Description
Wilhelm II: Prince and Emperor, 1859-1900 concentrates on Wilhelm's youth. As Cecil shows, the future ruler's Anglo-German genealogy, his education, and his subsequent service as an officer in the Prussian army proved to be unfortunate legacies in shaping Wilhelm's behavior and ideas.
Throughout his thirty-year reign, Wilhelm's connection with his subjects was tenuous. He surrounded himself with a small coterie of persons drawn from the government, the military, and elite society, most of whom were valued not for their ability but for their loyalty to the crown. They, in turn, contrived to keep Wilhelm isolated from outside influences, learned to be accomplished in catering to his prejudices, and strengthened his conviction that the government should be composed only of those who agreed with him. The day-to-day conduct of Germany's affairs was left in the hands of these loyal followers, for the Kaiser himself did not at all enjoy work. Rejoicing instead in pageantry and the superficial trappings of authority, he was particular about what he did and what he read, eliminating anything that was unpleasant, difficult, or tedious. He never learned to listen, to reason, or to make decisions in a sound, informed manner; he was customarily inclined to act solely on the basis of his personal feelings.
Many people believed him to be mad. Even courtiers who admired Wilhelm recognized that he was responsible for the diplomatic embarrassment in which Germany found itself by 1914 and that the Kaiser's maladroit behavior endangered the prestige of the Hohenzollern crown. His is the story of a bizarre and incapable sovereign who never doubted that he possessed both genius and divine inspiration.
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About the Author
Lamar Cecil is author of four books on imperial Germany, including Wilhelm II: Prince and Emperor, 1859-1900 (UNC Press, 1989), which won the 1991 Book Prize of the German Studies Association. He is William R. Kenan, Jr., Professor of History at Washington and Lee University.
Reviews
A scholarly work in the best sense. It is solidly based on the sources . . . [and] the style is clear and vigorous.--Journal of Modern History|""Readers interested in modern German history will thoroughly enjoy Cecil's well-balanced and lively account, which substantiates the commonly accepted assessment of the Kaiser.""--Choice|""Extensive archival research and an unusually thorough knowledge of the literature have combined to produce a rich political narrative of the first half of the Kaiser's life.""--Peter Paret
Book Information
ISBN 9780807865187
Author Lamar Cecil
Format Paperback
Page Count 488
Imprint The University of North Carolina Press
Publisher The University of North Carolina Press
Weight(grams) 333g