The English Rebel: One Thousand Years of Trouble-making from the Normans to the Nineties

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Description

The English have a rich and glorious history of making trouble for themselves. One hundred and forty years before the French Revolution, the English executed their king and instituted a radical revolutionary government. In 1215, more than 570 years before the United States ratified its Bill of Rights, England’s barons forced King John to accept the Magna Carta. In 1926 over 1.5 million strikers brought the nation to its knees. From the Peasants’ Revolt to the suffragettes, from Oliver Cromwell to Arthur Scargill, this ground-breaking and hugely enjoyable book describes a rich and continuous tradition of resistance, rebellion and radicalism, of violent and charismatic individuals with axes to grind, and of social eruptions and political earthquakes that have shaped England’s whole culture and character.

Additional information

Weight 0.5 kg
Dimensions 3.5 × 12.9 × 19.8 cm
by

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

496

Publisher

Year Published

2010-4-1

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

0141025476

About The Author

David Horspool read History at Oxford, and is History Editor of the Times Literary Supplement. He is the author of Why Alfred Burned the Cakes, and he writes for the TLS, the Sunday Times, Guardian, Daily Telegraph and New York Times.

A superb losers' history of England [told] with narrative verve and delicious detail

Other text

An unfailingly lucid, immensely readable, and above-all clear-eyed account of an indomitable strand in our national story

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