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As Adam Zamoyski set out to update The Polish Way, his bestselling
first history of Poland, he realized the task required not so much
re-writing as re-thinking the known facts well as the assumptions
of the past. The events of the last twenty years and the growth of
the independent Polish state allowed him to look at Poland's past
with a fresh eye. Tracing Poland's complex development from the
Middle Ages to present day, Zamoyski examines the country's
political, economic, and military struggles, as well as its
culture, art, and richly varied society through the ages, bringing
the major events and characters in Poland's history to life.
The Sunday Times bestselling account of Napoleon's invasion of
Russia and eventual retreat from Moscow, events that had a profound
effect on the subsequent course of Russian and European history.
Moscow has both fascinated military historians and captured the
imagination of millions on an emotional and human level. 1812 tells
the story of how the most powerful man on earth met his doom, and
how the greatest fighting force ever assembled was wiped out. Over
400,000 French and Allied troops died on the disastrous Russian
campaign, with the vast majority of the casualties occuring during
the frigid winter retreat. Adam Zamoyski tells their story with
incredible detail and sympathy, drawing on a wealth of first-hand
accounts of the tragedy to create a vivid portrait of an
unimaginable catastrophe. power. His intention was to destroy
Britain through a total blockade, the Continental System. But Tsar
Alexander of Russia refused to apply the blockade, and Napoleon
decided to bring him to heel. ramifications on Russian, French,
German and, indeed, European history and culture cannot be
understated. Adam Zamoyski's epic, enthralling narrative is the
definitive account of the events of that dramatic year.
Following on from his epic '1812: Napoleon's Fatal March on
Moscow', bestselling author Adam Zamoyski has written the dramatic
story of the Congress of Vienna. In the wake of his disastrous
Russian campaign of 1812, Napoleon's imperious grip on Europe began
to weaken, raising the question of how the Continent was to be
reconstructed after his defeat. There were many who dreamed of a
peace to end all wars, in which the interests of peoples as well as
those of rulers would be taken into account. But what followed was
an unseemly and at times brutal scramble for territory by the most
powerful states, in which countries were traded as if they had been
private and their inhabitants counted like cattle. The results,
fixed at the Congress of Vienna in 1815, not only laid the
foundations of the European world we know; it put in place a social
order and a security system that lie at the root of many of the
problems which dog the world today. Although the defining moments
took place in Vienna, and the principle players included Tsar
Alexander I of Russia, the Austrian Chancellor Metternich, the Duke
of Wellington and the French master of diplomacy Talleyrand, as
well as Napoleon himself, the accepted view of the gathering of
statesmen reordering the Continent in elegant salons is a false
one. Many of the crucial questions were decided on the battlefield
or in squalid roadside cottages amid the vagaries of war. And the
proceedings in Vienna itself were not as decorous as is usually
represented. Drawing on a wide range of first-hand sources in six
languages, which include not only official documents, private
letters, diaries and first-hand accounts, but also the reports of
police spies and informers, Adam Zamoyski gets below the thin
veneer of courtliness and reveals that the new Europe was forged by
men in thrall to fear, greed and lust, in an atmosphere of moral
depravity in which sexual favours were traded as readily as
provinces and the 'souls' who inhabited them. He has created a
chilling account, full of menace as well as frivolity.
