Who's Who in Late Hanoverian Britain | TheBookSeekers

Who's Who in Late Hanoverian Britain


volume 7, Whos Who in British History

No. of pages 480

Published: 1999

Reviews
Great for age 11-18 years

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Part of an eight-volume series providing short biographies of men and women from Roman to Victorian times, Who's Who in Late Hanoverian Britain spans the period from the outbreak of the French Revolution to the accession of Queen Victoria. Its themes include the wars against revolutionary France, liberal and radical campaigns for reform of society and institutions, a new and turbulent phase in the 'Irish question', the evolution of mature imperial power, the transforming effect of industrialism on a fast-growing population, and the abolition of slavery. It was a heroic time in many ways. Not only were there the soldiers, sailors and statesmen who defended the nation and consolidated the empire; there were also the great engineers who tackled the obstacles of nature in the conviction that nothing was impossible, evangelical Christians who felt called to take the Gospel to the furthest parts of the world, artists and writers who responded to the visionary spirit, and politicians and students intoxicated by the fall of the Bastille. Revolution did not occur but violence was endemic - two prime ministers fought duels, a third was shot by a bankrupt merchant. 175 short essays place the subject in the context of their age and evokes what was distinctive and interesting about their personality and achievement. The biographies are arranged in a broadly chronological rather than alphabetical sequence so that the reader may easily browse from one contemporary to the next. The index, with its many cross-references, reveals further linkages between contemporaries. Each volume is a portrait of an age, presenting history in a biographical form which complements the conventional approach.

 

This is volume 7 in Whos Who in British History .

This book is aimed at the following children: secondary school , university .

There are 480 pages in this book. This is a reference book. This book was published 1999 by Shepheard-Walwyn (Publishers) Ltd .

Geoffrey Treasure, general editor of the Who's Who in British History series was Senior Master at Harrow School. Besides his two volumes for this series, he has written about French and European history, notably Mazarin (Routledge, 1955) and Louis XIV (Longmans, 2001). He has contributed articles to the Encyclopaedia Britannica on Europe and the Enlightenment and to the New Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, 2004).

This book is in the following series:

Whos Who in British History

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