The popular history of England
Author: Charles Knight
Publisher:
Published: 1880
Total Pages:
ISBN-13:
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Author: Charles Knight
Publisher:
Published: 1880
Total Pages:
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Charles Knight
Publisher:
Published: 1862
Total Pages: 756
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Thomas Babington Macaulay Baron Macaulay
Publisher:
Published: 1856
Total Pages: 494
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Peter Ackroyd
Publisher: Macmillan
Published: 2012-10-16
Total Pages: 496
ISBN-13: 1250013674
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe first book in Peter Ackroyd's history of England series, which has since been followed up with two more installments, Tudors and Rebellion. In Foundation, the chronicler of London and of its river, the Thames, takes us from the primeval forests of England's prehistory to the death, in 1509, of the first Tudor king, Henry VII. He guides us from the building of Stonehenge to the founding of the two great glories of medieval England: common law and the cathedrals. He shows us glimpses of the country's most distant past--a Neolithic stirrup found in a grave, a Roman fort, a Saxon tomb, a medieval manor house--and describes in rich prose the successive waves of invaders who made England English, despite being themselves Roman, Viking, Saxon, or Norman French. With his extraordinary skill for evoking time and place and his acute eye for the telling detail, Ackroyd recounts the story of warring kings, of civil strife, and foreign wars. But he also gives us a vivid sense of how England's early people lived: the homes they built, the clothes the wore, the food they ate, even the jokes they told. All are brought vividly to life in this history of England through the narrative mastery of one of Britain's finest writers.
Author: Charles Robert Knight
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Published: 2024-06-08
Total Pages: 773
ISBN-13: 3385504937
DOWNLOAD EBOOKReprint of the original, first published in 1876.
Author: Simon Jenkins
Publisher: PublicAffairs
Published: 2011-11-22
Total Pages: 385
ISBN-13: 1610391438
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe heroes and villains, triumphs and disasters of English history are instantly familiar -- from the Norman Conquest to Henry VIII, Queen Victoria to the two World Wars. But to understand their full significance we need to know the whole story. A Short History of England sheds new light on all the key individuals and events in English history by bringing them together in an enlightening account of the country's birth, rise to global prominence, and then partial eclipse. Written with flair and authority by Guardian columnist and London Times former editor Simon Jenkins, this is the definitive narrative of how today's England came to be. Concise but comprehensive, with more than a hundred color illustrations, this beautiful single-volume history will be the standard work for years to come.
Author: James Hawes
Publisher: The Experiment, LLC
Published: 2022-03-15
Total Pages: 305
ISBN-13: 1615198156
DOWNLOAD EBOOKHow the most powerful country in the UK was forged by invasion and conquest, and is fractured by its north-south divide. The Shortest History books deliver thousands of years of history in one riveting, fast-paced read. England—begetter of parliaments and globe-spanning empires, star of beloved period dramas, and home of the House of Windsor—is not quite the stalwart island fortress that many of us imagine. Riven by an ancient fault line that predates even the Romans, its fate has ever been bound up with that of its neighbors; and for the past millennia, it has harbored a class system like nowhere else on Earth. This bracing tour of the most powerful country in the United Kingdom reveals an England repeatedly invaded and constantly reinvented—yet always fractured by its very own Mason-Dixon Line. It carries us swiftly through centuries of conflict between Crown and Parliament (starring the Magna Carta), America’s War of Independence, the rise and fall of empire, two World Wars, and England’s break from the EU. We discover: why the American colonists of 1776 believed that they were the true Anglo-Saxons how the British Empire was undermined from within why Winston Churchill said the UK could only be saved by splitting up England itself and how populism spawned Brexit and its “new elite.” The Shortest History of England brings all this and more to prescient life—offering the most direct, compelling route to understanding the country behind today’s headlines.
Author: C. V. Wedgwood
Publisher: New York Review of Books
Published: 2016-09-13
Total Pages: 538
ISBN-13: 1681371235
DOWNLOAD EBOOKEurope in 1618 was riven between Protestants and Catholics, Bourbon and Hapsburg--as well as empires, kingdoms, and countless principalities. After angry Protestants tossed three representatives of the Holy Roman Empire out the window of the royal castle in Prague, world war spread from Bohemia with relentless abandon, drawing powers from Spain to Sweden into a nightmarish world of famine, disease, and seemingly unstoppable destruction.
Author: George Lillie Craik
Publisher:
Published: 1841
Total Pages: 708
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: David Hume
Publisher:
Published: 1822
Total Pages: 474
ISBN-13:
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