The dramatic and little-known story of how, in the summer of 1920,
Lenin came within a hair's breadth of shattering the painstakingly
constructed Versailles peace settlement and spreading Bolshevism to
western Europe. In 1920 the new Soviet state was a mess, following
a brutal civil war, and the best way of ensuring its survival
appeared to be to export the revolution to Germany, itself
economically ruined by defeat in World War I and racked by internal
political dissension. Between Russia and Germany lay Poland, a
nation that had only just recovered its independence after more
than a century of foreign oppression. But it was economically and
militarily weak and its misguided offensive to liberate the Ukraine
in the spring of 1920 laid it open to attack. Egged on by Trotsky,
Lenin launched a massive westward advance under the flamboyant
Marshal Tukhachevsky. All that Great Britain and France had fought
for over four years now seemed at risk. By the middle of August the
Russians were only a few kilometres from Warsaw, and Berlin was
less than a week's march away. Then occurred the 'Miracle of the
Vistula': the Polish army led by Jozef Pilsudski regrouped and
achieved one of the most decisive victories in military history. As
a result, the Versailles peace settlement survived, and Lenin was
forced to settle for Communism in one country. The battle for
Warsaw bought Europe nearly two decades of peace, and communism
remained a mainly Russian phenomenon, subsuming many of the
autocratic and Byzantine characteristics of Russia's tsarist
tradition.
By the beginning of 1941 there was a fully fledged Polish Air
Force operating alongside the RAF. With 14 Squadrons it was larger
than any other of the Air Force from Nazi-occupied Europe that had
joined the Allies. Over 17,000 men and women passed through the
ranks of the Polish Air Force while it was stationed in the UK.
They shot down 745 enemy aircraft, with a further 175 unconfirmed.
They dropped thousands of bombs and laid hundreds of mines, flying
102,486 sorties notching up a total of 290,895 operation flying
hours. They achieved this at a cost of 1,973 killed and 1,388
wounded. They won 342 British gallantry awards.
Following Napoleon's defeat and exile in 1814, the future of the
European continent hung in the balance. Eager to negotiate a
lasting, workable peace, representatives of Britain, Austria,
Prussia, and Russia--along with a host of lesser nations--gathered
in Vienna for an eight-month-long political carnival, combining
negotiations with balls, tournaments, picnics, artistic
performances, and other sundry forms of entertainment for the
thousands of assembled aristocrats. While the Congress of Vienna
resulted in an unprecedented level of European stability, the price
of peace would be shockingly high, with many crucial questions
ultimately decided on the battlefield or in squalid roadside
cottages amid the vagaries of war.
Internationally bestselling author Adam Zamoyski's "Rites of
Peace" is a meticulously researched, masterfully told account of
these extraordinary events and their profound historical
consequences, featuring a cast of some of the most influential and
powerful figures in history.
Napoleon dominated nearly all of Europe by 1810, largely
succeeding in his aim to reign over the civilized world. But
Britain eluded him. To conquer the island nation, he needed
Russia's Tsar Alexander's help. The Tsar refused, and Napoleon
vowed to teach him a lesson by intimidation and force. The ensuing
invasion of Russia, during the frigid winter of 1812, would mark
the beginning of the end of Napoleon's empire. Although his army
captured Moscow after a brutal march deep into hostile territory,
it was a hollow victory for the demoralized troops. Napoleon's men
were eventually turned back, and their defeat was a momentous
turning point in world affairs. Dramatic, insightful, and
enormously absorbing, Moscow 1812 is a masterful work of
history.
'Napoleon is an out-and-out masterpiece and a joy to read' Sir
Antony Beevor, author of Stalingrad A landmark new biography that
presents the man behind the many myths. The first writer in English
to go back to the original European sources, Adam Zamoyski's
portrait of Napoleon is historical biography at its finest.
Napoleon inspires passionately held and often conflicting visions.
