Photo de l'auteur

E. R. Chamberlin (1926–2006)

Auteur de The Bad Popes

42 oeuvres 1,381 utilisateurs 18 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

E. R. Chamberlin was born in Kingston, Jamaica, in 1926, and came to England with his family in 1933. After serving with the Royal Navy he worked on the staff of a public library, then with a government historical section, and finally as an editor at a publishing house before turning professional afficher plus write afficher moins

Œuvres de E. R. Chamberlin

The Bad Popes (1969) 588 exemplaires
Everyday Life in Renaissance Times (1965) 121 exemplaires
The fall of the house of Borgia (1974) 91 exemplaires
Les Grandes Cités: Rome (1976) 88 exemplaires
The Emperor Charlemagne (1986) 63 exemplaires
Loot!: The Heritage of Plunder (1983) 48 exemplaires
The Sack of Rome (1979) 47 exemplaires
Great English Houses (1983) 27 exemplaires
English Market Towns (1983) 22 exemplaires
Cesare Borgia (1969) 17 exemplaires
Preserving the past (1979) 15 exemplaires

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I picked up this book because I thought the title was funny. Having only a vague understanding of the history of the Catholic church (and European politics during the Middle Ages), I got a fair amount out of this book. It's probably not a great work of history, but I found it well written in an elevated-gossip style. Some of these popes were ... pretty bad! (So were some of the non popes.). Another thing I found interesting was that there were periods of years where it's not really clear whose was in charge of the church. One criticism I had was that Stephen VI, who exhumed his predecessor and put him on trial (the Cadaver Synod), wasn't profiled outside a few paragraphs in the introduction.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
eherbst | 10 autres critiques | Dec 11, 2023 |
A short, concise book on the city of Florence (Italy) during the Renaissance. Arguably one of the most fascinating cities on the planet (at least to me), this book covers the time period well. Well written, easily readable, and just plain fascinating. I really enjoyed this book.
 
Signalé
1Randal | Jun 7, 2023 |
Lots and lots of information in this book! Perhaps too much. It comes across as rather dry and academic, not the kind of book one picks up for a casual read. Would be a great asset for assigning chapters to an university class.
 
Signalé
1Randal | Jun 7, 2023 |
Although this is a pretty old publication (1976), it has the classic hallmark of the Great Cities series, giving a thorough and insightful account of the city in its context, covering both the classical age and the modern period. The photographs show their vintage by the generally brown cast and slight fuzziness, but this only adds to their authenticity (no Photoshop here), and the aerial views of the major architectural features are excellent - e.g. the Spanish steps (featured also on the cover), which can only be appreciated in the whole, and not so much from the ground. An altogether delightful book (it loses a star only for its age), well worth the trouble of locating a used copy.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Dilip-Kumar | May 25, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
42
Membres
1,381
Popularité
#18,624
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
18
ISBN
111
Langues
7

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