Rosemary Hill is a writer and historian. Her biography, God's Architect- Pugin and the Building of Romantic Britain (2007) won the Wolfson History Prize, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, the Elizabeth Longford Prize and the Marsh Biography Award. In 2008 she published a prize-winning study of Stonehenge and its cultural legacy. She is a contributing editor at the London Review of Books, a visiting professor at the University of York, a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries and the Royal Society of Literature, and a quondam fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.
Hill is a magnificent historian and ... Time's Witness is a book to
change the way you think about history.
*Sunday Times*
in this rich and absorbing study ... Hill has succeeded splendidly
in her mission to rescue these often strange, eccentric but
fascinating figures from "oblivion and the condescension of
posterity".
*The Times*
Long meditated and meticulously researched, this book ... [is]
presented in prose of unassertive grace and quiet wit ... what it
offers is a rich feast, best consumed slowly and savoured, and Hill
has assembled each course with magnificent erudition.
*Sunday Telegraph*
immensely engaging... exceptional ... Antiquarianism was about
making the past live again, and Hill makes the past of the
antiquarians live again ... we can discern an innovative, sly and
wry new form of non-fiction ... a beautifully written and very
clever book which is psychologically astute
*Scotland on Sunday*
Not many writers could control this wide-ranging narrative with
such clarity or assurance as here. Nor has Dr Hill succumbed to the
temptation to tell in a long book what could be presented in a
relatively short one. The result is outstanding: an engaging,
incisive and thought-provoking exploration of the history of
history in Romantic Britain.
*Country Life*
She has accumulated a vast amount of detailed material and
organized it impeccably into a witty and intelligent narrative
which is both erudite and readable. If only all history was written
this well.
*Times Literary Supplement*
impressive and stimulating ... At its heart, Time's Witness is a
social and intellectual history that pays tribute to the role of
antiquaries in recasting the way that British people understood and
came to respect their distant national past. Hill seeks to rescue
the antiquaries from "the condescension of posterity", and in that
she succeeds admirably
*Financial Times*
Time's Witness retraces the antiquarians' journey into the past
through the revolutions of the present ... Hill is an elegant
stylist and vivid storyteller, and her account brims with anecdotes
gathered from the little-known papers of her protagonists ... few
could resist this sensitive, learned and amusing plunge into the
historical imagination.
*Apollo*
In this engaging survey ... by marrying scholarship and sensibility
... she achieves her stated aim of restoring history to the
antiquaries and the antiquaries to history.
*Spectator*
"The history we have," Rosemary Hill writes in her preface to
Time's Witness "is the history we want. It is the picture we choose
to see in the clouds." Hill's book accordingly recreates, in
magnificent detail, the cloud pictures conjured into being by the
historians, writers, architects and artists and, above all,
antiquaries who, between 1789 and 1851, reimagined the relationship
between past and present in both Britain and France.
*BBC History Magazine*
Time's Witness, which records with such verve the steady extension
of subjects deemed fit for scholarly investigation two hundred
years ago, is published at a moment when much of the curiosity and
many of the pursuits it documents are endangered.
*London Review of Books*
Not everything that was false was fake, a theme that runs through
Time's Witness, pushing us to think differently about the past,
challenging our expectations of how that past should be recorded
and interpreted and, above all, placing the Romantic sensibility
and its embracing of subjectivity and imaginative reconstruction at
the heart of historical enquiry.
*History Today*
in the best Romantic antiquarian tradition, the book is an engaging
and densely detailed scholarly tome that reads a bit like a love
letter, or at least an expression of infectious intellectual
enthusiasm. Throughout Time's Witness, 'history' becomes visible as
a succession of ideas and theories about the past that are
continuously overlaid and revised in an ongoing process of exchange
and accumulation.
*Literary Review*
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