Richelieu is a classic yet fresh treatment of one of the most central figures in the making of modern Europe, and Belloc tells his story as only Belloc can. Not a sterile, overly footnoted academic dissection of secondary sources, Belloc’s Richelieu is a lively, engaging, truth-is-stranger-than-fiction tale of an intriguing and ultimately tragic personality. The book directly tackles the central problem of the Cardinal, painting a surprisingly sympathetic portrait of the man while offering an objective critique of his policies: policies that did so much to make permanent the rift that split Christendom and which, thanks to Cardinal Richelieu’s efforts among other things, was never to be repaired.
Introduction —Fr. Michael Crowdy
Part One: The Nature of the Achievement
1. Richeliu: The Founder of Modern Europe
2. Richeliu and Bismarck
3. The Political Circumstance: Domestic
4. The Political Circumstance: Foreign
5. The Person and Character
6. The Surrounding Figures
Part Two: The Process of the Achievement
1. The Approach
2. Find, Check and Kill
3. The Valtelline
4. La Rochelle
5. The Day of Dupes
6. Gustavus Adolphus
7. The Final War
Part Three: The Exit