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In the long nineteenth century, officers were held as prisoners of war, but it meant pawning personal honour in exchange for freedom of movement and other privileges-in-captivity. Jasper Heinzen investigates how captives, statesmen, and humanitarians understood honour in this context, and the implications on our understanding of early modern war.

Produktbeschreibung
In the long nineteenth century, officers were held as prisoners of war, but it meant pawning personal honour in exchange for freedom of movement and other privileges-in-captivity. Jasper Heinzen investigates how captives, statesmen, and humanitarians understood honour in this context, and the implications on our understanding of early modern war.
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Autorenporträt
Jasper Heinzen completed his undergraduate studies at the Universities of Otago and Canterbury in New Zealand before obtaining an MPhil and PhD from the University of Cambridge. He is a senior lecturer in modern European history at the University of York. Research for the book was graciously supported by a Marie Curie Fellowship at the University of Bern, a EURIAS Fellowship at the Paris Institut d'études avancées, and a Leverhulme Fellowship, as well as a number of smaller grants.