Rebecca Rideal
Auteur van 1666: Plague, War, and Hellfire
Werken van Rebecca Rideal
1666; Plague, War And Hellfire 1 exemplaar
1666 - Plagure, War and Hellfire 1 exemplaar
Tagged
Algemene kennis
- Geslacht
- female
- Opleiding
- University College London
- Beroepen
- television producer
- Korte biografie
- Rebecca is an author, former television producer and researcher (specialising in the Stuart dynasty and seventeenth-century England).
As a specialist factual television producer she was responsible for developing and producing numerous history and science documentaries, including: Bloody Tales of the Tower, Adventurer’s Guide to Britain, Jack the Ripper: Killer Revealed, Escape from Nazi Death Camp and the triple Emmy award-winning series David Attenborough’s First Life.
She is the founder and editor of the popular online history magazine The History Vault. Originally conceived as a forum for academics to reach a different audience, the magazine has grown to include book reviews, event highlights and behind-the-scenes accounts of historical drama and documentaries.
Rebecca is studying for her PhD at University College London where she focuses on Restoration London. Her first nonfiction book, 1666: Plague, War and Hellfire, is published by John Murray (UK) and St Martin Press (US).
https://rebeccarideal.com/about-rebecc...
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- #116,758
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The British and The Dutch (allied with France) were entering their second war over trade routes and the colonies they both hungered to control. As men were being killed in battle, on the home front bubonic plague was ravaging the country. More than 100,000 people died from those events. Then, on September 2, 1666, London began to burn. The fire started in a bakery and helped along by high winds, quickly spread across the city. Indecision, by the Mayor, on whether to start knocking down buildings to establish firebreaks, hampered controlling the blaze. The time wasted allowed the fire to grow out of control.
Rebecca Rideal, in her research found little known archived diaries. The story is told through common men and some intellectuals who lived in Great Britain: Isaac Newton, Christopher Wren and others. These voices bring a layer to the story that takes it from "dry history" to interesting and extremely readable.
Although the 17th century was a time of scientific and artistic enlightenment, the fire and brimstone preachers still held sway over a large majority of the population. These preachers, at the beginning of the plague, had shouted from their pulpits that the number "666" was the sign of the devil and the year was sure to bring punishment from God, for the sin oozing from London. No one knowing how the fire began, the man on the street began to spread the rumor that it was arson by the Dutch or the French. This led to public beatings and killings of anyone with a foreign accent.
A quick easy read, but only for those of you with a love of history.… (meer)