Wednesday, 10 December 2025

Robert Shields Mevissen: The Danube Empire An Environmental History of Habsburg State Building and Civic Engagement.

  Robert Shields Mevissen: The Danube Empire An Environmental History of Habsburg State Building and Civic Engagement.  Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2025.  ISBN 9780822967798.


In the nineteenth century, changes to the environment, driven by ideology, natural forces, and burgeoning fossil fuel power, shifted the course of the Habsburg Empire. Along the Danube—Europe’s second longest river—hydraulic engineering projects ranging from bridges to embankments and shipping hubs affected the river’s dynamics, as did new activities related to trade, industrialization, sanitation, recreation, and agriculture. Taking a unique environmental perspective to explore questions of transnational solidarity and identity, The Danube Empire argues that the Danube River served as both a catalyst and a tool for institution building. Drawing on primary sources in German and Hungarian, Robert Shields Mevissen reconstructs how various communities throughout the empire viewed and shaped river engineering works as a means to promote material wellbeing and economic vitality. As they negotiated their conflicting and overlapping interests, they engaged government at all levels, from the imperial to the local, through democratic and civic avenues. Offering new insights into the state’s normative development and robust civil society, Mevissen shows how an empire, in reshaping a river, reshaped itself.

More Praise

 This book is more than just an account of a great river running through an empire in decline. Mevissen makes clear that all human affairs—may they be political, economic, or cultural—must not be separated from the environments they affect and in which they are embedded. Martin Schmid, BOKU University


 The Danube River ran through the Habsburg Monarchy for 850 miles—offering a vast, life-giving artery from one end of the empire to the other. But the promise of irrigation, fishery, navigation, and transportation could only be met if people from Linz to Vienna to Budapest to Bucharest could agree on its use and regulation. This book, written by a fresh new voice in environmental history, traces the work done to make sure the Danube was a source of common good rather than endless conflict. It’s a model of investigating the complex network of economic, social, cultural, and environmental forces at work in managing one of the most critical ecosystems in Central Europe. Alison Frank Johnson, Harvard University


about the author

Robert Shields Mevissen is assistant professor in the Department of Civic Engagement and Leadership at Culver–Stockton College.


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Robert Shields Mevissen: The Danube Empire An Environmental History of Habsburg State Building and Civic Engagement.

  Robert Shields Mevissen: The Danube Empire An Environmental History of Habsburg State Building and Civic Engagement.  Pittsburgh: Universi...