Official History Of Britain, The: Our Story In Numbers
19,42 €
Laos
Tarneaeg:
2-3 päeva
Tootekood
9780008412197
Description: 'Entertaining and absorbing' - The Sunday Times
A wonderfully written and entertaining book which places Britain under the microscope and asks who we are today and how we've changed as a nation.
In 1841 there were 734 female midwives working in Britain, along with 9 artificial eye makers, 20 peg makers, 6 stamp makers and 1 bee dealer. Fast forward near...
A wonderfully written and entertaining book which places Britain under the microscope and asks who we are today and how we've changed as a nation.
In 1841 there were 734 female midwives working in Britain, along with 9 artificial eye makers, 20 peg makers, 6 stamp makers and 1 bee dealer. Fast forward near...
Description: 'Entertaining and absorbing' - The Sunday Times
A wonderfully written and entertaining book which places Britain under the microscope and asks who we are today and how we've changed as a nation.
In 1841 there were 734 female midwives working in Britain, along with 9 artificial eye makers, 20 peg makers, 6 stamp makers and 1 bee dealer. Fast forward nearly two centuries and there are 51,000 midwives working in the UK and not an eye maker in sight!
For the past two centuries, through the Census and national surveys, the Office for National Statistics and its predecessors have charted the lives of the British: our jobs, home lives and strange cultural habits. With questions on occupation, housing, religion, travel and family, the Census findings have informed the economy, politics, and every other national matter. Its collected data forms the single most valuable ongoing historical resource of modern times.
A wonderfully written and entertaining book which places Britain under the microscope and asks who we are today and how we've changed as a nation.
In 1841 there were 734 female midwives working in Britain, along with 9 artificial eye makers, 20 peg makers, 6 stamp makers and 1 bee dealer. Fast forward nearly two centuries and there are 51,000 midwives working in the UK and not an eye maker in sight!
For the past two centuries, through the Census and national surveys, the Office for National Statistics and its predecessors have charted the lives of the British: our jobs, home lives and strange cultural habits. With questions on occupation, housing, religion, travel and family, the Census findings have informed the economy, politics, and every other national matter. Its collected data forms the single most valuable ongoing historical resource of modern times.
Autor | Starling, Boris; Bradbury, David |
---|---|
Ilmumisaeg | 2020 |
Kirjastus | Harpercollins Publishers Ltd |
Köide | Kõvakaaneline |
Bestseller | Ei |
Lehekülgede arv | 304 |
Pikkus | 222 |
Laius | 222 |
Keel | English |
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