Victorious Century

The United Kingdom, 1800-1906

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$21.00 US
Penguin Adult HC/TR | Penguin Books
24 per carton
On sale Feb 19, 2019 | 978-0-525-55791-3
Sales rights: US,CAN,OpnMkt(no EU)
A sweeping history of nineteenth-century Britain by one of the world's most respected historians.

"An evocative account . . .[Cannadine] tells his own story persuasively and exceedingly well.” —The Wall Street Journal

To live in nineteenth-century Britain was to experience an astonishing and unprecedented series of changes. Cities grew vast; there were revolutions in transportation, communication, science, and work--all while a growing religious skepticism rendered the intellectual landscape increasingly unrecognizable. It was an exhilarating time, and as a result, most of the countries in the world that experienced these changes were racked by political and social unrest. Britain, however, maintained a stable polity at home, and as a result it quickly found itself in a position of global leadership.

In this major new work, leading historian David Cannadine has created a bold, fascinating new interpretation of nineteenth-century Britain. Britain was a country that saw itself at the summit of the world and, by some measures, this was indeed true. It had become the largest empire in history: its political stability positioned it as the leader of the new global economy and allowed it to construct the largest navy ever built. And yet it was also a society permeated with doubt, fear, and introspection. Repeatedly, politicians and writers felt themselves to be staring into the abyss and what is seen as an era of irritating self-belief was in fact obsessed with its own fragility, whether as a great power or as a moral force. Victorious Century is a comprehensive and extraordinarily stimulating history--its author catches the relish, humor and staginess of the age, but also the dilemmas faced by Britain's citizens, ones we remain familiar with today.
Prologue

History is not just about dates and events, which are often arbitrary and accidental: it is at least as much about processes, which do not begin and end with any such tidy temporality or calendrical precision. But dates do matter, because important events happen at particular times, and this explains why many histories of nineteenth-century Britain begin with the Battle of Waterloo in 1815 and end with the outbreak of the First World War in 1914. Such were the defining dates of Elie Halévy’s pioneering but incomplete History of the English People in the Nineteenth Century, of David Thomson’s brief and bracing volume in the post-war Pelican History of England, of the two volumes contributed by Sir Llewellyn Woodward and Sir Robert Ensor to the Oxford History of England, and of the works by Norman Gash and E. J. Feuchtwanger for the later series published by Edward Arnold. Even today, in light of the recently observed bicentennial of the Battle of Waterloo, and of the hundredth anniversary of the Battle of the Somme, the idea that the British nineteenth century was defined by the triumphant conclusion of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars (which ushered in the century of Britain’s global greatness), and the lesssure-footed beginning of what was originally known as The Great War (after which Britain ceased, according to Sellar and Yeatman in 1066 and All That, to be ‘top nation’), has much to recommend it. In between these two massive continental conflicts, so this argument runs, the United Kingdom largely (but not entirely) avoided European military entanglements, and as a result enjoyed a remarkable period of peaceand prosperity at home, and of engagement and hegemony elsewhere in the world. Hence the establishment of the so‑called ‘Pax Britannica’, the widespread contemporary belief that God conversed in English, and the undeniable reality that more people were speaking that Victorious Century language, and doing so in more parts of the world, than had ever been true before.

But the very fact that so many distinguished historians have already opted for these beginning and end dates is itself one very good reason for trying to define and delineate the British nineteenth century differently. Other scholars have begun their histories in 1783, with the rise ofthe Younger Pitt to power, or continued on until 1918, with the close ofthe First World War, and these more spread-outdates certainly allow for a fuller treatment of Britain’s ‘long’ nineteenth century. But in addition, and as Jürgen Osterhammel has recently pointed out, there aremany other ways of dating and defining that period, depending on the topics selected, the themes chosen, the subjects to be treated, and the part of the world to be concentrated on, while the deeper processes of change defy and deny any such precise temporal pinpoints. This bookseeks to break new ground, and to offer new perspectives, by beginning the British nineteenth century with the passing of the Act of Union in 1800, which brought into being the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and by ending it with the general election of 1906, which witnessed a landslide Liberal victory that was the last great triumph of nineteenth-century progressive politics, but also brought to power the first great reforming government of the twentieth century. In 1800, and again in 1906, some contemporaries hoped, and others feared, they were living through revolutionary days and witnessing revolutionary events. But they might all have agreed that those two dates and thosetwo events had been and were of the first importance. Yet so far as I know, no one has attempted a history of nineteenth-century Britain bracketed and bounded in this way, which is as good a reason as anyfor trying to do so. Whether this enterprise has been worthwhile, ‘these pages must show’ (as Dickens wrote at the opening of David Copperfield), or hope to show.

