
A Comic History of England
The Original Horrible History
Stephen Basdeo(Editor)
Pen & Sword History (Publisher)
Published on 21. August 2025
Book
Hardback
224 pages
978-1-3990-1568-4 (ISBN)
Description
"Nothing now succeeds unless it's in the comic line. We have comic Latin grammars, and comic Greek grammars; indeed, I don't know but what English grammar, too, is a comedy altogether. All our tragedies are made into comedies by the way they are performed; and no work sells without comic illustrations to it. I have brought out several new comic works, which have been very successful. For instance, The Comic Wealth of Nations; The Comic Parliamentary Speeches ... I even propose to bring out a Comic Whole Duty of Man. All these books sell well: they do admirably for the nurseries of the children of the aristocracy. In fact they are as good as manuals and text-books."
Those words from best-selling Victorian novelist George W.M. Reynolds were a nod to the work of a writer named Gilbert Abbot a Beckett. Beckett loved history and writing about history but he was also something of a comedian. Then one day he had a bright idea: What if history could be funny and still be factual and educate people? He resolved to start writing a funny history book which he named The Comic History of England, which was originally serialised in Punch in 1847.
It was an irreverent take on the conservative history books of Beckett's day. Kings and queens emerge as mean-spirited petty rascals and to look for their virtues "would require the aid of one of those solar microscopes which give visibility to the merest atom, and the particle." Other monarchs such as King John were downright useless and allowed himself to be "bullied by bulls"-papal bulls. The Church came off not better either, being "the medium of extortion" and taking hard-earned money off the people. In this history book, then, readers can laugh with Caesar during his invasion of Britain; stand in the sea with Canute; and joke about Richard on the field of Bosworth.
Those words from best-selling Victorian novelist George W.M. Reynolds were a nod to the work of a writer named Gilbert Abbot a Beckett. Beckett loved history and writing about history but he was also something of a comedian. Then one day he had a bright idea: What if history could be funny and still be factual and educate people? He resolved to start writing a funny history book which he named The Comic History of England, which was originally serialised in Punch in 1847.
It was an irreverent take on the conservative history books of Beckett's day. Kings and queens emerge as mean-spirited petty rascals and to look for their virtues "would require the aid of one of those solar microscopes which give visibility to the merest atom, and the particle." Other monarchs such as King John were downright useless and allowed himself to be "bullied by bulls"-papal bulls. The Church came off not better either, being "the medium of extortion" and taking hard-earned money off the people. In this history book, then, readers can laugh with Caesar during his invasion of Britain; stand in the sea with Canute; and joke about Richard on the field of Bosworth.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Barnsley
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Illustrations
150 colour illustrations; 150 Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 165 mm
Thickness: 22 mm
Weight
650 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-3990-1568-4 (9781399015684)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Edited by Dr Stephen Basdeo, who has spent over a decade researching eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literature and culture.