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Warwick The Kingmaker eBook

by Charles Oman
language: english
Publisher: Jovian Press, January of 2018 ‧
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OF all the great men of action who since the Conquest have guided the course of English policy, it is probable that none is less known to the reader of history than Richard Neville Earl of Warwick and Salisbury. The only man of anything approaching his eminence who has been treated with an equal neglect is Thomas Cromwell, and of late years the great minister of Henry the Eighth is beginning to receive some of the attention that is his due. But for the Kingmaker, the man who for ten years was the first subject of the English Crown, and whose figure looms out with a vague grandeur even through the misty annals of the Wars of the Roses, no writer has spared a monograph. Every one, it is true, knows his name, but his personal identity is quite ungrasped. Nine persons out of ten if asked to sketch his character would find, to their own surprise, that they were falling back for their information to Lord Lytton Last of the Barons or Shakespeare Henry the Sixth.

Warwick The Kingmaker

by Charles Oman

Property Description
ISBN: 9781537806280
Publisher: Jovian Press
Release Date: January of 2018
Language: English
Pages: 268
Format: eBook
File Format and Compatibility:
Categories: eBooks in English > History > General History
eBooks in English > History > History of the Middle Ages
EAN: 9781537806280
Acessibilidade: Ver características de acessibilidade indicadas pelo editor

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Charles Oman

Charles William Chadwick Oman was a British military historian of the early 20th century. His reconstructions of medieval battles from fragmentary accounts were groundbreaking, in a style that is a refreshing blend of historical accuracy and narrative tension.
He was born in India in January 1860, the son of a British farmer, and graduated from Oxford University, where he studied with William Stubbs. In 1881 he was elected to a scholarship at All Souls Collegewhere he would remain for the rest of his career.
He became an honorary member of New College in 1936 and received the honorary titles of Doctor of Civil Law (Oxford, 1926) and of Doctor of Law (Edinburgh, 1911, and Cambridge, 1927).
He died in Oxford in June 1946.

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BY THE AUTHOR