These two dates also serve to remind us of the extraordinary dominance and unique continuity of parliament in the political culture and public life of the United Kingdom and the British Empire. Across those years, the Westminster legislature was, with all its faults, drawbacks and limitations, to which reformers and radicals often drew attention, auniquely enduring institution of political authority, government legitimacy, popular sovereignty and national identity – in ways unmatched in Spain or France (where there were absolute monarchs, revolutions and republics), the United States (its democracy ruptured by civil war and the attempted Southern secession), Austria-Hungary (both nations’ parliamentsonly established in 1868), Italy or Germany (neither countrycompletely unified until 1871), Japan (without a constitution before 1889), Russia (without a Duma until 1905) and China (without a constitution before 1913). Small wonder, then, that both the permanence andthe adaptability of the British constitution and the British parliament were acclaimed and envied by many commentators from overseas. They were also lauded and celebrated in Britain itself, as the franchise was peacefully and progressively extended in 1832, 1867 and 1884–85, thereby successfully fending off any potential revolutionary threat. The constitution of the United Kingdom may have been unwritten, but as Edmund Burke had earlier appreciated, that had turned out to be a huge advantage: for it could be constantly adapted and adjusted, to take account of the extraordinary and transformative changes of the nineteenth century, whereas nations with rigid and inflexible written constitutions all too often had to embrace revolution, tearing everything up and starting again, while nations with no constitution at all also had to resort to similar violent means and desperate measures to obtain one.

In terms of its institutions of government and authority, then, nineteenth-century Britain was uniquely stable among the nations ofthe world. To be sure, there was nothing preordained or inevitableabout that stability, and fears of revolution would not be confined tothe years 1800 and 1906. But the undeniable continuity of its governingstructures is a very good reason for approaching the history of theUnited Kingdom via its parliament and its politics, which became the embodiment and expression of that stability, and for beginning andending that history with events that were, appropriately, both parliamentary and political. Moreover, the United Kingdom was not only remarkably stable in terms of its unwritten constitution and its institutions of government, but also in geographical terms, avoiding armed invasion, enemy occupation and the forced loss of lands, which were often the fates of continental countries. In 1906 Great Britain and Ireland encompassed precisely the same political boundaries and national borders that had been established in 1800. This was not true of Germany or Italy (which were nineteenth-century creations), Austria-Hungary (which had forfeited its Italian provinces), France (which had ceded Alsace-Lorraineto Germany), or Russia (which gave up Port Arthur to Victorious Century Japan), or of the United States (which was not so much losing territoryas spreading across an entire continent). To be sure, there were ‘invasion scares’ in the United Kingdom in the 1790s and 1800s, at mid-century, and again during the 1900s; but uniquely among the great nations of the world, its boundaries remained unchanged and unchanging throughout the nineteenth century. This combination of continued and unchallenged parliamentary supremacy, and successfully preserved territorial integrity, was remarkable and important, and lent some credence to the contemporary view that Britain was unique, exceptional and providentially blessed.

Yet for all its constitutional continuity and geographical cohesiveness, the nation over which parliament and the politicians, rather than the monarch, exercised sovereign power (though George III, George IV, William IV and Queen Victoria and Prince Albert would all have contested this assertion) was a complex, contested and composite place. England and Wales had been unified since Tudor times; England and Wales, together with Scotland, had been united as crowns in 1603, and as legislatures in 1707; and the union between Great Britain and Ireland followed just short of a century later, which meant, incidentally, that in its final and fullest form, the United Kingdom was a more recently created nation than the United States of America. When the mid-Victorians described their legislature as the ‘imperial parliament’, they meant that it passed laws for all the four kingdoms, whichwere appropriately represented in the central lobby of the recently constructed Palace of Westminster, where mosaics depicted their respective patron saints: St George, St David, St Andrew and St Patrick. Moreover, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland would turn outto be in many ways an unsatisfactory and unstable creation, as England was overwhelmingly dominant in terms of population, wealth and resources, and as the three nations of what was disparagingly regarded as ‘the Celtic fringe’ came on occasions to resent or repudiate such an unequal and asymmetrical Union. This was especially so in the case of Ireland, which was not only the last to be assimilated but also the least successfully, and (with the exception of the six Ulster counties) for the shortest span of time. This, in turn, had major implications for the politics of the nineteenth century, as the Tories and Conservativeswould use their customary electoral dominance in England to try to impose their will on the rest of the Union, whereas the Whigs and Liberals would need the votes of Ireland, Scotland and Wales to enable them to dominate England.
“This is stupendous. The British nineteenth century, in all its complexity, all its horror, all its energy, all its hopes is laid bare. This is the definitive history, and will remain so for generations.” —A. N. Wilson, author of Victoria: A Life

