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If you look at the map of mid-eighteenth-century Europe you will
find that there were no ‘nation-states' as we know them today.
Some
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What we know today as Germany, Italy and Switzerland were
divided into kingdoms, duchies and cantons whose rulers had their
autonomous territories. Eastern and Central Europe were under
autocratic monarchies within the territories of which lived diverse
peoples. They did not see themselves as sharing a collective identity
or a common culture. Often, they even spoke different languages
and belonged to different ethnic groups. The Habsburg Empire
that ruled over Austria-Hungary, for example, was a patchwork of
many different regions and peoples. It included the Alpine regions
the Tyrol, Austria and the Sudetenland - as well as Bohemia,
where the aristocracy was predominantly German-speaking It also
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