A survey of the English experience through a thousand years and more, this book concentrates on the lasting characteristics of a people who early on discovered the fact of a national identity. The outstanding hallmarks of this experience were the existence of a strong central authority (in the monarchy), the provision of a system of law, and with these two the possibility of preserving individual rights and liberties in the face of a long sequence of historical vicissitudes.
Sir Geoffrey Rudolph Elton FBA (born Gottfried Rudolf Otto Ehrenberg) was a German-born British political and constitutional historian, specialising in the Tudor period. He taught at Clare College, Cambridge, and was the Regius Professor of Modern History there from 1983 to 1988.
An strong advocate of the primacy of political and administrative history, Elton was the pre-eminent Tudor historian of his day. He also made very significant contributions to the then current debate on the philosophy of historical practice, as well as having a powerful effect on the profession through, among other things, his presidency of the Royal Historical Society.
This is not my preferred style of delivery for history, but it does serve well for the summary role this book fills. Each chapter examines the areas of politics, finance, and religion for distinct periods of English history, beginning with the first invasions of the Saxons and the Angles all the way to the Edwardian age. As such, a lot of history is meshed together. While many events are compressed, I do say that the development of English identity is very easy to follow. The book is surprisingly optimistic about the developments without being nauseatingly liberal about it as some texts can be. Would recommend as a good portal for further reading.