"Cannadine's admirable history lucidly records Britain's many triumphs at home and abroad, and its many failures as well." —The New York Times, Editors' Choice

"An evocative account . . .[Cannadine] tells his own story persuasively and exceedingly well.” —The Wall Street Journal

"David Cannadine’s “Victorious Century” is a glorious tour of the Victorian Age crammed with the lively statesmen who haphazardly orchestrated Britain’s global dominions, from Pitt the Younger to Joseph Chamberlain." —Edward Glaeser, professor of economics at Harvard and author of Triumph of the City

“David Cannadine’s ambitious history of the UK in the 19th century, is about both the nation and its Empire, and how each built and gave character to the other. It is a remarkable story, remarkably well told, a story of remarkable stability but also of a remarkable native impulse for reform. . . . Cannadine’s volume may be regarded in the years ahead as its most glorious chronicle.” —The Boston Globe

"Cannadine shows a polymathic command of the cultural life of the period...[he] has pulled off the hat-trick of commanding erudition, original interpretation and graceful writing." —Maya Jasanoff, The Guardian

”Mr. Cannadine offers a comprehensive analysis . . . he knits together the often diverging grand imperial, national and social histories with skill.” —The Economist

"A masterful history." —The Financial Times

"[Victorious Century] tells a fascinating tale with engaging prose and intriguing themes. In his even-handed analysis, Cannadine does not find the British Empire to be without fault, nor does he engage in the needless iconoclasm that is so much en vogue among modern historians. This book is British history at its height, as it was, and well worth reading." —National Review

"This is a thumping great book, and it is probably destined to become a classic. . . . There is something hypnotic and compelling about his majestic delivery. . . . Cannadine succeeds triumphantly." —Jane Ridely, The Spectator

Victorious Century, the latest installment in the Penguin History of Britain, is a multilayered study, much more than a textbook, yet at the same time a work that can now be regarded as the standard single-volume treatment of its subject—an admirably readable guide to the British history of the long 19th century . . . This is, simply put, the most up-to-date study of a very special nation’s unusual place in the history of the West, and of the world itself . . . In Victorious Century, Victorian Britain has found its historian in David Cannadine’s capable hands, shrewd wit, and even judgments.” Paul Kennedy, American Scholar

"Cannadine writes fluently about Britain’s rise to industrial preeminence and subsequent world-leading status, providing a detailed examination of political machinations and imperial excursions. Cannadine’s account is solid and informative." —Publisher's Weekly

“Cannadine has written a quick-paced, comprehensive account of 19th-century Britain, with recommendations for further reading. For fans of the period and most history collections.” —Library Journal

"Victorious Century is an informative and enlightening analysis of prime ministers, businessmen and military leaders 'of exceptional experience and ability' who 'were riding tigers they could never fully control,' headed in directions they could not always discern." —Prof. Glenn C. Altschuler, Tulsa World

"[Cannadine's] books always engage with big themes and reach well beyond a narrow specialist readership. . . .His writing is both informative and entertaining, with a sharp eye for vivid, arresting detail. . . .Victorious Century will no doubt become a standard work." —The Times Higher Educatoin Supplement

"The acclaimed British historian meticulously traces every aspect of Britain from the Act of Union (with Ireland) in 1800 until the 1906 landslide by the Liberal Party . . . Ever adept, Cannadine shows us why and how it happened." —Kirkus Reviews

"A book such as this is a work of heroic summary." —David Aaronovitch, The Times

"Eminent historian Cannadine is well positioned to tell the story of Britain’s Victorious Century. . . .A big history on a big century but at under 600 pages it’s focused." —Library Journal

"Cannadine is a brilliant historian — his book is a must-read for all who want to understand why we are where we are as a country" —The Jewish Chronicle

About

A sweeping history of nineteenth-century Britain by one of the world's most respected historians.

