FISCAL-MILITARY SYSTEM PROJECT BIBLIOGRAPHY (see also www.oxfordbibliograhies.com: “Fiscal-Military State”, “Warfare and Military Organizations”, and “War and Trade”) Section A: Concepts A1 Fiscal-Military State A1.1 FMS Studies A1.2 Taxation in individual states A2 Contractor State A3 Sovereignty A4 International Order A5 War and the State Section B: Agents and Actors B1 Contractors, Enterprisers and Entrepreneurs B2 Patronage B3 Corruption B4 Networks B5 Trust Section C: Fiscal-Military Assets C1 Personnel C1.1 Mercenaries – definition C1.2 Mercenaries as migration C1.3 Foreign soldiers C1.4 PMSCs C1.5 Recruitment C1.6 Privateering C1.7 Prisoners C1.8 Hospitals C2. Expertise C3. Information and Intelligence C4. Finance C4.1 General C4.2 War finance C4.3 Subsidies and pensions C4.4 Credit and Debt C5. War Materials C5.1 General C5.2 Liege Arms Production C5.3 Naval Stores C5.4 Horses C5.5 Logistics C6. Services C6.1 Ports C6.2 Transit 1 Section D: Economic Aspects D1 General D2 Mercantilism D3 War and Economics D4 Contracts and Treaties D5 Trade Section E: Dismantling the FMSy E1 General E2 Foreign Fighters E3 Neutrality Section F: Case Studies F1. Cities and Hubs F2. Amsterdam F3. Danzig/Baltic F4. Geneva and the Swiss Confederation F5. Savoy-Piedmont F6. Genoa F7. Hamburg F8. London F9. Riga F10. Vienna F11. Venice F12. Italian States Section G: Global Comparisons SECTION A: CONCEPTS A1. Fiscal-Military State Blockmans, Wim (ed.), Fiscal Systems in the European Economy from the 13th to the 18th Centuries (Firenze, 2008) Bonney, R., The Rise of the Fiscal State in Europe, c.1200-1815 (Oxford, 1999). Bonney, R., ‘Towards the comparative fiscal history of Britain and France during the “long” eighteenth century’, in L. Prados de la Escosura (ed.), Exceptionalism and Industrialisation: Britain and its European Rivals, 1688-1815 (New York, 2004). Bowen, Huw V., and A. Gonzáles Encisco (eds.), Mobilising resources for war: Britain and Spain at work during the early modern period (Pamplona: EUNSA, 2006). ‘Examines the domestic impact of the company in terms of the state, its finances, and military power as well as trade.’ Brewer, J., The sinews of power. War, money and the English state 1688-1783 (New York, 1989). 2 ‘Influential and readable case for the transformations, costs, and tensions involved in Britain’s war effort. Shows the success and flexibility of the British model.’ Brewer, J., and E. Hellmuth (eds.), Rethinking Leviathan. The eighteenth-century state in Britain and Europe (New York, 1999). ‘A useful comparative study of two states that appeared to earlier historians to offer different state-building models, with Prussia epitomizing the strong, absolutist, bureaucratic state, contrasted with Britain’s weaker, consensual, and self-governing one. The essays challenge some of these assumptions.’ Conca Messina, Silvia A. A History of States and Economic Policies in Early Modern Europe. Perspectives in economic and social history 57. New York: Routledge, 2019. Contamine, Philippe, and Wim Blockmans, eds. War and Competition Between States. The origins of the modern state in Europe 13th to 18th centuries / general ed. Wim Blockmans … European Science Foundation; Theme A. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2000. Daunton, M., ‘The Fiscal Military State and the Napoleonic Wars: Britain and France compared’, in David Cannadine (ed.), Trafalgar in history. A battle and its afterlife (Basingstoke, 2006), pp. 18-43. Dickson, P.G.M., The Financial Revolution in England. A Study in the Development of Public Credit 1688- 1736 (London, 1967). ‘Pioneering study of the fiscal mechanisms that developed after the Glorious Revolution, and how British governments adapted and reacted to both the opportunities and obstacles presented by the new financial environment.’ Dunning, C. and N.S. Smith, ‘Moving beyond absolutism. Was early modern Russia a “Fiscal-Military State”?’, Russian History, 33 (2006), pp. 19-43. Özvar, Erol., ‘Transformation of the Ottoman Empire into a Military-Fiscal State: Reconsidering the Financing of War from a Global Perspective’, in Pál Fodor (ed.), The Battle for Central Europe (Leiden: Brill, 2019), pp.21–63. Glete, Jan., War and the State in Early Modern Europe: Spain, the Dutch Republic, and Sweden as Fiscal- military States, 1500–1660 (London, 2002). ‘Examines the economic underpinning of standing forces. Glete pays particular attention to the interplay of special- interest groups within early fiscal-military states (particularly Spain, the Dutch Republic, and Sweden) and how such influences affected the direction of state policy and military development.’ Godsey, William D., The sinews of Habsburg power: Lower Austria as a Fiscal-Military State (Oxford, 2018) Graham, Aaron, and P. Walsh (eds.), The British fiscal military states 1660-c.1783 (Farnham, 2016). Hadügyi forradalom - fiskális állam - fiskális-katonai állam Európában a 16-18. században. [Military Revolution – Fiscal state – Fiscal-military State in Europe in the 16-18th centuries] Századok 152. évf. 5. sz. (2018.) Thematic issue of the journal of the Hungarian Historical Society. A good overview of the Hungarian reception and criticism of the concept of the fiscal-military state. Abstracts in English. Content: 3 B. Szabó János: A félreértett „hadügyi forradalom”. Egy hadtörténeti eredetű globális világmagyarázat terjedésének dinamikája [Military Revolution Misunderstood. The Dynamics of Expansion of a Global Paradigm of Military Historical Origins] 939-960 Ágoston Gábor: Oszmán hadügyi változások a 16–18. században [Changes in the Ottoman Military Organisation in the Sixteenth to Eighteenth Centuries] 961-980 Korpás Zoltán: A fiskális-katonai állam és a katolikus monarchia a 16–17. században [The Fiscal-Military State and the Catholic Monarchy in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries] 981-1012 Sashalmi Endre: A 17–18. századi Oroszország mint fiskális-katonai állam [Russia in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries as a Fiscal-Military State] 1013-1032 Kenyeres István–Pálffy Géza: A Habsburg Monarchia és a Magyar Királyság had- és pénzügyigazgatásának fejlődése a 16–17. században. Modellek és értelmezési lehetőségeik [The Fiscal and Military Transformation of the Habsburg Monarchy and the Kingdom of Hungary in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries] 1033-1076 Oross András: A magyarországi végvidéki katonaság járandóságai a 17. század közepén [Paying the Garrisons of the Hungarian Border Forts in the Middle of the Seventeenth Century] 1077-1094 Szántay Antal: A Habsburg Monarchia és pénzügyei a 18. században [The Habsburg Monarchy and its Finances in the Eighteenth Century] 1095-1126 Schramek László Péter: A magyar vármegyék szerepe a Habsburg Monarchia haderejének finanszírozásában. Egy 1730. évi felmérés tapasztalatai [The Role of the Hungarian Counties in Financing the Military Forces of the Habsburg Monarchy. The Experiences of a 1730 Survey] 1127-1150 Harling, Philip/Peter Mandler, ‘From “Fiscal-Military” to “Laissex-Faire” state, 1760-1815’, Journal of British Studies, 32 (1993), 44-70 Hattendorf, John B, ‘English Governmental Machinery and the Conduct of War, 1702-1713,’ War and Society 3 (1985). Hattendorf, John B., England in the War of the Spanish Succession: A Study of the English View and Conduct of Grand Strategy, 1702-12 (1987). Hoffman, P.T., and K. Norberg (eds.), Fiscal Crises, Liberty and Representative Government (Stanford, 1994). Howard, Michael, War in European History (Oxford: Oxford UP, updated edition 2009) Classic study on war and the European state system with a sequence of forms of war from the war of the knights, mercenaries, merchants, professionals to the wars of the Revolution, the nations, and the technologists. Hutchinson, John, Nationalism and War (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2017) This volume examines the changing relationship between warfare, its changing forms, and the rise of the nation as a political category Jacob, Frank; Visoni-Alonzo, Gilmar, The Military Revolution in Early Modern Europe. A Revision (London: Palgrave, 2016) Kaspersen, Lars Bo, and Jeppe Strandsbjerg, Does War Make States?: Investigations of Charles Tilly’s Historical Sociology (Cambridge University Press, 2017). Mann, Michael, ‘Putting the Weberian state in its social, geopolitical and militaristic context: A response to Patrick O’Brien’, Journal of Historical Sociology, 19 (2006), 364-73 4 Monson, Andrew/Walter Scheidel (eds.), Fiscal Regimes and the Political Economy of Premodern States (Cambridge, 2015) [mostly ancient empires, but has chapters on theory and on debt] Nexon, Daniel H., The Struggle for Power in Early Modern Europe. Religious Conflict, Dynastic Empires, and International Change (Princeton: Princeton UP, 2009) O’Brien, Patrick K., and Philip A. Hunt. ‘The Rise of a Fiscal State in England, 1485–1815’, Historical Research, 66 (1993), pp. 129–176. ‘Frequently cited article by economic historians charting the emergence of a “fiscal state” over a long early modern period, emphasizing 17th- as much as 18th-century developments.’ Parker, Geoffrey, The Military Revolution: Military Innovation and the Rise of the West, 1500-1800. Reprint (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1990) Classic study Pincus, Steven/James Robinson, ‘Faire la guerre et faire l’Etat: Nouvelles perspectives sur l’essor de l’Etat dévelopmentaliste’, Annales HSS, 71 no.1 (2016), 7-35 Rauscher, P., A. Serles, and T. Winkelbauer (eds.), Das ‘Blut des Staatskörpers’: Forschungen zur Finanzgeschichte der Frühen Neuzeit (HZ Beiheft 56) (Munich, 2012). Rodger, N.A.M., ‘From the “Military
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