• The best books on Frederick the Great - Frederick the Great: King of Prussia by Tim Blanning
  • The best books on Frederick the Great - The Culture of Power and the Power of Culture: Old Regime Europe 1660-1789 by Tim Blanning
  • The best books on Frederick the Great - Frederick the Great: A Military Life by Christopher Duffy
  • The best books on Frederick the Great - The World in Flames: A Global History of the Seven Years' War by Marian Fussel
  • The best books on Frederick the Great - Friederisiko: Friedrich der Grosse Die Essays

The best books on Frederick the Great, recommended by Adam Storring

Frederick the Great (1712-1786) embodied two ideas of kingship: on the one hand, the traditional one of the warrior monarch, and on the other, an enlightened monarch, patron of the arts, a social reformer, and the friend of philosophes like Voltaire. It is on this dual character of his rule that his perennially high reputation rests, says historian Adam Storring. He introduces us to both sides of Frederick’s kingly character and recommends books to learn more about the brilliant military campaigner who led Prussia from 1740 until his death nearly half a century later.

  • The best books on Nineteenth Century Germany - Germany 1770-1866 by James J Sheehan
  • The best books on Nineteenth Century Germany - Iron Kingdom: the Rise and Downfall of Prussia 1600-1947 by Christopher Clark
  • The best books on Nineteenth Century Germany - Bismarck: A Life by Jonathan Steinberg
  • The best books on Nineteenth Century Germany - Marpingen: Apparitions of the Virgin Mary in Bismarckian Germany by David Blackbourn
  • The best books on Nineteenth Century Germany - Namibia under German Rule by Helmut Bley

The best books on Nineteenth Century Germany, recommended by Richard Evans

At the beginning of the 1800s, Germany was a collection of independent states. By the end, it had been unified under Prussian political leadership into one of the world’s great powers. Here, Richard Evans, Regius Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Cambridge and Provost of Gresham College in the City of London, chooses five books on 19th century Germany that illustrate how that process unfolded and what the political, economic and social consequences of it were—intended and otherwise.

  • The best books on The Weimar Republic - Weimar Germany: Promise and Tragedy by Eric D. Weitz
  • The best books on The Weimar Republic - The Artificial Silk Girl by Irmgard Keun & translated by Kathie von Ankum
  • The best books on The Weimar Republic - The Spider's Web by Joseph Roth
  • The best books on The Weimar Republic - Little Man, What Now? by Hans Fallada
  • The best books on The Weimar Republic - Berlin in Lights: The Diaries of Count Harry Kessler (1918-1937) by Harry Kessler

The best books on The Weimar Republic, recommended by Robert Gerwarth

The Weimar Republic was not doomed to fail, says the historian Robert Gerwarth; it was, in many ways, popularly rooted and successful, and its artistic achievements remain influential to this day. Here he selects five books that illustrate the rich cultural life of the Weimar Republic, its pioneering modernism and the febrile political atmosphere that gripped it in the wake of the Great Depression.

  • The best books on The Thirty Years War - Westphalia: the Last Christian Peace 1643-48 by Derek Croxton
  • The best books on The Thirty Years War - Monro, His expedition with the worthy Scots regiment (called Mac-Keyes-regiment) levied in August 1626 by Robert Monro
  • The best books on The Thirty Years War - Wallenstein: His Life Narrated by Golo Mann
  • The best books on The Thirty Years War - European Weapons and Warfare 1618–1648 by Eduard Wagner
  • The best books on The Thirty Years War - Tagebuch Eines Soldners Aus Dem Dreissigjahrigen Krieg Peter Hagendorf (ed. Jan Peters)

The best books on The Thirty Years War, recommended by Peter Wilson

It was a war that devastated Europe and left more than one-fifth of the German population dead. The complex peace agreement that ended it, the Treaty of Westphalia, is still credited with establishing our modern state system. Peter Wilson, Chichele Professor of the History of War at Oxford University and author of the most recent general history of the war, Europe’s Tragedy: A New History of the Thirty Years War, recommends books to read for a nuanced picture of Europe’s cataclysmic 17th-century conflict.