Word: castlereaghs
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...19th century, Europe maintained a hundred-year peace partially because the European monarchs left foreign policy up to civil servants who knew what they were doing. Men such as Castlereagh, Talleyrand, Metternich, and Bismarck maintained the Concert of Europe without excessive interference from their superiors. Today's leaders should learn from that example...
...past year to challenge the agreement. The Republic's decision two weeks ago to continue its ban on divorce only confirmed a Protestant sense of distance from their neighbors to the south. "There is nothing that attracts me toward the Irish Republic," complains Billy Stevenson, chairman of the Castlereagh Ulster Club in east Belfast. "The present situation under the Anglo-Irish agreement is like living with in-laws who don't want...
...Emperor made his last futile effort, in the famous Hundred Days, to recapture the glory that had been his France. After Wellington put an end to that dream at Waterloo, the leaders of Europe's Quadruple Alliance -Czar Alexander I of Russia, Frederick William III of Prussia, Lord Castlereagh of Britain and, above all, Prince Klemens Wenzel von Metternich of Austria -were free to determine in Vienna the future of the Continent...
...Europe, rewarding the states that defeated Napoleon with new territories and restoring ruling families, like the Bourbons, to thrones from which they had been ousted by the French Revolution and Bonaparte's conquests. The Final Act, signed in an unostentatious ceremony on June 9, 1815, created what Castlereagh called "a great machine of European safety" that was to endure, more or less intact, for 40 years. It was a supremely conservative document, reflecting its signatories' belief that aristocratic authority would ensure stability, and that the then radical ideas about liberalism, democracy and nationalism would lead inevitably to chaos...
...this ever-struggling world of Charlie "Metternich" Finely, Baron von Kroc (the Padres's mastermind of realpolitik) and Bob "Castlereagh" Short (since ousted from his Texas kingdom), the balance of power explains all. After a long winter season of pacts which guarantee support from the lackey ballplayers, baseball begins its annual summer campaign in early April. Once the campaign begins, cityteams continually battle to stay ahead, clashing as frequently as four or five times a week during those hot months of July and August...