BaronVonWreckedoften wrote: ↑Sat Nov 18, 2023 4:58 pm
Panzer21 wrote: ↑Sat Nov 18, 2023 9:39 am
It highlights, I think, our tendency to approach history retrospectively (which of course is entirely natural and logical) and see broad trends and macro events that perhaps blind us to the perspective of the participants themselves.....
It may be "natural" but I would dispute that it is logical. History is the story of mankind evolving - the acid test is not "did they follow the same rules we have today" but "were they better than the generation that went before". This has become a fundamental flaw in modern historiography, and I believe is known as the "rear view mirror approach" - typified by "Ooooh, we don't do that today, so if they were doing it back then, they MUST be evil." The problem is that the act under discussion was, very often, completely legal back then and so no crime was committed at the time (eg slavery). You cannot retrospectively convict people of something that was perfectly legal - and moreover universally legal throughout the world - when they did it.
I think you are attributing more than was intended by my remarks; undoubtedly I expressed myself poorly.
My response was addressing the question of what they called it at the time; that is what we now call "the Seven Years War".
From a C20th perspective we see it as natural and logical to incorporate the Prussian / Austrian rivalry in Europe with Britain's colonial asperations as all being part of the same conflict as we are conditioned by two major global conflicts in the C20th century. I'm not arguing the C21st perspective that incorporates morality in a skewed and biased fashion to fit a modern narrative.
Most of that morality is very poor history; slavery is rightly condemned from a moral perspective, but without any insight into contemporary values, being replaced by C21st standards of behaviour. It is denounced as the prerogative of white western colonialism, while ignoring the essential involvement of African and Arab slavers without whom it would not have worked.
One poster said they probably called it " the war" which I think is probably true; I think Lloyd(?) writing after the event called it the "Late War in Germany" ( thus ignoring America and India).
Neil