Synopses & Reviews
Peripheral cultures have been largely absent from the European canon of historiography. Seeking to redress the balance, Monika Baar discusses the achievements of five East-Central European historians in the nineteenth century: Joachim Lelewel (Polish); Simonas Daukantas (Lithuanian); Frantisek Palacky (Czech); Mihaly Horvath (Hungarian) and Mihail Kogalniceanu (Romanian). Comparing their efforts to promote a unified vision of national culture in their respective countries, Baar illuminates the complexities of historical writing in the region in the nineteenth century.
Drawing on previously untranslated documents, Baar reconstructs the scholars' shared intellectual background and their nationalistic aims, arguing that historians on the European periphery made significant contributions to historical writing, and had far more in common with their Western and Central European contemporaries than has been previously assumed.
About the Author
Monika Baar completed her D.Phil. at Oxford in 2002 and is currently the Rosalind Franklin Fellow and Senior Lecturer in Modern History at the University of Groningen.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. Five Biographical Profiles
2. Romantic Historiography in the Service of Nation-building
3. Institutionalization and Professionalization
4. Intellectual Background
5. Language as Medium, Language as Message
6. National Antiquities
7. Feudalism
8. The Golden Age
9. Perceptions of others and attitudes to European civilization
Conclusion
Bibliography