Early Modern Diplomacy

Handbook on Early Modern European Diplomacy
published at DeGruyter:
doi.org/10.1515/9783110672008

editors: @dorotheegoetze & @LenaOetzel

#earlymodern #diplomacy #Europe & pandas of course

Early Modern Diplomacy boosted:
Dr Bram van Leuveren (he/they)bramvanleuveren@akademienl.social
2025-04-16

Wist je dat eten en drinken een geheime rol speelden in Nederlandse diplomatie van de 16de tot 18de eeuw? 🍷 🧆 Ik schreef er een bijdrage over voor het nieuwe nummer van 𝘝𝘪𝘳𝘵𝘶𝘴.

Kom te weten hoe een Engelse graaf in 1587 'schurfthoofden' 🤢 at in Alkmaar, hoe de koningin-moeder van Frankrijk in 1638 een snufje nootmuskaat 🌶️ proefde op het Oost-Indisch Huis in Amsterdam en hoe de Hollandse stadhouder in 1781 letterlijk de hond in de pot vond 🍲.

👉 research-portal.uu.nl/ws/files.

Early Modern Diplomacy boosted:
2025-04-11

#CfA Forschungsstipendium 2025 des MWN Osteuropa

📍 ein- bis dreimonatige Forschungsstipendien für Archivrecherchen zu historischen Themen in den postsowjetischen Staaten (außer Russland und Belarus) sowie in Finnland
📅 Zeitraum: 1. August bis 31. Dezember 2025

🔗maxweberstiftung.de/aktuelles/

Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-11

It's time for us to take a break, get some rest and eat Easter eggs. We wish you a good and hopefully relaxing time!
We will be back in May with more #emdiplomacy content, so stay tuned!

Picture of a big panda. Its head rests between two branches of a tree.

Image by <a href="https://pixabay.com/users/cimberley-2163857/?utm_source=link-attribution&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=image&utm_content=1236875">Cim</a> from <a href="https://pixabay.com//?utm_source=link-attribution&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=image&utm_content=1236875">Pixabay</a>
Early Modern Diplomacy boosted:
DHd-Verband (moderator)DHd@fedihum.org
2025-04-10

Wir schreiben erneut fünf #Reisestipendien zu je 500€ aus, die nicht an die Teilnahme an der DHd-Jahreskonferenz gebunden sind, sondern die für die Teilnahme einer DH-relevanten Tagung verwendet werden können. 📣 🎉
Alle Informationen & Bedingungen für die Reisestipendien gibt es unter: digitalhumanities.de/2025/04/0

Auch hier freuen wir uns auf zahlreiche Bewerbungen! Diese können bis zum 30.04.2025 eingereicht werden.
^vw

#DigitalHumanities

Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-10

@histodons @historikerinnen @earlymodern

If we caught your interest with this thread, we have some reading recommendations.
On Madame de Maintenon we can recommend the biography by Mark Bryant, Queen of Versailles: Madame de Maintenon, Fist Lady of Louis XIV’s France, London/Chicago 2020
as well as the PhD thesis by Corina Bastian who focused especially on #emdiplomacy: Corina Bastian. Verhandeln in Briefen. Frauen in der höfischen Diplomatie des frühen 18. Jahrhunderts, Köln u. a. 2013.

On Marie Adélaïde de Savoie we can recommend the biography by Elisabetta Lurgo, Marie Adélaïde de Savoie – Duchesse de Bourgogne, mère de Louis XV., Paris 2024. (7/7)

#emdiplomacy #Versailles #emdiplomats

Title cover of Mark Bryant, Queen of Versailles: Madame de Maintenon, Fist Lady of Louis XIV’s France, London/Chicago 2020Title cover of Corina Bastian. Verhandeln in Briefen. Frauen in der höfischen Diplomatie des frühen 18. Jahrhunderts, Köln u. a. 2013.Title cover of: Elisabetta Lurgo, Marie Adélaïde de Savoie – Duchesse de Bourgogne, mère de Louis XV., Paris 2024
Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-10

