The Celts (Hardback)

A Sceptical History

Simon Jenkins

A short history of one of Ancient Britain's most enigmatic civilisations

'Simon Jenkins, as ever, writes with clarity and insight' The Times
'Jenkins has a journalist's ear for the outrageous' Sunday Times
'There's much here to interest and stimulate' Literary Review

The history of the Celts is the history of a misnomer.

There has never been a distinct people, race or tribe claiming the name of Celtic, though remnants of different languages and cultures remain throughout Wales, Ireland, Scotland and Cornwall. The word keltoi first appears in Greek as applied generally to aliens or 'barbarians' - and theories of Celticism continue to fuel many of the prejudices and misconceptions that divide the peoples of the British Isles to this day.

Often seen as unimportant or irrelevant adjuncts to English history, in The Celts Simon Jenkins offers a compelling counterargument. This is a fascinating and timely debate on who the Celts really were - or weren't - and what their legacy should be in an increasingly dis-United Kingdom.

Publication date: 30/06/2022

£16.99

ISBN: 9781788168809

Imprint: Profile Books

Subject: History & Classics

The Celts (Ebook)

A Sceptical History

Simon Jenkins

A short history of one of Ancient Britain's most enigmatic civilisations

A WATERSTONES BEST HISTORY BOOK OF 2022

'Simon Jenkins, as ever, writes with clarity and insight' Times

'One of the liveliest commentators in Britain, always worth reading and pleasingly contrarian' Jeremy Paxman, Guardian

Who were the Celts? Were they a people, a civilisation, an empire, or a fiction of historical imagination? They flit as ghosts through Europe's ancient past, purported ancestors of the Irish, Welsh, Scottish, Cornish and Bretons.
Yet they have never been identified with any one land, or with any one history or language.

Simon Jenkins argues compellingly that the 'Celts' is a misleading concept, bundling together quite distinct peoples. The word keltoi first appears in Greek, applied generally to aliens or 'barbarians' - and theories of Celticism continue to fuel many of the prejudices and misconceptions that divide the British Isles to this day.

Fascinating and increasingly relevant, who the Celts were - or weren't - goes to the heart of the ongoing argument over the future of a dis-United Kingdom.

Publication date: 30/06/2022

£8.99

ISBN: 9781782838869

ISBN 10 / ASIN: B09M7QDN38

Imprint: Profile Books

Subject: History & Classics

The Celts (Audiobook)

A Sceptical History

Simon Jenkins

A short history of one of Ancient Britain's most enigmatic civilisations

'Simon Jenkins, as ever, writes with clarity and insight' The Times
'Jenkins has a journalist's ear for the outrageous' Sunday Times
'There's much here to interest and stimulate' Literary Review

The history of the Celts is the history of a misnomer.

There has never been a distinct people, race or tribe claiming the name of Celtic, though remnants of different languages and cultures remain throughout Wales, Ireland, Scotland and Cornwall. The word keltoi first appears in Greek as applied generally to aliens or 'barbarians' – and theories of Celticism continue to fuel many of the prejudices and misconceptions that divide the peoples of the British Isles to this day.

Often seen as unimportant or irrelevant adjuncts to English history, in The Celts Simon Jenkins offers a compelling counterargument. This is a fascinating and timely debate on who the Celts really were – or weren't – and what their legacy should be in an increasingly dis-United Kingdom.

Publication date: 30/06/2022

£24.99

ISBN: 9781800810662

ISBN 10 / ASIN: B09M7QDN38

Imprint: Profile Books

Subject: History & Classics

Read by: Simon Jenkins

The Celts (Paperback)

A Sceptical History

Simon Jenkins

A short history of one of Ancient Britain's most enigmatic civilisations

A WATERSTONES BEST HISTORY BOOK OF 2022

'Simon Jenkins, as ever, writes with clarity and insight' Times

'One of the liveliest commentators in Britain, always worth reading and pleasingly contrarian' Jeremy Paxman, Guardian

Who were the Celts? Were they a people, a civilisation, an empire, or a fiction of historical imagination? They flit as ghosts through Europe's ancient past, purported ancestors of the Irish, Welsh, Scottish, Cornish and Bretons.
Yet they have never been identified with any one land, or with any one history or language.

Simon Jenkins argues compellingly that the 'Celts' is a misleading concept, bundling together quite distinct peoples. The word keltoi first appears in Greek, applied generally to aliens or 'barbarians' - and theories of Celticism continue to fuel many of the prejudices and misconceptions that divide the British Isles to this day.

Fascinating and increasingly relevant, who the Celts were - or weren't - goes to the heart of the ongoing argument over the future of a dis-United Kingdom.

Publication date: 30/03/2023

£10.99

ISBN: 9781788168816

Imprint: Profile Books

Subject: History & Classics

Reviews for The Celts

'Simon Jenkins, as ever, writes with clarity and insight'

Gerard DeGroot Times

'Jenkins has a journalist's ear for the outrageous'

John Carey Sunday Times

'There's much here to interest and stimulate'

Ewen A Cameron Literary Review

'Comprehensive and informative'

Alastair Mabbott Herald

'Particularly good ... The old familiar identities of English, Scots, Welsh and Irish are not what they used to be'

Allan Massie Scotsman

'

Praise for A Short History of England:
'A lucid and handsomely illustrated narrative

'

 Times

'Jenkins is one of the liveliest commentators at work in Britain, always worth reading and pleasingly contrarian'

Jeremy Paxman Guardian

'This is traditional, kings-and-things, great-men history with all its dates and famous quotations in place ... Jenkins has a newspaper columnist's aphoristic verve'

 Spectator

'A characteristically bold, wry, fluent, combative gallop through English history'

Max Hastings 

'Full of good writing and lively anecdotes ... Food for thought'

 New Statesman

'Immediately accessible'

 Prospect

'Where Jenkins excels is in his very journalistic approach ... The historical events are joined up, and work as narrative'

 Time Out

'Hugely important to the history of the British Isles yet commonly misunderstood and neglected by contemporary audiences, the story of the Celts is finally told in a coherent and engaging fashion by the bestselling author of A Short History of England'

 Waterstones Best Books of 2022: History

Simon Jenkins

Simon Jenkins

Simon Jenkins is the author of the bestselling A Short History of England (Profile), England's Thousand Best Churches and England's Thousand Best Houses, Britain's 100 Best Railway Stations and most recently A Short History of Europe. From 2008 to 2014 he was the chairman of the National Trust, and the former editor of The Times and Evening Standard and a columnist for the
Guardian. He lives in London.

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