Republic of Letters
Curing The Sick Man
Curing The Sick Man
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This book uses the embassy of Sir Henry Bulwer at Constantinople as a prism through which to examine British policy towards the 'Eastern Question' in the mid-nineteenth century. It is concerned with the 'politics of foreign policy' and the role of the diplomat in the decision-making process.
Table of Contents Acknowledgements Glossary Dramatis Personae Forward
Introduction Chapter 1: Turning away from that den of low intrigue: The Conservative approach to the 'Eastern Question'.
Chapter 2: Accepting anything less dangerous than a revolution: The Ottoman Empire and the Austro-French war of 1859.
Chapter 3: Leaving behind Malmesbury's 'milk and water'?: The Liberal approach to the 'Eastern Question'.
Chapter 4: Envying the flowery couch of Naples: Bulwer and the Constantinople embassy.
Chapter 5: Evidently bent upon doing mischief: The Russian challenge of 1860.
Chapter 6: Going hand over head: Britain, France and the Syrian massacres of 1860.
Chapter 7: Thriving under all the complications?: Scandal, division and disappointment, 1860-61.
Chapter 8: Evacuation by great persistence: Getting the French out of Ottoman territory.
Chapter 9: United and determined action?: Britain, Russia and the Balkans, 1861.
Chapter 10: Returning Turkey to its proper position?: The accession of Sultan Abdulaziz.
Chapter 11: Showing skill, promptitude, judgement and conciliation: Bulwer and the bombardment of Belgrade, 1862.
Chapter 12: A nation in favour of the Mahammedan barbarism?: The anti-Ottoman Parliamentary and press attack of 1863.
Chapter 13: Hard battles to fight: The Romanian and Egyptian Questions, 1863-64.
Chapter 14: Undoing everything de Redcliffe had done?: The Porte's attack on the Protestant missionaries, 1864.
Chapter 15: Letting the rest of the world go to pieces: The beginning of the end of 'Palmerstonian Orientalism'.
Conclusion Bibliography Index
About the Author(s)/Editor(s)
Laurence Guymer, Ph.D. (2010) in History, University of East Anglia, is a Junior Fellow at Winchester College and Research Associate at the University of East Anglia. He is interested primarily in British foreign policy in the nineteenth century. His most recent publication is A Question Presenting a Host of Difficulties: Sir Henry Bulwer, Viscount Stratford de Redcliffe and the Danubian Principalities, 1856-58 (History, 2011).
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