Jump to book subject area navigation Jump to general navigation Jump to start of page content
Search   
non fiction 

 

London: A Short History

A N Wilson

A short, entertaining and passionate history of London by the bestselling author of THE VICTORIANS

The structure of the book is chronological, with digressions. From Roman and then Norman London, we move on to Chaucer's London - the city of the Peasants Revolt, Dick Whittington and the great Livery Companies. In Tudor and Stuart London many believed the city was being wrecked by over-population, over-building and the greed of speculators. Eighteenth-century London witnessed the South Sea Bubble, gin, highwaymen and the Gordon riots; but also banking, hospitals, and the elegant design of everyday things. In
the nineteenth century, expanding vigorously, the city resisted any overall make-over. With Queen Victoria came the Railway Age, which made and unmade the city. Chartism, anti-semitism, overcrowding and cholera. But engineering triumphs too. If the First World War was a nightmare happening elsewhere, the amazing six years of 1939-45 were the city's finest hour. Post-1945, property developers took over, with disastrous results. The author celebrates the cosmopolitan city that mobility and immigration have created,
while deploring the `moronization' of the city, exemplified by the Millennium

London: A Short History

Buy from Book Depository
Buy from Play.com
Buy from Waterstones
£7.99
Paperback
176 pages
198 x 129 mm
ISBN-10: 0753817683
ISBN-13: 9780753820278
Publication: February 2005
  Orion Group Publishing logo - link to home page Reading Room * * *