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World History

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 October 2024

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“The new linking up of all parts of the world inevitably affects our view of history. In a sense, world history has just begun. Before, it was the history of more or less isolated groups: now, we must think in wider terms, we must emerge from our nation-caves into the wider world of to-day and to-morrow.'’ In these admirable sentences the authors of the most recent World History sum up their survey of human history from palæolithic beginnings to the Manchurian question, with which they bring it to a close: most fittingly, as they say, “since of all the problems of world history that of the relations of East and West, of European and Asiatic peoples, is perhaps the most important for the future of mankind.”

Messrs. R. Flenley and W. N. Weech have indeed provided us with a World History in a single volume, which compares most favourably with any similar attempt made hitherto. It not only tells the whole story—which is not merely one of conquests and defeats, but of cultural development, social changes, artistic and scientific achievements—but it tells it impartially and tells it remarkably well: concise and encyclopædic though it be, it can be read with real pleasure and sustained interest from cover to cover.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1936 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 World History. The Growth of Western Civilization. By R. Flenley and W. N. Weech. (London, 1936. J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd.; 12/6.)

2 Add to this the 300 odd illustrations in tone and line and in full colour, the 32 pages of coloured maps and the time-chart: and it will be admitted that, in presenting to the reader this book of 800 pages in handy format for the price of 12/6, the publishers have in a remarkable manner seconded the literary and historical skill of the authors.

3 London, 1935; pp. 431. Jonathan Cape; 12/6. To put its contention into a nutshell, Mr. Heard believes that only Yoga practices can make the world safe for—Peace.

4 Dr. C. A. Bentley in the British Medical Journal of March 01, 1936.

5 Mr. Christopher Dawson in his Age of the Gods (London, 1933. Sheed & Ward) has most successfully described and analyzed this Archaic Civilization. Curiously enough, Mr. Weech never mentions this outstanding example of haute vulgarisation, when expounding the origins of human civilization: which is all the more strange, as Mr. Flenley on his part does not fail to recommend for further reading Mr. Dawson's Making of Europe.