England\'s History retold for the modern age--from Caesar to Brexit via Conquest, Empire, and world wars In nations across the world, political divides seem to loom wider than ever before.
The Sh.
All these events and more are conveyed in James Hawes\'s succinct, incisive voice, accompanied by over 150 maps, images, and diagrams.
The Shortest History of England links these earlier struggles to England\'s uncertain present and future, with fascinating aspects of the nation\'s History playing starring roles, such as: The constant political tug-of-war between the crown and Parliament, with a beheaded king and the Magna Carta at the centerLinguistic conflict between the haves and the have-nots as French became the language of the elite, leading to the Frenchified Northern way of speaking correct English still dominating todayWars, wars, and more wars--from the Hundred Years\' War between England and France to the Wars of the Roses between northern and southern England to World War I and IIReligious battles as the Reformation split the country into Catholic versus ProtestantThe rise of an Empire stretching across America, India, Africa, and Australia--and its fallPopulism\'s modern ascendancy with the help of Prime Ministers Margaret Thatcher and Nigel Farage as well as the UKIP partyThe empire\'s decline from the inside, with Ireland breaking away from the UK, the UK breaking away from the EU, and Scottish independence.
As the country dealt with outside pressures such as colonizing Romans, Germanic settlers, and Danish and Norman invaders over the centuries, it also faced a battle within between the more privileged southern elite and the northern people who resisted southern domination.
Every moment of England\'s past is colored by its geographical and cultural split into two regions--north and south.
England\'s historical and present dominance over the other countries in the UK means this split reverberates across the entire kingdom, with repercussions for all its interactions on the global stage.
It\'s easy to see this extreme polarization as a modern phenomenon--but looking closely at English History reveals that this North Atlantic nation has been deeply divided across 2,000 years (and even before the first humans made its land their home).
Whether in the United States or England, many people are frustrated with the inability of different ideologies, or even different regions of the same country, to find a middle ground and understand each other\'s viewpoints.
England\'s History retold for the modern age--from Caesar to Brexit via Conquest, Empire, and world wars In nations across the world, political divides seem to loom wider than ever before