More than Shakespeare, more than the invention of the railway, more than fair play, it was Empire which made Britain into Great Britain. By the early twentieth century, that Empire covered around a quarter of the earth's surface, and embraced more than a quarter of its inhabitants, a mass of over five hundred million people. From its maritime origins in exploration, plunder, trade and war to the scuttling of the Raj, the Empire was always shot through with paradox. In India, the Raj was the splendour of elephant processions and the gallantry of tiger shoots, just as Africa was the glory of mission Christianity and agricultural progress. British India was also the agony of famine, massacre and labouring misery, just as Africa was also slavery and land seizures. The Empire was both a triumphal cavalcade of governors and commissioners, and a sceptical tributary of humanitarians who believed in the emancipation of colonial peoples. It was always a challenging blend of greed and morality, intervention and callous neglect, liberal virtue and high-handed autocracy. At times, it was a source of strength and prestige, at times a burden and a dilemma. Untidy, even messy, Great Britain's Empire survived on its contradictions, to go down in history as the largest and greatest European empire of the modern era. This narrative account seeks to provide a balanced historical understanding of the extraordinary diversity of the British Empire, explaining its realities while avoiding either nostalgia or polemical condemnation. Written by an acclaimed South African historian raised under the discriminatory system of Apartheid (itself a vestige of European colonialism), this is a major new historical narrative of the British Empire from an entirely fresh perspective.
Stephen Conway observes how European settlers, soldiers, scientists, sailors, clergymen, merchants, and technical experts contributed to the British Empire, and how they were shaped by imperial direction and control
... a8427151.html Goodman , P. S. ( 2018 ) “ Theresa May Arrives in Davos as U.K.'s Post- “ Brexit ” Slide Continues , New York Times , 25 January , https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/25/business/theresa-may-brexit-davos.html Since 2007 ...
They people this book as they peopled the Empire - their astonishing courage and endurance, their remarkable personal stories vividly and enthrallingly recaptured.
Kingsworthy near Winchster, Hampshire, Oxford: Oxford University School of Archaeology Hawkes, S.C. & Hull, ... London: The British Academy Henig, M. (2004) 'Remaining Roman in Britain AD 300–700' in N.J. Higham (ed.) ...
Shortlisted for the Wilbur Smith Adventure Writing Prize. Simon Scarrow's veteran Roman soldier heroes face a cunning and relentless enemy in BRITANNIA, the unforgettable fourteenth novel in the bestselling Eagles of the Empire series.
In Copperfield, David recounts that Annie Strong's feckless cousin, Jack Maldon, is sent to India, just as at the end of Hard Times the sullen ingrate Tom Gradgrind is dispatched to the colonies, his banishment from so-called civilized ...
Kipling to Oman, 18 Nov. 1919, Bodleian Library, Oxford, Charles Oman Papers [hereafter MS. Eng. c. 8182], MS. Eng. c. 8182. ... Racial Violence in Britain, 1840–1950 (Leicester: Leicester University Press, 1993), pp. 92–111.
About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work.
Combining an extensive range of Greek and Latin sources with a sound understanding of archaeology, Bronwen Riley describes an epic journey from Rome to Hadrian's Wall at Britannia's - and the empire's - northwestern frontier.
Patrick Dunae and Louis James have concerned themselves with the impact of such ideas on the young reader, as have studies emerging from historians operating in the fields of education and social history. The position of women in the ...