1st Edition

An Unproclaimed Empire: The Grand Duchy of Lithuania From the Viewpoint of Comparative Historical Sociology of Empires

By Zenonas Norkus Copyright 2018
426 Pages
by Routledge

426 Pages
by Routledge

426 Pages
by Routledge

An Unproclaimed Empire: The Grand Duchy of Lithuania is an interdisciplinary study of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (GDL) that is historical in subject but social scientific in approach. It is also the first study to apply this comparative and social scientific method to the GDL. In this book, Zenonas Norkus draws on national historiographies and applies theories from comparative... Read more

Contents





List of figures





List of maps





List of tables





 



Introduction





Part 1 Translatio imperii and Lithuanian History



1. 1.Translatio imperii in outline



1. 2. The Grand Duchy of Lithuania as an empire in historiography





Part 2 Empire and Imperialism: Methodological Strategies



2. 1. On the controversies over concepts and the ways how to solve them



2. 2. Cliometry of empires



2. 3. The empire and the inter-polity system: views from international relations studies



2. 4. The empire from the viewpoint of constitutional law and comparative politics



2. 5. Definition and typology of empires



2. 6. Cliodynamics of empires





Part 3 The Grand Duchy of Lithuania as an Empire



3. 1. Old Lithuanians as imperialist liberators



3. 2. The Grand Duchy in the pursuit of hegemony: aims and achievements



3.3. Whose empire was the Grand Duchy?



3. 4. The metropole and peripheries of the Grand Duchy



3. 5. Why was it so difficult to identify the Grand Duchy as an empire?



3. 6. The Grand Duchy as an empire with adjectives



3. 7. On the dates of birth and death of the Lithuanian empire



3. 8. Lithuanian imperialism and the birth of the Lithuanian state



3. 9. Unaccomplished mission of the Lithuanian empire





Concluding generalisations





Index

Biography

Zenonas Norkus is a Professor of Comparative Historical Sociology at Vilnius University. His previous publications include Max Weber and Rational Choice (2001) and Which Democracy, Which Capitalism? Post-communist Transformation in Lithuania from the Viewpoint of Comparative Historical Sociology (2008).