Cover
Title page
Copyright page
Contents
Michael Freeden: Foreword
Editor’s Preface
Liberalism and Nationalism: An Ambiguous Relationship
I.WESTERN EUROPE
1. Scotland and England: Diverging PoliticalDiscourses
2. Radical Liberalism and Nationalismin Mid-Victorian Scotland
3. Dutch Liberals and Nineteenth-CenturyNational Traditions
4. Liberal Nationalism and Modern Regional Identity: Revolutionary Belgium, 1786–1830
II. CENTRAL EUROPE
1. Unity or Liberty? German Liberalism Founding an Empire, 1850–1879
2. Switzerland: A European Model of Liberal Nationalism?
3. The Identity Problems of the Austro-German Liberals
4. Political Vocabularies of the Hungarian Liberals and Conservatives before 1848
5. The Liberalism of the Hungarian Nobility, 1825–1910
6. Marginal or Central? The Place of the Liberal Tradition in Nineteenth-Century Polish History
7. Czech Liberalism, 1848–1918
III. EASTERN EUROPE, THE BALKANS AND SOUTHERN EUROPE
1. The Inherent Burden of Russian Liberalism
2. Empire and Nation in Russian LiberalThought
3. The Value System of Serb Liberalism
4. Building the State from the Roof Down: Varieties of Romanian Liberal Nationalism
5. The Interesting Anomaly of Balkan Liberalism
6. In Defiance of History: Liberal and National Attributes of the Ottoman-Turkish Path to Modernity
List of Contributors
Index