Samenvattingen teksten diplomatie
LES 1: History of diplomacy
From social status to sovereignty – practices of foreign relations from the
Renaissance to Sattelzeit
- Christian Windler
Summary
- Explores the historical evolution and conceptual redefinition of diplomacy and
foreign relations
- from the Renaissance through the transformative period around 1800 (= the
Sattelzeit)
- “Diplomacy” as a word (relating to foreign affairs & statecraft) only came to be
in late 18th century)
Shift from personal, status-based political interactions towards relations
between sovereign states
- Diplomacy was first not a clearly defined profession
But rather set of social & political practices embedded within estate-based
hierarchies (= Ständegesellschaft) and several normative orders like religious
and social obligations
- Diplomats
Public duty + private loyalties, network & patronage
Influence through personal relationships & gift-giving
Ceremonials => expressing and negotiating social status, not legal
sovereignty
- New Diplomatic History
Social practices, symbolic communication and normative pluralism >
anachronistic, state-centric conceptions of diplomacy
Challenge’s traditional view of Peace of Westphalia in 1648 as a definitive
break
Rather Sattelzeit around 1800 = true breaking point
=> Diplomacy professionalized
=> diplomatic corps was institutionalized
=> Principle of sovereign equality became dominant
- Beyond East/West dichotomies
Interactions between European and Asian empires
=> Intercultural diplomatic practices: negotiated norms & ceremonial
exchanges
Pluralistic and relationally nuanced diplomacy
- Role of gender & marginalized actors
Women, unofficial agents, merchants and religious figures also
participated in diplomacy
Before emergence of diplomatic corps
=> Then they were marginalized
- 19 & 20th century
th
Persistence of personal networks and symbolic capital
Emerging bureaucratic professionalism
Highlights
- Term “diplomacy” in its modern meaning only emerged in the late 18th century,
reflecting a shift from social status-based to sovereign state-based relations.
, - Early modern diplomacy was embedded in ceremonial, symbolic
communication, and social hierarchies rather than legal sovereignty or formal
state systems.
- “New Diplomatic History” challenges state-centric views, emphasizing social
practices, normative pluralism, and intercultural interactions in historical
diplomacy.
- Diplomatic practices in Asia and Europe were characterized by negotiated norms
rather than fixed systems or binary cultural oppositions.
- Gender and unofficial actors played significant roles in diplomacy before the
professionalization and institutional closure of the diplomatic corps around
1800.
- The Peace of Westphalia (1648) was not as definitive a turning point for
diplomacy as traditionally thought; systemic changes around 1800 during the
Sattelzeit were more transformative.
- Personal networks and patronage continued to influence diplomacy well into the
19th and 20th centuries despite growing bureaucratization.
Key insights
1. Evolution of the Concept ‘Diplomacy’:
- Semantic evolution during 18th century
- Original meaning of “diplomacy” = document authentication
- Later: foreign relations as a specialized skill or science
- Language reflects political order
=> before the late 1700s: diplomacy was a part of broader political and social
interactions.
- Highlights the importance of understanding terms in their historical linguistic
context to avoid anachronism.
2. Status vs. Sovereignty in Early Modern Diplomacy:
- Early modern period: diplomatic relations were governed by social status and
hierarchical estate-based norms ("Ständegesellschaft") than
- Later by legal notions of state sovereignty common after the 19th century
- Diplomatic interaction revolved around ceremonials, gift-giving, and symbolic
displays
=> negotiate precedence, respect and recognition rather than formal legal
equality/sovereignty
- Socio-cultural embeddedness complicates simplistic staging of diplomacy as
only interstate relations.
3. Normative Pluralism and Social Embeddedness:
- Diplomacy = space of competing and overlapping norms—social, religious,
political— in flexible configurations
- Envoys had multiple roles = reconciling duties to prince, family, kinship
networks, and patrons.
- The pluralism provided diplomats with manoeuvring room
=> reflecting a more relational and network-based understanding of political
power.
- The close entwinement of private and public roles blurred modern dichotomies
between state and society.
