Cover Blurbs
- Andrew Marr, author of two best-selling histories of Great Britain, now turns his attention to the world as a whole. Written alongside a landmark BBC One television series, A History of the World takes readers on a journey from the Nazca to Mongolia and from the kingdom of Mali to the plantations of Haiti, in search of the characters and stories that shaped the world we live in.
- Our understanding of world history is changing, as new discoveries are made on all the continents and old prejudices are being challenged. In this truly global journey Andrew Marr revisits some of the traditional epic stories, from classical Greece and Rome to the rise of Napoleon, but surrounds them with less familiar material, from Peru to the Ukraine, China to the Caribbean. He looks at cultures that have failed and vanished, as well as the origins of today’s superpowers, and finds surprising echoes and parallels across vast distances and epochs.
- This is a book about the great change-makers of history and their times; people such as Cleopatra1, Genghis Khan, Galileo and Mao. But it is also a book about us – for ‘the better we understand how rulers lose touch with reality, or why revolutions produce dictators more often than they produce happiness, or why some parts of the world are richer than others, the easier it is to understand our own times.’
- Fresh, exciting and vividly readable, this is popular history at its very best.
- Andrew Marr was born in Glasgow in 1959. He studied English at the University of Cambridge and has since enjoyed a long career in political journalism, working for the Scotsman, the Independent, the Daily Express and the Observer. From 2000 to 2005 he was the BBC’s Political Editor. He has written and presented television documentaries on history, science and politics, and presents the weekly Andrew Marr Show on Sunday mornings on BBC One and Start the Week on Radio 4. He lives in London with his family.
ContentsAcknowledgements → p.xi
Introduction → p.xiii
- Out Of The Heat, Towards The Ice → p.1
- The Case For War → p.
- The Sword And The Word → p.109
- Beyond The Muddy Melting Pot → p.183
- The World Blows Open → p.249
- Dreams Of Freedom → p.307
- Capitalism And Its Enemies → p.385
- 1918-2012: Our Times → p.467
Notes → p.567
Bibliography → p.581
Index → p.591
Picture Acknowledgements → p.613
In-Page Footnotes ("Marr (Andrew) - A History of The World")
Footnote 1:
- I hope this isn’t symptomatic of the perspective of the book. How – compared with the unmentioned Julius Caesar – could Cleopatra be described as a “great change-maker”?
Book Comment
Macmillan, 2012. BBC. Hardback.
Text Colour Conventions (see disclaimer)- Blue: Text by me; © Theo Todman, 2026
- Mauve: Text by correspondent(s) or other author(s); © the author(s)