Audiobook: Reign of George VI, 1900-1925: A Forecast Written in the Year 1763
Reign of George VI, 1900-1925: A Forecast Written in the Year 1763
1 - Editor's Preface
- Download Editor's Preface audio
- Download Author's Preface audio
- Download Introduction audio
- Download Chapter 1: A.D. 1900 audio
- Download Chapter 2: 1900-1901 audio
- Download Chapter 3: 1901-1902 audio
- Download Chapter 4: 1902-1916 audio
- Download Chapter 5: 1917-1918 audio
- Download Chapter 6: 1919-1920 audio
- Download Chapter 7: 1919-1920 audio
- Download Chapter 8: 1920 audio
- Download Chapter 9: 1921-1922 audio
- Download Chapter 10: 1922-1923 audio
Audiobooks Genres
Author
Description
Imagine a world in which there were no major revolutionary upheavals (the American, French and Russian revolutions did not occur), there was no Victorian Age, the Great War (World War I) went unfought. No Cold War, no United States, no Soviet Union; in short, no world as we have known it. Such is the vision presented in this counterfactual historical work.
Originally written by Samuel Madden in 1763, the work is a prospective look at events in Europe from 1900-1925, the reign of Madden's "George VI." (The actual George VI, father of Elizabeth II, reigned from 1936-1952.) Taking the social, political, and economic trends of the eighteenth century and projecting their impact in the twentieth, this work is written in the style of a history of the first quarter of the twentieth century.
As editor Charles William Chadwick Oman notes in his preface to this 1899 reprint, "Of late years has it been common enough for authors to comment on the political and social tendencies of their own day, by drawing fancy pictures of the state of the world many generations hence, when these tendencies have been worked out to their full development" (p. vii). Chadwick was unaware of the identity of the author of the work, ironically leading him in his preface to make some speculations about the author which were similarly flawed. The comparison between this fictional alternative view of history--what could have happened--what didn't--and what actually happened is occasionally amusing, sometimes frightening, and other times eerily familiar. (Summary by DrPGould)
Liked what you heard? Share it with your friends and family!.