A History of Modern Europe, 1792-1878 by Charles Alan Fyffe

(10 User reviews)   4921
By Ava Marino Posted on Dec 26, 2025
In Category - Historical Travel
Fyffe, Charles Alan, 1845-1892 Fyffe, Charles Alan, 1845-1892
English
Hey, if you've ever wondered how Europe went from powdered wigs and kings to steam engines and nation-states in less than a century, this is your book. Fyffe takes you on a wild ride through the chaos that followed the French Revolution. It's not just about dates and treaties—it's about the explosive clash between old-world monarchs and the new, radical idea that people could govern themselves. Think of it as the origin story for modern Europe, full of ambition, betrayal, and ideas powerful enough to shatter empires. A surprisingly gripping read that connects the dots from Napoleon to the world we live in now.
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recent date, but the period of seventy years is surely unnecessarily long. Public interests could not be prejudiced, nor could individuals be even remotely affected, by the freest examination of the papers of 1820 or 1830. The London documents of 1814-1815 are of various degrees of interest and importance. Those relating to the Congress of Vienna are somewhat disappointing. Taken all together, they add less to our knowledge on the one or two points still requiring elucidation than the recently-published correspondence of Talleyrand with Louis XVIII. The despatches from Italy are on the other hand of great value, proving, what I believe was not established before, that the Secret Treaty of 1815, whereby Austria gained a legal right to prevent any departure from absolute Government at Naples, was communicated to the British Ministry and received its sanction. This sanction explains the obscure and embarrassed language of Castlereagh in 1820, which in its turn gave rise to the belief in Italy that England was more deeply committed to Austria than it actually was, and probably occasioned the forgery of the pretended Treaty of July 27, 1813, exposed in vol. i. of this work, p. 538, 2nd edit. [3] The papers from France and Spain are also interesting, though not establishing any new conclusions. While regretting that I have not been able to use the London archives later than 1815, I believe that it is nevertheless possible, without recourse to unpublished papers, to write the history of the succeeding thirty years with substantial correctness. There exist in a published form, apart from documents printed officially, masses of first-hand material of undoubtedly authentic character, such as the great English collection known by the somewhat misleading name of Wellington Despatches, New Series; or again, the collection printed as an appendix to Prokesch von Osten's History of the Greek Rebellion, or the many volumes of Gentz' Correspondence belonging to the period about 1820, when Gentz was really at the centre of affairs. The Metternich papers, interesting as far as they go, are a mere selection. The omissions are glaring, and scarcely accidental. Many minor collections bearing on particular events might be named, such as those in Guizot's Mémoires. Frequent references will show my obligation to the German series of historical works constituting the Leipzig Staatengeschichte, as well as to French authors who, like Viel-Castel, have worked with original sources of information before them. There exist in English literature singularly few works on this period of Continental history. A greater publicity was introduced into political affairs on the Continent by the establishment of Parliamentary Government in France in 1815, and even by the attempts made to introduce it in other States. In England we have always had freedom of discussion, but the amount of information made public by the executive in recent times has been enormously greater than it was at the end of the last century. The only documents published at the outbreak of the war of 1793 were, so far as I can ascertain, the well-known letters of Chauvelin and Lord Grenville. During the twenty years' struggle with France next to nothing was known of the diplomatic transactions between England and the Continental Powers. But from the time of the Reform Bill onwards the amount of information given to the public has been constantly increasing, and the reader of Parliamentary Papers in our own day is likely to complain of diffusiveness rather than of reticence. Nevertheless the perusal of published papers can never be quite the same thing as an examination of the originals; and the writer who first has access to the English...

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Let's be honest, a history book from the 1880s might sound like a dusty slog. But Fyffe's work is different. He writes with the urgency of someone who just saw this era's final act, and he wants you to feel its incredible momentum.

The Story

This isn't a simple story with one hero. It's the grand, messy drama of a continent being remade. The book kicks off with the aftershocks of the French Revolution, where the old rules of royalty and privilege are thrown out the window. We follow Napoleon's breathtaking rise and fall, watching him redraw the map of Europe with his armies. After his defeat, the kings try to stuff the genie back in the bottle, but it's too late. The book then tracks the relentless, often violent, struggle for national identity and liberal reforms—from the streets of Paris in 1848 to the unification of Germany and Italy—right up to 1878.

Why You Should Read It

Fyffe has a real point of view. He's clearly on the side of liberal progress and national freedom, which gives the narrative a driving energy and makes the political fights feel vital, not just academic. You get a sense of the huge forces—ideas like nationalism and democracy—colliding with the stubborn weight of tradition. It reads less like a textbook and more like a great, sprawling political novel where the fate of millions hangs in the balance with every decision.

Final Verdict

Perfect for anyone who loves a great story of power and change, or who wants to understand the deep roots of today's Europe. It's for the reader who enjoys Simon Schama or Dan Carlin's storytelling style. While it's a serious history, Fyffe's passion makes it accessible and genuinely exciting. Just be ready—it might change how you look at every old map and national anthem you come across.



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Thomas Davis
8 months ago

High quality edition, very readable.

Mark Jackson
1 year ago

Fast paced, good book.

Edward Nguyen
1 year ago

Great read!

Michael Garcia
3 weeks ago

Enjoyed every page.

Sarah Thompson
1 year ago

My professor recommended this, and I see why.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (10 User reviews )

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