Book description
A wise, illuminating little book' Sydney Morning Herald
'An
entertaining, learned piece of historical compression' The
Age
'Great stuff . . . the book as a whole is constantly
thought-provoking' Courier Mail
'Beautifully and sparely
constructed, yet rich in fact, feeling and detail -- sweeping,
challenging and funny' James Button
'The balance of analysis and
description, generalisation and specific instance, is beautifully
maintained' ABR
Describing the birth of European civilisation
from an unlikely mixture of three elements - classical learning,
Christianity and German warrior culture - The Shortest History of
Europe begins with a rapid historical overview from the ancient Greeks
to the dawn of the modern era.
In each later chapter, the author
returns to explore in more detail one aspect of Europe's remarkable
history: its political evolution; its linguistic boundaries and their
defining influence; the crucial role played by power struggles between
Pope and Emperor; and the great invasions and conquests that have
transformed the continent. Along the way we meet a cast of highly
distinctive characters, from pious knights to belligerent popes, from
German romantics spouting folklore to French revolutionaries imitating
their Roman heroes.
Written with clarity, feeling and wit, The
Shortest History of Europe is a tour-de-force of compression: it will
be read in an afternoon, but remembered for a lifetime.
John Hirst is the author of numerous books, including Freedom on the
Fatal Shore and Sense & Nonsense in Australian History. Until
recently he was Reader in History at La Trobe University in Melbourne.