A Short History of the World
The queen was guillotined, most of Robespierre’s antagonists were guillotined, atheists who argued that there was no Supreme Being were guillotined; day by day, week by week, this infernal new machine chopped off heads and more heads and more. The reign of Robespierre lived, it seemed, on blood; and needed more and more, as an opium-taker needs more and more opium.
H.G. Wells
A Short History of the World
H.G. Wells
Wells’s two-volume Outline of History, published in 1920, was the first general history constructed on an evolutionary, sociological and anthropological basis. It was immensely popular and set the basis for this Short History, which Wells created "to meet the needs of the busy general reader, too driven to study the maps and time charts of that Outline in detail, who wishes to refresh and repair his faded or fragmentary conceptions of the great adventure of mankind."
Contents
NEW YORK: MACMILLAN, 1922
- The World in Space
- The World in Time
- The Beginnings of Life
- The Age of Fishes
- The Age of the Coal Swamps
- The Age of Reptiles
- The First Birds and the First Mammals
- The Age of Mammals
- Monkeys, Apes and Sub-men
- The Neanderthaler and the Rhodesian Man
- The First True Men
- Primitive Thought
- The Beginnings of Cultivation
- Primitive Neolithic Civilizations
- Sumeria, Early Egypt and Writing
- Primitive Nomadic Peoples
- The First Sea-going Peoples
- Egypt, Babylon and Assyria
- The Primitive Aryans
- The Last Babylonian Empire and the Empire of Darius I
- The Early History of the Jews
- Priests and Prophets in Judea
- The Greeks
- The Wars of the Greeks and Persians
- The Splendour of Greece
- The Empire of Alexander the Great
- The Museum and Library at Alexandria
- The Life of Gautama Buddha
- King Asoka
- Confucius and Lao Tse
- Rome Comes into History
- Rome and Carthage
- The Growth of the Roman Empire
- Between Rome and China
- The Common Man’s Life under the Early Roman Empire
- Religious Developments under the Roman Empire
- The Teaching of Jesus
- The Development of Doctrinal Christianity
- The Barbarians Break the Empire into East and West
- The Huns and the End of the Western Empire
- The Byzantine and Sassanid Empires
- The Dynasties of Suy and Tang in China
- Muhammad and Islam
- The Great Days of the Arabs
- The Development of Latin Christendom
- The Crusades and the Age of Papal Dominion
- Recalcitrant Princes and the Great Schism
- The Mongol Conquests
- The Intellectual Revival of the Europeans
- The Reformation of the Latin Church
- The Emperor Charles V
- The Age of Political Experiments; of Grand Monarchy and Parliaments and Republicanism in Europe
- The New Empires of the Europeans in Asia and Overseas
- The American War of Independence
- The French Revolution and the Restoration of Monarchy in France
- The Uneasy Peace in Europe That Followed the Fall of Napoleon
- The Development of Material Knowledge
- The Industrial Revolution
- The Development of Modern Political and Social Ideas
- The Expansion of the United States
- The Rise of Germany to Predominance in Europe
- The New Overseas Empires of Steamship and Railway
- European Aggression in Asia, and the Rise of Japan
- The British Empire in 1914
- The Age of Armament in Europe, and the Great War of 1914–18
- The Revolution and Famine in Russia
- The Political and Social Reconstruction of the World