“Among continental Europeans, the Thirty Years War is etched in memory… A definitive account has been needed, and now Peter Wilson, one of Britain’s leading historians of Germany, has provided it. The Thirty Years War: Europe’s Tragedy is a history of prodigious erudition that manages to corral the byzantine complexity of the Thirty Years War into a coherent narrative. It also offers a bracingly novel interpretation. Historians typically portray the Thirty Years War as the last and goriest of Europe’s religious wars—a final bonfire of the zealots before the cooler age of enlightened statecraft. Mr. Wilson severely qualifies this conventional wisdom. It turns out that the quintessential war of religion was scarcely one at all… Wilson’s masterful account of the Thirty Years War is a reminder that war, and peace, are almost never the offspring of conviction alone.”—Jeffrey Collins, The Wall Street Journal
“[The Thirty Years War] succeeds brilliantly. It is huge both in its scene-setting and its unfolding narrative detail… It is to Wilson’s credit that he can both offer the reader a detailed account of this terrible and complicated war and step back to give due summaries. His scholarship seems to me remarkable, his prose light and lovely, his judgments fair. This is a heavyweight book, no doubt. Sometimes, though, the very best of them have to be.”—Paul Kennedy, The Sunday Times
“Only in retrospect did the strife acquire coherence as the Thirty Years’ War, and Wilson incisively cuts through its several phases to recount the objectives and options of the warring parties… Confidently argued, clearly written, Wilson’s history is superb coverage of this pivotal period in European history.”—Gilbert Taylor, Booklist
“Wilson’s monumental study captures both the complexities of the political and military transformations and the level of brutality that the endemic struggles unleashed… This will be the defining study of the Thirty Years War for the next generation.”—P.G. Wallace, Choice
“In his monumental study of the causes and the consequences of the Thirty Years War, Wilson challenges traditional interpretations of the war as primarily religious. He explores instead the political, social, economic as well as religious forces behind the conflict… Wilson then provides a meticulous account of the war, introducing some of its great personalities: the crafty General Wallenstein; the Swedish king Gustavus Adolphus, who preserved his state through canny political treaties and military operations; and Hapsburg archdukes Rudolf and Matthias, the brothers whose quarrels marked the future of Bohemia, Austria and Hungary. By the war’s end, ravaged as all the states were by violence, disease and destruction, Europe was more stable, but with sovereign states rather than empires, and with a secular order. Wilson’s scholarship and attention to both the details and the larger picture make his the definitive history of the Thirty Years War.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Peter Wilson’s book is a major work, the first new history of the Thirty Years’ War in a generation. It is a fascinating, brilliantly written attempt to explain a compelling series of events, which tore the heart out of Europe.”—The Times


The Thirty Years War
Europe's Tragedy
Book Details
PAPERBACK
$22.50 • £16.95 • €20.30
ISBN 9780674062313
Publication: October 2011
1024 pages
6-3/8 x 9-1/4 inches
8 color illustrations, 8 halftones, 22 maps
United States and its dependencies only
Awards
- 2011 Distinguished Book Award, European or Other Military History Category, Society for Military History
- A Choice Outstanding Academic Title of 2010
- An Atlantic Books of the Year Runner-Up, 2009
- An Independent Best History Book of 2009


