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Mary Platt Parmele was an American author and historian.
Mary Platt was born in Albany and educated in New York. Her first marriage was to J. J. Agnew and her second marriage to Theodore W. Parmele. From 1892 she began contributing philosophical articles and short stories to reviews and magazines, and published Kingdom of the Invisible and Christian Science. However, her most successful books were a number of "Short History" books of various countries written in the late 19th and early 20th century. Her "Short History of..." books included France, Russia, England, United States, Germany, Spain, and Italy.
Benimle 6 kere uçağa binen o kısa ve bahtsız metin. Türkçe'den okudum da kimse eklememiş, benim de kütüphaneciliğim düşmüş, öyle bi edisyon seçtim kendime rastgele. 20.yy başında yazılmış olması elbette onu eskimiş yapmıyor ama perspektifi biraz hristiyan merkezli göründü bana. Sanırım o yüzden de birine laf mı çarpıyor ne yapıyor anlamadığım için uzak hissettim. Kısa Tarih derken, gerçekten çok kısaya indirgiyor, bazı bölümlerde sadece aile ağacı ve o torun hangi devlette taç giymiş kadar bir okuma sunuyor. Ve fakat ben zaten seyahatime doğru 16.yy civarına kadar chatgpt ile devam edebileceğim referanslar arıyordum, ona da yetti. Bir aydınlanma olarak: 8.Henry'nin kızı Bloody Mary Katolik Kraliçe İsabel'in torunuymuş :) Şok!
Definitely a product of its time with its own set of biases and prejudices. But nonetheless, it gives a great overview of Spain's history up until the book's publishing. It doesn't dwell too much on little and obscure historical details and helps connect the dots that lead to an overall better understanding of Spanish history. Generally, Parmele's accessable writing and style has strengths that outweight any negative if slight issues in the overall narrative. Just keep in mind the time period of publishing and "Great Men of History" focus throughout the book.
Dear dear yet another old kindle book which turned out to be dire. I have been doing a bit of housekeeping on my kindle and came across this book from around the late 1910s to the early 1920s. It is billed as a short history of Spain and it certainly was. It spent what seemed half of the book talking about the romans and then moved on to the history of Spain and Portugal. Now I am a latin scholar but this just left me uninterested and well bored really. Not the book for me.
Author freebie. Suitable for all ages. Written before the 1900's. The slight differences in spelling and Spanish viewpoint on history is quite interesting. The coverage of the Monroe doctrine and the Spanish American war seems odd.
An interesting account of the history of Spain even though it was written over 100 years ago, interesting and obviously some views and biases are very much of the time, but an interesting account of Spain up the the 1900s nonetheless.
This probably should have been more correctly titled "A Short Survey of the History of Spain"...and I definitely should have checked the publication date before downloading. I've never read a work of "history" that glosses over so much or contains so many exclamation points. The tone is undeniably paternalistic and patronizing. I urge anyone who has read this book to seek out a more authoritative and genuinely historical work to supplement.
I was rather disappointed by the book. First of all, it was supposed to be a history book. And a historian ought never stand in favor or against someone. This book was more like an opinion summary. Also, facts had been dramatized, which is not the case when writing history books. In addition, it was very difficult to keep on, and very tiring to read. If you missed a single line or name, you totally lost it. The only good thing about the book was that it contained some very interesting facts. It wasn't what I expected when I bought it.
This book is indeed short and consequently lacking in coverage for most of my areas of interest. Almost no mention is made of Aragon or any cultural group other than Castilian. In addition, the book was written over a century ago. The author's feelings toward certain groups and historial figures betrays her era, including her rather positive view of Isabella. Still, it is a very quick read that gives an introduction to Spanish history and for some, that is all that is needed.
Written just after the 1898 Spanish-American War, this is one in a series of "short history of" books written by Parmele. As it is a short history it covers a lot of ground and does shows the author's prejudices and biases that were the norm of her day. Nonetheless it was full of quirky stories, very readable and, to a non-academic, a good introduction into the history of a great people.
It's an interesting look back at what nonfiction publishing looked like a hundred years ago. I so rarely read anything about Europe written before WWI, I enjoyed the quirks of the author's perspective, too. I wouldn't recommend it as anything other than a curio, but I enjoyed the read.
Very interesting book about the history of Spain. One thing to notice is that this book was written c. 1898, so it opens a window of historiography (AFAIK that was it is called). The author recounts history more like it is a story which makes this book easy to read and engaging at the same time.
Livrinho honesto, já antigo, com uma síntese breve da História de Espanha em tom de relato popular. Vale pela relação final dos reis de Espanha e dos reis visigóticos da Península Ibérica.