Template:Use dmy dates Brendan Peter Simms (born 1967, Dublin)<ref name="Who's Who">Template:Who's Who</ref> is a Professor of the history of international relations in the Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of Cambridge.
Early lifeEdit
Brendan Simms is the son of Anngret and David Simms, a professor of mathematics.<ref name="IT">Historian says Varadkar has breached letter and spirit of the Belfast Agreement, irishtimes.com, 19 July 2019</ref> He is also a grand-nephew of Brian Goold-Verschoyle, a member of the Communist Party of Ireland, who became a Soviet spy and died in a Soviet gulag in 1942.<ref name="IT"/>
Simms was brought up in the Roman Catholic faith.<ref name="IT"/> He studied at Trinity College Dublin, where he was elected a Scholar in 1986,<ref name=scholars>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> before completing his doctoral dissertation, Anglo-Prussian relations, 1804–1806: The Napoleonic Threat, at Peterhouse, Cambridge, under the supervision of Tim Blanning in 1993.<ref name="Who's Who"/>
CareerEdit
Simms became a Fellow of Peterhouse and now also serves as Professor of the History of European International Relations at the University of Cambridge, where he lectures and leads seminars, specializing in international history since 1945.<ref> Brendan Simms profile, Department of Politics and International Studies, Cambridge University</ref>
In addition to his academic work, Simms also serves as the president<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> of the Henry Jackson Society, which advocates the view that supporting and promoting liberal democracy and liberal interventionism should be an integral part of Western foreign policy,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and as President of the Project for Democratic Union, a Munich-based student-organised think tank.<ref>Brendan Simms , theguardian.com</ref>
He has advocated that the Eurozone should create a United States of Europe,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and also that this should continue the traditions of the Holy Roman Empire, appointing an elected Emperor.<ref>Brendan Simms, Charles III — why not make him King-Emperor of Europe?, engelsbergideas.com, 3 October 2022, accessed 5 October 2022</ref>
Europe: The Struggle for SupremacyEdit
Norman Stone praised Europe: The Struggle for Supremacy as "lively and erudite".<ref name=ns-reviewed-europe-struggle-supremacy-brendan-simms>Reviewed: Europe – the Struggle for Supremacy by Brendan Simms, Norman Stone, New Statesman 25 April 2013</ref> He also praised the book for the focus on Germany and Simms's knowledge of it though he qualifies it by saying Simms is stronger on the 18th century than the 20th century due to the volume of material to be covered in the latter.<ref name=ns-reviewed-europe-struggle-supremacy-brendan-simms/>
Richard J. Evans was critical of the book, saying that Simms had overly favoured observations by A. J. P. Taylor of a Hobbesian view of European history, focusing on periods of strife while neglecting periods of cooperation between European states.<ref name=guardian-europe-the-struggle-for-supremacy-review>Template:Cite news</ref> Evans described the book as a "one-sided picture", adding that even Simms has to acknowledge that there were periods of cooperation.<ref name=guardian-europe-the-struggle-for-supremacy-review/>
Noel Malcolm praised Simms as "a historian of unusual range and ability", saying that "knowing what he wants to say is one of Simms’s strengths".<ref name=teletraph-Europe-by-Brendan-Simms-review>Europe by Brendan Simms: review, Noel Malcolm, The Telegraph, 15 April 2013</ref> On the whole Malcolm praised the book, though regarding Simms' emphasis on the primacy of foreign policy in European affairs, Malcolm did wonder if there may be counterexamples, such as those where the foreign/domestic distinction is less clear.<ref name=teletraph-Europe-by-Brendan-Simms-review/>
Hitler: Only the World Was EnoughEdit
British historian Richard J. Evans was critical of Hitler: Only the World Was Enough, arguing that the book makes a number of false claims, such as the claim that Hitler embraced socialism, and concluding that Simms "hasn’t written a biography in any meaningful sense of the word; he has written a tract that instrumentalises the past for present-day political purposes."<ref name=guardian-hitler-by-brendan-simms-and-hitler-by-peter-longerich-problematic-portraits>Template:Cite news</ref>
British historian Richard Overy described Hitler: Only the World Was Enough as a "thoroughly thought-provoking and stimulating biography which all historians of the Third Reich will have to take seriously," but also criticized the book for downplaying Hitler's imperial ambitions in Eastern Europe and for giving Hitler too much credit for creating outcomes.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
BibliographyEdit
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BooksEdit
- The Struggle for Mastery in Germany, 1779–1850 (Palgrave MacMillan, 1998)
- Unfinest Hour: Britain and the Destruction of Bosnia (Penguin, 2001)
- Three Victories and a Defeat: The Rise and Fall of the First British Empire, 1714–1783 (Penguin, 2007)
- Europe: The Struggle for Supremacy, 1453 to the Present (Allen Lane, 2013)
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- Britain's Europe: A Thousand Years of Conflict and Cooperation (Penguin, 2017)
- Donald Trump: The Making of a Worldview (I.B. Tauris & Co. Ltd., 2017)
- Hitler: A Global Biography (Basic Books, 2019) Template:ISBN
- Hitler's American Gamble: Pearl Harbor and the German March to Global War (Penguin, 2021) Template:ISBN
- (with Steven McGregor and David DeVries) The Silver Waterfall: How America Won the War in the Pacific at Midway (Hachette, 2022) Template:ISBN
Critical studies and reviews of Simms' workEdit
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