The best new history books to buy for Christmas 2021

Christmas is the time of year when people are most likely to attend divine service, and Going to Church in Medieval England by Nicholas Orme (Yale, £20), tells us how they did it 800 years ago: much as today, three masses were allowed (midnight, dawn, mid-morning) in buildings decorated with holly and ivy. Orme also describes how the churches that punctuate our landscape came about, and who ran them. He ends at the Reformation, which underpins Clare Jackson’s Devil-Land, (Allen Lane, £35). It begins as the Armada attempts to reverse the English Reformation and ends a century later with the Glorious Revolution, when James II, the last king to attempt Catholic rule, was driven out. Jackson looks at history from the viewpoint of the loser, painting England as a failed state – though the revolution turned out more glorious than she suggests.

The pivotal figure of the 17th century features in The Making of Oliver Cromwell, by Ronald Hutton (Yale, £25), which meticulously takes the Lord Protector’s story to 1645, showing how his gifts as a soldier equipped him for leadership.

A different type of 16th century is revealed in Antwerp: The Glory Years by Michael Pye (Allen Lane, £25). This was where, before the Dutch unsuccessfully rebelled against Habsburg rule, Bruegel painted The Tower of Babel, Tyndale issued copies of his Bible in English, Erasmus and Thomas More thought world-changing thoughts. Antwerp became a refuge for Jews fleeing a Portuguese pogrom; it was a model for what we call globalism.

Talking of old subjects newly relevant, in The Gun, the Ship and the Pen (Profile, £25), Linda Colley takes a fresh approach to nation-making, showing how the vogue for written constitutions from the 1750s onwards did not prevent nations waging wars on each other, or help them achieve many of the stated aims of the drafters.

In Time’s Witness (Allen Lane, £25), Rosemary Hill argues that after 1789 the way history was written, and its purposes, underwent profound change. Whereas before (to evoke Carlyle) it had been about the lives of great men, it now also looked at the common people – an inevitable result of the French Revolution – and sought to enlighten us about the objects and art of the past, a point Hill makes by studying the lives of various notable antiquarians. Such antiquarianism led on to archaeology, and Alexandria: The Quest for the Lost City by Edmund Richardson (Bloomsbury, £25) recounts the fashion for exploring the ancient world in the 19th century, from Persia to Afghanistan, and notably the adventures of one archaeologist, Charles Masson, who turned out to be more than met the eye.

Related Posts

Property Management in Dubai: Effective Rental Strategies and Choosing a Management Company

“Property Management in Dubai: Effective Rental Strategies and Choosing a Management Company” In Dubai, one of the most dynamically developing regions in the world, the real estate…

In Poland, an 18-year-old Ukrainian ran away from the police and died in an accident, – media

The guy crashed into a roadside pole at high speed. In Poland, an 18-year-old Ukrainian ran away from the police and died in an accident / illustrative…

NATO saw no signs that the Russian Federation was planning an attack on one of the Alliance countries

Bauer recalled that according to Article 3 of the NATO treaty, every country must be able to defend itself. Rob Bauer commented on concerns that Russia is…

The Russian Federation has modernized the Kh-101 missile, doubling its warhead, analysts

The installation of an additional warhead in addition to the conventional high-explosive fragmentation one occurred due to a reduction in the size of the fuel tank. The…

Four people killed by storm in European holiday destinations

The deaths come amid warnings of high winds and rain thanks to Storm Nelson. Rescuers discovered bodies in two separate incidents / photo ua.depositphotos.com Four people, including…

Egg baba: a centuries-old recipe of 24 yolks for Catholic Easter

They like to put it in the Easter basket in Poland. However, many countries have their own variations of “bab”. The woman’s original recipe is associated with…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *