European University Institute Library

Region and State in Nineteenth-Century Europe, Nation-building, Regional Identities and Separatism, edited by Joost Augusteijn and Eric Storm

Label
Region and State in Nineteenth-Century Europe, Nation-building, Regional Identities and Separatism, edited by Joost Augusteijn and Eric Storm
Language
eng
Main title
Region and State in Nineteenth-Century Europe
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
823717829
Responsibility statement
edited by Joost Augusteijn and Eric Storm
Series statement
ProQuest Ebook Central
Sub title
Nation-building, Regional Identities and Separatism
Table Of Contents
Cover; Contents; Acknowledgements; Notes on Contributors; 1 Introduction: Region and State; Part I: Transnational; 2 Historiographical Approaches to Sub-national Identities in Europe: A Reappraisal and Some Suggestions; 3 The Birth of Regionalism and the Crisis of Reason: France, Germany and Spain; Part II: Centralised Nation-States; 4 National Diversity, Regionalism and Decentralism in France; 5 Regionalism in Italy: A Critique; Part III: Continental Empires; 6 Regionalism, Federalism and Nationalism in the German Empire; 7 How to Run a Multilingual Society: Statehood, Administration and Regional Dynamics in Austria-Hungary, 1867-1914Part IV: Region, Nation, Empire; 8 The Empire, the Nation and the Homelands: Nineteenth-Century Spain's National Idea; 9 'A Mere Geographical Expression'? Scotland and Scottish Identity, c. 1890-1914; Part V: Competing Regional Movements; 10 Gaelic and Northumbrian: Separatism and Regionalism in the United Kingdom, 1890-1920; 11 Irish Nationalism and Unionism Between State, Region and Nation; 12 Nationalist Versus Regionalist? The Flemish and Walloon Movements in Belle époque BelgiumPart VI: Language and Religion; 13 The Consequences of Transport by Steam: Dutch Nationalism and Frisian Regionalism in the Nineteenth Century; 14 Inadvertent Allies: Catholicism and Regionalism in a German-Polish Borderland; 15 Conclusion: Transnational Patterns; Index
Classification
Content
Mapped to

Incoming Resources