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City on the Thames [Kietas viršelis]

3.67/5 (121 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 432 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 231x150x43 mm, weight: 658 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 29-Mar-2022
  • Leidėjas: Pegasus Books
  • ISBN-10: 164313552X
  • ISBN-13: 9781643135526
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 432 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 231x150x43 mm, weight: 658 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 29-Mar-2022
  • Leidėjas: Pegasus Books
  • ISBN-10: 164313552X
  • ISBN-13: 9781643135526
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
By the former editor of the London Times, a vivid, evocative, and deeply knowledgeable history of this unique world capital.

London: a settlement founded by the Romans, occupied by the Saxons, conquered by the Danes, and ruled by the Normans. This transformative place became a medieval maze of alleys and courtyards, later to be checkered with grand estates of Georgian splendor. It swelled with industry and became the center of the largest empire in history. And having risen from the rubble of the Blitz, it is now one of the greatest cities in the world.

From the prehistoric occupants of the Thames Valley to the preoccupied commuters of today, Simon Jenkins brings together the key events, individuals and trends in London's history to create a matchless portrait of the capital. He masterfully explains the battles that determined how London was conceived and built&;and especially the perennial conflict between money and power.

Based in part on his experiences of and involvement in the events that shaped the post-war city, and with his trademark color and authority, Simon Jenkins shows above all how London has taken shape over more than two thousand years. Fascinating for locals and visitors alike, this is narrative history at its finest, from the most ardent protector of British heritage.
List of Illustrations
xi
Maps
xix
Introduction 1(6)
1 Londinium: 43--410
7(8)
Old Father Thames
Rome and Boudicca
Londinium's decline
2 Saxon City: 410--1066
15(9)
Lundenwic
Christianity reborn
Saxons and Danes
London and Westminster
3 Medieval Metropolis: 1066--1348
24(9)
Norman Conquest
Growth of trade
De Montfort's Rebellion
Monarchy vs Money
4 The Age of Chaucer and Whittington: 1348--1485
33(10)
Plague and Revolt
Chaucer's London
Church and politics
Medieval epitaph
5 Tudor London: 1485--1603
43(14)
Reformation Capital
Dissolution of the Monasteries
Elizabeth I
Mapping the city
John Stow
Dawn of planning
6 Stuarts and Rebellion: 1603--1660
57(12)
James I
Inigo Jones
Charles I
Civil War
The Commonwealth
7 Restoration, Calamity, Recovery: 1660--1688
69(18)
Charles II
Rise of the square
The Plague and Pepys
The Great Fire
Rebuilding the city
Development of Westminster
8 Dutch Courage: 1688--1714
87(10)
Succession crisis
William of Orange
Royal palaces
Rise of banking
Westward expansion
9 Hanoverian Dawn: 1714--1763
97(18)
Whig ascendancy
Growth of family estates
The Enlightenment
Law, order and gin
Bridging the Thames
10 A Tarnished Age: 1763--1789
115(14)
George III
Gordon riots
The spirit of improvement
1774 Building Act
The great estates revived
Class divisions
11 Regency: The Dawn of Nash: 1789--1825
129(10)
Revolution in France
War economy
The `royal way'
George IV- Waterloo churches
12 Cubittopolis: 1825--1832
139(12)
Belgravia
The Ladbroke disaster
Development north and east
The City's independence
Demands for reform
13 The Age of Reform: 1832--1848
151(8)
1834 Poor Law
Westminster rebuilt
Cholera
Arrival of the train
14 The Birth of a New Metropolis: 1848--1860
159(14)
Poverty
The Chartists
The Great Stink
First underground railway
Property boom and bust
European immigration
15 The Maturing of Victorian London: 1860--1875
173(13)
The world's largest city
Recession and the vote
Victorian architecture
Leisure and shopping
Open-space preservation
Booth, Dickens and poverty
16 Philanthropy Versus the State: 1875--1900
186(10)
Octavia Hill
Industrial unrest
The LCC
Public transport
17 Edwardian Apotheosis: 1900--1914
196(18)
Victorian legacy
Edwardian Style
Localism ascendant
Expansion of the Underground
Trams and buses
Growth of services
A new suburbia
18 War and Aftermath: 1914--1930
214(12)
The Great War-Lloyd George
The General Strike
`Homes for heroes'
19 The Climax of the Sprawl: 1930--1939
226(8)
Town and Country Planning Act
London Passenger Transport Board
Suburban culture
20 Metropolis at War: 1939--1951
234(14)
The Blitz
The Beveridge Report
Planning under Abercrombie
Post-war economy
Festival of Britain
21 The Great Property Boom: 1951--1960
248(12)
A planning free-for-all
The new millionaires
Modernism ascendant
22 Swinging City: 1960--1970
260(14)
The permissive society
The GLC
The council estate and Ronan Point
Conservation areas
23 Recession Years: 1970--1980
274(13)
Immigration
The Common Market
Rise of the drugs trade
The Motorway Box
Battle for Covent Garden
24 Metropolis Renascent: 1980--1997
287(15)
Thatcher vs Livingstone
IRA bombs
Docklands development
Big Bang
The decline of the council house
25 Going for Broke: 1997--2008
302(13)
Blair and the mayoralty
Post-9/11 threats
Livingstone's skyline
26 Constructs of Vanity: 2008 to the present
315(17)
Boris Johnson
2011 riots
2012 Olympics
High-rise London
Whose city?
Brexit
Epilogue 332(9)
A Timeline of London's History 341(6)
Author's Note 347(2)
Further Reading 349(2)
Index 351