Best of Enemies: Anglo-French Relations Since the Norman ConquestImpress Books, 2004 - 326 páginas Republished for the centenary of the Entente Cordiale, this new edition of Best of Enemies gives an entertaining and perceptive overview of Anglo-French relations. Updated to include the Anglo-French disagreements over the second Gulf War, this is an extensively revised edition of a book that was widely praised when it first appeared in 1995. Robert Gibson gives a lucid and lively account of the love-hate relationship between the English and the French that has lasted for more than a thousand years. Richly illustrated with cartoons from both sides of the Channel, this intelligent and well-documented study will appeal to anyone interested in the history of English and French relations. Reviews of the previous edition "Best of Enemies is a thoroughly absorbing - and at times hilarious - study of 800 years of hostilities and misunderstandings between our nations." Tom Hibbert, The Mail on Sunday "Copious quotation plus a pleasingly crisp style combine to make this a very attractive and readable volume. Just the thing to consult en route to the gnte." Michhle Roberts, The Independent "This is a readable and scholarly enhancement of the understanding of our diplomatic and military history over nearly a thousand years." Alan Clark, The Daily Telegraph "[A] highly readable account of Anglo-French relations over the past millennium . the perspectives Gibson offers are welcome and timely." A.C. Grayling, The Financial Times |
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Página 247
... Britain laid neither the weaponry nor the will to fight . At the time , they were less than frank with one another . Characteristic of the prevarication on each side was the exchange between the French and British Foreign Ministers on ...
... Britain laid neither the weaponry nor the will to fight . At the time , they were less than frank with one another . Characteristic of the prevarication on each side was the exchange between the French and British Foreign Ministers on ...
Página 279
... Britain had remained the major shareholder since 1875. At the end of the Second World War , Britain began to dismantle what had been its world - wide empire . It withdrew from India in 1947 and in the early 1950s was in the process of ...
... Britain had remained the major shareholder since 1875. At the end of the Second World War , Britain began to dismantle what had been its world - wide empire . It withdrew from India in 1947 and in the early 1950s was in the process of ...
Página 291
... Britain's being able to exert direct influence over policies and events from within the centre of Europe and of gaining access to the European market - place without needing to pay the common external tariff . The entrance fee for ...
... Britain's being able to exert direct influence over policies and events from within the centre of Europe and of gaining access to the European market - place without needing to pay the common external tariff . The entrance fee for ...
Contenido
The Growth of Nationalism in the Middle Ages | 1 |
The Religious and Cultural Divide in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries | 34 |
Cosmopolitanism and Xenophobia in the Eighteenth Century | 67 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Best of Enemies: Anglo-French Relations Since the Norman Conquest Robert Gibson Vista previa limitada - 2004 |
Términos y frases comunes
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