Just Finished Reading :
Medieval Britain
– A Very Short Introduction by John Gillingham and Ralph A Griffiths
Despite knowing most of the names and some of the highlights
mentioned in this busy little volume I was surprised at the amount of detail I
was clearly unaware of. After reading this excellent book I at least now know
the main elements of my ignorance. I am actually surprised by how little I seem
to know of my own countries history. We covered some aspects of this period in
school history classes – 1066, the Wars of the Roses, things like that – but I
never realised just how things fitted together before. The Middle Ages now
makes a great deal more sense. I certainly have a much greater understanding
about our long lasting enmity with France for example – that our
political and royal histories are so deeply intertwined that it would be
difficult for us not to have become century’s long enemies. Like competing
siblings we simply have too many ambitions and desires in common to become
friends without the maturity that only time brings. One thing that did surprise
me very much, though on reflection should not have done, is how turbulent the
whole period was. Not only was war an almost constant feature of the time but,
combined with civil unrest, invasion, famine and plague, every thing seemed to
be in flux. It’s pretty amazing how anything managed to keep going. But it did
– often through the skill and willpower of kings, queens and great men.
2 comments:
Alistair Horne's "La Belle France" also showed how intertwined English and French history were in the early years.
The medieval era has always fascinated it: it seems like such a simpler time, but most of the issues are the same as today and it eventually helped create the modern world. My favorite authors in this subject are Frances and Joseph Gies, who do "daily life" and cultural histories. They're usually real eye-openers. The Gies' "Cathedral, Forge, and Waterwheel" is another good one.
By the way, I saw this earlier today and thought you'd like it: pinups!
http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2011/04/21/vintage-pin-ups-before-and-after/
Thanks for the link. It certainly appears that photo-shop existed long before computers!
There is indeed nothing new under the sun!
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