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Success Is Never Final book cover
Success Is Never Final
2001
First Published
3.69
Average Rating
420
Number of Pages
A strikingly fresh account of power struggles in early modern Europe by "the finest military historian currently writing." — Reviews in History. The British politician Enoch Powell claimed that "all political lives end in failure" while, according to Winston Churchill, "success is never final." In these brilliant essays on the history of Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, Geoffrey Parker finds an unusual number of cases of defeat snatched from the jaws of victory. Parker examines three defining developments of the period—the decline of the Spanish empire, the emergence of modern warfare, and the rise of the Protestant Reformation—that demonstrate the paradox of success giving way to failure. Success Is Never Final offers a rich and original view of the limits of power. Lucid, provocative, and engaging, this stimulating collection could only be the work of one of the world's leading historians.
Avg Rating
3.69
Number of Ratings
29
5 STARS
24%
4 STARS
38%
3 STARS
24%
2 STARS
10%
1 STARS
3%
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Author

Geoffrey Parker
Geoffrey Parker
Author · 18 books

Geoffrey Parker is Andreas Dorpalen Professor of European History and an Associate of the Mershon Center at The Ohio State University. He has published widely on the social, political and military history of early modern Europe, and in 2012 the Royal Dutch Academy recognized these achievements by awarding him its biennial Heineken Foundation Prize for History, open to scholars in any field, and any period, from any country. Parker has written or co-written thirty-nine books, including The Military Revolution: Military innovation and the rise of the West, 1500-1800 (Cambridge University Press, 1988), winner of the 'best book prize' from both the American Military Institute and the Society for the History of Technology; The Grand Strategy of Philip II (Yale University Press, 1998), which won the Samuel Eliot Morison Prize from the Society of Military History; and Global Crisis: War, Climate Change and Catastrophe in the Seventeenth Century (Yale University Press, 2013), which won the Society of Military History’s Distinguished Book Prize and also one of the three medals awarded in 2014 by the British Academy for ‘a landmark academic achievement… which has transformed understanding of a particular subject’. Before moving to Ohio State in 1997, Parker taught at Cambridge and St Andrews universities in Britain, at the University of British Columbia in Canada, and at Illinois and Yale Universities in the United States, teaching courses on the Reformation, European history and military history at both undergraduate and graduate levels. He has directed or co-directed over thirty Doctoral Dissertations to completion, as well as several undergraduate theses. In 2006 he won an OSU Alumni Distinguished Teaching Award. He lives in Columbus, Ohio, and has four children. In 1987 he was diagnosed as having Multiple Sclerosis. His latest book is Imprudent King: A New Life of Philip II (Yale University Press, 2014).

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