Erich Eyck
Bismarck and the German Empire
"Authoritative, illuminating and easy to read. . . . Dr. Eyck, in his
excellent book, has exposed the many fallacies of which Bismarck legend is
compounded. His analysis is tragic and austere."The Observer
For most people Bismarck is the man of "blood and iron"; he coined the phrase
himself and he lived up to it. But he was much more; he had an itellectual
ascendancy over all the politicians of his day, and his superiority was
acknowledged not only by his own people, but by all European statesmen.
The unification of Germany, the defeat of Austria, the fall of the Second Empire,
the defeat of France, the alliance of the German Empire and the Habsburg
Monarchy, the dismemberment of Denmarkthese are his most obvious achievements;
no less important was the transformation in the national consciousness of the
German people, for which Bismarck was also responsible. Dr. Eyck has analyzed
not only the personality but also the accomplishments of a statesman whose
influence on Europe in the latter half of the nineteenth century was more
far-reaching than that of any other man in his time.
This edition contains minor corrections and a new foreword by the author's son
Frank Eyck, also a nineteenth-century historian, evaluating some of the
important publications in the field since the book appeared and illuminating
his father's attitude to Bismarck.
Erick Eyck (18781964) was born in Berlin and educated at the
Universities of Berlin and Freiburg. He made his career in law, serving in the
Court of Appeals, as a legal correspondent, and as a City Councillor in
Charlottenberg and Berlin. In 1937 Dr. Eyck emigrated to England, where he lectured
at the Universities of London and Oxford and turned to the writing of history.
This volume is based on a series of lectures delivered at Oxford and also on
Dr. Eyck's monumental three-colume study Bismarck.
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