This charming and spirited story of the extraordinary European nation
begins with the fall of the Roman Empire and the rise of the Swiss
people amongst the challenging landscape of the rugged Alps, and follows
their tale through the development of feudalism, the struggle for
control by warlords, the Thirty Years War, and into the aftermath of the
French Revolution. First published in 1832, this is a tale of dramatic
splendor performed by captivating personalities-here is a work of
classic history that will delete Europhiles and students of the past
alike. Scottish author JOHN WILSON (1785-1854) sometimes wrote under the
pseudonym "Christopher North" for Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine. He is
also the author of Lights and Shadows of Scottish Life (1822), The
Trials of Margaret Lyndsay (1823), and The Foresters (1825), among other
works.