Books by Miles Taylor
“It’s often the way with the modern British monarchy, that people ignore it because they think it has no power. I think of Ben Pimlott’s wonderful life of Queen Elizabeth II: there was a Labour stalwart writing about a most unexpected figure and revealing just how important this impeccably discreet person was. You might say that Queen Victoria was the first attempt at doing that as a constitutional monarch and that’s what Miles Taylor shows in Empress. He has got a feel for the way that apparently formal institutions, which don’t have real power, actually do. Queen Victoria took an enormous interest in India and had an instinct for how to brand it in a new way. In India the British monarchy was faced with scores of other monarchies, which needed to survive in this new uncharted territory of a British Empire. The queen was an extremely good way of integrating them into the Empire. And she enjoyed it. Hugely. In India she found a world in which she had far fewer limitations than she did in Great Britain. That was partly because, as a British possession, India was feeling its way from a chaotic set of structures which the East India Company had built up. It gave her a stage on which to play which she wouldn’t otherwise have had.” Read more...
The Best History Books: the 2019 Wolfson Prize shortlist
Diarmaid MacCulloch, Theologians & Historians of Religion
Interviews where books by Miles Taylor were recommended
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1
Oscar: A Life
by Matthew Sturgis -
2
Empress: Queen Victoria and India
by Miles Taylor -
3
Birds in the Ancient World: Winged Words
by Jeremy Mynott -
4
Reckonings: Legacies of Nazi Persecution and the Quest for Justice
by Mary Fulbrook -
5
Trading in War: London's Maritime World in the Age of Cook and Nelson
by Margarette Lincoln -
6
Building Anglo-Saxon England
by John Blair
The Best History Books: the 2019 Wolfson Prize shortlist, recommended by Diarmaid MacCulloch
The Best History Books: the 2019 Wolfson Prize shortlist, recommended by Diarmaid MacCulloch
Every year the Wolfson History Prize sets out to pick the very best history books written in the past year. Historian and Wolfson prize judge, Diarmaid MacCulloch, talks us through the wonderful books that made the 2019 shortlist: history books that are both great reads and serious scholarship.