Named a Book of the Year by the Daily Telegraph, Times Literary
Supplement, The Times, Spectator, and The Economist
The English first materialized as an idea, before they had a common
ruler and before the country they lived in even had a name. From the
armed Saxon bands that descended onto Roman-controlled Britain in the
fifth century to the travails of the Eurozone plaguing the
prime-ministership of today's multicultural England, acclaimed historian
Robert Tombs presents a momentous and challenging history of a people
who have a claim to be the oldest nation in existence.
Drawing on a wealth of recent scholarship, Tombs sheds light on the
strength and resilience of English governance, the deep patterns of
division among the people who have populated the British Isles, the
persistent capacity of the English to come together in the face of
danger, and not the least the ways the English have understood their own
history, have argued about it, forgotten it and yet been shaped by it.
Momentous and definitive, The English and Their History is the first
single-volume work on this scale for more than half a century.