When I studied history at Oxford I was able to specialise in economic history and the history of science and technology. I was also made to study European history alongside what was called English or more accurately UK history. I was not expected to study American history or Chinese or Japanese history, yet these were then the arrived or coming powers. It was a lop sided syllabus with hints of European superiority and bias in its design.
I found European history deeply depressing. It was a continuing story of changing borders and countries endlessly fighting over their identities and for control of sufficient resources to feed and clothe themselves. There were too many great Kings, Emperors and thugs seeking dominion over larger areas of the continent. Economic progress was regularly damaged by marauding armies. Much blood and treasure was shed to achieve a European Empire that never materialised. In the sixteenth century there also came a wave of wars over religious reform with the continent split not just between Roman and Orthodox Christianity , but also between Roman and protestant Christianity.
The twentieth century was disfigured by two ruinous world wars as Germany fought to unite Europe under its control. The early nineteenth century had seen a destructive world war to establish a French European Empire, mimicking Spain’s failed attempt in the sixteenth century. The UK did Europe a great service by the big sacrifices to defeat Hitler.
It made me proud to be British as we had in the last 500 years dropped any claim to a European empire, had developed Parliamentary checks on monarchs’ powers and given the world the prosperity machines of the Industrial revolution. The pity was we had been drawn into too many land wars on the continent as we tried to help smaller states resist the barbaric invasions by Spanish, French, German and other forces. We had successfully started settlements in North America which led on to the creation of two great free nations, the USA and Canada. The American rebels were better heirs to English democratic thinking than was George III who lost to them.
The UK today should learn from its past. We succeed when we project naval and air power to protect our islands and keep open seas for trade. We do not by history or inclination wish to be a land power risking armies in a continental cauldron.The cause of a European empire was not worth all the dead who suffered for it.