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London: A Short History of the Greatest City in the Western World
- Narrated by: Robert Bucholz
- Length: 12 hrs and 18 mins
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Editor reviews
Summary
No city has had as powerful and as enduring an impact on Western civilization as London. But what made the city the perfect environment for so many great developments? How did London endure the sweeping historical revolutions and disasters without crumbling? Find the answers to these questions and more in these 24 fascinating lectures.
Professor Bucholz takes you through the history of this magnificent metropolis, from its birth as an ancient Roman outpost to its current status as a global village. You'll study the many epic chapters in British and world history - including the English Renaissance, the turmoil of the English civil war, and the epic conflicts of World Wars I and II - through the lens of this amazing capital.
What makes the course unique is that it takes you deep into the streets of London during formative periods in its history. Professor Bucholz continuously emphasizes the importance of understanding and experiencing the sights and sounds of London as it was lived by its residents. You'll come to know what daily life was like in historical London, learning the secret histories behind places such as Westminster Abbey, Piccadilly Circus, and London Bridge.
This unforgettable look at an unforgettable city will undoubtedly delight and surprise you. By the final lecture, you'll come to realize just what Samuel Johnson meant when he famously declared, "there is in London, all that life can afford."
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your My Library section along with the audio.
What listeners love about London: A Short History of the Greatest City in the Western World
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Dusty Raven
- 20-08-15
Enjoyable until..
Would you listen to London: A Short History of the Greatest City in the Western World again? Why?
Yes. I have worked in London for 35 years and was interested to learn more about the places I know.
What did you like best about this story?
Learning about the history of all the familiar places.
What about Professor Robert Bucholz’s performance did you like?
His enthusiasm and personal knowledge of London.
If you made a film of this book, what would be the tag line be?
No idea.
Any additional comments?
I enjoyed this until the last couple if episodes when a number of factual errors made me doubt the veracity of the whole thing. So The Dave Clark 5 were from Tottenham not Tooting, the Labour election victory in 1964 was not a landslide, the O2 is not the O squared and so on.
18 people found this helpful
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- Louise A.
- 16-09-14
Wonderful overview of historical London
I enjoy listening to The Great Courses series and was drawn to this one as being a native Londoner, I enjoy learning more about this wonderful city. This gave a very concise and detailed history of London, and included interesting little nuggets of information about certain monuments, buildings and details about the human side of history too. Professor Bucholz presents this course in a very engaging way, although his accent did start to niggle at me after a while. Overall though a very good listen.
5 people found this helpful
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- FarmerDave
- 05-08-17
Great subject, appalling presentation
I believe that London is the greatest city on the planet and was truly looking forward to this course but the prof made me inclined, every few minutes, to turn it off, thinking I couldn’t take it anymore. That’s harsh but his delivery is appalling and he appears to believe he’s the most beguiling presenter ever. Satisfy your love of exploring the history of London elsewhere.
3 people found this helpful
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- Brendon
- 01-01-14
Fascinating & Eductional
What did you like most about London: A Short History of the Greatest City in the Western World?
This book cover a vast period in London's history, yet still manages to go into great detail. A fascinating and educational read / listen if you like history. I will definitely be listening to a lot more in this series.
2 people found this helpful
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- Sam Hayday
- 25-05-23
Can't recommend highly enough
I loved his series on Tudor and Stuart England. I didn't realise he'd made one about London - the city I've lived in for the past 30 years. I inhaled it in a week. Fascinating, charming, beautiful. Can't recommend highly enough.
1 person found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 27-10-22
Best single volume history of London I know.
I have lived and worked in London for half my life. And read quite a few books telling its history. This is the best I have come across. Covers the big trends, key moments in the city’s history and key people. As well as insights from a wide variety of Londoners.
Particularly useful are the half dozen walks through the London of different eras. I have done the accompanied by the authors excellent narration and felt myself a time traveller.
