More Than a Game
- 336pages
- 12 heures de lecture
The story of Britain, told through its many sports.
David Horspool est un historien et journaliste britannique dont le travail explore les détails complexes des événements historiques. Il apporte sa plume éclairée à d'éminents journaux britanniques et internationaux, ainsi qu'à des revues littéraires. Sa prose se caractérise par une profonde compréhension du contexte historique et un talent pour présenter des récits complexes de manière captivante. À travers sa lentille journalistique, il découvre des couches du passé, les rendant accessibles au lecteur contemporain.


The story of Britain, told through its many sports.
Although he styled himself 'His Highness', adopted the court ritual of his royal predecessors, and lived in the former royal palaces of Whitehall and Hampton Court, Oliver Cromwell was not a king - in spite of the best efforts of his supporters to crown him. Yet, as David Horspool shows in this illuminating new portrait of England's Lord Protector, Cromwell, the Puritan son of Cambridgeshire gentry, wielded such influence that it would be a pretence to say that power really lay with the collective. The years of Cromwell's rise to power, shaped by a decade-long civil war, saw a sustained attempt at the collective government of England; the first attempts at a real Union of Britain; the beginnings of empire; a radically new solution to the idea of a national religion; atrocities in Ireland; and the readmission to England of the Jews, a people officially banned for over three and a half centuries. At the end of it, Oliver Cromwell had emerged as the country's sole ruler: to his enemies, and probably to most of his countrymen, his legacy looked as likely to last as that of the Stuart dynasty he had replaced.