4. Intercultural and Interimperial Diplomacy:
- Complexity of diplomatic practice beyond Europe => Asian-European diplomatic
exchanges were characterized by adaptation and negotiation rather than
confrontation along civilizational lines
, - Normative pluralism and ceremonial expectations varied widely
- European envoys willingly adopting subordinated or tributary roles to gain
access and influence
=> challenging Eurocentric models of diplomatic hierarchy and sovereignty.
5. Gender and Informal Actors in Early Modern Diplomacy:
- Women and other unofficial figures (merchants or religious agents) played
active roles in diplomatic processes
- The eventual professionalization and bureaucratization of diplomacy in the 19 th
centurt => exclusion
- Diplomatic agency was historically distributed differently
- Importance of examining diplomatic history beyond formal officeholders
6. Reconsidering Periodization: Beyond Westphalia:
- First: traditional historiography sets the Peace of Westphalia (1648) as the
foundational moment of modern diplomacy and sovereignty
- BUT epochal change occurring around 1800, the Sattelzeit
=> consolidation of diplomatic professionalization
=> clear separation of diplomat’s public and private roles=> rise of sovereign
equality codified at Vienna
=> more nuanced periodization attentive to long-term continuities and
ruptures.
7. Persistence of Personal Networks and Symbolic Capital:
- Even after formal diplomatic reforms and state professionalization: persistence
of
=> personal relationships
=> social standing
=> patronage networks
as vital components of diplomatic practice into the 19th and 20th centuries
- Continuity illustrates the limits of rational-bureaucratic models and more focus
on cultural and social dimensions underlying diplomatic interactions, including
their impact on contemporary issues such as economic and financial crises.
Conceptualising the resident ambassador
Summary
- Conceptualization and practice of the resident ambassador during the
Renaissance
focus on Rome in the late 15th & 16th centuries
- Dual nature of the ambassador
1. Official representative of his prince or republic
2. Private individual
=> allowed ambassador to embody the honour and values of his state +
exercising personal discretion and initiative in diplomacy
- Ermolao Barbaro - De Officio Legati & Étienne Dolet’s - De Officio Legati
Ambassador’s duties:
1. to maintain friendly relations
2. execute instructions
3. handle “day-to-day” business (= news-gathering and negotiation,
managing ceremonial duties, engaging in complex ecclesiastical politics
like papal conclaves and church councils)
- The ambassador’s functions went beyond merely collecting intelligence
, => literature often depicted residents as just informants under special
ambassadors’ command.
- Residents negotiated on political, ecclesiastical and familial alliance matters
like:
marriage dispensations
management of curial benefices.
- Effectiveness of the resident was dependent on:
Their embeddedness in court society
Fluency in languages (Latin and Italian)
Understanding of local customs
Strategic networking
- Ceremonial and political constraints on ambassadors
Distinctions between types of envoys (resident versus special
ambassadors)
Ceremonial practices at the papal court shaped diplomatic hierarchies
and interactions
Ambassador’s attire => visually project princely authority +
accommodating the practicalities of their own identities.
- Autonomy = issue for Renaissance ambassadors
Need to make quick decisions without prior instructions, negotiate
delicate matters + need for discretion
BUT: slow communications and complex political environment which
makes it difficult
Theorists like Barbaro, Dolet, and Machiavelli
prudence as a central virtue for diplomats
balance loyalty and initiative
operating in ambiguous zones: private persona and official roles
overlapped.
- Overlap between private person & official role
Dissimulate effectively
Appearing to endorse policies personally while officially maintaining a
formal distance from sensitive positions.
Their dual persona was not rigid
Adaptable and performative
Employed strategically in different diplomatic contexts—from formal
ceremonies to informal political maneuvers within Rome’s courts
and ecclesiastical institutions.
Highlights
- Renaissance ambassadors embodied a dual persona combining official
representation and private individuality.
- Resident diplomats conducted day-to-day affairs including negotiation, news-
gathering, and curial business.
- Early treatises by Barbaro and Dolet shaped Renaissance diplomatic theory,
balancing instructions and autonomy.
- Ambassadors visually personified their princes through ceremonial dress and
bearing, projecting princely dignity abroad.
- Ambassadors were expected to promote peace but also execute various
political missions, including power politics and warfare.
- Slow communications demanded pragmatic discretion and initiative from
diplomats in urgent or unforeseen circumstances.
- Ambassadors played unique roles in papal conclaves, consistories, and
church councils, impacting religious-political processes.
