PublishedOxford University Press, August 2012 |
ISBN9780199642427 |
FormatSoftcover, 600 pages |
Dimensions23.3cm × 15.6cm × 4.5cm |
A political genius who remade Europe and united Germany between 1862 and 1890 by the sheer power of his great personality, Otto von Bismarck 'made' Germany but never 'ruled' it. He transformed Europe like Napoleon before and Hitler after him but with neither their control of the state nor command of great armies. He was and remained a royal servant. This new biography explores the greatness and limits of a huge and ultimately destructive self. It uses the diaries
and letters of his contemporaries to explore the most remarkable figure of the nineteenth century, a man who never said a dull thing or wrote a slack sentence. A political genius who combined creative
and destructive traits, generosity and pettiness, tolerance and ferocious enmity, courtesy and rudeness - in short, not only the most important nineteenth-century statesman but by far the most entertaining.