Description
Imperial Borderlands provides a comprehensive analysis of the Habsburg Military Frontier, one of Europe’s most distinctive institutional arrangements. Bogdan G. Popescu investigates how the Austrian Empire managed this contested border region through military and administrative structures that evolved over centuries.
The book examines the economic, social, and political institutions that characterized the Military Frontier, tracing their origins and development through the early modern period. Popescu demonstrates how these institutions influenced settlement patterns, military organization, and ethnic relations in the borderlands.
As part of the Cambridge Studies in Economic History series, this work employs rigorous economic analysis to understand how frontier institutions functioned and adapted. The author argues that the Military Frontier’s legacy extends beyond its formal dissolution, influencing modern Central European societies and interstate relations.







Reviews
There are no reviews yet.