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Imperial Marriage Hugh Cecil

Imperial Marriage By Hugh Cecil

Imperial Marriage by Hugh Cecil


£9.80
New RRP £25.00
Condition - Very Good
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Summary

Certain lives epitomize an age, its glamour, its successes, and its broken dreams. Such were the lives of the subjects of this biography - Lord Edward Cecil, his wife Violet, and Alfred Milner with whom she fell in love.

Imperial Marriage Summary

Imperial Marriage: An Edwardian War and Peace by Hugh Cecil

Certain lives epitomize an age, its glamour, its successes, and its broken dreams. Such were the lives of Lord Edward Cecil, his wife Violet, and Alfred Milner with whom she fell in love. The adventurous Guards officer Edward Cecil married Violet Maxse in 1894, as Britain reached its imperial zenith. During the Boer War, as Chief Staff Officer to Baden-Powell, he was besieged at Mafeking, while in Cape Town Violet, young, attractive and enterprising, fell in love with Alfred Milner, the High Commissioner responsible for British policy. Her love for him dominated the rest of her life. This book is also a picture of the British aristocratic world during its last period of real influence. As Foreign Secretary and Prime Minister, Lord Edward's father, the Marquess of Salisbury, was Britain's leading statesman. His Jacobean palace, Hatfield, was a political powerhouse. Violet's father, Frederick Maxse was an unorthodox war hero and landed gentleman. His artistic and political friends, such as the statesman Georges Clemenceau, influenced her profoundly. Alfred Milner, a brilliant scholarship boy, rose to control the destinies of the nation alongside Lloyd George during World War I - a war bringing terrible personal tragedy to Violet and Edward. Edward spent his later life administering the finances of Egypt. After his death in 1918, Alfred and Violet were married for four brief, happy years.

About Hugh Cecil

Hugh and Mirabel Cecil's previous joint biography, Clever Hearts: A Life of Desmond and Molly MacCarthy (1990) won the Duff Cooper Prize and the Marsh Biography Award. Hugh Cecil's books include The Flower of Battle: How Britain Wrote the Great War (1996). Mirabel Cecil is the author of Sebastian Walker: A Kind of Prospero (1995).

Table of Contents

Illustrations; Maps; Preface; Introduction: Childhood and Youth, 1867-1894; 1. Edward Cecil's Childhood; 2. Schooldays and Hatfield; 3. Violet Maxse's childhood; 4. Violet in Paris and in Society; 5. With Wolseley in Ireland; Marriage and Campaigning, 1894-1898: 6. Engagement and Marriage; 7. Married Life; 8. The Sudan Campaign; 9. 'The Apotheosis of Empire'; The South African War, 1899-1900: 10. The South African Crisis; 11. Groote Schuur; 12. Mafeking; 13. Violet at the Cape; 14. The Relief of Mafeking; 15. Zeerust; Egypt and England, 1901-1914; 16. Egypt; 17. 'A Tragic Combination of Success and Failure', Alfred Milner; 18. Great Wigsell; 19. George and Helen; 20. Edward in Egypt; From War to Peace, 1914-1921: 21. George at War; 22. The Quest of George; 23. The Second Year of Armageddon; 24. Last Years in Egypt; 25. The Death of Edward; 26. 'The Leisure of an Egyptian Official; 27. Peacemaking; Lady Milner, 1921-1958: 28. Lady Milner; 29. After Alfred, the National Review; 30. The Coming of War; 31. Wartime at Wigsell; 32. Memories Notes; Bibliography; Acknowledgements; Index

Additional information

GOR001824374
9780719560439
0719560438
Imperial Marriage: An Edwardian War and Peace by Hugh Cecil
Used - Very Good
Hardback
John Murray Press
20020321
377
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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