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Books > Humanities > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > General
The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Anatolia is a unique blend of
comprehensive overviews on archaeological, philological,
linguistic, and historical issues at the forefront of Anatolian
scholarship in the 21st century. Anatolia is home to early complex
societies and great empires, and was the destination of many
migrants, visitors, and invaders. The offerings in this volume
bring this reality to life as the chapters unfold nearly ten
thousand years (ca. 10,000-323 B.C.E.) of peoples, languages, and
diverse cultures who lived in or traversed Anatolia over these
millennia. The contributors combine descriptions of current
scholarship on important discussion and debates in Anatolian
studies with new and cutting edge research for future directions of
study. The fifty-four chapters are presented in five separate
sections that range in topic from chronological and geographical
overviews to anthropologically based issues of culture contact and
imperial structures, and from historical settings of entire
millennia to crucial data from key sites across the region. The
contributors to the volume represent the best scholars in the field
from North America, Europe, Turkey, and Asia. The appearance of
this volume offers the very latest collection of studies on the
fascinating peninsula known as Anatolia.
From the Great Game to the present, an international cultural and
political biography of one of our most evocative, compelling, and
poorly understood narratives of history. The Silk Road is rapidly
becoming one of the key geocultural and geostrategic concepts of
the twenty-first century. Yet, for much of the twentieth century
the Silk Road received little attention, overshadowed by
nationalism and its invented pasts, and a world dominated by
conflict and Cold War standoffs. In The Silk Road, Tim Winter
reveals the different paths this history of connected cultures took
towards global fame, a century after the first evidence of contact
between China and Europe was unearthed. He also reveals how this
remarkably popular depiction of the past took hold as a platform
for geopolitical ambition, a celebration of peace and cosmopolitan
harmony, and created dreams of exploration and grand adventure.
Winter further explores themes that reappear today as China seeks
to revive the Silk Roads for the twenty-first century. Known across
the globe, the Silk Road is a concept fit for the modern world, and
yet its significance and origins remain poorly understood and are
the subject of much confusion. Pathbreaking in its analysis, this
book presents an entirely new reading of this increasingly
important concept, one that is likely to remain at the center of
world affairs for decades to come.
Bestselling historian William Dalrymple reinstates India as the great intellectual and philosophical superpower of Ancient Asia, tracing the cultural flow of its religion, science and mathematics.
For most of its modern history, India was fated to be on the receiving end of cultural influence from other civilisations. But this isn’t the complete story. A full millennium earlier, India’s major cultural exports – religion, art, technology, astronomy, mathematics, medicine, language and literature – were shaping civilisations, travelling as far as Afghanistan in the West and Japan in the East.
Out of India came pioneering merchants, astronomers and astrologers, scientists and mathematicians, surgeons and sculptors, as well as holy men, monks and missionaries. In The Golden Road, legendary historian William Dalrymple highlights India’s oftforgotten position as a crucial economic and civilisational hub at the heart of the ancient and early medieval history of Eurasia.
From Angkor to Ayutthaya, The Golden Road traces the cultural flow of Indian religions, languages, artistic and architectural forms and mathematics throughout the world. In this groundbreaking tome, Dalrymple draws from a lifetime of scholarship to reinstate India as the great intellectual and philosophical superpower of ancient Asia.
Based on extensive ethnographic fieldwork conducted in the Central
Himalayan region of Kumaon, Tales of Justice and Rituals of Divine
Embodiment from the Central Himalayas explores ideas of justice by
drawing on oral and written narratives, stories, testimonies, and
rituals told and performed in relation to the 'God of Justice',
Goludev, and other regional deities. The book seeks to answer
several questions: How is the concept of justice defined in South
Asia? Why do devotees seek out Goludev for the resolution of
matters of justice instead of using the secular courts? What are
the sociological and political consequences of situating divine
justice within a secular, democratic, modern context? Moreover, how
do human beings locate themselves within the indeterminateness and
struggles of their everyday existence? What is the place of
language and ritual in creating intimacy and self? How is justice
linked to intimacy, truth, and being human? The stories and
narratives in this book revolve around Goludev's own story and
deeds, as well as hundreds of petitions (manauti) written on paper
that devotees hang on his temple walls, and rituals (jagar) that
involve spirit possession and the embodiment of the deity through
designated mediums. The jagars are powerful, extraordinary
experiences, mesmerizing because of their intensity but also
because of what they imply in terms of how we conceptualize being
being human with the seemingly limitless potential to shift, alter,
and transform ourselves through language and ritual practice. The
petitions, though silent and absent of the singing, drumming, and
choreography that accompany jagars, are equally powerful because of
their candid and intimate testimony to the aspirations, breakdowns,
struggles, and breakthroughs that circumscribe human existence.
A masterpiece of war reportage, The Morning They Came for Us bears
witness to one of the most brutal internecine conflicts in recent
history. Drawing from years of experience covering Syria for Vanity
Fair, Newsweek, and the front page of the New York Times,
award-winning journalist Janine di Giovanni chronicles a nation on
the brink of disintegration, all written through the perspective of
ordinary people. With a new epilogue, what emerges is an
unflinching picture of the horrific consequences of armed conflict,
one that charts an apocalyptic but at times tender story of life in
a jihadist war zone. The result is an unforgettable testament to
resilience in the face of nihilistic human debasement.
Britain’s best-selling historian writes the first definitive account of
the famous televised SAS storming of the Iranian embassy in London in
1980
On April 30, 1980, six heavily armed gunmen burst into the Iranian
embassy on Princes Gate, overlooking Hyde Park in London. There they
took 26 hostages, including embassy staff, visitors, and three British
citizens. A tense six-day siege ensued as millions gathered around
screens across the country to witness the longest news flash in British
television history, in which police negotiators and psychiatrists
sought a bloodless end to the standoff, while the SAS – hitherto an
organisation shrouded in secrecy – laid plans for a daring rescue
mission: Operation Nimrod.
Drawing on unpublished source material, exclusive interviews with the
SAS, and testimony from witnesses including hostages, negotiators,
intelligence officers and the on-site psychiatrist, bestselling
historian Ben Macintyre takes readers on a gripping journey from the
years and weeks of build-up on both sides, to the minute-by-minute
account of the siege and rescue.
Recreating the dramatic conversations between negotiators and hostages,
the cutting-edge intelligence work happening behind-the-scenes, and the
media frenzy around this moment of international significance, The
Siege is the remarkable story of what really happened on those fateful
six days, and the first full account of a moment that forever changed
the way the nation thought about the SAS – and itself.
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