Description

Book Synopsis
Placing the creation of Westphalia within the context of the larger German story of the Napoleonic Wars, this groundbreaking book offers the only complete history of Napoleon’s grand experiment to construct a model state in Germany. In 1807, in the wake of two years of victories over the Austrians, Prussians, and Russians, Napoleon redrew the map of central Europe by fashioning a new German state. Dubbing it the Kingdom of Westphalia, he appointed his 23-year-old brother Jerome as its king. Sam A. Mustafa shows how Westphalia became a proving ground for the allegedly liberating and modern concepts of the French Revolution, brought by foreign conquest and enforced by a powerful new centralized state. Over the next six years, the inhabitants of this region experienced fundamental and often jarring changes in almost every aspect of their lives. They witnessed a profound clash of French and German culture, as well as new ideas about law, nationality, and politics. And yet, for all of its promise on paper, Westphalia ended up despised by most of its people, who cheered at its collapse and in many cases helped to bring it down. What went wrong with this early example of what we would today call “nation building” and how did Germans react to the changes? Napoleon’s Paper Kingdom is the first book in the English language to provide a comprehensive investigation of this fascinating chapter of the Napoleonic Wars.

Trade Review
Sam Mustafa is to be heartily congratulated on his outstanding new work chronicling the history of the ephemeral Kingdom of Westphalia in Napoleonic Germany. Despite its importance in both the story of the Napoleonic era and the broader sweep of Germany’s national development, Westphalia has not been the subject of a comprehensive, professional historical analysis for more than a century. Mustafa has filled this astonishing gap in sterling fashion, meeting the highest expectations of scholarship while being eminently readable. His book is a series of firsts: the first serious study since the late 1800s, the first ever in English, and the first to provide an assessment outside the strictures of either Prussian historical biases or post-Napoleonic romanticism. Combining careful consideration of the historiography with unprecedented primary research and a mastery of the secondary literature, he presents a thoughtfully nuanced view of a kingdom that sat at the center of Germany for six tumultuous years and whose brief existence continues to proffer powerful interpretive insights for the Napoleonic epoch and the evolution of Germany as a state and society. -- Colonel (retd) John H. Gill, author of Thunder on the Danube: Napoleon's Defeat of the Habsburgs
Sam Mustafa’s groundbreaking study is the first complete and scholarly history of the Kingdom of Westphalia since the nineteenth century. Drawing from years of intensive research in state archives, Napoleon’s Paper Kingdom covers all the complex facets of government, religious, and social affairs of Napoleon’s model state. It is a seminal book, well-researched and highly recommended for all historians and readers interested in the Napoleonic period. -- Wolf D. Gruner, University of Rostock
This well-researched history of the Kingdom of Westphalia examines the perspectives of its French architects and its German subjects. Mustafa highlights Napoleon’s plan for the kingdom, the practice of its governance, and day-to-day life within Westphalia. Outstanding chapters address the expansion of Westphalia, the significance of the wars, the many colorful characters who sought to make the state work, and those who opposed it. Very accessible to the general public, this book is an excellent contribution to our understanding of Napoleonic state-building and warfare and the diverse fate of Germans living under French rule. -- Katherine Aaslestad, West Virginia University

Table of Contents
Contents Abbreviations Used in the Notes Acknowledgments Preface Notes on Citation, Spelling, and Usage Chapter 1: I Have Come to Occupy Your Land Chapter 2: A Kingdom on Paper Chapter 3: König Lustik Chapter 4: Coin and Purse Chapter 5: Sword and Shield Chapter 6: Law and Order Chapter 7: The Challenge Chapter 8: Minds and Souls Chapter 9: Fatherlands and Patriots Chapter 10: Subjects and Rebels Chapter 11: The False Dawn and the Horizon Chapter 12: Collapse Chapter 13: Restoration Chapter 14: Epilogue: Was Bleibt? Bibliography

Napoleon's Paper Kingdom: The Life and Death of

    Product form

    £83.70

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £93.00 – you save £9.30 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 27 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Sam A. Mustafa

