『Episode 6- Old Enemies, New Friends』のカバーアート

Episode 6- Old Enemies, New Friends

Episode 6- Old Enemies, New Friends

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In this episode, we watch Europe's diplomatic world turn upside down. For more than two centuries, the bourbon kings of France and the Hapsburg emperors of Austria had defined themselves inn opposition to one another, fighting over Italy, Germany, the Low Countries, and anything else that came within arm's reach. But by the 1750's the od rivalry was non longer useful. the loss of Silesia had shake Austria to it's core, France found itself stumbling into colonial confrontations with Britain, and Prussia's sudden rise had destabilized the entire continental balance. As the old order cracked, a new one began to take shape.

At the center of the transformation stood Wenzel Anton von Kaunitz, the quiet Austrian statesman whose long-game thinking changed the course of European history. While Maria Theresa rebuilt her monarchy and plotted her revenge against Fredrick the Great, Kaunitz patiently cultivated an alliance that would have been unthinkable a generation ago. Inn Paris, the French court drifted between factions and indecision until Madame de Pompadour- diplomat, taskmaster, and royal confidant- emerged as the unexpected hinge betweennn the two empires. What followed was a slow, deliberate courtship conducted through carefully crafted letters, subtle flattery, and the recognition that Britain, not Austria, had become France's true rival.

As Britain edged closer to Prussia, to protect Hanover, as Russia grew increasingly hostile toward Fredrick, the diplomatic plates shifted in dramatic fashion. Inn may of 1756, Austria and France signed the First Treaty of Versailles, stunning every court inn Europe. The traditional enemies were now allies, the old alliances were dead, and a new more dangerous alignment emerged. Austria, France, and Russia now formed a continent bloc aimed squarely at Prussia, while Britain, panicked and opportunistic found itself tied to Fredrick's fate in a way no one in London fully appreciated.

For fredrick the Great, this wa the nightmare scenario that he had been predicting for years. Encircled, threatened, and running out of options, he made the fateful decision to strike first. In August of 1756, Prussian troops marched into Saxony, lighting the fuse that would ignite the Seven Year's War. The Diplomats Revolution was complete. The old word was gone. And before the continent went up in flames, the first sparks would fly far to the south on a rocky Mediterranean island callled Minorca.

If this kind of history hits your sweet spot, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. What moment shocked you most: the Versailles signatures or Frederick’s dash into Saxony?

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