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SCHNEID, FREDERICK C (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   082806


Kings, clients and satellites in the Napoleonic imperium / Schneid, Frederick C   Journal Article
Schneid, Frederick C Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract Napoleon shaped his Empire with the expansion of dynastic possessions, the cultivation of princely clientele and the establishment of satellite and allied states. He built his imperium on the foundation of historic French relationships. This expansion began with the Revolutionary Republic and achieved its fullest extent under the Empire. Expansion was not pursued as a universal principle, but instead, each state became a part of a grand strategic objective related to respective enemies. In some cases, states served as buffers between France and their immediate enemies, but shortly thereafter served a dual role as offensive and defensive components of the Republic, and later Napoleonic Empire.
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2
ID:   116778


Well-coordinated affair: Franco-Piedmontese war planning in 1859 / Schneid, Frederick C   Journal Article
Schneid, Frederick C Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract The American Civil War (1861-1865) and the Wars of German Unification (1864-1871) have overshadowed the military history of the Second War of Italian Unification (1859-1861). Yet, this war witnessed the integral use of railroads and steam-powered navies to achieve military victory. The histories immediately following the war purposely obscured the extensive military planning and the premeditation of the Franco-Piedmontese general staffs. The Second War of Italian Unification should be given greater attention as one of the first "modern" wars of the industrial age.
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