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Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Christopher Lee, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

45+ oeuvres 939 utilisateurs 17 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Christopher Lee

This Sceptred Isle : 55BC-1901 (1997) 207 exemplaires
The Making of the British (2012) 24 exemplaires
The Bath Detective (1995) 15 exemplaires
Carrington: An Honourable Man (2018) 8 exemplaires
This Sceptred Isle 4 exemplaires
This Sceptred Isle Empire (2006) 4 exemplaires
The Killing of Cinderella (1998) 3 exemplaires
The Killing of Sally Keemer (1998) 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

A History of the English-Speaking Peoples [abridged: Lee] (1998) — Directeur de publication — 133 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Lee, Christopher Robin James
Date de naissance
1941-10-13
Date de décès
2021-02-14
Sexe
male
Nationalité
UK
Lieu de naissance
Dartford, Kent, England, UK
Lieu du décès
Sussex, England (at home)
Cause du décès
COVID-19
Lieux de résidence
Sussex, England, UK
London, England, UK
Florence, Tuscany, Italy
Études
Dartford Technical High School, Wilmington, Kent
Wool witch Poly
Goldsmiths College, University of London
Professions
historian
broadcaster
writer
Organisations
Emmanuel College, Cambridge University (Quatercentenary fellow in Contemporary History)
Birkbeck College, University of London
BBC
Prix et distinctions
Reserve Forces Decoration
Courte biographie
Christopher Lee is a British writer, historian and broadcaster, best known for writing the radio documentary series This Sceptred Isle for the BBC read by the late Anna Massey and directed by Pete Atkin.

Lee's career began after expulsion from school and running away to sea in an old tramp steamer built for the duration of WWII. In his Twenties he re-started education reading history at London University. He later joined the BBC as a defence and foreign affairs correspondent and was posted to Moscow and the Middle East. Leaving his career in journalism for academia, Lee was the first Quatercentenary Fellow in Contemporary History and Gomes Lecturer in Emmanuel College, Cambridge. He went on to research the history of ideas at Birkbeck College in the University of London.

Lee is the originator and writer of the BBC Radio 4 trilogy This Sceptred Isle, which recounts the history of Britain from the Romans to the death of Queen Victoria, the 20th century and the British Empire.

His recent books include the three accompanying volumes of This Sceptred Isle. In 2003 was published 1603, the history of the death of Elizabeth I and the arrival of the Stuarts. In 2005, Nelson and Napoleon described the events that led to the Battle of Trafalgar and also in the same year he published the autobiographic Eight Bells and Top Masts the story of his time as a deck boy and his circumnavigation of the globe and the Bath Detective thriller trilogy.

In 2006, he gave a "Platform" talk on history writing and teaching at the National Theatre as a prelude to Alan Bennett's play The History Boys and a new stage play set in the London of 1912. His study of the British monarchy and its future was published in spring 2014 and his book on Royal Ceremony and Regalia is to be published early 2015. He is currently writing an authorised biography of Lord Carrington and the history of the Viceroys of India with illustrations by his wife, the royal portrait and landscape painter Fiona Graham-Mackay He is also the writer of more than 100 Radio 4 plays and series including, The House for Timothy West, Julian Glover and Isla Blair, Colvil & Soames for Christopher Benjamin and Amanda Redman, Our Brave Boys for Martin Jarvis and Fiona Shaw and the Los Angeles production of his The Trial of Walter Ralegh which Rosalind Ayres produced with Michael York in the title role. His play, "A Pattern in Shrouds" was broadcast on Radio 4 in the summer of 2009 and deals with the consequences of the assassination of the Queen's uncle, Lord Mountbatten in 1979. In 2013 the BBC ran his play Air Force One that questioned the events during the 90 minutes between the assassination of President Kennedy and swearing in of Lyndon B Johnson aboard the presidential plane. In December 2014 Lee was commissioned as the Climate Change Analyst and policy director of the Fort Foundation examination of Climate Change and Global Warming data in preparation for the 2015 Paris Conference. Through the Fort Foundation he was linked also as an observer to Climate Change work initiated by projects made possible by the work of a team lead by HSH Prince Albert II of Monaco. Lee's direct interest in the global tapestry is the migration of masses due to global warming and the secuity consequences.Throughthe Fort Foundation, Lee is working on a new handbook of the universe.

