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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.
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