@histodons @historikerinnen @earlymodern

If you browse through the homepage of the castle of Versailles you do find more detailed information about Madame de Maintenon, but visiting the palace only with an audioguide at your side as most tourists do, you get a very limited and outdated view of the role of female political and diplomatic actors. (6/7)

en.chateauversailles.fr/discov

#Versailles #France #LouisXIV #emdiplomats #emdiplomacy

Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-10

@histodons @historikerinnen @earlymodern

Another woman that played an important role at Versailles was Françoise d’Aubigné, Marquise de Maintenon. She was first mistress and later wife of Louis XIV, although this marriage was never openly acknowledged. Nevertheless, she was a close confidant and advisor to the king and everybody knew about her political influence. The audioguide doesn’t mention this. At several points it describes how Louis XIV discussed politics with his (male) advisors in this or that room. Madame de Maintenon isn’t mentioned in these contexts. She is only discussed, when talking about Louis’ XIV free time and that he enjoyed going for extended walks with her. That they might have discussed politics isn’t mentioned at all, neither that she was an important political and diplomatic actor at the French court. (5/7)

#France #Versailles #LouisXIV #emdiplomacy #earlymodern

Portrait of: 
Pierre Mignard I: Françoise d'Aubigné, marquise de Maintenon (1635-1719), circa 1694, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pierre_Mignard_-_Fran%C3%A7oise_d%27Aubign%C3%A9,_marquise_de_Maintenon_(1694).jpg
Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-10

@histodons @historikerinnen @earlymodern

Whether this is true or not, the position of the princess was always that of a broker between her family of origin and the family of her husband. They were in a way #emdiplomats. That was not always an easy position, as both sides expected on the one hand that she acted as an intermediary between the two families and on the other hand that she had to be loyal to both sides which of course could lead to conflicts. How the women handled this situation was very different, depending also on the political constellation between the two dynasties. In the case of Marie Adélaïde de Savoie it is important to acknowledge this position, instead of creating the image of a woman who overstepped her competences. When reporting home to her father, she might have enraged Louis XIV, but she fulfilled the expectations of her family of origin. (4/7)

#emdiplomats #emdiplomacy #France #Savoy #earlymodern

Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-10

@histodons @historikerinnen @earlymodern

One of these stories was about Marie Adélaïde de Savoie (1685-1712) who was married to Louis de Bourbon, the grandson of Louis XIV. She was also the mother of the later Louis XV. She came to Versailles when she was only eleven and the audioguide tells you that the old Louis XIV really enjoyed her lively company. When she died quite young at the age of 26 of measels, her papers were sorted and it was discovered that she had regularly reported about court politics to her father the duke of Savoy. According to the story, Louis XIV had been enraged and called her a traitor. (3/7)

#emdiplomacy #Versailles #LouisXIV #earlymodern #France #Savoy

Portrait de Marie Adélaïde de Savoie, Duchess of Burgundy (1685-1712), circa 1698, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Marie_Ad%C3%A9la%C3%AFde_of_Savoy_as_depicted_circa_1697_(wearing_Fleur-de-lis_as_Duchess_of_Burgundy)_by_a_member_of_the_%C3%89cole_Fran%C3%A7aise.jpg
Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-10

@histodons @historikerinnen @earlymodern

Explaining the architecture as well as courtly life under Louis XIV. the audioguide enriched the historical facts with some details and stories from his life. Altogether, very few women appeared in this audioguide and if they did they were presented in a very unpolitical way. (2/7)

#Versailles #LouisXIV #earlymodern #histodons

Hall of mirrors in versailles. You see the hugely and gold decorated ceiling as well as lots of chandeliers.
Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-10

A few weeks ago one of editors @LenaOetzel visited Versailles for the first time. Listening to the audioguide she felt the strong need to talk about #earlymodern female diplomatic/political actors and how they are represented in popular culture (or at least in this audioguide...).
True to the motto that every month is #WomensHistoryMonth, here is a thread about the women of Versailles - or at least two of them. (1/7)

#emdiplomacy #emdiplomats #Versailles #earlymodern
#France #EarlyModernEurope
@histodons @historikerinnen @earlymodern

View of the gardens of Versailles on a cloudy day.
Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-04

@historikerinnen @histodons @earlymodern

In order to analyse the diplomatic activities of the members of the #emdiplomat’s household, research has to shift focus with regard to #emdiplomacysSources. It is not enough to evaluate diplomatic file material, which rarely mentions these individuals. Instead, research must increasingly resort to first person documents. (10/10)

