Book contents
- Frontmatter
- General Introduction: History and the Modern Historian
- I Introduction
- II The face of Europe on the eve of the great discoveries
- III Fifteenth-century civilisation and the Renaissance
- IV The Papacy and the Catholic Church
- V Learning and education in Western Europe from 1470 to 1520
- VI The arts in Western Europe
- VII The Empire under Maximilian I
- VIII The Burgundian Netherlands, 1477–1521
- IX International relations in the West: diplomacy and war
- X France under Charles VIII and Louis XII
- XI The Hispanic kingdoms and the Catholic kings
- XII The invasions of Italy
- XIII Eastern Europe
- XIV The Ottoman empire (1481–1520)
- XV The New World
- XVI Expansion as a concern of all Europe
XIII - Eastern Europe
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- General Introduction: History and the Modern Historian
- I Introduction
- II The face of Europe on the eve of the great discoveries
- III Fifteenth-century civilisation and the Renaissance
- IV The Papacy and the Catholic Church
- V Learning and education in Western Europe from 1470 to 1520
- VI The arts in Western Europe
- VII The Empire under Maximilian I
- VIII The Burgundian Netherlands, 1477–1521
- IX International relations in the West: diplomacy and war
- X France under Charles VIII and Louis XII
- XI The Hispanic kingdoms and the Catholic kings
- XII The invasions of Italy
- XIII Eastern Europe
- XIV The Ottoman empire (1481–1520)
- XV The New World
- XVI Expansion as a concern of all Europe
Summary
For the thirty-five years before its transformation under the effects of the battle of Mohács, Europe east of the frontiers of the Empire and north of the lines reached at that date by the Turkish armies fell into two parts, sharply distinguished politically and even psychologically: on the one hand, the Russian lands which the grand dukes of Moscow were welding into a compact, disciplined and self-regarding world on its own; on the other, the vast and complex area comprising the kingdoms of Poland-Lithuania, Hungary and Bohemia—for the connection between Bohemia and the Empire was during this period purely technical, whereas it was intimately joined with Hungary and in close relationship with Poland. These three kingdoms were linked together, albeit loosely and, as the future was to prove, transiently, by dynastic ties; the Crowns of Hungary and Bohemia were united, and that of Poland held by brothers or uncles of the Hungarian king, all these rulers belonging to the Polish-Lithuanian house of Jagiello. The principality of Moldavia alternated between semi-independence and vassalage, now to the Porte, now to Hungary, now to Poland.
It is permissible to confine our account of the easternmost of these two divisions to a very few words, for the rise of Moscow and the growth, round the Muscovite nucleus, of the Russian State, in which the whole history of this area resides, were processes which had begun long before 1490 and were not completed until long after 1526: the period described here constitutes only a term in a steady progression. It was, indeed, a brilliant one.
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- Information
- The New Cambridge Modern History , pp. 368 - 394Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1957