
Britain
A New History Of Our Island
Hywel Williams(Author)
Callisto (Publisher)
Book
Hardback
336 pages
978-0-85740-005-5 (ISBN)
Description
Albion is a popular narrative history of the island of Great Britain from the withdrawal of the Roman legions in 410 AD, which heralded the onset of the so-called 'Dark Ages', to the post-imperial and ethnically diverse Britain of the start of the third millennium. With six chronological sections, it follows the major periods in the evolution of the island's civilization: Early Medieval Britain to 1066; Medieval Britain 1066-1485; Tudor and Stuart Britain; Hanoverian Britain; Victorian Britain; and 20th- and 21st-century Britain.
Albion's central narrative spine is fortified by a series of single-page 'capsule' biographies - twelve for each of the book's six sections - of the men and women who forged, moulded and transformed Britain over sixteen centuries. Furthermore, each section is prefaced by a timeline of key dates and events of the period. A practical work of reference, as well as an engrossing and richly informative read, Albion is an inclusive history of all three nations of the island of Britain: English, Welsh and Scots. It describes the inter-relationship between these three nations while also examining how events in Ireland have at times influenced the course of British history.
Hywel Williams is a historian with an enviable track record of writing books that inform as well as entertain. With Albion he has produced a concise history of Britain for a wide general readership: told with authority, energy and insight - and a zest for telling the many remarkable stories that underpin the decisive events of Britain's past.
Albion's central narrative spine is fortified by a series of single-page 'capsule' biographies - twelve for each of the book's six sections - of the men and women who forged, moulded and transformed Britain over sixteen centuries. Furthermore, each section is prefaced by a timeline of key dates and events of the period. A practical work of reference, as well as an engrossing and richly informative read, Albion is an inclusive history of all three nations of the island of Britain: English, Welsh and Scots. It describes the inter-relationship between these three nations while also examining how events in Ireland have at times influenced the course of British history.
Hywel Williams is a historian with an enviable track record of writing books that inform as well as entertain. With Albion he has produced a concise history of Britain for a wide general readership: told with authority, energy and insight - and a zest for telling the many remarkable stories that underpin the decisive events of Britain's past.
More details
Edition
Callisto
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Atlantic Books
Illustrations
30 integrated colour images and 5 maps
Dimensions
Height: 210 mm
Width: 148 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-85740-005-5 (9780857400055)
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
Hywel Williams is a historian, broadcaster, journalist and former political adviser. He is the author of Guilty Men: Conservative Decline and Fall: 1992-7 (1998); Cassell's Chronology of World History: Dates, Events and Ideas that Made the World (2005); Britain's Power Elites: the Rebirth of a Ruling Class (2006); Days that Changed the World: the 50 Defining Events of World History (2006) and Sun Kings: a History of Kingship (2007) and Emperor of the West: Charlemagne and the Making of Modern Europe (2010). A cabinet adviser between 1993 and 1995, and an Honorary Fellow of the University of Wales, Hywel Williams has written for The Guardian newspaper since 2000.