History of Friedrich II of Prussia — Volume 14

audiobook

History of Friedrich II of Prussia — Volume 14

by Thomas Carlyle

EN·~5 hours·40 chapters

Chapters

40 total
1

HISTORY OF FRIEDRICH II OF PRUSSIA, Volume 14 - FREDERICK THE GREAT - by Thomas Carlyle

0:05
2

BOOK XIV.—THE SURROUNDING EUROPEAN WAR DOES NOT END.—August, 1742-July, 1744.

0:04
3

Chapter I.—FRIEDRICH RESUMES HIS PEACEABLE PURSUITS.

9:30
4

SETTLES THE SILESIAN BOUNDARIES, THE SILESIAN ARRANGEMENTS; WITH MANIFEST PROFIT TO SILESIA AND HIMSELF.

8:19
5

OPENING OF THE OPERA-HOUSE AT BERLIN.

2:35
6

FRIEDRICH TAKES THE WATERS AT AACHEN, WHERE VOLTAIRE COMES TO SEE HIM.

7:29
7

Chapter II.—AUSTRIAN AFFAIRS ARE ON THE MOUNTING HAND.

1:51
8

WAR-PHENOMENA IN THE WESTERN PARTS: KING GEORGE TRIES, A SECOND TIME, TO DRAW HIS SWORD; TUGS AT IT VIOLENTLY, FOR SEVEN MONTHS (February-October, 1742).

10:23
9

HOW DUC D'HARCOURT, ADVANCING TO REINFORCE THE ORIFLAMME, HAD TO SPLIT HIMSELF IN TWO; AND BECOME AN "ARMY OF BAVARIA," TO LITTLE EFFECT.

7:46
10

HOW BELLEISLE, RETURNING FROM DRESDEN WITHOUT CO-OPERATION FOUND THE ATTACK HAD BEEN DONE,—IN A FATALLY REVERSE WAY. PRAG EXPECTING SIEGE. COLLOQUY WITH BROGLIO ON THAT INTERESTING POINT. PRAG BESIEGED.

7:34

Description

In the wake of his early triumphs, Frederick the Great turns his attention from conquest to the fragile prospect of lasting peace. The narrative follows the king’s attempts to settle Silesia and his yearning for a continent‑wide truce, while the embers of war continue to smolder across Europe. Through letters from Voltaire and vivid accounts of diplomatic maneuvering, the text captures the tension between the monarch’s idealism and the relentless pull of conflict.

Carlyle’s chronicle paints Frederick as a ruler keenly aware of the weight his decisions carry, balancing the allure of glory with stark practicalities. Readers are drawn into the interplay of Austrian resolve, English finances, and the broader geopolitical chessboard that forces the Prussian king back onto the battlefield. The early years of this tumultuous period are rendered with a blend of sharp analysis and lively prose, offering a compelling portrait of a leader navigating ambition, duty, and the ever‑present specter of war.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (331K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by D.R. Thompson and David Widger

Release date

2008-06-16

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Thomas Carlyle

Thomas Carlyle

1795–1881

A fierce Scottish essayist and historian, he became one of the most influential voices of the Victorian age through his dramatic writing on revolution, heroism, and the troubles of modern life.

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