"An evocative account . . .[Cannadine] tells his own story persuasively and exceedingly well.” —The Wall Street Journal

To live in nineteenth-century Britain was to experience an astonishing and unprecedented series of changes. Cities grew vast; there were revolutions in transportation, communication, science, and work--all while a growing religious skepticism rendered the intellectual landscape increasingly unrecognizable. It was an exhilarating time, and as a result, most of the countries in the world that experienced these changes were racked by political and social unrest. Britain, however, maintained a stable polity at home, and as a result it quickly found itself in a position of global leadership.

In this major new work, leading historian David Cannadine has created a bold, fascinating new interpretation of nineteenth-century Britain. Britain was a country that saw itself at the summit of the world and, by some measures, this was indeed true. It had become the largest empire in history: its political stability positioned it as the leader of the new global economy and allowed it to construct the largest navy ever built. And yet it was also a society permeated with doubt, fear, and introspection. Repeatedly, politicians and writers felt themselves to be staring into the abyss and what is seen as an era of irritating self-belief was in fact obsessed with its own fragility, whether as a great power or as a moral force. Victorious Century is a comprehensive and extraordinarily stimulating history--its author catches the relish, humor and staginess of the age, but also the dilemmas faced by Britain's citizens, ones we remain familiar with today.

Excerpt

Prologue

History is not just about dates and events, which are often arbitrary and accidental: it is at least as much about processes, which do not begin and end with any such tidy temporality or calendrical precision. But dates do matter, because important events happen at particular times, and this explains why many histories of nineteenth-century Britain begin with the Battle of Waterloo in 1815 and end with the outbreak of the First World War in 1914. Such were the defining dates of Elie Halévy’s pioneering but incomplete History of the English People in the Nineteenth Century, of David Thomson’s brief and bracing volume in the post-war Pelican History of England, of the two volumes contributed by Sir Llewellyn Woodward and Sir Robert Ensor to the Oxford History of England, and of the works by Norman Gash and E. J. Feuchtwanger for the later series published by Edward Arnold. Even today, in light of the recently observed bicentennial of the Battle of Waterloo, and of the hundredth anniversary of the Battle of the Somme, the idea that the British nineteenth century was defined by the triumphant conclusion of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars (which ushered in the century of Britain’s global greatness), and the lesssure-footed beginning of what was originally known as The Great War (after which Britain ceased, according to Sellar and Yeatman in 1066 and All That, to be ‘top nation’), has much to recommend it. In between these two massive continental conflicts, so this argument runs, the United Kingdom largely (but not entirely) avoided European military entanglements, and as a result enjoyed a remarkable period of peaceand prosperity at home, and of engagement and hegemony elsewhere in the world. Hence the establishment of the so‑called ‘Pax Britannica’, the widespread contemporary belief that God conversed in English, and the undeniable reality that more people were speaking that Victorious Century language, and doing so in more parts of the world, than had ever been true before.

But the very fact that so many distinguished historians have already opted for these beginning and end dates is itself one very good reason for trying to define and delineate the British nineteenth century differently. Other scholars have begun their histories in 1783, with the rise ofthe Younger Pitt to power, or continued on until 1918, with the close ofthe First World War, and these more spread-outdates certainly allow for a fuller treatment of Britain’s ‘long’ nineteenth century. But in addition, and as Jürgen Osterhammel has recently pointed out, there aremany other ways of dating and defining that period, depending on the topics selected, the themes chosen, the subjects to be treated, and the part of the world to be concentrated on, while the deeper processes of change defy and deny any such precise temporal pinpoints. This bookseeks to break new ground, and to offer new perspectives, by beginning the British nineteenth century with the passing of the Act of Union in 1800, which brought into being the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and by ending it with the general election of 1906, which witnessed a landslide Liberal victory that was the last great triumph of nineteenth-century progressive politics, but also brought to power the first great reforming government of the twentieth century. In 1800, and again in 1906, some contemporaries hoped, and others feared, they were living through revolutionary days and witnessing revolutionary events. But they might all have agreed that those two dates and thosetwo events had been and were of the first importance. Yet so far as I know, no one has attempted a history of nineteenth-century Britain bracketed and bounded in this way, which is as good a reason as anyfor trying to do so. Whether this enterprise has been worthwhile, ‘these pages must show’ (as Dickens wrote at the opening of David Copperfield), or hope to show.