Was he a god-like genius, Romantic avatar, megalomaniac monster,
compulsive warmonger or just a nasty little dictator? While he
displayed elements of these traits at certain times, Napoleon was
none of these things. He was a man and, as Adam Zamoyski presents
him in this landmark biography, a rather ordinary one at that. He
exhibited some extraordinary qualities during some phases of his
life but it is hard to credit genius to a general who presided over
the worst (and self-inflicted) disaster in military history and who
single-handedly destroyed the great enterprise he and others had
toiled so hard to construct. A brilliant tactician, he was no
strategist. But nor was Napoleon an evil monster. He could be
selfish and violent but there is no evidence of him wishing to
inflict suffering gratuitously. His motives were mostly
praiseworthy and his ambition no greater than that of
contemporaries such as Alexander I of Russia, Wellington, Nelson
and many more. What made his ambition exceptional was the scope it
was accorded by circumstance. Adam Zamoyski strips away the lacquer
of prejudice and places Napoleon the man within the context of his
times. In the 1790s, a young Napoleon entered a world at war, a
bitter struggle for supremacy and survival with leaders motivated
by a quest for power and by self-interest. He did not start this
war but it dominated his life and continued, with one brief
interruption, until his final defeat in 1815. Based on primary
sources in many European languages, and beautifully illustrated
with portraits done only from life, this magnificent book examines
how Napoleone Buonaparte, the boy from Corsica, became 'Napoleon';
how he achieved what he did, and how it came about that he undid
it. It does not justify or condemn but seeks instead to understand
Napoleon's extraordinary trajectory.
A magnificent and timely examination of an age of fear, subversion,
suppression and espionage, Adam Zamoyski explores the attempts of
the governments of Europe to police the world in a struggle against
obscure forces, seemingly dedicated to the overthrow of
civilisation. The advent of the French Revolution confirmed the
worst fears of the rulers of Europe. They saw their states as
storm-tossed vessels battered by terrible waves coming from every
quarter and threatened by horrific monsters from the deep. Rulers'
nerves were further unsettled by the voices of the Enlightenment,
envisaging improvement only through a radical transformation of
existing structures, with undeniable implications for the future
role of the monarchy and the Church. Napoleon's arrival on the
European stage intensified these fears, and the changes he wrought
across Europe fully justified them. Yet he also brought some
comfort to those rulers who managed to survive: he had tamed the
revolution in France and the hegemony he exercised over Europe was
a kind of guarantee against subversion. Once Napoleon was toppled,
the monarchs of Europe took over this role for themselves. However,
the nature of their attempts to impose order were not only
ineffectual, they also managed to weaken the bases of that order.
As counter-productive as anything, for example, was the use of
force. Reliance on standing armies to maintain order only served to
politicize the military and to give potential revolutionaries the
opportunity to get their hands on a ready armed force. The wave of
revolutions in 1848 might have embodied the climactic clash that
many had come to expect, but it was no Armageddon, lacking the kind
of mass support that rulers had dreaded and revealed the
groundlessness of most of their fears. Interestingly, the sense of
a great, ill-defined, subversive threat never went away, indeed it
lingers on even today in the minds of world leaders. Adam
Zamoyski's compelling history explores how the rulers and
governments of the time really did envisage the future and how they
meant to assure it.
Adam Zamoyski first wrote his history of Poland two years before
the collapse of the Soviet Union. This substantially revised and
updated edition sets the Soviet era in the context of the rise,
fall and remarkable rebirth of an indomitable nation. In 1797,
Russia, Prussia and Austria divided Poland among themselves,
rewriting Polish history to show that they had brought much-needed
civilisation to a primitive backwater. But the country they wiped
off the map had been one of Europe's largest and most richly
varied, born of diverse cultural traditions and one of the boldest
constitutional experiments ever attempted. Its destruction
ultimately led to two world wars and the Cold War. Zamoyski's fully
revised history of Poland looks back over a thousand years of
turmoil and triumph, chronicling how Poland has been restored at
last to its rightful place in Europe.
