1688: a Global History
NB: This is a secondhand book in very good condition. See our FAQs for more information. Please note that the jacket image is indicative only. A description of our secondhand books is not always available. Please contact us if you have a question about this title.
Author: John E Wills
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 320
It is an extraordinary year. The Shogun of Japan is cracking down on the samurai, and is obsessed with cruelty to dogs (he is known to history as the Dog Shogun). A very young Peter the Great is just about to launch his coup d' tat and transform Russia. In France, the Sun King rules over a court of unprecedented splendour and ceremonial formality. A Spanish viceroy is leaving Mexico for home, lauded in a baroque poem by Sor Juana, the greatest female poet of Latin America, a nun who may be the lover of the Viceroy's wife. In the Sonora desert of North America, a Jesuit priest and his tribe of Pima Indian converts are cultivating the land, and are about to discover that the land across the bay is not an island but a part of the same continent. It will be called California. In Manila, meanwhile, there is a pogrom against the non-Christian Chinese. The lieutenant-governor of Jamaica dies. He is Henry Morgan, the most notorious pirate of the age. William Dampier, an Englisman sailing with buccaneers, lands on the desert coast of northwest Australia and writes down the first Western impressions of the strange stone-age people who gather around him on the shore. In the little-known kingdom of Siam, a Greek adventurer from Cephalonia has become the chief adviser to the king. The French are anxious to move in, and Louis XIV sends a huge glittering entourage to the other side of the world. The intrigue ends in blood and confusion. And in far off England, a Dutch king lands in Dorset to begin the Glorious Revolution and fashion the state under which we still live. John Wills has written an epic and fascinating book. He immerses us in a world of wooden ships, of trade in precious metals and spices, of diverse religions and cultures. He is as sure a guide to Africa and the Netherlands as he is to Western science and Buddhist mythology. '.quite an achievement of research and scholarship .' The Bookseller '.John Wills has produced an original book packed with fascinating detail and unexpected delights.' Bookseller
Author: John E Wills
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 320
It is an extraordinary year. The Shogun of Japan is cracking down on the samurai, and is obsessed with cruelty to dogs (he is known to history as the Dog Shogun). A very young Peter the Great is just about to launch his coup d' tat and transform Russia. In France, the Sun King rules over a court of unprecedented splendour and ceremonial formality. A Spanish viceroy is leaving Mexico for home, lauded in a baroque poem by Sor Juana, the greatest female poet of Latin America, a nun who may be the lover of the Viceroy's wife. In the Sonora desert of North America, a Jesuit priest and his tribe of Pima Indian converts are cultivating the land, and are about to discover that the land across the bay is not an island but a part of the same continent. It will be called California. In Manila, meanwhile, there is a pogrom against the non-Christian Chinese. The lieutenant-governor of Jamaica dies. He is Henry Morgan, the most notorious pirate of the age. William Dampier, an Englisman sailing with buccaneers, lands on the desert coast of northwest Australia and writes down the first Western impressions of the strange stone-age people who gather around him on the shore. In the little-known kingdom of Siam, a Greek adventurer from Cephalonia has become the chief adviser to the king. The French are anxious to move in, and Louis XIV sends a huge glittering entourage to the other side of the world. The intrigue ends in blood and confusion. And in far off England, a Dutch king lands in Dorset to begin the Glorious Revolution and fashion the state under which we still live. John Wills has written an epic and fascinating book. He immerses us in a world of wooden ships, of trade in precious metals and spices, of diverse religions and cultures. He is as sure a guide to Africa and the Netherlands as he is to Western science and Buddhist mythology. '.quite an achievement of research and scholarship .' The Bookseller '.John Wills has produced an original book packed with fascinating detail and unexpected delights.' Bookseller
Description
NB: This is a secondhand book in very good condition. See our FAQs for more information. Please note that the jacket image is indicative only. A description of our secondhand books is not always available. Please contact us if you have a question about this title.
Author: John E Wills
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 320
It is an extraordinary year. The Shogun of Japan is cracking down on the samurai, and is obsessed with cruelty to dogs (he is known to history as the Dog Shogun). A very young Peter the Great is just about to launch his coup d' tat and transform Russia. In France, the Sun King rules over a court of unprecedented splendour and ceremonial formality. A Spanish viceroy is leaving Mexico for home, lauded in a baroque poem by Sor Juana, the greatest female poet of Latin America, a nun who may be the lover of the Viceroy's wife. In the Sonora desert of North America, a Jesuit priest and his tribe of Pima Indian converts are cultivating the land, and are about to discover that the land across the bay is not an island but a part of the same continent. It will be called California. In Manila, meanwhile, there is a pogrom against the non-Christian Chinese. The lieutenant-governor of Jamaica dies. He is Henry Morgan, the most notorious pirate of the age. William Dampier, an Englisman sailing with buccaneers, lands on the desert coast of northwest Australia and writes down the first Western impressions of the strange stone-age people who gather around him on the shore. In the little-known kingdom of Siam, a Greek adventurer from Cephalonia has become the chief adviser to the king. The French are anxious to move in, and Louis XIV sends a huge glittering entourage to the other side of the world. The intrigue ends in blood and confusion. And in far off England, a Dutch king lands in Dorset to begin the Glorious Revolution and fashion the state under which we still live. John Wills has written an epic and fascinating book. He immerses us in a world of wooden ships, of trade in precious metals and spices, of diverse religions and cultures. He is as sure a guide to Africa and the Netherlands as he is to Western science and Buddhist mythology. '.quite an achievement of research and scholarship .' The Bookseller '.John Wills has produced an original book packed with fascinating detail and unexpected delights.' Bookseller
Author: John E Wills
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 320
It is an extraordinary year. The Shogun of Japan is cracking down on the samurai, and is obsessed with cruelty to dogs (he is known to history as the Dog Shogun). A very young Peter the Great is just about to launch his coup d' tat and transform Russia. In France, the Sun King rules over a court of unprecedented splendour and ceremonial formality. A Spanish viceroy is leaving Mexico for home, lauded in a baroque poem by Sor Juana, the greatest female poet of Latin America, a nun who may be the lover of the Viceroy's wife. In the Sonora desert of North America, a Jesuit priest and his tribe of Pima Indian converts are cultivating the land, and are about to discover that the land across the bay is not an island but a part of the same continent. It will be called California. In Manila, meanwhile, there is a pogrom against the non-Christian Chinese. The lieutenant-governor of Jamaica dies. He is Henry Morgan, the most notorious pirate of the age. William Dampier, an Englisman sailing with buccaneers, lands on the desert coast of northwest Australia and writes down the first Western impressions of the strange stone-age people who gather around him on the shore. In the little-known kingdom of Siam, a Greek adventurer from Cephalonia has become the chief adviser to the king. The French are anxious to move in, and Louis XIV sends a huge glittering entourage to the other side of the world. The intrigue ends in blood and confusion. And in far off England, a Dutch king lands in Dorset to begin the Glorious Revolution and fashion the state under which we still live. John Wills has written an epic and fascinating book. He immerses us in a world of wooden ships, of trade in precious metals and spices, of diverse religions and cultures. He is as sure a guide to Africa and the Netherlands as he is to Western science and Buddhist mythology. '.quite an achievement of research and scholarship .' The Bookseller '.John Wills has produced an original book packed with fascinating detail and unexpected delights.' Bookseller
1688: a Global History