A.J.P Taylor
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A.J.P. Taylor wrote, in History Today July 1951, on one of those surprising outsiders with a touch of mischief whom Taylor always had a soft historical spot for – in this case a man whose political career spanned nearly sixty years.
Published May 17 2010
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A.J.P. Taylor gives a decidedly mid-20th century view of a mid-19th century war, its aims, and legacy. Jeremy Black offered his own historiographical analysis in 2009. Published October 21 2009
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Lord Beaverbrook’s close acquaintance with the two War Leaders began in 1911; his reflections on them had not been published in full before this August 1973 article. With introduction by A.J.P. Taylor and separate analysis by Andrew Roberts. Published September 17 2009
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European history is whatever the historian wants it to be. It is a summary of the events and ideas political, religious, military, serious, romantic, prosaic, near at hand, far away, tragic, comic, significant, meaningless, anything else you would like it to be. There is only one limiting factor. It must take place in or derive from the area we cal
Published January 1 1986
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by John Erickson
Published March 31 1984
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Edgar Feuchtwanger
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From The Archive
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John Kennedy’s commitment to put a man on the Moon in the 1960s is often quoted – most recently by Gordon Brown – as an inspired civic vision. Gerard DeGroot sees the reality somewhat differently. |

















