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The Dukes

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Dukes

Contributors:

By (Author) Brian Masters

ISBN:

9780712667241

Publisher:

Vintage

Imprint:

Pimlico

Publication Date:

2nd March 2001

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Family history, tracing ancestors
Social classes

Dewey:

305.52230941

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

416

Dimensions:

Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 29mm

Weight:

538g

Description

'An excellent book. I found it completely fascinating, with new and delightful information on every page' - Auberon Waugh The origins of the non-royal dukes in the British peerage divide nicely into Tudor looters, Royal bastards, opportunist generals, territorial, metropolitan or Scottish magnates. Lloyd George said that a duke, fully equipped, cost more than a dreadnought to maintain and with their palaces, possessions and retinues, they are nearly all splendid. Some of them are, of course, now poor; some of them have great wealth; some of them hit every headline and others are obscure. But within each duchy, Brian Masters tells the story of quaint grandees determined to survive.The Dukes is an essential guide that provides vital biographical information and explores the history of the dukes in unprecedented depth. This revised edition includes new information which was not available on first publication, and brings up to date the accounts of families whose titles have passed to a subsequent generation in the intervening years.

Reviews

Excellent mightily researched and readable. Absorbing through so many pages * Scotsman *
Splendidly painstaking and enormously readable -- Arthur Marshall * New Statesman *
With a keen sense of precedence and an admirable grasp of the British peerage system, he darts from duke to duke... racing up and down the genealogies * The Economist *

Author Bio

Brian Masters has written on a wide range of subjects, from dukes to gorillas to murderers. His account of the addictive killer Dennis Nilsen, Killing for Company, won the Gold Dagger Award in 1985, and he followed this with studies of Jeffrey Dahmer and Rosemary West. In between, there were biographies of John Aspinall, Georgina Duchess of Devonshire, Marie Corelli, and E. F. Benson, as well as a book on India and a celebration of Great Hostesses (such as Cunard and Colefax). His book on moral philosophy was entitled The Evil That Men Do. He also published his own memoirs, Getting Personal, in 2002.

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