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Andrew Drummond

    Andrew Drummond è uno scrittore scozzese la cui opera approfondisce le complessità dell'esperienza umana attraverso uno stile ponderato e una prospettiva unica. I suoi romanzi, spesso ispirati dalla storia e dalla lingua, esplorano i lunghi viaggi e le connessioni inaspettate che plasmano le nostre vite. Drummond opera come un esploratore letterario, svelando le profondità e le narrazioni inespresse all'interno di ciò che appare ordinario. La sua scrittura offre ai lettori un'esplorazione avvincente di un mondo di dettagli sottili e narrazioni avvincenti.

    Law, politics and power
    The Dreadful History and Judgement of God on Thomas Muntzer
    The Scottish Church, 1688-1843: The Age of the Moderates
    The Intriguing Life and Ignominious Death of Maurice Benyovszky
    A Quite Impossible Proposal
    • In the 1890s, the people of north-west Scotland grew tired of Government Commissions sent to consider a railway to Ullapool. Despite rock-solid arguments in favour of such a railway, neither government nor the big railway companies lifted a finger to build one.

      A Quite Impossible Proposal
    • "The self-styled Hungarian Baron Maurice Auguste Aladar Benyovszky, Counsellor to the Duke of Saxony and Colonel in the service of the Queen of Hungary, was in fact only confirmed to have been an officer in a regiment of the Polish Confederation of Bar. While he did escape from Russian captors and subsequently travel to Japan, Formosa, China and Madagascar, many of his exploits were wildly exaggerated or simply invented. Andrew Drummond reveals an alternative picture of events by looking at statements from Benyovszky’s travelling companions and sceptical officials as well as contemporary documents from the places he claimed to have visited, untangling the truth behind his stories and examining what these stories can nonetheless tell us about the era in which Benyovszky lived."--Provided by publisher.

      The Intriguing Life and Ignominious Death of Maurice Benyovszky
    • On 5 December 63 BC the Roman senate voted for the execution without trial of five alleged associates of Catiline. This is one of the most famous and controversial episodes in Roman political history, involving important questions of individual liberties and public security. This monograph employs a variety of approaches to construct a new and original analysis of the senatorial debate and the issues it raises. It incorporates a systematic analysis of the evidence, with particular emphasis on the interrelationship of individual sources and their own specific characteristics and priorities; it examines the narrative of Sallust in detail and offers a fresh assessment of its methods, objectives and value; it discusses the terms in which the legality of the executions was defended in antiquity; and it addresses fundamental general issues of the interaction between law and politics at Rome.

      Law, politics and power