Geschichte von England seit der Thronbesteigung Jakob's des Zweiten. Dritter…
So, what's this massive history book actually about? In the simplest terms, it's about the revolution that didn't involve guillotines. King James II, a Catholic, is on the English throne in a fiercely Protestant country. He starts pushing his religious agenda, ignoring laws, and generally acting like a monarch with absolute power. The political elite—the guys in Parliament—watch in horror. They've been down this road before with his father, Charles I, and it ended with a king's head on a block. They're determined not to repeat history.
The Story
Instead of another bloody civil war, a group of powerful nobles and politicians do something almost unthinkable: they secretly write a letter. They invite the Dutch Prince William of Orange (who is married to James's Protestant daughter, Mary) to come to England with an army and... well, sort things out. James panics and flees. William and Mary are offered the throne, but with a crucial catch: they have to agree to a new Bill of Rights that permanently limits the monarch's power and establishes Parliament's supremacy. That's the 'Glorious' part—it was (mostly) bloodless and created the constitutional monarchy Britain still has today.
Why You Should Read It
Don't let the 19th-century prose scare you off. Macaulay has a point of view, and he argues it with the energy of a brilliant lawyer giving a closing statement. He's firmly on the side of Parliament and progress. You can feel his contempt for James's stubbornness and his admiration for the pragmatic politicians who engineered the change. Reading this isn't about memorizing facts; it's about witnessing the dramatic, messy, and very human process of how a nation fundamentally changes its own rules.
Final Verdict
This is for the reader who loves big, sweeping narratives and wants to understand the origins of modern democracy. It's perfect if you enjoyed books like 1776 or Team of Rivals but want to go further back to one of the source events. Be prepared for a dense but rewarding read. You won't get a neutral account, but you will get a story told with conviction and flair that makes 1688 feel urgently important.
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Deborah Jackson
1 year agoThanks for the recommendation.
James Young
9 months agoJust what I was looking for.
Oliver Davis
1 year agoI came across this while browsing and the flow of the text seems very fluid. Exactly what I needed.
Michelle Jones
1 year agoI stumbled upon this title and the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. I couldn't put it down.
Margaret Lopez
1 month agoJust what I was looking for.