Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Chapter I Introduction
- Chapter II The scientific movement and the diffusion of scientific ideas, 1688–1751
- Chapter III CULTURAL CHANGE IN WESTERN EUROPE
- Chapter IV Religion and the relations of church and state
- Chapter V International relations in Europe
- Chapter VI The English revolution
- Chapter VII The Nine Years War, 1688–1697
- Chapter VIII The emergence of Great Britain as a world power
- Chapter IX War finance, 1689–1714
- Chapter X The condition of France, 1688–1715
- Chapter XI The Spanish Empire under foreign pressures, 1688–1715
- Chapter XII From the Nine Years War to the war of the Spanish Succession
- Chapter XIII The war of the Spanish succession in Europe
- Chapter XIV The pacification of Utrecht
- Chapter XV France and England in North America, 1689–1713
- Chapter XVI Portugal and her Empire, 1680–1720
- Chapter XVII The Mediterranean
- Chapter XVIII The Austrian Habsburgs
- Chapter XIX The retreat of the Turks, 1683–1730
- Chapter XX(1) Charles XII and the Great Northern War
- Chapter XX(2) The eclipse of Poland
- Chapter XXI Russia under Peter the Great and the changed relations of east and west
- Chapter XXII ARMIES AND NAVIES
- Chapter XXIII ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
- References
Chapter XII - From the Nine Years War to the war of the Spanish Succession
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- Chapter I Introduction
- Chapter II The scientific movement and the diffusion of scientific ideas, 1688–1751
- Chapter III CULTURAL CHANGE IN WESTERN EUROPE
- Chapter IV Religion and the relations of church and state
- Chapter V International relations in Europe
- Chapter VI The English revolution
- Chapter VII The Nine Years War, 1688–1697
- Chapter VIII The emergence of Great Britain as a world power
- Chapter IX War finance, 1689–1714
- Chapter X The condition of France, 1688–1715
- Chapter XI The Spanish Empire under foreign pressures, 1688–1715
- Chapter XII From the Nine Years War to the war of the Spanish Succession
- Chapter XIII The war of the Spanish succession in Europe
- Chapter XIV The pacification of Utrecht
- Chapter XV France and England in North America, 1689–1713
- Chapter XVI Portugal and her Empire, 1680–1720
- Chapter XVII The Mediterranean
- Chapter XVIII The Austrian Habsburgs
- Chapter XIX The retreat of the Turks, 1683–1730
- Chapter XX(1) Charles XII and the Great Northern War
- Chapter XX(2) The eclipse of Poland
- Chapter XXI Russia under Peter the Great and the changed relations of east and west
- Chapter XXII ARMIES AND NAVIES
- Chapter XXIII ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
- References
Summary
In the treaties signed at Ryswick the clauses which formally terminated the war show differences of phraseology. Between the French and the Dutch there was to be a good, firm, fruitful and inviolable peace; between Louis XIV and William III as king by the grace of God of Great Britain, a universal and perpetual peace was to be inviolably, religiously and sincerely observed. The peace made by France with Spain was to be good, firm and durable; that with the emperor Christian, universal and perpetual. Whatever significance these variations may have had, none of them implied any reservation. None of the leading contemporaries seems to have suggested, at least in writing or in reported conversation, that the official phrases were hypocritical or over-optimistic, or that this peace of exhaustion was a mere armistice. Yet less than four years later the French were fighting the Austrians in Lombardy, and in the spring of 1702 the emperor, Queen Anne and the States-General declared war against France. This was the result of two processes. The first and more difficult to trace was the economic and administrative recovery which enabled the powers to take the field again. Such recovery was a normal concomitant of peace; it was usually quicker than seemed possible at the moment when peace was made, and statesmen were liable to miscalculate when they estimated how far it had proceeded in their own or in other countries. The other process was the building-up of antagonisms, some inveterate and others new.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The New Cambridge Modern History , pp. 381 - 409Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1970
References
- 1
- Cited by