One of the vert best of the many Great Courses audio books I have heard
1 person found this helpful
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- Binky
- 08-10-22
Great course!
This course was entertaining, unbiased, and interesting.
As a lady born and living half my life in London, l enjoyed it very much. There was so much I could relate to, especially the effects of the two world wars upon the city, the building programmes, more recent bombings, politics, and the lives of the rich and poor alike. My family, most of whom are dead now, would talk about their lifetime historical events, many included in this course, and the author was spot on in many of his observations about Londoners.
The author's love of London shines through in his affectionate homage and is well worth a credit.
1 person found this helpful
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- Vasco
- 22-08-20
The greatest city in the world indeed!
Being a London resident myself, I found it fascinating to uncover so many secrets and factoids of this most fantastic city. Though much has changed throughout the millenia, it does feel that a certain sense of London has persisted through it all. I can't recommend this listen enough!
1 person found this helpful
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- Mr J A G Lees
- 09-08-20
Another great course
I loved Prof Bucholz Tudor and Stuart course and I enjoyed this too. His style is engaging and accessible, particularly the narrated tours through the city at various times.
I must admit I take some issue with the idea that there can be a "greatest" city (which seems like the sort of thing a TV countdown series would offer) but if one has to choose I couldn't think of a better candidate. My only criticism, slight as it would be, is of the suggestion that everyone in the UK felt the same way about the death of Diana - perhaps a danger of seeing history though ones own eyes is it gives a narrow perspective - and that the O2 arena is not "o squared" but "o two". But that shows how little criticism I can manage!
1 person found this helpful
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- Alexander
- 27-08-17
Wonderful Introduction
Professor Bucholz is a very skilled writer. His course on London manages to orchestrate many of the political, social and cultural narratives that have made the city what it is today. In doing so, he develops themes that run throughout the course. Particularly appreciated were his regular walking tours across the city at particular moments in time. His annunciation is excellent and deserves much credit, for it engages and charms the listener. His decision to conclude on personal experiences and interesting quotations worked very well. Bravo!
Despite all the much deserved praise, having tuned in to so many of The Great Courses, I refrained from awarding a 5* review. I would have appreciated a free speech. It is obvious that Prof. Bucholz read a script, which was fine, but learning more Text by heart would have enabled an even more didactic approach to conveying the complex history of London. I also would have appreciated more of the wider historical narratives, allowing Bucholz to contribute further of his scholarly perspectives, rather than merely retelling what Wikipedia could tell us as well. Finally, I would have welcomed more of the 'why does London look the way it does', i.e. urban development. Too much time went with a retelling of English history. While English history is not easily divorced from London history, I would have preferred a clearer division, especially seeing that Bucholz offers separate courses on English history. Whenever urban development was addressed, for example regarding the influence of the Russell family, one desired more of it. What about the Bedford dynasty and the Dukes of Westminster. More behind-the-scenes kind-of stories that help to understand the fabric of the city would have been wonderful.
These criticisms should not stop those interested in London to tune in. There's much on offer that justifies the purchase.
My compliments.
1 person found this helpful
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- Cynthia
- 23-11-13
Walking through London/Two Millennia
I have a new Audible routine: every weekday morning before I leave the house, I download the New York Times. If traffic is good, I get there right as the narrators finishing the last section, Opinions. At the end of the day, and now that Great Courses are available, I listen to a 20 to 30 minute lecture; and then I return to whatever book I'm listening to. Well, unless I'm really engaged in the book - I'll put the Great Course lecture aside until I'm done.
I chose Robert Bucholz' "London: A Short History of the Greatest City in the World" (2009) for my first Great Course. I haven't been to London, but I plan to go soon - and I'd like to know what I will see. I feel like I will.
If this were a regular college class, it would be Level 100 - Freshman. Each lecture covers at least 30 years, so it's hard for Bucholz to go into any great detail. The Audible version doesn't come with course materials, which was fine with me - I sure wasn't going to look at them while I was driving. I do wish it had two items, though: maps of London during the eras Bucholz discussed, and a timeline.
