Edward Mortimer, former Chief Program Officer of Salzburg Global Seminar, delivered the inaugural Palliser Lecture in memory of Sir Michael Palliser GCMG at the House of Lords in London.
The lecture looked at Europe's future in the light of two centenaries that fell in 2014 – that of the start of the Congress of Vienna in 1814, which re-shaped Europe after the Napoleonic wars, and that of 1914, when the outbreak of World War One shattered Europe's long peace, leading to 30 years of horrific bloodshed and the loss of Europe's pre-eminent position in world affairs.
In Europe and perhaps even more in the global world order, 2014 resembled 1914 – the time of the "sleepwalkers" - rather than 1814, the time of the "architects". Is it possible to reach consensus on much-needed reforms in the international system without first subjecting it to yet another cataclysmic shock?