1999
DOI: 10.1177/002200949903400201
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Dilemmas of Empire 1850–1918. Power, Territory, Identity

Abstract: In the period 1850-1918 two types of empire existed. The first is the one familiar to modern students of imperialism. The West European maritime empires had their origins in the sixteenth century and by 1900 were the world's leading industrial and financial powers. Britain was the model empire of this type, with the French and Dutch as lesser variations on the same theme. By 1914, Germany and the USA, though in important ways different from the classic West European maritime empires, could nevertheless be cons… Show more

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Cited by 47 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…In spite of the methodological difficulties attached to comparing maritime and land-based empires such endeavours have repeatedly been suggested and asked for (McGranahan and Stoler, 2007;Miller, 1997;Ruthner, 2001 11. Lieven (1999), 165. A similar line of thought is followed by Cooper (2004) who compares the ratio between 'incorporation and differentiation' within empires (p. 269).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In spite of the methodological difficulties attached to comparing maritime and land-based empires such endeavours have repeatedly been suggested and asked for (McGranahan and Stoler, 2007;Miller, 1997;Ruthner, 2001 11. Lieven (1999), 165. A similar line of thought is followed by Cooper (2004) who compares the ratio between 'incorporation and differentiation' within empires (p. 269).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Russia's rulers felt vulnerable in their relations with the West, and the defeat in the Crimean War exacerbated the feeling of inferiority. 25 Neumann ascribed Russia's difficulties in remaining an equal partner for European states to its inability to meet the nineteenth-century standards of internal governance. Such inability made it difficult for Russia to be recognised as a great power.…”
Section: Russia's Absence In the Debates About The Standardmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most identified with the monarchy, which did have a hold on the popular imagination (Lieven 1998, p. 256;Wortman 2000Wortman , 2003, but Russian nationalism was fractured and incomplete, impeded by the fact that Russia was, first and foremost, an empire, which contributed to a weakened sense of the Russian core (Rogger 1962;Hosking 1997;Szporluk 1997, pp. 65-66;Lieven 1999Lieven , 2000Miller 2004).…”
Section: The Russian Bolsheviksmentioning
confidence: 99%