I enjoyed learning about London, especially from someone who loves it so dearly. Bucholz describes London as though you are there, which was fun to imagine - well, not that The Great Fire and The Blitz were a good time.
I liked the way the course was parsed into very manageable segments - I never had to stop listening mid-lecture.
Worth the credit, and I hope I get as much out of other Great Courses.
[If this review helped, please press YES. Thanks!]
89 people found this helpful
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- Amy
- 05-08-14
Good Starting Place or Refresher
I went to these lectures in order to brush up on my knowledge of London's history (which varies depending on the era from "rather expert" to "rather sketchy") and gain new perspectives on the "Cool Britannia" phenomenon today, and this fit the bill. Robert Bucholz offers an interdisciplinary and broad history of the city drawing from court history, literature, sociology, urban planning, economics, and other approaches. He manages to cover a great deal in a short time, complete with entertaining asides and corny humor. I especially appreciated his guided tours of the city during different stages of its life (Chaucer's time, Shakespeare's time, Samuel Pepys's time, Dickens's time, and "Millennial London"), which provided very useful comparisons and contrasts. A work this brief covering such a time span cannot be all things to all people, but for someone already familiar with the history and wanting a refresher, or someone wholly new to the history and seeking an introduction, this is an ideal resource.
The individual lectures are as follows:
1. There's No Place like London
2. The Rise and Fall of Roman Londinium
3. Medieval London's Thousand-Year Climb
4. Economic Life in Chaucer's London
5. Politics and Religion in Chaucer's London
6. London Embraces the Early Tudors
7. Elizabeth I and London as a Stage
8. Life in Shakespeare's London—East
9. Life in Shakespeare's London—West
10. London Rejects the Early Stuarts
11. Life in Samuel Pepys's 17th-Century London
12. Plague and Fire
13. London Rises Again—As an Imperial Capital
14. Johnson's London—All That Life Can Afford
15. The Underside of 18th-Century London
16. London Confronts Its Problems
17. Life in Dickens's London
18. Two Windows into Victorian London
19. Questions Postponed and the Great War
20. London's Interwar Expansion and Diversions
21. The Blitz—The Greatest Target in the World
22. Postwar London Returns to Life
23. The Varied Winds of Change
24. Millennial London—How Do You Like It?
60 people found this helpful
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- BF Palo Alto
- 27-08-19
Interesting, but Thatcher derangement syndrome
I enjoyed most of the lecturers, until the later episodes. Then, the lecturer suffered a bout of serious Thatcher Derangement Syndrome. OK, he liked the miners and didn't like her. But save that for the pub, mate.
Like many of the historians on Great Courses, he could only keep his liberal sympathies bottled up for so long.
14 people found this helpful
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- Joel
- 28-04-15
Well Done
Enjoyed it a lot but missed the maps etc that are not included with Audable download. Fortunately with a little digging you can find it on the Internet.
11 people found this helpful
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- Lorrie
- 20-10-15
The Best King of Travelogue!
I loved, loved, loved this audiobook! I've listened to dozens of these courses and none of them struck me as such a labour of love. Dr. Bucholz not only knows his subject, but understands it in a way only a devoted acolyte can. In his able presentation, London turns from a pile of bricks and mortar into a living, breathing entity, with a humanity which includes and yet outstrips its citizenry. In its two millennia (yes, it's that old!), it has endured and prospered in a spectacular way, but essentially, it's a long story about a place, its corners and backstreets as much as its institutions, where generation after generation have been born, lived their lives and died. We are, all of us, the richer for it's existence. Good Bless London! Long may she endure!
