Counter-Revolutionary Cross Currents
XV. Britain: Republicanism and the Establishment
British Radicalism and Continental Revolution
Clubs and Conventions
The Levee en masse of the People of Quality
The Abortive Irish Revolution of 1798
XVI. America: Democracy Native and Imported
The "Other" Americas, Latin and British
Which Way the New Republic?
The Impact of the Outside World
The "Corruption of Poland"
Democracy in America
XVII. Climax and Denouement
The Still Receding Mirage of the Moderates
The Conservative Counter-Offensive of 1799
The Revolutionary Re-arousal and Victory
Two Men on Horseback
Appendix
Index
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Permanent URL for this title: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/heb.00740.0002.001 | ||
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