From the award-winning author of The Discovery of France and Parisians.
Graham Robb was born in Manchester in 1958 and is a former Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. He has published widely on French literature and history, including biographies of Victor Hugo (which won the Royal Society of Literature Heinemann Award and the Whitbread Biography Award in 1997) and Rimbaud (shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize in 2000). The Discovery of France won both the Duff Cooper and Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prizes. His most recent book, Parisians: An Adventure History of Paris, was a Sunday Times Top Ten Bestseller. He is a Chevalier dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, and lives on the English-Scottish border.
'remarkable . . . an overarching, wondrous reworking of history
rooted in painstaking, if not obsessive, research. And if its
fantastical connections and arcane details leave the reader
reeling, perhaps that is merely a reflection of the astounding
complexity and continuing mystery of a lost civilisation that
Graham Robb has restored to its rightful place.' Philip Hoare,
Literary Review
'a wonderful writer . . . No one else can make a bike ride through
the French countryside so enthralling. No one else so relishes the
odd corners of history.' Sunday Times
'Robb produces an elaborately detailed account of [Celtic] society
and ideas . . . Those who enjoy a mixture of myth and archaeology,
who admire a vivid metaphor and a fine turn of phrase, will find
much in this book to enjoy.' New Statesman
'He is such a warm, gentle and generous writer, with no faux
scholarly tosh or solitary ecstasy riffs [and] Robb's own calm
eloquence is deeply persuasive . . . If Graham Robb has discovered
that Ancient Gaul was arranged as a reflection of the universe,
then that amazing discovery, and this heroically courageous
publication of it, is a wonder and a marvel.' Adam Nicolson,
Evening Standard
'The findings of Graham Robb, a biographer and historian, bring
into question two millennia of thinking about Iron Age Britain and
Europe and the stereotyped image of Celts as barbarous,
superstitious tribes.' Daily Telegraph
‘Presenting one of the most astonishing, significant discoveries in
recent memory, Robb, winner of the Duff Cooper Prize and Ondaatje
Award for The Discovery of France, upends nearly everything we
believe about the history—or, as he calls it, protohistory—of early
Europe and its barbarous Celtic tribes and semimythical Druids.
Popularly dismissed as superstitious, wizarding hermits, Robb
demonstrates how the Druids were perhaps the most intellectually
advanced thinkers of their age: scientists and mathematicians who,
through an intimate knowledge of solstice lines, organized their
towns and cities to mirror the paths of their Sun god, in turn
creating the earliest accurate map of the world. In his
characteristically approachable yet erudite manner, Robb examines
how this network came to be and also how it vanished, trampled over
by a belligerent Rome, which has previously received credit for
civilizing Europe—though in Robb’s account, Caesar, at the helm,
appears dim, unwitting, and frankly lucky, and the (often
literally) deeply buried Celtic beliefs and innovations seem more
relevant in modern Europe than previously assumed. Like the vast
and intricate geographical latticework that Robb has uncovered, the
book unfurls its secrets in an eerie, magnificent way—a remarkable,
mesmerizing, and bottomless work.' Publishers Weekly, Starred
Review and Pick of the Week
'One certainly has to admire the perseverance Robb has shown, not
just researching in libraries and map rooms, but also following
trails on the ground. Fifteen thousand miles on a bike, very often
to places that no tourist or researcher has ever visited or even
inquired about before . . . If you accept Robb's complex arguments,
drawn from astronomy, philology, archaeology and history, you do
indeed get a new view of an ancient civilisation . . . all those
miles on the bike. All those archaeological discoveries pointed
out. If nothing else, The Ancient Paths creates a new respect for
the ancient Gauls, and the ancient Britons. Whatever Caesar may
have said, they weren't all woad and moustaches.' Tom Shippey,
Guardian
'an enthralling new history . . . 'Important if true' . . . rings
loud in the ears as one reads the latest book by Graham Rob, a
biographer and historian of distinction whose new work, if
everything in it proves to be correct, will blow apart two
millennia of thinking about Iron Age Britain and Europe and put
several scientific discoveries back by centuries . . . it presents
extraordinary conclusions in a deeply persuasive and uncompromising
manner. What surfaces from these elegant pages - if true - is
nothing less than a wonder of the ancient world: the first solid
evidence of Druidic science and its accomplishments and the
earliest accurate map of a continent . . . a book almost indecently
stuffed with discoveries . . . suggestions follow thick and fast,
backed by a mixture of close reading, mathematical construction and
scholarly detective work . . . Robb manages his revelations with a
showman's skill, modestly conscious that his book is unfurling a
map of Iron Age Europe and Britain that has been inaccessible for
millennia. Every page produces new solutions to old mysteries, some
of them so audacious that the reader may laugh aloud . . .
Beautifully written . . . It's a magnificent piece of historical
conjecture, backed by a quizzical scholarly intellect and given a
personal twist by experiment . . . watching its conclusions
percolate through popular and academic history promises to be
thrilling. Reading it is already an electrifying and uncanny
experience: there is something gloriously unmodern about seeing a
whole new perspective on history so comprehensively birthed in a
single book. If true, very important indeed.'
*Daily Telegraph*
'The Romans did a good job of writing their predecessors out of
history . . . As the conquerors got to write the history, we have
to rely on their account of what they found. But as Robb makes
clear, they told only part of the story.' Observer
An ingenious and thoroughly gripping historical and archaeological
bolt from the blue
*New Statesman*
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