John Hirst
Born
in Adelaide, Australia
July 09, 1942
Died
February 03, 2016
Genre
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The Shortest History of Europe
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published
2009
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39 editions
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Australian History in Seven Questions
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published
2014
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8 editions
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The Australians: Insiders and Outsiders on the National Character since 1770
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published
2010
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7 editions
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Freedom on the Fatal Shore: Australia's First Colony 1788-1884
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published
2008
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2 editions
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Die kürzeste Geschichte Europas
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Sense & Nonsense in Australian History
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published
2005
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6 editions
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Looking for Australia
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published
2010
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3 editions
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'Kangaroo Court': Family Law in Australia (Quarterly Essay #17)
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published
2005
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4 editions
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The Sentimental Nation: The Making of the Australian Commonwealth
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published
2001
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2 editions
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A mais breve história da Europa: Uma visão original e fascinante das forças que moldaram o mundo
by |
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“كانت عمليات الإعدام في أثينا سريعة، في المعتاد، لكن إعدام «سقراط» أُجل بسبب أعياد دينية. وكان يمكنه أن يهرب، وتمنت السلطات، بعض التمني، أن يفعل، ولكنه رفض هذا الخيار. لماذا التمادي في التمسك بالحياة، إذا لم أكن سأعيش للأبد؟ تساءل «سقراط». ليس الهدف أن تعيش، ولكن أن تعيش بشكل حسن. لقد عشت حياة طيبة تحت القوانين اليونانية، وأنا مستعد للقبول بجزائي. لقد استمر فيلسوفًا حتى النهاية. ولما نزعت الأغلال عنه، علق قائلًا: «ما أقرب الألم من السعادة».”
― أوروبا: تاريخ وجيز
― أوروبا: تاريخ وجيز
“The Romans were better than the Greeks at fighting. They were better than the Greeks at law, which they used to run their empire. They were better than the Greeks at engineering, which was useful both for fighting and running an empire. But in everything else they acknowledged that the Greeks were superior and slavishly copied them.”
― The Shortest History of Europe
― The Shortest History of Europe
“Charles Bean, the official historian of Australia’s part in World War I, was unusual in dealing closely with the deeds of the soldiers on the front line, and not just the plans and orders of their leaders. At the end of his account of the Gallipoli landing in the Official History, he asked what made the soldiers fight on. What motive sustained them? At the end of the second or third day of the Landing, when they had fought without sleep until the whole world seemed a dream, and they scarcely knew whether it was a world of reality or of delirium – and often, no doubt, it held something of both; when half of each battalion had been annihilated, and there seemed no prospect before any man except that of wounds or death in the most vile surroundings; when the dead lay three deep in the rifle-pits under the blue sky and the place was filled with stench and sickness, and reason had almost vanished – what was it then that carried each man on? It was not love of a fight. The Australian loved fighting better than most, but it is an occupation from which the glamour quickly wears. It was not hatred of the Turk. It is true that the men at this time hated their enemy for his supposed ill-treatment of the wounded – and the fact that, of the hundreds who lay out, only one wounded man survived in Turkish hands has justified their suspicions. But hatred was not the motive which inspired them. Nor was it purely patriotism, as it would have been had they fought on Australian soil. The love of country in Australians and New Zealanders was intense – how strong, they did not realise until they were far away from their home. Nor, in most cases was the motive their loyalty to the tie between Australia and Great Britain. Although, singly or combined, all these were powerful influences, they were not the chief. Nor was it the desire for fame that made them steer their course so straight in the hour of crucial trial. They knew too well the chance that their families, possibly even the men beside them, would never know how they died. Doubtless the weaker were swept on by the stronger. In every army which enters into battle there is a part which is dependent for its resolution upon the nearest strong man. If he endures, those around him will endure; if he turns, they turn; if he falls, they may become confused. But the Australian force contained more than its share of men who were masters of their own minds and decisions. What was the dominant motive that impelled them? It lay in the mettle of the men themselves. To be the sort of man who would give way when his mates were trusting to his firmness; to be the sort of man who would fail when the line, the whole force, and the allied cause required his endurance; to have made it necessary for another unit to do his own unit’s work; to live the rest of his life haunted by the knowledge that he had set his hand to a soldier’s task and had lacked the grit to carry it through – that was the prospect which these men could not face. Life was very dear, but life was not worth living unless they could be true to their idea of Australian manhood.”
― The Australians: Insiders and Outsiders on the National Character since 1770
― The Australians: Insiders and Outsiders on the National Character since 1770
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