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The Seven Years War in Europe by Franz A.J. Szabo
The Seven Years War in Europe by Franz A.J. Szabo







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The Seven Years War in Europe by Franz A.J. Szabo

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The Seven Years War in Europe by Franz A.J. Szabo

Get help with access Institutional accessĪccess to content on Oxford Academic is often provided through institutional subscriptions and purchases. It is for the east-central European theater that the author's mastery of the sources and the literature is particularly impressive. While the theater of war in western Germany, where Britain-Hanover and its German allies were struggling to hold the superior French forces in check, is not altogether forgotten, Szabo's focus is clearly on the bloody battlefields in Bohemia, Saxony, Silesia, and Brandenburg-Prussia, where, surprisingly, the anti-Prussian coalition failed to overcome Frederick II. With this at times excessively detailed though highly readable study, Szabo fills an important lacuna in historical research and writing on the Seven Years' War, which in recent decades has suffered from a one-sided scholarly concentration on its maritime and colonial aspects. Szabo's treatment of the Seven Years' War in continental Europe takes up more than 500 pages.

The Seven Years War in Europe by Franz A.J. Szabo

Anderson needed hardly more than 200 pages for his survey of the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–1748), Franz A. Recent contributions to the series are no longer concise textbooks for a student readership but full-blown scholarly publications, voluminous, heavily footnoted.…and expensive. Longman's “Modern Wars in Perspective” series has come a long way since the publication of its first volumes in the early 1990s.









The Seven Years War in Europe by Franz A.J. Szabo