What the Tudors & Stuarts did for Us.

By Adam Hart Davis

ISBN: 9780752215563

Printed: 2002

Publisher: Boxtree. London

Dimensions 20 × 25 × 2 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 20 x 25 x 2

£20.00
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Item information

Description

In the original dustsheet. Cream cloth binding with gilt title on the spine.

  • F.B.A. provides an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feeling and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available.

Tudor and Stuart England saw the most dramatic shifts in thinking and innovation since the Romans. It was a period that saw the emergence of Protestant churches, the increase in the power of parliament, the end of the feudal system, the development of empire, the union of Scotland and England and the emergence of some of the world’s greatest scientists. Adam Hart-Davis illuminates the innovations of the period and shows how these Tudor and Stuart advancements have changed our world. Featuring demonstrations of Tudor and Stuart devices, Adam attempts to reconstruct a Tudor printing press, the first flushing toilet and to demonstrate the first stagecoach suspension, amongst many others.

Reviews:

  • Adam Hart-Davis has a knack for bringing the historical past to life through books and television programmes, and in What the Tudors and Stuarts Did For Us he repeats this formula to explain the legacy of England’s Tudor and Stuart monarchies, and the inventions and new ideas they bequeathed to later generations.

  • Lavishly illustrated and full of practical, hands-on exploration of Tudor developments ranging from the printing press to the flushing toilet, Hart-Davis is good at explaining how necessity was the mother of most Tudor inventions, and his scientific background is particularly useful in explaining the rather obscure progress in astronomy, navigation and natural history in 16th-century England. As well as explaining the importance of apparently inconsequential inventions such as pendulum clocks, knitting machines and stagecoach suspension, Hart-Davis explores the great scientific and architectural innovations that took place under the Stuarts in the 17th century, from Francis Bacon’s experiments in freezing food to Christopher Wren’s building of St. Paul’s Cathedral.

  • What the Tudors and Stuarts Did For Us is an entertaining popular romp through popular science and history, but its main problem is that the historical reality is that the Tudors and the Stuarts actually contributed relatively little by way of useful inventions to the modern world. As a result Hart-Davis often struggles to convince that 16 and 17th-century Englishmen invented new ideas, when in most cases they were just developing innovations learned from Italy and Germany. As a result, the book tends to perpetuate the myth of the greatness of Elizabethan England; let’s hope that the same author’s planned book and programme on 18th-century England are more convincing. –Jerry Brotton

Adam Hart-Davis is an English scientist, author, photographer, historian and broadcaster, well known in the UK for presenting the BBC television series Local Heroes and What the Romans Did for Us, the latter spawning several spin-off series involving the Victorians, the Tudors, the Stuarts and the Ancients. He was also a co-presenter of Tomorrow’s World, and presented Science Shack. Currently he presents How London Was Built and Just Another Day on History UK. He was awarded an Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society in 2007. These are awarded to distinguished persons having, from their position or attainments, an intimate connection with the science or fine art of photography or the application thereof. He is the author of What the Tudors and Stuarts Did For Us.

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