Born in Corsica, and a brilliant military leader during the French
revolution, Napoleon became Emperor in 1804 and dominated European
and indeed global affairs for the next ten years, leading France
against a series of coalitions in what were later called the
Napoleonic wars. His victories are the stuff of legend, as is his
famous invasion of Russia in 1812, disastrous and shattering
retreat from Moscow two years later, and final defeat by Britain
and its allies at Waterloo in 1815. So how great a military leader
was Napoleon? And how skilled a political operator? Why are his
relationships with women, and especially his Empress, Josephine, so
famous? And what of his legacy - in particular, how important was
the so-called Napoleonic Code? "The ideas that underpin our modern
world-meritocracy, equality before the law, property rights,
religious toleration, modern secular education, sound finances, and
so on-were championed, consolidated, codified and geographically
extended by Napoleon," says Andrew Roberts. "To them he added a
rational and efficient local administration, an end to rural
banditry, the encouragement of science and the arts, the abolition
of feudalism and the greatest codification of laws since the fall
of the Roman Empie." Zamoyski assesses this verdict of Napoleon and
gives his own view of the greatness and legacy of one of history's
most compelling figures.
From America's fight for independence to the Paris Commune - an
exotic collection of fanatics, adventurers, poets and thinkers are
brought vividly to life. Holy Madness probes into the psyche that
was responsible for so many of the founding events of our modern
world, and into the instincts that inspired its most generous and
most murderous impulses. It explains how the Enlightenment
dislodged Christianity from its central position in the life of
European societies and how man's quest for ecstasy and
transcendence flooded into areas such as the arts, spawning the
Romantic movement. This dramatic journey which begins in America in
1776 and goes right up to the last agony of the Paris Commune in
1871, takes in the French revolution, the Irish rebellion, the
Polish risings, the war of Greek liberation, the Russian
insurrection, the Hungarian struggles for freedom, the liberation
of South America, and the Italian Risorgimento. 'An ambitious and
in many ways brilliant book' Hilary Mantel
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Chopin (Paperback)
Adam Zamoyski
1
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R445
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
Save R76 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A new edition of Adam Zamoyski's definitive biography of Chopin,
first published in 1979 and unavailable in English for many years.
Few composers elicit such strong emotions as Chopin. Few have been
more revered and cherished. And few have had so much sentimental
nonsense written about them. Published to coincide with the
bicentenary of Chopin's birth, Adam Zamoyski's compelling new
biography cuts through the mass of anecdote and myth that has
sprung up around the composer's life and the ebullient and striking
personalities of Romantic Paris among whom he lived, including
Liszt, Berlioz, Victor Hugo and George Sand, in search of the real
Chopin. Zamoyski brings to the subject an unrivalled knowledge of
the historical, social and cultural background of the composer's
native Poland as well as of the France in which he spent most of
his creative life. He has scoured the archives of Warsaw, Krakow,
Paris and London in his quest for the truth, and has based his
account exclusively on primary sources and contemporary accounts.
The result is a biography of authority, perception and wit. Chopin
emerges from the sugary romantic mist in which he has been shrouded
as a real, palpable personality, a man of intelligence and humour;
in music an innovator of genius; in business a feckless
spendthrift; in love hesitant and tender; in friendship
passionately loyal but often intolerably exacting. Through a close
reading of his letters and the use of everyday detail, Zamoyski
draws the reader into the private world of this most complicated
and reticent of men - 'a man made for intimacy', as the poet
Heinrich Heine called him - and reveals the real passions,
suffering and ultimate tragedy of his life.
A superb study of one of the most important, romantic and dynamic
figures of European history. 'A fine book ... the web of political
intrigue unfolds like an appetising detective novel' Scotsman The
last king of Poland owed his throne largely to his youthful romance
with the future Catherine the Great of Russia. But Stanislaw
Augustus was nobody's pawn. He was an ambitious, highly intelligent
and complex character, a dashing figure in the finest
eighteenth-century tradition. A great believer in art and
education, he spent fortunes on cultural projects, and finding that
he was blocked politically by Catherine, he put his energies into a
programme of social and artistic regeneration. He transformed the
mood of his country and brought it to a new phase of reform and
independence. Poland's neighbours, however, viewed this beacon of
liberty in their midst with alarm, and as they invaded and
partitioned it, Stanislaw saw the destruction of his life's work,
and ultimately was forced to abdicate, a broken man, deceived and
disillusioned.
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