LES 1: History of diplomacy
From social status to sovereignty – practices of foreign relations from the
Renaissance to Sattelzeit
- Christian Windler
Summary
- Explores the historical evolution and conceptual redefinition of diplomacy and
foreign relations
- from the Renaissance through the transformative period around 1800 (= the
Sattelzeit)
- “Diplomacy” as a word (relating to foreign affairs & statecraft) only came to be
in late 18th century)
Shift from personal, status-based political interactions towards relations
between sovereign states
- Diplomacy was first not a clearly defined profession
But rather set of social & political practices embedded within estate-based
hierarchies (= Ständegesellschaft) and several normative orders like religious
and social obligations
- Diplomats
Public duty + private loyalties, network & patronage
Influence through personal relationships & gift-giving
Ceremonials => expressing and negotiating social status, not legal
sovereignty
- New Diplomatic History
Social practices, symbolic communication and normative pluralism >
anachronistic, state-centric conceptions of diplomacy
Challenge’s traditional view of Peace of Westphalia in 1648 as a definitive
break
Rather Sattelzeit around 1800 = true breaking point
=> Diplomacy professionalized
=> diplomatic corps was institutionalized
=> Principle of sovereign equality became dominant
- Beyond East/West dichotomies
Interactions between European and Asian empires
=> Intercultural diplomatic practices: negotiated norms & ceremonial
exchanges
Pluralistic and relationally nuanced diplomacy
- Role of gender & marginalized actors
Women, unofficial agents, merchants and religious figures also
participated in diplomacy
Before emergence of diplomatic corps
=> Then they were marginalized
- 19 & 20th century
th
Persistence of personal networks and symbolic capital
Emerging bureaucratic professionalism
Highlights
- Term “diplomacy” in its modern meaning only emerged in the late 18th century,
reflecting a shift from social status-based to sovereign state-based relations.
, - Early modern diplomacy was embedded in ceremonial, symbolic
communication, and social hierarchies rather than legal sovereignty or formal
state systems.
- “New Diplomatic History” challenges state-centric views, emphasizing social
practices, normative pluralism, and intercultural interactions in historical
diplomacy.
- Diplomatic practices in Asia and Europe were characterized by negotiated norms
rather than fixed systems or binary cultural oppositions.
- Gender and unofficial actors played significant roles in diplomacy before the
professionalization and institutional closure of the diplomatic corps around
1800.
- The Peace of Westphalia (1648) was not as definitive a turning point for
diplomacy as traditionally thought; systemic changes around 1800 during the
Sattelzeit were more transformative.
- Personal networks and patronage continued to influence diplomacy well into the
19th and 20th centuries despite growing bureaucratization.
Key insights
1. Evolution of the Concept ‘Diplomacy’:
- Semantic evolution during 18th century
- Original meaning of “diplomacy” = document authentication
- Later: foreign relations as a specialized skill or science
- Language reflects political order
=> before the late 1700s: diplomacy was a part of broader political and social
interactions.
- Highlights the importance of understanding terms in their historical linguistic
context to avoid anachronism.
2. Status vs. Sovereignty in Early Modern Diplomacy:
- Early modern period: diplomatic relations were governed by social status and
hierarchical estate-based norms ("Ständegesellschaft") than
- Later by legal notions of state sovereignty common after the 19th century
- Diplomatic interaction revolved around ceremonials, gift-giving, and symbolic
displays
=> negotiate precedence, respect and recognition rather than formal legal
equality/sovereignty
- Socio-cultural embeddedness complicates simplistic staging of diplomacy as
only interstate relations.
3. Normative Pluralism and Social Embeddedness:
- Diplomacy = space of competing and overlapping norms—social, religious,
political— in flexible configurations
- Envoys had multiple roles = reconciling duties to prince, family, kinship
networks, and patrons.
- The pluralism provided diplomats with manoeuvring room
=> reflecting a more relational and network-based understanding of political
power.
- The close entwinement of private and public roles blurred modern dichotomies
between state and society.
4. Intercultural and Interimperial Diplomacy:
- Complexity of diplomatic practice beyond Europe => Asian-European diplomatic
exchanges were characterized by adaptation and negotiation rather than
confrontation along civilizational lines
, - Normative pluralism and ceremonial expectations varied widely
- European envoys willingly adopting subordinated or tributary roles to gain
access and influence
=> challenging Eurocentric models of diplomatic hierarchy and sovereignty.
