If, like most people, you know little more about the Holy Roman Empire than Voltaire’s bon mot—that it ‘was neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire’—then this is the book for you. In his masterly study of the original ‘1,000-year Reich’ (Hitler’s was merely a grotesque caricature), the Oxford professor Peter H. Wilson condenses a great deal of modern scholarship while wearing his learning lightly… Wilson’s account is distinctive in treating the empire neither as a sequence of obstacles on the path to national self-determination, nor as a blueprint for the European Union. Instead, he seeks to understand how and why it worked.
Sunday Times - Daniel Johnson
Hugely impressive… Wilson is an assured guide through the millennium-long labyrinth of papal–imperial relations.
Literary Review - John Adamson
An ambitious, sprawling tome that seeks to rehabilitate the Holy Roman Empire's reputation by re-examining its place within the larger sweep of European history…Heart of Europe succeeds splendidly in rescuing the empire from its critics.
Wall Street Journal - Mark Molesky
Distils in over a thousand pages the millennium from Charlemagne to Napoleon. It is indispensable to any serious library.
Daily Telegraph - Simon Heffer
In his remarkable book, Wilson argues that a broad and deep perspective on the old Reich—broader and deeper than those available to either Charles IV or Goethe—discloses a fundamentally positive vision of that much-maligned institution. Wilson has set himself a staggering task, but it is one at which he succeeds heroically. Over the course of nearly a thousand pages, Wilson recounts with unflagging lucidity the history of an empire spanning continental Europe from the North Sea to the Vistula and from the Baltic to southern Italy, which endured for more than a millennium, between Charlemagne and Napoleon. Wilson does more. He tracks the medieval Empire back to its ancient roots, and he excavates its subterranean modern afterlife. His book amounts to a panoramic vision of pre-modern Europe, expanding outward from the vast and varied landscapes of the Reich…Despite its vast sweep, this is remarkably fine-grained history.
Times Literary Supplement - Len Scales
Wilson has given [the Holy Roman Empire] its longest and most readable one-volume history in the modern era.
Christian Science Monitor - Steve Donoghue
Superb… Wilson attempts something very ambitious—to treat the history by categories… Wilson’s history represents the culmination of a lifetime of research and thought, and in its scope and depth of detail is an astonishing scholarly achievement. The author moves from the grand themes to detail with felicity…Wilson uses a relaxed and easy prose, turning antiquated and odd pieces of evidence or description into approachable and comprehensible explanations… [What] pleasure that a massive work of scholarship like Wilson’s can give the conscientious reader… This book [is] a very stimulating read.
The Spectator - Jonathan Steinberg
Engrossing… Even those who know the empire well will read this book with profit… Peter Wilson is to be congratulated on writing the only English-language work that deals with the empire from start to finish and on the basis of staggering erudition.
The Times - Brendan Simms
If, like most people, you know little more about the Holy Roman Empire than Voltaire’s bon mot—that it ‘was neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire’—then this is the book for you. In his masterly study of the original ‘1,000-year Reich’ (Hitler’s was merely a grotesque caricature), the Oxford professor Peter H. Wilson condenses a great deal of modern scholarship while wearing his learning lightly… Wilson’s account is distinctive in treating the empire neither as a sequence of obstacles on the path to national self-determination, nor as a blueprint for the European Union. Instead, he seeks to understand how and why it worked. -- Daniel Johnson Sunday Times Hugely impressive… Wilson is an assured guide through the millennium-long labyrinth of papal–imperial relations. -- John Adamson Literary Review Superb… Wilson attempts something very ambitious—to treat the history by categories… Wilson’s history represents the culmination of a lifetime of research and thought, and in its scope and depth of detail is an astonishing scholarly achievement. The author moves from the grand themes to detail with felicity…Wilson uses a relaxed and easy prose, turning antiquated and odd pieces of evidence or description into approachable and comprehensible explanations… [What] pleasure that a massive work of scholarship like Wilson’s can give the conscientious reader… This book [is] a very stimulating read. -- Jonathan Steinberg The Spectator Engrossing… Even those who know the empire well will read this book with profit… Peter Wilson is to be congratulated on writing the only English-language work that deals with the empire from start to finish and on the basis of staggering erudition. -- Brendan Simms The Times Wilson has given [the Holy Roman Empire] its longest and most readable one-volume history in the modern era. -- Steve Donoghue Christian Science Monitor An ambitious, sprawling tome that seeks to rehabilitate the Holy Roman Empire's reputation by re-examining its place within the larger sweep of European history…Heart of Europe succeeds splendidly in rescuing the empire from its critics. -- Mark Molesky Wall Street Journal In his remarkable book, Wilson argues that a broad and deep perspective on the old Reich—broader and deeper than those available to either Charles IV or Goethe—discloses a fundamentally positive vision of that much-maligned institution. Wilson has set himself a staggering task, but it is one at which he succeeds heroically. Over the course of nearly a thousand pages, Wilson recounts with unflagging lucidity the history of an empire spanning continental Europe from the North Sea to the Vistula and from the Baltic to southern Italy, which endured for more than a millennium, between Charlemagne and Napoleon. Wilson does more. He tracks the medieval Empire back to its ancient roots, and he excavates its subterranean modern afterlife. His book amounts to a panoramic vision of pre-modern Europe, expanding outward from the vast and varied landscapes of the Reich…Despite its vast sweep, this is remarkably fine-grained history. -- Len Scales Times Literary Supplement Distils in over a thousand pages the millennium from Charlemagne to Napoleon. It is indispensable to any serious library. -- Simon Heffer Daily Telegraph An impressive and inspiring magnum opus that tells the history of the Holy Roman Empire from its medieval beginnings to its end in the nineteenth century…Wilson gives an overview on the history of its perception in the following centuries and its role in modern political debates. What is even more impressive is Wilson’s approach to the book’s structure: instead of telling the empire’s history chronologically, he chooses an analytical outline. In this way, he points out connections as well as breaks between the medieval and the early modern empire…[A] tour de force. -- Lena Oetzel Austrian History Yearbook
2015-11-04 Wilson (History/Univ. of Hull; The Thirty Years War: Europe's Tragedy, 2009, etc.) delves into the makeup, structure, and lands of the Holy Roman Empire, which lasted "more than a millennium, well over twice as long as imperial Rome itself." Beginning with the coronation of Charlemagne in 800, the empire lasted until the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars brought about its dissolution. The author takes Voltaire to task with his comment that it was neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire, and he meticulously explains how it was structured and ruled. The Holy Roman Empire was unlike any other, defined by countless autonomous kingdoms led by an emperor with a divine mission. The emperor combined secular and ecclesiastical roles, and he existed as a protector of the papacy—but not a master. The empire lacked the things that constituted a single political core, such as a stable heartland, a capital city, central political institutions, or even a single "nation." The Reichstag, representing the imperial estates, not the general population, had a broader remit than other countries, enacting law codes, military regulations, and policy implementation. The author avoids chronological narration, arguing that the empire never had a linear development. He traces the power and influence of the imperial church system and the educated clergy as well as the lords' power over clerical appointments. As princes gained power, structure switched to a status hierarchy, persistent and increasingly rigid. To explain the details of this nebulous empire ruled by autonomous princes, Wilson takes thoroughness to a painful threshold. Many aspects can only be pinpointed with semantics. The author's scholarship is unassailable, and his writing ability is clean and readable, but the subject is just too convoluted and even tedious to readers without deep historical background knowledge of this enormous federation. An encyclopedic reference work to be consulted but likely not completely read by anyone other than fellow academics.