    Out of stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Napoleon's Paper Kingdom: The Life and Death of by Sam A. Mustafa

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 05/09/2017
      ISBN13: 9781538108291, 978-1538108291
      ISBN10: 1538108291

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Placing the creation of Westphalia within the context of the larger German story of the Napoleonic Wars, this groundbreaking book offers the only complete history of Napoleon’s grand experiment to construct a model state in Germany. In 1807, in the wake of two years of victories over the Austrians, Prussians, and Russians, Napoleon redrew the map of central Europe by fashioning a new German state. Dubbing it the Kingdom of Westphalia, he appointed his 23-year-old brother Jerome as its king. Sam A. Mustafa shows how Westphalia became a proving ground for the allegedly liberating and modern concepts of the French Revolution, brought by foreign conquest and enforced by a powerful new centralized state. Over the next six years, the inhabitants of this region experienced fundamental and often jarring changes in almost every aspect of their lives. They witnessed a profound clash of French and German culture, as well as new ideas about law, nationality, and politics. And yet, for all of its promise on paper, Westphalia ended up despised by most of its people, who cheered at its collapse and in many cases helped to bring it down. What went wrong with this early example of what we would today call “nation building” and how did Germans react to the changes? Napoleon’s Paper Kingdom is the first book in the English language to provide a comprehensive investigation of this fascinating chapter of the Napoleonic Wars.

      Trade Review
      Sam Mustafa is to be heartily congratulated on his outstanding new work chronicling the history of the ephemeral Kingdom of Westphalia in Napoleonic Germany. Despite its importance in both the story of the Napoleonic era and the broader sweep of Germany’s national development, Westphalia has not been the subject of a comprehensive, professional historical analysis for more than a century. Mustafa has filled this astonishing gap in sterling fashion, meeting the highest expectations of scholarship while being eminently readable. His book is a series of firsts: the first serious study since the late 1800s, the first ever in English, and the first to provide an assessment outside the strictures of either Prussian historical biases or post-Napoleonic romanticism. Combining careful consideration of the historiography with unprecedented primary research and a mastery of the secondary literature, he presents a thoughtfully nuanced view of a kingdom that sat at the center of Germany for six tumultuous years and whose brief existence continues to proffer powerful interpretive insights for the Napoleonic epoch and the evolution of Germany as a state and society. -- Colonel (retd) John H. Gill, author of Thunder on the Danube: Napoleon's Defeat of the Habsburgs
      Sam Mustafa’s groundbreaking study is the first complete and scholarly history of the Kingdom of Westphalia since the nineteenth century. Drawing from years of intensive research in state archives, Napoleon’s Paper Kingdom covers all the complex facets of government, religious, and social affairs of Napoleon’s model state. It is a seminal book, well-researched and highly recommended for all historians and readers interested in the Napoleonic period. -- Wolf D. Gruner, University of Rostock
      This well-researched history of the Kingdom of Westphalia examines the perspectives of its French architects and its German subjects. Mustafa highlights Napoleon’s plan for the kingdom, the practice of its governance, and day-to-day life within Westphalia. Outstanding chapters address the expansion of Westphalia, the significance of the wars, the many colorful characters who sought to make the state work, and those who opposed it. Very accessible to the general public, this book is an excellent contribution to our understanding of Napoleonic state-building and warfare and the diverse fate of Germans living under French rule. -- Katherine Aaslestad, West Virginia University

      Table of Contents
      Contents Abbreviations Used in the Notes Acknowledgments Preface Notes on Citation, Spelling, and Usage Chapter 1: I Have Come to Occupy Your Land Chapter 2: A Kingdom on Paper Chapter 3: König Lustik Chapter 4: Coin and Purse Chapter 5: Sword and Shield Chapter 6: Law and Order Chapter 7: The Challenge Chapter 8: Minds and Souls Chapter 9: Fatherlands and Patriots Chapter 10: Subjects and Rebels Chapter 11: The False Dawn and the Horizon Chapter 12: Collapse Chapter 13: Restoration Chapter 14: Epilogue: Was Bleibt? Bibliography

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account