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Citizens, Soldiers and National Armies : Military Service in France and Germany, 1789–1830

Part of the War, History and Politics series
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This book examines the creation of ‘national armies’ through compulsory military service in France and Prussia during the French Revolution and the Prussian Reform Period.

The French Revolution tried to establish military and political structures in which the armed forces and society would merge.

In order to ensure that the army would never become a means of oppression against the people, the whole population should thus ‘be’ the army.

Defeated by the enormous military potential that these new political settings had unchained in France, Prussia adapted the French innovations to its own needs, thus laying the basis for its contributions to the victories of the coalition troops in 1813-15.

Conscription had implications that went beyond the purely military sphere and involved assumptions about the nature of the state and its relationship to its citizens.

It was the material basis of Napoleon’s campaigns and of the German ‘wars of national liberation’ of 1813-15, before becoming a cornerstone of the Prussian Reforms and the creation of a civil society ‘from above’.

Military service has therefore been one of the most essential and contradictory institutions of the modern nation-state.

Citizens, Soldiers and National Armies will be of interest to historians of modern Europe, military historians and students of intellectual history in general.

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Product Details
Routledge
1138873462 / 9781138873469
Paperback / softback
10/04/2015
United Kingdom
English
272 pages
24 cm