Europe 1700
$7.91
Map Code: Ax02453The turn of the 17th century was sandwiched between the Great Turkish War (1683–97), which effectively ended Ottoman expansion into Europe, and the Great Northern War (1700–21), through which Russia wrested control of the Baltic from Sweden, and effectively replaced the Ottomans as Europe’s threat to the east. The nightmare scenario (for Protestant Europe and the Habsburgs) of a Bourbon union of the French and Spanish Crowns would be averted by the War of the Spanish Succession (1700–13). The Dutch emerged from their long wars of independence as the latest masters of global trade, even supplying the English with a two-for-one deal on Protestant monarchs with William and Mary’s accession in 1689. The German states of the Holy Roman Empire recovered slowly from the ravages of the Thirty Years’ War (1618–48), but a shrewd princeling, the Elector of Brandenburg-Prussia gained recognition as a kingdom for Prussia (1701), a future great power, in return for military backing to the French.
Occasionally we create complex maps, with a high level of detail, which can be reproduced as wall charts or studied in depth. The price of £5.99 reflects the enhanced complexity of these maps. These maps are included in all subscription packages.
All of our downloadable maps are provided as JPEG at 300 DPI and a minimum of 1500px wide.