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BRITISH HISTORY IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY ( 1782-1901) by GEORGE
MACAULAY. Originally published in 1922. PREFACE: THE object of this
book is to enable the student or general reader to obtain, in the
compass of one volume, a picture of change and development during
the hundred and twenty years when things certainly, and probably
men and women with them, were undergoing a more rapid change of
character than in any previous epoch of our annals. I have tried to
give the sense of continuous growth to show how economic led to
social, and social to political change, how the political events
reacted on the economic and social, and how new thoughts and new
ideals accompanied or directed the whole complicated process. For
such a purpose, it would be a mistake to confuse the narrative with
too much detail, but I have put into the story the main events
which directed the course of the current, or were regarded as
specially symbolic of each passing age. I cannot hold the epicurean
doctrine, sometimes favoured now adays, that because history
increasingly deals with generalisation it is safe for the student
to neglect dates, which are the bones of historical anatomy. Still
less is it safe, in pursuit of generalised truth, to overlook the
personality and influence of great men, who are often in large
measure the cause of some c tendency which only they rendered
inevitable. Political writers, social philosophers and founders of
move ments must take their place beside warriors and statesmen in
any account of social and political changes in modern times, But
religion, literature and science are only mentioned here in
connection with social or political developments of which they were
in some degree thecause or the symbol. I have made no attempt to
appreciate their real significance in a century of British history
famous for all three of these supreme efforts of the human spirit.
I have called the book British History, because, though it cannot
claim to be a History of the Empire, it is more than a History of
Britain. It is indeed, mainly, a history of Britain, but it treats
of that island as the centre of a great association of peoples,
enormously increasing in extent during the period under survey. The
course of events in Canada, Australasia, Ireland, India and British
Africa have been indicated in broken outline. In particular, I have
tried to show the relation of the various phases of our home
affairs to each of those separate stories of Imperial development,
and the effect of politics and persons at home on our relations
with Europe and with the United States Where should a British
History of the Nineteenth Century begin, and where break off?
Clearly it should stop where the nominal century and the reign of
Queen Victoria come to an end together. The finish or the Boer War
leaves us on the threshold of our own times, which are still too
near us to be seen in perspective. Where to begin is perhaps less
obvious. It would, I think, be absurd to begin exactly with the new
century, with Adding ton and the Treaty of Amiens, at a moment s
pause in the battle with revolutionary France, and in the most
terrible years of the initial agony of our own Industrial
Revolution. It is necessary first to describe the starting-point of
this great era of change, to give a sketch of the quiet, old
England of the eighteenth century before machines destroyed it, and
the poli tical scene before theFrench Revolution came to disturb
it. The fifty years that stretch from the loss of the American
Colonies and the fall of George Ill s personal government down to
Lord Grey s Reform Bill, compose a single epochs n our political hi
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Richard II (Paperback)
Anthony Steel; Foreword by George Macaulay Trevelyan
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R888
Discovery Miles 8 880
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Originally published in 1941, this monograph by historian Anthony
Steel assesses the character and policies of Richard II, who
reigned in a time of tremendous literary and artistic change which
was also underpinned by great political and religious uncertainty.
Steel puts the monarch in his context as a medieval ruler during an
era when the structures of the medieval period were beginning to
fracture, particularly the strict hierarchy which separated peasant
from lord. With an introduction by distinguished historian G. M.
Trevelyan, this book will be of value to anyone with an interest in
medieval history.
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