5 people found this helpful
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- Matthew
- 18-07-15
A Nice Panorama
This book covers over a millennia of London's history. History buffs in general and English History buffs in particular may be a bit let down in how it speeds along without delving too deeply into any one time period. It begins with the Romans, speeds through the Medieval period, and then it slows down for the Tudors, Stuarts, and Victorians, and World War II. It provides a nice panorama of London's history and of several trends within that history. As somewhat of an English history buff, I wished it had stayed longer on a few periods, but I came away satisfied and with a few new authors, locations, and events to read about.
The narration by the teacher is very engaging throughout the lecture.
I would recommend this audiobook to people just dipping their toes into English/London history and to history buffs looking for a relaxing romp through the millennia of that city's growth.
5 people found this helpful
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- David
- 08-07-15
London is a little England
It's hard to tell the history of London and not make it basically the history of England, but while most of the events narrated, from its early founding as a Roman outpost to its modern status as a global financial center, are basically echoes of British history, Professor Bucholz keeps the focus on the city, including periodic "walkabouts" through the ever-changing terrain of London, from Chaucer's time to Churchill's.
There will be many kings and queens and wars described, as all of them obviously left a mark on London, and of course there is the Black Death, the Great Fire, Cromwell and Shakespeare, Dickens and Jack the Ripper, the Blitz, the IRA bombings, the London tube bombings, and all those other great events we associate with London. But Bucholz treats London itself, or rather its people, like a character in a long historical epic.
There are several points he emphasizes throughout London's history.
London has always been somewhat independent of the rest of England. London has historically had its own privileges and prerogatives. It has acted as kingmaker and kingbreaker. Its people have rioted frequently, and London authorities have even recognized "legitimate" riots as the ancient right of its people to express their grievances.
London's economy has also often acted independently of the rest of the country. When England is doing poorly, London has often prospered.
As in all great cities, London's residents have always been convinced that London is a dangerous city full of violent criminals, going back to at least Chaucer's day, even when the evidence shows that the crime rate was falling, or was no worse in London than anywhere else.
As ancient as London is, it seems that very little of its most ancient parts are still intact. Developers right up to the modern day have had few scruples about replacing centuries-old dwellings and edifices with modern buildings. Not many Victorian mansions are still around, let alone streets or buildings going back to medieval times... though you can still find parts of the wall that was once built around the city!
This is a lively lecture told with a lot of humor by someone who's clearly a fan of the city. You can listen to this course as a proxy for a brief history of England, but just remember the focus is on the city of London and its occupants.
5 people found this helpful
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- Michael Byrne
- 09-04-15
Great preparation for a trip to London
What made the experience of listening to London: A Short History of the Greatest City in the Western World the most enjoyable?
I listened to this course as part of my prep for a vacation to London. It was fantastic. As I walked the streets, visited the sights and sat in the pubs I felt I had a sense of the history and resilience of the place and enjoyed my trip all the more.
What did you like best about this story?
The personal viewpoints in particular the section on Dr. Johnson. I found myself standing outside his house and then sitting in the Ye Old Cheshire Cheese pub with a appreciation of the man and his times that made the experience memorable.
Any additional comments?
I recommend this course and also reading the extraordinary work, "London: A Biography" by Peter Ackroyd. London came alive to me because of the great work of these two scholars.
5 people found this helpful
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- CJFLA
- 02-11-13
Good, not great.
Where does London: A Short History of the Greatest City in the Western World rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?
Trying to condense the whole history of a nation in 24 half hour sessions is quite the challenge. Realistically, spending more time on a lesser number of years (say a couple of centuries or so!) would have been better. Essentially, everything is glossed over because of time constraints and you don't take away as much as you could. That said, the presentation is quite good and narrator/professor delivering the lectures does a very good job. While I found this audiobook interesting, I really wouldn't overly recommend it to anyone.
What about Professor Robert Bucholz’s performance did you like?
Very, very good.
4 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 22-07-13
The Visit
What did you love best about London: A Short History of the Greatest City in the Western World?
If you are planning to visit London, this lecture plus a good guide book will give overview of the city and how it got to the place it is today.
3 people found this helpful