Book description
The seventeen months from April 1814 to August 1815 were an
extraordinary period in European history; a period which saw two sieges
of Paris, a complete revision of Europe's political frontiers, an
international Congress set up in Vienna, civil war in Italy and
international war in Belgium. Gregor Dallas tells the story of these
days through the perspectives of three very different European cities:
the great metropolis of London, post-revolutionary Paris and baroque
Vienna. The writing is almost cinematic in its power to evoke and bring
to life the Europe of Tolstoy: the ebb and flow of power, of armies and
of peoples across Europe's northern plains. Working essentially from
primary sources, Dallas is as interested in the weather conditions
before battle as in the way cartoonists reacted to court intrigues and
fashions. It is also Europe seen through the eyes of its central
players: Talleyrand, who has served nearly every French regime since the
Revolution of 1789; Metternich, who devises new plans for a 'Germany'
that does not yet exist and for a 'Europe' that remains devided;
Wellington, who reveals himself a diplomat as well as a soldier; Tsar
Alexander, an idealist seeking to impose a uniform plan for all Europe;
and 'Boney' himself, who has his own ideal of Europe and, though
banished to Elba, does not abandon his dream to realise it. Gregor
Dallas was born in London in 1948, attended Sherborne School in Dorset,
received a BA at the University of California at Berkeley and a PhD at
Rutgers University in New Jersey. He is interested in peasants as well
as presidents and kings. His first book was on rural life in France, his
second on Clemenceau, the French war leader. He and his French wife live
on the outskirts of Paris, close to the chateau of Madame de Maintenon,
mistress then wife of Louis XIV.