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From the time of Metternich to that of Hitler and Stalin no other figure cast so large a shadow as Bismarck on the pages of European and world history. He began his career in 1862 as the hated minister of a faltering monarchy and of a state which for decades had accepted a secondary position in both Germany and Europe. And yet the political virtuosity of this Pomeranian Junker made him the decisive influence in German political life and the arbiter of European diplomacy for nearly a quarter of a century.
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References
1 The author wishes to express his appreciation to the American Council of Learned Societies for a grant which made possible some of the research for this article. In the preparation of the manuscript he received helpful suggestions from Glenn Tinder.
2 On the character of this synthesis see the author's “Bismarck and German Nationalism,” American Historical Review, LX (04, 1955), 555 ff.Google Scholar
3 This term was coined by the German liberal publicist August Ludwig von Rochau in his Grundsätze der Realpolitik, angewendet auf die staatlichen Zustände Deutschlands (Stuttgart, 1853).Google Scholar
4 Quoted in Hearnshaw, F. J. C., The Social and Political Ideas of Some Representative Thinkers of the Age of Reaction and Reconstruction 1815–65 (London, 1932), p. 61.Google Scholar
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15 Ibid., XIV (1), 468, 549; I, 238; III, 148. On the relationship between politics and morality in Bismarck's thinking see Vossler, O., “Bismarck's Ethos,” Historische Zeitschrift, Vol. 171 (1951), 264 ff.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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17 The only previous attempt to evaluate this material in terms of Bismarck's Realpolitik is the inadequate one of the German civil servant, Brauer, A. v., “Bismarcks Staatskunst auf dem Gebiete der auswartigen Politik,” in von Poschinger, H., ed., Neues Bismarck-Jahrbuch (Vienna, 1911), I, 298–339.Google Scholar
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21 Ibid., XIII, 558.
22 Ibid., IX, 161; XIV (1), 483, 544; XIV (2), 752, 879; XIII, 304, 456–7.
23 Ibid., XIV (1), 249.
24 Ibid., XI, 46; XIII, 304.
25 Ibid., XIII, 468.
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29 Ibid., IX, 93, 420.
30 Ibid., IX, 90.
31 Ibid., IX, 399; to Hofmann; also XIII, 177.
32 Ibid., XIII, 468, to a delegation from Jena.
33 Ibid., IX, 93, to Memminger. See also III, 251, “Die Politik ist eine Wissenschaft der Relativen.
34 Ibid., IX, 90.
35 Ibid., IX, 93–4.
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38 Ibid., IX, 50.
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45 Egmont Zechlin was the first to give an adequate description of this strategy as Bismarck developed it in the fifties. Grundlegung der deutschen Grossmacht, pp. 88 ff.Google Scholar
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50 Although Steefel, Srbik, and Eyck have given good accounts of Bismarck's diplomacy in the Schleswig-Holstein question, it is impossible to comprehend fully the astonishing skill with which he maneuvered his way through and over the many obstacles in his way without reading the two great documentary collections which record the day to day diplomatic transactions in the Wilhelmstrasse. Friese, Chr. and others, eds., Die auswärtige Politik Preussens 1858–71 (Oldenburg, 1933–1945), Vol. IVGoogle Scholar, and von Srbik, H., ed., Quellen zur deutschen Politik Österreichs 1859–66 (Oldenburg, 1934–1938), Vol. III.Google Scholar
51 Werke, VII, 140Google Scholar. The pattern of political strategy evident in Bismarck's diplomacy of the fifties and sixties appears also in that of the seventies and eighties.
52 Bismarck's draft is printed in Binding, Karl, ed., Deutsche Staatsgrundgesetze in diplomatisch genauem Abdrucke (Leipzig, 1901), I, 75 ffGoogle Scholar. In an earlier and incomplete form it is printed in Werke, VI, 187Google Scholar ff. The best source in which to study the development of the constitution is: von Völlendorff, Otto, ed., “Deutsche Verfassungen und Verfassungsentwürfe,” Annalen des deutschen Reichs (1890), pp. 241–401.Google Scholar
53 It also did not provide for a central judiciary. There was no court to decide questions of constitutional interpretation. Cases of treason were to be handled by the superior court of the Hansa cities (Bremen, Hamburg, Lübeck).
54 It was originally intended, in fact, for Friedrich Karl von Savigny, the last Prussian delegate to the Frankfurt Diet.
55 Politische Geschichte des neuen deutschen Kaiserreiches (Frankfurt a. M., 1925–1930), I, 216–7.Google Scholar
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