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"Associations and societies such as the Bordeaux Club are the very
acme of civilization. Botticelli and Bach were engaged in the
eternal quest for truth and beauty in painting and music, and the
Bordeaux Club did the same for viniculture." - Andrew Roberts The
story of 12 friends who gathered to share and celebrate the
extraordinary wines of Bordeaux. Like-minded in their love of wine,
they differed wildly (often alarmingly!) in their personal wealth,
life and circumstances - their opinions, always voiced, had the
power to ignite anger and divide friendships just as easily as they
bound them together. Neil McKendrick, member and minute-taker for
57 of the Club's 70 extraordinary years, weaves the tale of this
convivial group with the rigour of a Cambridge academic (he is
ex-Master of Gonville and Caius) and the humour of a born
raconteur. Alongside the likes of Hugh Johnson, Steven Spurrier and
Michael Broadbent, he celebrates the beauty of top-class Bordeaux
and the splendour of each setting - from glorious country park to
rickety Dickensian boardroom - in which these men were lucky enough
to dine, serving up memories of vintages the like of which we will
never see again.
This collection of original essays is a tribute to Donald Coleman, Emeritus Professor of Economic History in the University of Cambridge, Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge, and formerly Professor of Economic History at the London School of Economics. The essays are contributed by friends, former students and colleagues to honour him in his retirement. They range, as does Donald Coleman’s work itself, from the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries, and reflect, in other ways, his special talents and interests. Two particular themes are reflected in the essays: the operations of businessmen and business values in history, and the factors that shaped and influenced government policies.
This enormously influential book by three leading historians was a
revolution in the understanding of commercialisation and the
economy, entrepreneurship, innovation, and the consumer revolution.
Neil McKendrick studies the fashion and the pottery industries, and
created a new framework for enquiring into fundamental issues. John
Brewer examines the commercialisation and politics. J.H. Plumb
considers the social; changes brought about by commercialization,
looking in particular at leisure, the `new world' of children, and
the acceptance of modernity.
This enormously influential book by three leading historians was a
revolution in the understanding of commercialisation and the
economy, entrepreneurship, innovation, and the consumer revolution.
Neil McKendrick studies the fashion and the pottery industries, and
created a new framework for enquiring into fundamental issues. John
Brewer examines the commercialisation and politics. J.H. Plumb
considers the social; changes brought about by commercialization,
looking in particular at leisure, the `new world' of children, and
the acceptance of modernity.
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