norman davies talks about vanished kingdoms
Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
Egypt Today, egypt today
Egypt Today, egypt today
Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
Egypt Today, egypt today

Norman Davies talks about Vanished Kingdoms

Egypt Today, egypt today

Egypt Today, egypt today Norman Davies talks about Vanished Kingdoms

London - Arabstoday

When I arrive (late) for lunch at St Antony’s College, Oxford, Professor Norman Davies is reading a fan letter. It is from someone who claims to have been at school with him and he shows me the first line: “Dear Dr Davies, Please don’t be unduly alarmed at receiving a letter from someone writing from HMP Wandsworth…” It is a long letter, and it turns out to be from an armed robber. “Plenty of time on his hands, then, I suppose,” Davies observes, tucking the letter away for later. I’m in Oxford to talk to Davies about the potential disappearance of the Europe with which we’ve become familiar since the Treaty of Rome in 1957. His new book Vanished Kingdoms is a history of those various European states that have predeceased the EU and sunk beneath the waters of obscurity – states such as Etruria, Galicia, Eire or the Soviet Union. We are all so busy asking clueless economists what is next going to happen to the eurozone, but perhaps we ought to seek the lessons of history. Davies is a short man who speaks in a voice enriched with a northern English accent. At the moment, while he’s recovering from a hip operation, he moves awkwardly. That is not the only thing that is awkward because when his gaze settles on me, I sense disappointment and suspicion. I suddenly feel like an undergraduate handing in work I know to be substandard. I reassure him of my credentials with the story that when my wife was in labour with our daughter, I read her long extracts from Davies’s A History of Europe. The birth took 18 hours so I got through quite a bit of it, and by a curious coincidence I am meeting Davies exactly 12 years later, on my daughter’s 12th birthday. In a roundabout way the letter from the armed robber and the 12th anniversary of my reading A History of Europe both chime with one of the many themes that inform his new book. Vanished Kingdoms is a study of the events that led to the disappearance of various European states – states such as Alt Clud, which for 500 years stretched across southern Scotland, or that of Carpatho-Ukraine, which only lasted for a day. These disappearances are of a rather different magnitude to everyday events such as a man ending up in jail when his fellow pupil ends up as Honorary Fellow of an Oxford college, but they are prey to the same forces, which Davies describes as “contingency”. “Why does a state last a thousand years? Why not 999? Why not a thousand and one? What are the events that finally bring the whole thing down? That is what I am asking.” By contingency, he means more than mere coincidence, but it is by coincidence the day we meet, Mervyn King has been talking about the financial crisis: “Who knows what’s going to happen tomorrow, let alone next month?” This is just the kind of uncertainty Davies is interested in and there is a distinct brightening of the glint in his eye when he imagines the break-up of the United Kingdom, something he says has become a possibility thanks to this crisis. “If the Tory Right manages to shift the blame for it onto the euro, they might be able to get a referendum to leave the European Union altogether. If that happens, then the Scots – who’ve always seen membership of the EU as a bulwark against English encroachment – will probably vote for independence. If they go, then Wales will go, and that will be the end of the United Kingdom. Vanished.” It’s a shocking thought, but Davies talks about the Jagiellonians, once the ruling dynasty of the largest kingdom in 15th-century Europe. For centuries it was taken that the family would reign forever, but as Rousseau suggested, nothing made by mortal man can be immortal, and within a few years that which had seemed eternal was gone, and the Habsburgs had emerged “out of the crooked timbers of European history” to snap everything up. He makes it clear that this is not necessarily a pessimistic view. “States seem to have a natural life cycle,” he says, “and anything can occur to change them into something else, and that something might be no bad thing.” It is an unexpectedly cheering conclusion. * Norman Davies is appearing at the Hay Winter Weekend, which runs from December 2-4. hayfestival.com/winterweekend Vanished Kingdoms (Allen Lane) is available for T £26. *Brecon Beacons Holiday Cottages offer over 300 holiday cottages in and around the National Park, with a good selection of properties in the Hay on Wye area including several conveniently located in the town centre. The Brecon Beacons is less than three hours drive from London, two hours from Birmingham and only one hour from Bristol. As well as superb walking, it is famous for its world-class mountain biking and a range of outdoor activities.

egypttoday
egypttoday

Name *

E-mail *

Comment Title*

Comment *

: Characters Left

Mandatory *

Terms of use

Publishing Terms: Not to offend the author, or to persons or sanctities or attacking religions or divine self. And stay away from sectarian and racial incitement and insults.

I agree with the Terms of Use

Security Code*

norman davies talks about vanished kingdoms norman davies talks about vanished kingdoms



GMT 21:06 2017 Monday ,01 May

Will Smith at all-star Jazz Day in Cuba

GMT 06:25 2017 Monday ,27 November

Bali raises volcano alert to highest level

GMT 12:45 2018 Monday ,26 November

Israeli forces close entrance of village in Ramallah

GMT 12:14 2018 Monday ,08 October

HM King congratulates Ugandan President

GMT 13:49 2017 Thursday ,17 August

Alibaba posts 94% surge in quarterly profit

GMT 08:47 2017 Saturday ,10 June

CDD responds to 236 various incidents

GMT 00:31 2015 Saturday ,16 May

Canada plans 30% CO2 emissions cut by 2030

GMT 03:31 2017 Wednesday ,22 February

‘Man-made’ climate change a major woman’s problem

GMT 10:42 2017 Thursday ,16 November

Algeria FM leaves Cairo following tripartite meeting

GMT 11:08 2017 Tuesday ,03 October

Moscow, Riyadh willing to boost cooperation
 
 Egypt Today Facebook,egypt today facebook  Egypt Today Twitter,egypt today twitter Egypt Today Rss,egypt today rss  Egypt Today Youtube,egypt today youtube  Egypt Today Youtube,egypt today youtube

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©

egypttoday egypttoday egypttoday egypttoday
egypttoday egypttoday egypttoday
egypttoday
بناية النخيل - رأس النبع _ خلف السفارة الفرنسية _بيروت - لبنان
egypttoday, Egypttoday, Egypttoday