These two dates also serve to remind us of the extraordinary dominance and unique continuity of parliament in the political culture and public life of the United Kingdom and the British Empire. Across those years, the Westminster legislature was, with all its faults, drawbacks and limitations, to which reformers and radicals often drew attention, auniquely enduring institution of political authority, government legitimacy, popular sovereignty and national identity – in ways unmatched in Spain or France (where there were absolute monarchs, revolutions and republics), the United States (its democracy ruptured by civil war and the attempted Southern secession), Austria-Hungary (both nations’ parliamentsonly established in 1868), Italy or Germany (neither countrycompletely unified until 1871), Japan (without a constitution before 1889), Russia (without a Duma until 1905) and China (without a constitution before 1913). Small wonder, then, that both the permanence andthe adaptability of the British constitution and the British parliament were acclaimed and envied by many commentators from overseas. They were also lauded and celebrated in Britain itself, as the franchise was peacefully and progressively extended in 1832, 1867 and 1884–85, thereby successfully fending off any potential revolutionary threat. The constitution of the United Kingdom may have been unwritten, but as Edmund Burke had earlier appreciated, that had turned out to be a huge advantage: for it could be constantly adapted and adjusted, to take account of the extraordinary and transformative changes of the nineteenth century, whereas nations with rigid and inflexible written constitutions all too often had to embrace revolution, tearing everything up and starting again, while nations with no constitution at all also had to resort to similar violent means and desperate measures to obtain one.

In terms of its institutions of government and authority, then, nineteenth-century Britain was uniquely stable among the nations ofthe world. To be sure, there was nothing preordained or inevitableabout that stability, and fears of revolution would not be confined tothe years 1800 and 1906. But the undeniable continuity of its governingstructures is a very good reason for approaching the history of theUnited Kingdom via its parliament and its politics, which became the embodiment and expression of that stability, and for beginning andending that history with events that were, appropriately, both parliamentary and political. Moreover, the United Kingdom was not only remarkably stable in terms of its unwritten constitution and its institutions of government, but also in geographical terms, avoiding armed invasion, enemy occupation and the forced loss of lands, which were often the fates of continental countries. In 1906 Great Britain and Ireland encompassed precisely the same political boundaries and national borders that had been established in 1800. This was not true of Germany or Italy (which were nineteenth-century creations), Austria-Hungary (which had forfeited its Italian provinces), France (which had ceded Alsace-Lorraineto Germany), or Russia (which gave up Port Arthur to Victorious Century Japan), or of the United States (which was not so much losing territoryas spreading across an entire continent). To be sure, there were ‘invasion scares’ in the United Kingdom in the 1790s and 1800s, at mid-century, and again during the 1900s; but uniquely among the great nations of the world, its boundaries remained unchanged and unchanging throughout the nineteenth century. This combination of continued and unchallenged parliamentary supremacy, and successfully preserved territorial integrity, was remarkable and important, and lent some credence to the contemporary view that Britain was unique, exceptional and providentially blessed.

Yet for all its constitutional continuity and geographical cohesiveness, the nation over which parliament and the politicians, rather than the monarch, exercised sovereign power (though George III, George IV, William IV and Queen Victoria and Prince Albert would all have contested this assertion) was a complex, contested and composite place. England and Wales had been unified since Tudor times; England and Wales, together with Scotland, had been united as crowns in 1603, and as legislatures in 1707; and the union between Great Britain and Ireland followed just short of a century later, which meant, incidentally, that in its final and fullest form, the United Kingdom was a more recently created nation than the United States of America. When the mid-Victorians described their legislature as the ‘imperial parliament’, they meant that it passed laws for all the four kingdoms, whichwere appropriately represented in the central lobby of the recently constructed Palace of Westminster, where mosaics depicted their respective patron saints: St George, St David, St Andrew and St Patrick. Moreover, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland would turn outto be in many ways an unsatisfactory and unstable creation, as England was overwhelmingly dominant in terms of population, wealth and resources, and as the three nations of what was disparagingly regarded as ‘the Celtic fringe’ came on occasions to resent or repudiate such an unequal and asymmetrical Union. This was especially so in the case of Ireland, which was not only the last to be assimilated but also the least successfully, and (with the exception of the six Ulster counties) for the shortest span of time. This, in turn, had major implications for the politics of the nineteenth century, as the Tories and Conservativeswould use their customary electoral dominance in England to try to impose their will on the rest of the Union, whereas the Whigs and Liberals would need the votes of Ireland, Scotland and Wales to enable them to dominate England.

