The Spectre of Hegemony from the Centre: Germany's Neighbours and the Process of National Unification, 1830-1871

Location
WG12 - Aston Webb Building
Dates
Monday 25 March 2019 (12:00-14:00)

This is a joint event of the Birmingham Research Institute for History and Cultures (BRIHC) and the Institute for Germans Studies (IGS). All staff and students are welcome.

Speaker: Jacco Pekelder (Associate Professor in the history of International Relations, Utrecht University)

In 2021, a century and a half will have passed since Bismarck’s “Reichsgründung” fundamentally changed the European balance of power. It marked the end of a quest for German unity that had lasted at least four decades, and had, since the early 1830s, at times, been the central theme of European politics. In research, with most historians of international relations focused on the road from 1871 to the First World War, this era of emergent German power has so far received relatively little attention. This has obscured the fact that the rise of Germany around the middle of the nineteenth century not only triggered anxiety and fear from among Germany’s neighbours, but feelings of sympathy and hope as well. Many even felt peace and prosperity of their own peoples and of Europe as a whole might benefit from the realization of a unified Germany of some sort.

To help us understand these unexpected dynamics and the openness of the historical process, Dutch historian Jacco Pekelder will present his current book project. How did Germany’s neighbours react to the long process of unification, and how did observers from outside the German Confederation anticipate a continent with a unified, strong German state at its centre? Did the spectre of hegemony from Europe’s centre haunt them as much as it did later generations?

About the Speaker

Prof. Dr. Jacco Pekelder is Associate Professor in the History of International Relations at Utrecht University, the Netherlands, and Honorary Professor of Contemporary History of Western Europe at Saarland University, Saarbrücken, Germany. His publications deal with the dynamics of political violence, especially around left-wing terrorism in West Germany in the 1970s, and the history of Germany’s position in Europe since 1815. He is currently writing a book about the German question in the nineteenth century.