
A History of Britain: Volume 1
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Narrado por:
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Stephen Thorne
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De:
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Simon Schama
The story of Britain from the earliest settlements in 3000 BC to the death of Elizabeth I in 1603. To look back at the past is to understand the present. In this vivid account of over 4,000 years of British history, Simon Schama takes us on an epic journey which encompasses the very beginnings of the nation's identity, when the first settlers landed on Orkney.
From the successes and failures of the monarchy to the daily life of a Roman soldier stationed on Hadrian's Wall, Schama gives a vivid, fascinating account of the many different stories and struggles that lie behind the growth of our island nation. Simon Schama's major BBC2 series has shown him to be one of our most original and exciting historians.
©2012 Simon Schama (P)2014 Audible, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















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This is a well written Book.
The real history of England
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Good history, fantastic reading
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Would you listen to A History of Britain: Volume 1 again? Why?
Yes. The information is so packed in there. I finished this a few months ago, and I am afraid I have retained probably less than a 10th of the information.Who was your favorite character and why?
King Alfred the Great. Brilliant.Any additional comments?
Probably written for a British audience. Had the feeling that I was pretending to know what was happening half the time because I got disoriented in time and eras.Intriguing introduction
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dense but interesting
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great story
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great reader, story jumps around
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Schama is one of the great English wordsmiths
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Professor Schama deserves kudos for making history interesting, even in this non-TV version. Though this starts out in prehistoric times of the beginning of civilization, that portion of the book is covered quite briefly. He slows down and goes into more detail when the Romans arrived, naturally, since there are written records from that time period. Those 300 years seem to be a relatively peaceful time and certainly the great building boom bears that out. The later arrival of the Vikings, the Anglo-Saxons, and finally the Normans was much more violent when the land seemed to be the focal point of conflict between various foreign forces and peoples. He does a good job of explaining the development of the history, particularly from a political, i.e. royal perspective. Though it also attempts to help us understand the life of the “civilian” population at times, that may be its weakest area, though it may have made the book much too long to deal with the lives of ordinary people. And one may also criticize its focus on England at the expense of Scotland, Wales, and Ireland since it calls itself “A History of Britain.”
Although at the end of this first book, there was still no united Britain, one of the themes is the events that laid the foundations for the formation of a nation state in the next century.
Much more time was spent on the era after the arrival of the Normans, particularly of the Plantagenet kings (1145 – 1485) and the Tudors (1485 – 1603), a very violent time, at least for royals and other nobles, when the Tower would have quickly filled to capacity were it not for the many beheadings, hangings, and quartering (look that up) that seemed to be the equivalent or reality TV for the middle ages.
But, some of those excesses also set the stage for the evolution of Britain into a constitutional monarchy (over many more centuries) and eventually the experiment in a constitutional democratic republic in the independent American colonies. The Magna Carta (1215) was signed by King John of England to solve a political crisis of his own making and was later ignored many times but kept coming back in modified form to limit the power of the monarchy.
One thing that is ofen ignored in history is the recurrence of anti-Semitism and Professor Schama does not ignore this part of history. He recounts its prevalence in various incidents in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries including massacres in York in 1190 and the Edict of Expulsion issued by Edward I in 1290.
If you have any interest in History, this is a good one to read. I suspect that it won’t offer any new revelations to a scholar, but for someone who just wants to understand without being bored, this is a good start.
Good political history for most of us
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William I, Edward I, Henry II and Beckett, Henry III and Eleanor and the Tudors all get lots of press. Wales, Scotland, Ireland, Chaucer, Shakespeare, the War of the Roses, Richard III, the Crusades and many other aspects of British history are given scant mention.
Thorne does a fine job as narrator, and it is a well written book, with a sly wit, but the subtitle is a bit misleading.
A History of the English Monarchy from 1066-1603
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Excellent history, read surprisingly well.
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