His next major project is the constitutional future of the British Royal Family

When not in London, Christopher Lee moves between Florence and his house in Sussex or sailing his old East Coast sloop from the River Beaulieu in southern England skippered by his wife, Fiona (see above)the artist-in-residence for the Beaulieu Estate.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christop...

Membres

Critiques

A fast-moving, almost breezy journey through the twenty viceroys (the British Crown representative) in India from 1858 to 1947. While it provides a convenient summary of this period, I must say there is something disconcerting about the construction of many of the sentences, that may be due to a colloquial use of English, or to careless editing. It makes the reading of it rather taxing, which probably accounts for the inordinately long time spent on it. The author has some strong views on the persons involved, sometimes self-contradictory within the same paragraph or page, leaving the reader puzzled. Useful as a framework, but would have to be supplemented by more sober, more 'standard' biographies and historical accounts.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Dilip-Kumar | 1 autre critique | Jan 30, 2022 |
This is a fast fun way to brush up on your English history, starts off with the Romans, then how the "English" invaded and finishes with William the Conqueror, I'll be getting the next series soon to continue my English history education.
 
Signalé
kevn57 | Dec 8, 2021 |
Lee has chosen to take 1603 as a great turning point in British history, akin to 1066. There is no argument that the death of Elizabeth I and the accession of James I and VI, bringing England and Scotland under one monarch, did entail a change for Great Britain - most obviously civil war and eventual unification.
Although Lee has written an interesting book, it is a little choppy in places, and 1603 doesn't seem to provide enough material in itself, there being no great focus, such as the battle of Hastings is for 1066.
There are plenty of extracts from original documents included. It is very interesting to see these in the original English they were written in, although the number of extracts does at times make it heavy going and perhaps not for the casual reader.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Jawin | 2 autres critiques | Sep 6, 2020 |
This is a deeply disappointing book. The title is misleading, and the execution of the theme is quite sloppily done. Dealing with it in reverse order, I presume that Dr. Lee, is a fairly skilled lecturer, and has had his lecture notes cited edited for references, and spell checked. But he has not checked the text for a problem arising from being a better speaker than writer. Lee often has allowed sentences or rather, non-sentences to creep into his text, severely hampering his information flow. An example: "Mountbatten the man to do it." Lee has a weakness, omitting the verb "to be" in a written sentence. It is highly effective in speaking but not in written speech. An adequate editor would have helped him correct this, I hope. Into the bargain he does not use the semicolon; a punctuation mark that links two ideas in equal partnership in a sentence, rather than the word "And". What Lee relies on is the verbal trick of emphasis, but it requires the sentence to be read aloud rather than silently, usually several times,slowing down the flow. I raise these points as I also suffer from them, and I feel his temptations, and his pain.
The work starts with a potted history of "India before the Mutiny,' from the British point of view. It is readable, and definitely a recap rather than an account, for there' s often a frustrating lack of detail. This lack of detail persists in the descriptions of the Viceroys, who are all linked to their educational backgrounds but often not linked to their accomplishments. While they are linked to their social roles in the government of India, one is often left at loose ends as to how they actually worked, and what demands were made on them by their office. As a tool in discovering how India was moved from a medieval plundering empire to a modern parliamentary state by the British run period...the book disappoints. I would however give Mr. Lee credit for his work in two areas: his essay on the history of Jinnah, usually portrayed as a simple Islamic villain in the partition controversy, and Lee's essay on the Wavell/Mountbatten windup of the whole show. These two, at least, are useful to the student.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
DinadansFriend | 1 autre critique | Nov 28, 2018 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
45
Aussi par
1
Membres
939
Popularité
#27,357
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
17
ISBN
165
Langues
2

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