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Geoffrey Moorhouse
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Un écrivain, voyageur à ses heures, décide un beau jour d’exorciser le démon qui loge en lui : la peur. À l’automne 1972, il entreprend un voyage insensé : la redoutable traversée du Sahara d’ouest en est, qu’il sera le premier à entreprendre. Des côtes de la Mauritanie aux rives du Nil, il parcourt six mille kilomètres. Son voyage, marqué par une alternance de chances et de malchances inouïes devient une aventure initiatique au suspens sans cesse renouvelé. L’itinéraire géographique se double d’un cheminement intérieur et conjugue miraculeusement exaltation aventureuse et quête intime.
Geoffrey Moorhouse a obtenu le Thomas Cook Travel Book Award en 1984 pour son livre To the Frontier, mais c’est Jusqu’au bout de la peur (1974) qui l’a rendu célèbre des deux côtés de l’Atlantique. Plusieurs de ses livres sont en grande partie basés sur ses voyages. -
Henry VIII's dissolution of the monasteries, through the never-before-told story of how one priory was saved and become Durham's mighty cathedral
What happened to the monks, their orders and the communities they served after Henry VIII's break with Rome in 1536? In THE LAST OFFICE Geoffrey Moorhouse reveals how the Dissolution of the Monasteries affected the great Benedictine priory at Durham, drawing for his sources on material that has lain forgotten in the recesses of one of our great cathedrals.
The quarrel between Henry VIII and the papacy not only gave birth to the Church of England but heralded the destruction of the 650 or so religious houses that played a central role in the spiritual and economic life of the nation. Durham proved to be the exception. On New Year's Eve 1539, the monks sang the last compline. Next morning the priory and its community were surrendered into the hands of the King's commissioners. But then nothing happened. An interregnum lasted 16 months before the priory was reborn as the new cathedral church of Christ and the Blessed Virgin, part of the new Church of England. The Prior became the Dean and 12 monks were retained as prebendaries.
In Geoffrey Moorhouse's original and absorbing study, one of the great catalytic events of our past comes alive through the personalities and events at one key monastery.