'The Industrial Revolution marks the most fundamental transformation of human life the history of the world recorded in written documents'
In no nation was the change greater than in Britain which for a while held a position of unparalleled global influence and power. In this magnificent history, Eric Hobsbawm explores the origin and dramatic course of the Industrial Revolution over two-hundred and fifty years and its influence on Britain's social and political institutions and on society in general. He argues that the country's relative decline this century is due to its early and long-sustained beginnings as a world industrial power.