Because of the overarching shadow of ‘the state’ in all things diplomatic, traditional diplomatic history has neglected the study of any actors in foreign relations other than state diplomats, such as ambassadors. This volume focuses on the question of how and why consuls, missionaries, and spies not formally tied to the state or a prince could play a role in premodern diplomatic relations. It highlights their multiple loyalties, their volatility, and the porous boundaries of diplomatic activity. Historical research on non-state actors – in the context of the so-called new diplomatic history – is all the more urgent as it demonstrates their undeniably significant contributions to the formation of Europe’s international relations
Mainly drawing on evidence from Scandinavia, the Holy Roman Empire, the British Isles, France, Spain...
In recent decades the study of British foreign policy and diplomacy has broadened in focus. No longe...
Collective identities and transnational networks in medieval and early modern Europe, 1000-180
The general historiography of Stuart diplomacy has, by and large, argued that those who were tasked ...
Historians of Late Antiquity have studied a wide range of examples regarding the status, powers and ...
The author investigates the birth of modern diplomacy. Drawing on a wide-ranging body of textual mat...
Over the last two decades, the study of early modern diplomatic history has changed considerably. On...
In the seventeenth-century western Mediterranean, the conflict between the Dutch Republic and North ...
One of the prominent themes of the political history of the 16th and 17th centuries is the waxing in...
The crisis of political history, particularly profound since the 1960s and the subsequent cultural t...
Using the legal literature of the ius commune and a body of texts commonly known as the “treatises o...
There was no professional diplomacy in the European Middle Ages, nor was there specifically trained ...
This thesis examines the theory of diplomacy in the formative phase of the European states-system. F...
Researchers of the sixteenth-century European diplomacy discuss diplomatic networks and daily life a...
In the 18th – early 20th centuries, state ceremonial was an integral part of the system of governmen...
Mainly drawing on evidence from Scandinavia, the Holy Roman Empire, the British Isles, France, Spain...
In recent decades the study of British foreign policy and diplomacy has broadened in focus. No longe...
Collective identities and transnational networks in medieval and early modern Europe, 1000-180
The general historiography of Stuart diplomacy has, by and large, argued that those who were tasked ...
Historians of Late Antiquity have studied a wide range of examples regarding the status, powers and ...
The author investigates the birth of modern diplomacy. Drawing on a wide-ranging body of textual mat...
Over the last two decades, the study of early modern diplomatic history has changed considerably. On...
In the seventeenth-century western Mediterranean, the conflict between the Dutch Republic and North ...
One of the prominent themes of the political history of the 16th and 17th centuries is the waxing in...
The crisis of political history, particularly profound since the 1960s and the subsequent cultural t...
Using the legal literature of the ius commune and a body of texts commonly known as the “treatises o...
There was no professional diplomacy in the European Middle Ages, nor was there specifically trained ...
This thesis examines the theory of diplomacy in the formative phase of the European states-system. F...
Researchers of the sixteenth-century European diplomacy discuss diplomatic networks and daily life a...
In the 18th – early 20th centuries, state ceremonial was an integral part of the system of governmen...
Mainly drawing on evidence from Scandinavia, the Holy Roman Empire, the British Isles, France, Spain...
In recent decades the study of British foreign policy and diplomacy has broadened in focus. No longe...
Collective identities and transnational networks in medieval and early modern Europe, 1000-180