5. Gender and Informal Actors in Early Modern Diplomacy:
- Women and other unofficial figures (merchants or religious agents) played
active roles in diplomatic processes
- The eventual professionalization and bureaucratization of diplomacy in the 19 th
centurt => exclusion
- Diplomatic agency was historically distributed differently
- Importance of examining diplomatic history beyond formal officeholders
6. Reconsidering Periodization: Beyond Westphalia:
- First: traditional historiography sets the Peace of Westphalia (1648) as the
foundational moment of modern diplomacy and sovereignty
- BUT epochal change occurring around 1800, the Sattelzeit
=> consolidation of diplomatic professionalization
=> clear separation of diplomat’s public and private roles=> rise of sovereign
equality codified at Vienna
=> more nuanced periodization attentive to long-term continuities and
ruptures.
7. Persistence of Personal Networks and Symbolic Capital:
- Even after formal diplomatic reforms and state professionalization: persistence
of
=> personal relationships
=> social standing
=> patronage networks
as vital components of diplomatic practice into the 19th and 20th centuries
- Continuity illustrates the limits of rational-bureaucratic models and more focus
on cultural and social dimensions underlying diplomatic interactions, including
their impact on contemporary issues such as economic and financial crises.
Conceptualising the resident ambassador
Summary
- Conceptualization and practice of the resident ambassador during the
Renaissance
focus on Rome in the late 15th & 16th centuries
- Dual nature of the ambassador
1. Official representative of his prince or republic
2. Private individual
=> allowed ambassador to embody the honour and values of his state +
exercising personal discretion and initiative in diplomacy
- Ermolao Barbaro - De Officio Legati & Étienne Dolet’s - De Officio Legati
Ambassador’s duties:
1. to maintain friendly relations
2. execute instructions
3. handle “day-to-day” business (= news-gathering and negotiation,
managing ceremonial duties, engaging in complex ecclesiastical politics
like papal conclaves and church councils)
- The ambassador’s functions went beyond merely collecting intelligence
, => literature often depicted residents as just informants under special
ambassadors’ command.
- Residents negotiated on political, ecclesiastical and familial alliance matters
like:
marriage dispensations
management of curial benefices.
- Effectiveness of the resident was dependent on:
Their embeddedness in court society
Fluency in languages (Latin and Italian)
Understanding of local customs
Strategic networking
- Ceremonial and political constraints on ambassadors
Distinctions between types of envoys (resident versus special
ambassadors)
Ceremonial practices at the papal court shaped diplomatic hierarchies
and interactions
Ambassador’s attire => visually project princely authority +
accommodating the practicalities of their own identities.
- Autonomy = issue for Renaissance ambassadors
Need to make quick decisions without prior instructions, negotiate
delicate matters + need for discretion
BUT: slow communications and complex political environment which
makes it difficult
Theorists like Barbaro, Dolet, and Machiavelli
prudence as a central virtue for diplomats
balance loyalty and initiative
operating in ambiguous zones: private persona and official roles
overlapped.
- Overlap between private person & official role
Dissimulate effectively
Appearing to endorse policies personally while officially maintaining a
formal distance from sensitive positions.
Their dual persona was not rigid
Adaptable and performative
Employed strategically in different diplomatic contexts—from formal
ceremonies to informal political maneuvers within Rome’s courts
and ecclesiastical institutions.
Highlights
- Renaissance ambassadors embodied a dual persona combining official
representation and private individuality.
- Resident diplomats conducted day-to-day affairs including negotiation, news-
gathering, and curial business.
- Early treatises by Barbaro and Dolet shaped Renaissance diplomatic theory,
balancing instructions and autonomy.
- Ambassadors visually personified their princes through ceremonial dress and
bearing, projecting princely dignity abroad.
- Ambassadors were expected to promote peace but also execute various
political missions, including power politics and warfare.
- Slow communications demanded pragmatic discretion and initiative from
diplomats in urgent or unforeseen circumstances.
- Ambassadors played unique roles in papal conclaves, consistories, and
church councils, impacting religious-political processes.