Description
About the Author
Peter Oliver Loew is Director of the German Institute of Polish Affairs and honorary professor at the Technical University of Darmstadt. The author of several books, he has been instrumental in the foundation of a forthcoming "German-Polish House" in Berlin to serve as a place of remembrance and information.
Reviews
This is the best portrait of Gdansk ever written. Peter Oliver Loew vividly recounts the fascinating history of this Baltic town up to the present day. The reader gets a taste of what it meant to live there throughout centuries and can understand the unique position of the city located between Poland and Germany and claimed by both sides. * Pawel Machcewicz, Polish Academy of Sciences and founding director of the Museum of the Second World War in Gdansk *
Comprehensive, balanced, accessible, this is a much-needed account of Gdansk's fascinating, over-thousand-year past. Peter Oliver Loew evocatively chronicles Germanic and Slavic influences, changing urban and maritime features, and the sometimes central role this city on the periphery has played in European and world history. * Patrice M. Dabrowski, author of Poland: The First Thousand Years *
This is a long-overdue history of Gdansk, a mid-sized, relatively provincial city that for decades became a symbol of some of the most important events in twentieth-century European history. Loew beautifully weaves multiple chapters of the city's history into a powerful narrative of its uniqueness and ordinariness. This rich work should become a must-read for anyone interested in exploring Polish and European history and all its complexity not from the center but rather from its margins. * Anna Muller, author of If the Walls Could Speak: Inside a Women's Prison in Communist Poland *
Book Information
ISBN 9780197603864
Author Peter Oliver Loew
Format Hardback
Page Count 296
Imprint Oxford University Press Inc
Publisher Oxford University Press Inc
Weight(grams) 590g
Dimensions(mm) 244mm * 165mm * 31mm