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Sismondi: The History of the Italian Republics, by J. C. L. de Sismondi (Dent, 1907) Stern: Gold and Iron: Bismarck, Bleichroder and the Building of the German Empire, by Fritz Stern (Penguin, 1987) Strachan: The First World War: Vol. I, Call to Arms: (OUP, 2001) Stubbs: The Constitutional History of England in its Origin and Development, by William Stubbs (3 vols., OUP, 1891) Taylor I: The Origins of the Second World War, by A. J. P. Taylor (Hamish Hamilton, 1961) Taylor II: The Struggle for Mastery in Europe, by A. J. P. Taylor (OUP, 1954) Thierry: The Norman Conquest of England, by A. Thierry (2 vols., Dent, 1906) Thomas: The Conquest of Mexico, by Hugh Thomas (Hutchinson, 1993) Thucydides: The Peloponnesian Wars, trans. Rex Warner (Penguin, 1972) Tooze: The Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy, by Adam Tooze (Pengin, 2006) Trevelyan: England under Queen Anne (3 vols.), by G. M. Trevelyan (Longmans, 1930–4) Tyerman: God’s War: A New History of the Crusades, by Christopher Tyerman (Allen Lane, 2006) Weber: Political Writings, by Max Weber, edited by Peter Lassman and Ronald Spiers (CUP, 1994) Wickham: The Inheritance of Rome: A History of Europe, by Chris Wickham (Allen Lane, 2009) Wilson: Europe’s Tragedy: A History of the Thirty Years War, by Peter Wilson (Allen Lane, 2009) Woodruff: The Struggle for World Power 1500–1980, by William Woodruff (Macmillan, 1981) Zamoyski: 1812: Napoleon’s Fatal March on Moscow, by Adam Zamoyski (HarperCollins, 2004) 168
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– Acknowledgements – This book arose out of a series of conversations and exchanges several years ago with Stuart Proffitt, who shaped my thinking on this question to a profound degree, though all the responsibility for what appears here is mine and mine alone. I am grateful to him and hope he feels the trouble he took in discussing these ideas was worthwhile, even if not profitable. I am indebted to Dr Lucasta Miller for agreeing to take this project on, and for her intelligent and highly perceptive guidance during the course of it. Michael Burleigh, to whom this work is dedicated, gave me some invaluable guidance early on and exerted a moral and intellectual influence whose full extent he will be too modest to appreciate. I wrote the book during a sabbatical year, for which I must thank the Chief Executive of the Telegraph Media Group, Murdoch MacLennan. It was written at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, during a year as Fellow Commoner, and I must sincerely thank the Master, Stuart Laing, and the Fellows for their hospitality and many other kindnesses. I greatly benefited particularly from conversations with Professor Jonathan Haslam, Sarah Cain and Dr Pernille Røge, and notably from a seminar I led with Dr Røge’s history students. Professor Brendan Simms and Professor Christopher Clark also gave me important and helpful ideas, for which I thank them. My agent, Georgina Capel, was especially supportive on the long journey of such a short book. Finally, nothing would have been possible without the constant support and understanding of my wife, and I thank her above all others.

– Acknowledgements –

This book arose out of a series of conversations and exchanges several years ago with Stuart Proffitt, who shaped my thinking on this question to a profound degree, though all the responsibility for what appears here is mine and mine alone. I am grateful to him and hope he feels the trouble he took in discussing these ideas was worthwhile, even if not profitable. I am indebted to Dr Lucasta Miller for agreeing to take this project on, and for her intelligent and highly perceptive guidance during the course of it. Michael Burleigh, to whom this work is dedicated, gave me some invaluable guidance early on and exerted a moral and intellectual influence whose full extent he will be too modest to appreciate. I wrote the book during a sabbatical year, for which I must thank the Chief Executive of the Telegraph Media Group, Murdoch MacLennan. It was written at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, during a year as Fellow Commoner, and I must sincerely thank the Master, Stuart Laing, and the Fellows for their hospitality and many other kindnesses. I greatly benefited particularly from conversations with Professor Jonathan Haslam, Sarah Cain and Dr Pernille Røge, and notably from a seminar I led with Dr Røge’s history students. Professor Brendan Simms and Professor Christopher Clark also gave me important and helpful ideas, for which I thank them. My agent, Georgina Capel, was especially supportive on the long journey of such a short book. Finally, nothing would have been possible without the constant support and understanding of my wife, and I thank her above all others.

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