Praise

“This is stupendous. The British nineteenth century, in all its complexity, all its horror, all its energy, all its hopes is laid bare. This is the definitive history, and will remain so for generations.” —A. N. Wilson, author of Victoria: A Life

"Cannadine's admirable history lucidly records Britain's many triumphs at home and abroad, and its many failures as well." —The New York Times, Editors' Choice

"An evocative account . . .[Cannadine] tells his own story persuasively and exceedingly well.” —The Wall Street Journal

"David Cannadine’s “Victorious Century” is a glorious tour of the Victorian Age crammed with the lively statesmen who haphazardly orchestrated Britain’s global dominions, from Pitt the Younger to Joseph Chamberlain." —Edward Glaeser, professor of economics at Harvard and author of Triumph of the City

“David Cannadine’s ambitious history of the UK in the 19th century, is about both the nation and its Empire, and how each built and gave character to the other. It is a remarkable story, remarkably well told, a story of remarkable stability but also of a remarkable native impulse for reform. . . . Cannadine’s volume may be regarded in the years ahead as its most glorious chronicle.” —The Boston Globe

"Cannadine shows a polymathic command of the cultural life of the period...[he] has pulled off the hat-trick of commanding erudition, original interpretation and graceful writing." —Maya Jasanoff, The Guardian

”Mr. Cannadine offers a comprehensive analysis . . . he knits together the often diverging grand imperial, national and social histories with skill.” —The Economist

"A masterful history." —The Financial Times

"[Victorious Century] tells a fascinating tale with engaging prose and intriguing themes. In his even-handed analysis, Cannadine does not find the British Empire to be without fault, nor does he engage in the needless iconoclasm that is so much en vogue among modern historians. This book is British history at its height, as it was, and well worth reading." —National Review

"This is a thumping great book, and it is probably destined to become a classic. . . . There is something hypnotic and compelling about his majestic delivery. . . . Cannadine succeeds triumphantly." —Jane Ridely, The Spectator

Victorious Century, the latest installment in the Penguin History of Britain, is a multilayered study, much more than a textbook, yet at the same time a work that can now be regarded as the standard single-volume treatment of its subject—an admirably readable guide to the British history of the long 19th century . . . This is, simply put, the most up-to-date study of a very special nation’s unusual place in the history of the West, and of the world itself . . . In Victorious Century, Victorian Britain has found its historian in David Cannadine’s capable hands, shrewd wit, and even judgments.” Paul Kennedy, American Scholar

"Cannadine writes fluently about Britain’s rise to industrial preeminence and subsequent world-leading status, providing a detailed examination of political machinations and imperial excursions. Cannadine’s account is solid and informative." —Publisher's Weekly

“Cannadine has written a quick-paced, comprehensive account of 19th-century Britain, with recommendations for further reading. For fans of the period and most history collections.” —Library Journal

"Victorious Century is an informative and enlightening analysis of prime ministers, businessmen and military leaders 'of exceptional experience and ability' who 'were riding tigers they could never fully control,' headed in directions they could not always discern." —Prof. Glenn C. Altschuler, Tulsa World

"[Cannadine's] books always engage with big themes and reach well beyond a narrow specialist readership. . . .His writing is both informative and entertaining, with a sharp eye for vivid, arresting detail. . . .Victorious Century will no doubt become a standard work." —The Times Higher Educatoin Supplement

"The acclaimed British historian meticulously traces every aspect of Britain from the Act of Union (with Ireland) in 1800 until the 1906 landslide by the Liberal Party . . . Ever adept, Cannadine shows us why and how it happened." —Kirkus Reviews

"A book such as this is a work of heroic summary." —David Aaronovitch, The Times

"Eminent historian Cannadine is well positioned to tell the story of Britain’s Victorious Century. . . .A big history on a big century but at under 600 pages it’s focused." —Library Journal

"Cannadine is a brilliant historian — his book is a must-read for all who want to understand why we are where we are as a country" —The Jewish Chronicle