#emdiplomacy #emdiplomats #history #histodons

Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-04

@historikerinnen @histodons @earlymodern

Lower-ranking envoys often resided in place for decades and thus built networks that enabled them to compensate for the disadvantages of their low status. Their lack of access to the ruler was compensated for by their contacts with members of the court.
Neither have these lower-ranking agents and residents nor their networking and its importance for the functioning of #emdiplomacy been researched in detail, as Externbring and Ferber highlight. The same is true for the #emdiplomat's household. (9/10)

#emdiplomacy #earlymodern #EarlyModernEurope #history

Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-04

@historikerinnen @histodons @earlymodern

Diplomatic missions were ambiguous, on the one hand, diplomatic service could be seen as a test if one was suited for higher offices at court. On the other hand, there are examples of #emdiplomats perceiving lengthy missions as a removal from the centre of power.
Permanent absence from the home court became more frequent during the 18th century but was rare during the 16th and 17th centuries due to the yet not developed institutionalization of the legation system. (8/10)

#emdiplomacy #earlymodern #history

Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-04

@historikerinnen @histodons @earlymodern

An institutionalised education for #emdiplomats was lacking. Normally, their recruitment was part of an administrative or courtly career. Depending on the nature of the mission, the envoy had a legal education or he combined high birth and the master’s favour. (7/10)

#emdiplomacy #earlymodern #EarlyModernEurope #history

Entrance of the palace of the ecclesiastical Academy (16th century). Piazza della Minerva, Rome, Italy.
The papal Academy was founded in 1701 and remained for a long time the only diplomatic academy.
Jastrow, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Palazzo_dell_accademia_ecclesiastica_Roma.jpg
Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-04

@historikerinnen @histodons @earlymodern

#emdiplomats were not bound by their nationalities, quite the opposite, it was normal for them to serve foreign sovereigns with exception of the papal diplomatic service which mostly relied on Italians.
Moving between courts fostered desirable networks between the #emdiplomats & their colleagues but as the members of the courts. Although the comparatively low loyalty of the #emdiplomats hampered community building with the latter as Externbrink and Ferber emphasise. (6/10)

#emdiplomacy #histodons #EarlyModern

Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-04

@historikerinnen @histodons

Although the transition from medieval to #emdiplomacy was far more fluid than described in older research, the emergence of a new type of political and diplomatic actor can be characterized as specific for the 16th century: the learned councilors.
Over the 16th and 17th centuries an increasing number of diplomatic actors could be seen, while the foreign politics and thereby also foreign relations became more and more monopolised by the sovereigns.
#emdiplomats were mostly recruted from the nobility due to their rank which should reflect the prestige of the master appropriately. They were often accompanied by jurists from the bourgoisie who were educated at humanist schools & therefore were international experienced. (5/10)

#EarlyModernEurope #EarlyModern #history
@earlymodern

Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-04

@historikerinnen @histodons

Magnus Ulrich Ferber is a specialist for 16th century’s humanism and the republic of letters. He also edited a volume within the Acta Pacis Westphalicae series and has therefore great knowledge on the Westphalian Peace congress. His expertise on the republic of letters and diplomacy is especially helpful, as both spheres were often connected.
In a few months his co-edited volume on album amicorum will be published. (4/10)

wallstein-verlag.de/9783835358

Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-04

@historikerinnen @histodons

Externbrink is professor at @fernunihagen. He is specialisied in early modern history of southwestern Europe during the 17th and 18th centuries and has a certain interest for French #emdiplomacy as documented in several publications. He recently published a monograph on Louis XIV (in German). (3/10)

brill.com/display/title/57502?

Early Modern Diplomacyemdiplomacy@hcommons.social
2025-04-04

@historikerinnen @histodons

Our 2024 #emdiplomacy #AdventCalendar offered some glimpses into different #emdiplomats careers by introducing different diplomatic actors.
The #handbook takes a different approach by offering some generalizations. Our authors Sven Externbrink and Magnus Ferber take a closer look on the career paths of #emdiplomats as well as their social, national and educational backgrounds which suggest that the group of offical diplomatic actors in this age appears to be quite homogeneous. (2/10)

hcommons.social/@emdiplomacy/1

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