Beschreibung:
Steven Ozment is McLean Professor of Ancient and Modern History at Harvard University and the author of The Bürgermeister's Daughter; Flesh and Spirit; Ancestors; Protestants; and The Age of Reform, a finalist for the National Book Award and winner of the Schaff History Prize. He lives in Newburyport, Massachusetts.
The word "German" was being used by the Romans as early as the mid-first century B.C. to describe tribes in the eastern Rhine valley. Nearly two thousand years later, the richness and complexity of German history have faded beneath the long shadow of the country's darkest hour in World War II. Now, award-winning historian Steven Ozment, whom The New Yorker has hailed as "a splendidly readable scholar," gives us the fullest portrait possible in this sweeping, original, and provocative history of the German people, from antiquity to the present, holding a mirror up to an entire civilization -- one that has been alternately Western Europe's most successful and most perilous.
Der preisgekrönte Historiker Steve Ozment liefert mit diesem Band den Versuch einer umfassenden Geschichte der deutschen Nation, von den germanischen Stämmen zur Zeit des Römischen Reiches bis zur Wiedervereinigung. Er beschreibt meisterhaft eine Zivilisation, die oftmals die erfolgreichste, aber auch die gefährlichste Westeuropas war.