George Stepney, 1663-1707: Diplomat and PoetJ. Clarke & Company, 1997 - 403 Seiten George Stepney was one of the most remarkable men of the end of the seventeenth century. He was considered one of the eight poets worthy of emulation, while 'no Englishman ever understood the affairs of Germany so well, and few Germans better.' A member of the Kit-Cat Club, and respected by Halifax and Marlborough, he - a commoner - was carried to his grave in Westminster Abbey by two dukes, two earls and two barons. Despite his importance for students of the period, and the fascination of his story in its own right, the only study of his life to date has been an article in The Huntingdon Library Quarterly from 1946. Miss Spens's biography is therefore a major contribution to scholarship which will prove invaluable to the international academic community. Diplomatic history has tended to focus on the monarchs and princes rather than on the handful of professional diplomats whose job it was to 'lie abroad for their country', of whom Stepney stands as an unusually well-documented example. Besides arousing the enthusiasm of specialists this volume will complement works on figures as diverse as William III and John Dryden. The fruit of over ten years' research in major archival collections throughout Europe, George Stepney provides new and valuable material on a key period of political and military history. |
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... Kaunitz , requesting either an answer in writing regarding the Portuguese affair , or a suitable time and place where the matter could be discussed seriously . The Vice - Chancellor took offence , and wrote back immediately that he was ...
... Kaunitz , requesting either an answer in writing regarding the Portuguese affair , or a suitable time and place where the matter could be discussed seriously . The Vice - Chancellor took offence , and wrote back immediately that he was ...
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... Kaunitz's valet interrupted him to ask for the return of a Latin paper which the Vice - Chancellor had lent him . This was folded in the same way as another , and Stepney gave the wrong paper back . Next morning , arranging his letters ...
... Kaunitz's valet interrupted him to ask for the return of a Latin paper which the Vice - Chancellor had lent him . This was folded in the same way as another , and Stepney gave the wrong paper back . Next morning , arranging his letters ...
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... Kaunitz , was found dead of apoplexy . Stepney had had official dealings with Kaunitz ever since his arrival in Vienna in 1701 , and although he had once seriously clashed with him ( cf. Chapter XVI above ) , he had grown used to the ...
... Kaunitz , was found dead of apoplexy . Stepney had had official dealings with Kaunitz ever since his arrival in Vienna in 1701 , and although he had once seriously clashed with him ( cf. Chapter XVI above ) , he had grown used to the ...
Inhalt
Introduction | 1 |
Antecedents | 6 |
Education | 12 |
Urheberrecht | |
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affairs appointment army August Baron Benebourg Blathwayt Bruynincx Cardonnel Charles Montagu Cleves Colt command correspondence Count Frise Count Kaunitz Count Wratislaw Cresset Danckelmann diplomat dispatch Dresden Duke Dutch Earl Elector of Bavaria Elector of Brandenburg Elector of Saxony Elector Palatine Electress Ellis Emperor England favour France Frankfurt French George Stepney Goertz Hague Hamburg Hanover Harley Hedges Heinsius Het Loo Holland horses Hungarian Hungary ibid imperial court instructions James Johnston journey Kaunitz King William King's Landgrave later Letters to Stepney Lexington London Lord March n.s. Marlborough Max Emmanuel Mediators ministers negotiations Palatine Pressburg Prince Eugene Prince Louis Queen Rákóczy received Rechteren Rhine Schöning secretary sent Spanish Netherlands Stepney continued Stepney in Dresden Stepney in Vienna Stepney Papers Stepney reported Stepney took Stepney wrote Stepney's Letter Book Trade treaty troops Tyrnau Vernon Whitehall wished Wratislaw writing Wyche Zell