One of the most influential political texts articulating a vision for a peaceful global order is Immanuel Kant’s Perpetual Peace. The text was published in 1795 by the shores of the Baltic Sea, a region, which has resurfaced today as a place of conflict. However, the academic literature has for a long period adopted Kant’s thoughts and ideas without any regard for its historical context. Only recently a more critical perspective has emerged analysing Kant’s cosmopolitan vision through the lectures on geography that he developed and presented throughout his academic career. In order to engage with this new line of criticism this project seeks to return Kant’s cosmopolitan vision to its historical context in Königsberg. In doing so it presents a vision of a more worldly Kant engaged with tackling the political dilemmas of his era. The result is a reenvisioning of Kant’s political thought that can be responsive to the multiple dilemmas between political ideals and realities that we face in our own time.