In Europe Brendan Simms recounts its compelling history over the last 550 years, from the fall of Constantinople to the rise of modern democracies. It is the story of highly competitive and mutually suspicious monarchies and republics; of empires, revolution, rivalry, unification and utopias.
Brendan Simms is Professor of the History of International Relations at the University of Cambridge. His major books include Unfinest Hour- Britain and the Destruction of Bosnia (shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize) and Three Victories and a Defeat- The Rise and Fall of the First British Empire.
Brendan Simms is a historian of unusual range and ability ... this
book is driven by two great master-ideas, and there is hardly a
page in it where their presence is not felt ... the reader always
has the exhilarating sense of moving swiftly onwards, in a kind of
turbocharged Rolls-Royce of historical argumentation ... truly
powerful and original
*Telegraph*
Ought to sit on the desk of every politician, pundit and policy
wonk ... [Simms] marshals the great events ... with a
breath-stopping assurance. Panoramic, multi-faceted ... sweeping,
well-paced narrative ... awesome command. This is top-down European
history, diplomatic and political, seen from the soaring eagle's
eye. But what an eagle; and what an eye
*Independent*
Europe is a superb, sure-footed analysis of how this center of
world civilization, technology, and warfare evolved since the fall
of Constantinople in 1453. It is unabashedly political history, and
the better for being so. Simms's acumen and sharp opinions are a
joy to read. This book will be appreciated both by the general
reader, and by history teachers everywhere
*Paul Kennedy*
Brendan Simms's new history [is] especially timely. He has, in
effect, dropped a big stone into the European pond and stood back
to watch the ripples spread ... Compelling and provocative ... This
is sweeping history, told with verve and panache, and it is all the
more refreshing for that
*Economist*
This is a brilliant and beautifully written history. From the Holy
Roman Empire to the Euro, Brendan Simms shows that one of the
constant preoccupations of Europeans has always been the geography,
the power and the needs of Germany. Europe is a work of
extraordinary scholarship delivered with the lightest of touches.
It will be essential, absorbing reading for anyone trying to
understand both the past and the present of one of the most
productive and most dangerous continents on earth
*William Shawcross*
A stimulating, impressive history that starts with the Ottoman
conquest of Constantinople in 1453 and extends to the present day
... perspicacious and flexible ... an excellent read and its
insights into the grand themes of European history are penetrating
and lucidly argued
*Financial Times*
Unrepentantly old-fashioned, lively and erudite ... The book is
centrally concerned, rightly, with Germany, which Simms knows at
first hand. Its great strength is that you are always reminded that
European countries did not grow autonomously ... Europe is very
ambitious in scope ... The references are prodigious, multilingual
and extremely useful ... Simms knows what he is talking about
*New Statesman*
How do you write a history of Europe ... without making it seem
like a list of dates? The answer of Brendan Simms in his new book
is both simple and brilliantly successful: take a strong thesis and
argue it through from start to finish ... Simms has the breadth of
knowledge and clarity of vision to make his case compelling. His
book is also immensely entertaining as well as instructive. There
are few pages not enlivened by sharp insight, telling vignette or
memorable turn of phrase. In short, this is a great book and
everyone interested in European history will want to read it
*BBC History Magazine*
There is nothing in the recent literature to match it ... Not only
has Simms bitten off a huge chunk of history, he has mastered it
with style and an awe-inspiring command of the literature ... [a]
Herculean feat of synthesis
*Prospect*
Exciting ... In [Simms's] survey of European power politics through
six centuries and more, he dissects the economic, social,
administrative and religious aspects of the "domestic" life of the
states involved ... Simms's eye for the telling detail is shown ...
[his] majestic prose flows impressively ... lucid and
perceptive
*Times Higher Education*
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