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Britannia's Empire : 'a short history of the British Empire'

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More than Shakespeare, more than the invention of the railway, more than fair play, it was Empire which made Britain into Great Britain.

By the early twentieth century, that Empire covered around a quarter of the earth's surface, and embraced more than a quarter of its inhabitants, a mass of over five hundred million people.

From its maritime origins in exploration, plunder, trade and war to the scuttling of the Raj, the Empire was always shot through with paradox.

In India, the Raj was the splendour of elephant processions and the gallantry of tiger shoots, just as Africa was the glory of mission Christianity and agricultural progress.

British India was also the agony of famine, massacre and labouring misery, just as Africa was also slavery and land seizures.

The Empire was both a triumphal cavalcade of governors and commissioners, and a sceptical tributary of humanitarians who believed in the emancipation of colonial peoples.

It was always a challenging blend of greed and morality, intervention and callous neglect, liberal virtue and high-handed autocracy.

At times, it was a source of strength and prestige, at times a burden and a dilemma. Untidy, even messy, Great Britain's Empire survived on its contradictions, to go down in history as the largest and greatest European empire of the modern era.

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Product Details
The History Press Ltd
0752438085 / 9780752438085
Paperback / softback
01/06/2006
United Kingdom
English
336 p. : ill.
general Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 2004.