Traitorfish
The Tighnahulish Kid
Christendom Destroyed by Mark Greengrass covers most of the sixteenth century and the first half of the seventeenth century (1517-1648 per the cover), but apart from that it sounds very similar to what you want.Can somebody recommend a good history of sixteenth-century Europe?
Here's why I need it and therefore what specifically I need. I'm reading, side by side, two histories of Tudor England (Guy and Elton). Naturally, they have to make frequent references to what is occurring on the continent, as they convey Hen or Liz's calculations regarding particular alliances, military ventures, etc. But in Guy and Elton, these matters come in piecemeal (naturally). But as a result, I get a really sketchy sense of the other monarchs' situation and motivations.
So what I'd need is something that identified the major "players": Empire, Spain, France, papacy, Dutch. (And even minor players when needed), and then, through a certain stretch of time kind of treated the internal developments and international ambitions of each one of those, viewed in its own right. I don't need it to be au courant with social history, etc. It can be old-school political, economic, (religious, in this case, of course) history. Just so I get some starting continuous narrative for each of these other players.
Does a thing like that exist?
The Verge by Patrick Wyman similarly doesn't cover the full century and has one foot in another century (1490-1530) but goes into a lot of detail about the sorts of changes and forces at play in Europe that would shape the rest of the sixteenth century.