Renaissance and Reformation Erasmus of Rotterdam ranks among the greatest of scholars. But as
Erasmus: The Growth of a Mind (1972) and other studies show, he was more caught up in the bitter conflicts of the age than has been thought. Events made him change his mind in some ways. Like politically active friends in the
Low Countries, he harbored dark suspicions about the government of his native provinces (
The Politics of Erasmus, 1979). Even while distancing himself from
Luther's Reformation, Erasmus quarreled more with fellow Catholics than with Protestants (
Erasmus of the Low Countries,1996)
. Tracy also co-edited two volumes of state-of-the-question essays on
Early Modern Europe, and published a textbook, ''Europe's Reformations'' (1999), described as "a well-informed, critical, independent-minded, but essentially traditional view of the subject."
War and finance Early modern wars were fought on borrowed money, but princes had terrible credit ratings. One solution was for provinces to fund and manage, in the sovereign's name, a long-term, low-interest debt in which investors could have confidence.
A Financial Revolution in the Habsburg Netherlands (1985) was said to have identified "a major development in European history that has somehow escaped all previous scholarly treatment." What Tracy calls "fiscal intermediation" took many forms.
Emperor Charles V,
Impresario of War (2002), which examines how
Emperor Charles V exploited in different ways the credit-worthiness of his various realms, has been called "one of the few serious contributions in any language during the last century to the study of Charles V in his European context.
The Low Countries Prior to the 1980s, historians of the Dutch Revolt tended to pass over the preceding Habsburg era relatively quickly.
Holland under Habsburg Rule (1990) described how fiscal pressure from Habsburg authorities forced the provinces to develop many of the institutional mechanisms that would, in a few decades, prove necessary for local self-government. This was "in many respects a new and attractive view of Holland's provincial government." Historians also like to credit the young republic's success in withstanding
Spain to a patriotic cohesion among the rebel provinces, notwithstanding the selfish "particularism" of wealthy
Holland.
The Founding of the Dutch Republic (2008) argued that what held Spanish armies at bay in the difficult early years was that the States of Holland directed resources first and foremost to a successful defense of their own provincial border.
Early modern history As director of Minnesota's Center for Early Modern History (CEMH), Tracy organized in 1987 a major research conference on "Merchant Empires". He then edited one volume of substantial essays on long-distance trade in the early modern world and another on the characteristically European entanglement of state power and mercantile interest. These volumes were well received: "To speak of these essays as attaining a high level would be faint praise; their quality is excellent." Subsequent CEMH conference volumes dealt with the global phenomenon of walled cities, and the relations between religion and the early modern state as seen from
China,
Russia, and
Great Britain.
The Habsburg Monarchy and the Ottoman Empire In the long confrontation between the Habsburgs and
Ottomans, the sultan's forces held the upper hand until nearly 1600. Historians pay little attention to conflicts during the sixteenth century, and virtually ignore the southern or Croatian sector of the frontier.
Balkan Wars (2016) traces the connected histories of three adjoining provinces that shared the same language and culture but were divided among rival empires:
Habsburg Croatia,
Ottoman Bosnia, and
Venetian Dalmatia. Tracy does not read Turkish or Hungarian; he uses published sources in other languages and unpublished diplomatic correspondence to "break ground in a field as yet little cultivated." Several essays deal with the Hungarian sector of the frontier and propose a modified version of
Samuel Huntington's "
clash of civilizations" thesis. == Awards ==