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Collection of diverse perspectives, major topics and multiple
approaches to property. Multidisciplinary approach to the subject
matter. Comprehensive and accessible survey of current research at
the interface of property, society and the environment. Of interest
to students and researchers across a range of disciplines including
law, sociology, geography, history, and economics.
This fully illustrated study explores the armies of the Hindu,
Buddhist and Jain states within what are now India, Pakistan,
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal during the period AD 500-1500, as
well as Afghanistan until the early 13th century AD. Following the
emergence of a distinct 'medieval Indian' civilization in the Late
Classical and Early Medieval periods, there was a prolonged
struggle between this civilization and that of the eastern Islamic
world, concluding with the rise of the Mughal Empire at the start
of the 16th century. In this fully illustrated study, David Nicolle
investigates the traditions and enduring conservatism of
non-Islamic medieval Indian warfare, notably evident in recruitment
patterns and the significance of archery and cavalry. The role and
impact of war-elephants, both positive and negative, are also
considered, as well as the influence of climate and weather
(notably the seasonal monsoon) on warfare in this region. As well
as assessing arms and armour - contrasting the advanced technology
and high status of Indian weapons (especially swords) with the
remarkable lack of metallic armour in the region during this period
- the author also explores siege warfare and riverine and naval
warfare in South Asia. This book assesses the contributing factors
identified by those who have sought to explain why the huge wealth
and substantial populations of the traditional non-Islamic Indian
states did not prevent their persistent failure in the face of
Islamic invasion and conquest.
This illustrated study investigates the Indo-Islamic fighting men
of South Asia from the 7th century AD to the Mughal conquest of the
16th century. From 1206, much of what is now India as well as parts
of Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal were ruled by a succession of
Islamic dynasties that had their origins in the Ghurid forces that
conquered parts of northern India in the 12th century. Although it
was never complete, the Islamic domination of this huge region also
had a profound impact upon Islamic civilization as a whole, not
least in military terms, being felt as far west as Africa. Within
South Asia, the war-torn medieval centuries laid the foundations
for the subsequent even more brilliant Mughal Empire. Featuring
eight plates of superb artwork alongside carefully chosen
photographs and illustrations, this study complements the same
author's Medieval Indian Armies (1): Hindu, Buddhist and Jain. It
describes and illustrates the Indo-Islamic forces operating in
South Asia, from the Umayyad Caliphate’s frontier in
north-western India and Afghanistan in the late 7th century through
to the Delhi Sultanate, the Sultanate of Bengal and the Bahmani
Sultanate in the 15th and 16th centuries. David Nicolle explains
how, with respect to arms, armour, fortification and transport both
on land and at sea, the widely successful Muslim armies learned a
great deal from their more numerous Hindu, Jain and Buddhist
opponents. This was especially evident in developments such as the
use of war-elephants and the adoption of lighter, often
textile-based forms of protection such as ‘soft armour’ made of
cotton. On the other side, there would be widespread adoption of
more potent weapons such as the composite bow, and considerably
more sophisticated systems of cavalry warfare, among the
non-Islamic forces of the Indian sub-continent. Fully illustrated,
this absorbing account casts light on many centuries of warfare in
South Asia.
Lawscape: Property, Environment, Law considers the ways in which
property law transforms both natural environments and social
economies. Addressing law's relationship to land and natural
resources through its property regime, Lawscape engages the
abstract philosophy of property law with the material environments
of place. Whilst most accounts of land law have contributed
cultural analyses of historical and political value predominantly
through the lens of property rights, few have contributed analyses
of the natural consequences of property law through the lens of
property responsibilities. Lawscape does this by addressing the
relationship between the commodification of land, instituted in and
by property law, and ecological and economic histories. Its
synthesis of property law and environmental law provides a
genuinely transdisciplinary analysis of the particular cultural
concepts and practices of land tenure that have been created, and
exported, across the globe.
Lawscape: Property, Environment, Law considers the ways in which
property law transforms both natural environments and social
economies. Addressing law's relationship to land and natural
resources through its property regime, Lawscape engages the
abstract philosophy of property law with the material environments
of place. Whilst most accounts of land law have contributed
cultural analyses of historical and political value predominantly
through the lens of property rights, few have contributed analyses
of the natural consequences of property law through the lens of
property responsibilities. Lawscape does this by addressing the
relationship between the commodification of land, instituted in and
by property law, and ecological and economic histories. Its
synthesis of property law and environmental law provides a
genuinely transdisciplinary analysis of the particular cultural
concepts and practices of land tenure that have been created, and
exported, across the globe.
Osprey's study of Teutonic Knights from 1190 to 1561. The Military
Order of Teutonic Knights was one of the three most famous
Crusading Orders; the others being the Templars and the
Hospitallers. Like these two, the Teutonic Knights initially
focused upon the preservation of the Crusader States in the Middle
East. Wielding their swords in the name of their faith, the
crusading knights set out to reclaim Jerusalem. Unlike the Templars
they survived the crises of identity and purpose which followed the
loss of the last Crusader mainland enclaves in the late thirteenth
century and, like the Hospitallers, they managed to create a new
purpose - and a new field of combat - for themselves. Whereas the
Hospitallers focused their energies in the eastern Mediterranean
battling against Muslim armies, the Teutonic Knights shifted their
efforts to the Baltic, to the so-called Northern Crusades against
pagan Prussians and Lithuanians and, to a lesser extent, against
Orthodox Christian Russia. As a result the Order of Teutonic
Knights became a significant power, not only in the Baltic but in
north-central Europe as a whole. Paradoxically, however, it was
their fellow Catholic Christian Polish neighbours who became their
most dangerous foes, breaking the Order's power in the
mid-fifteenth century. The Teutonic Knights lingered on in what are
now Estonia and Latvia for another century, but this was little
more than a feeble afterglow. This title will examine this
fascinating military and religious order in detail, revealing the
colourful history of the crusades within Europe itself which
inexorably changed the future of the continent.
A story about a boy and his two friends, who embark on a quest to
save their town, but little do they know that one of their own, is
a Chosen, selected by the gods, to compete in The Gathering. Will
survive to become the Phoenix, and save Majestica from Chaos, or
will Chaos destroy all?
Despite the great English victories at Crecy, Poitiers and
Agincourt, the French eventually triumphed in the Hundred Years
War. This book examines the last campaign of the war, covering the
great battles at Formigny in 1450 and Castillon in 1453, both of
which hold an interesting place in military history. The battle of
Fornigny saw French cavalry defeat English archers in a reverse of
those earlier English victories, while Castillon became the first
great success for gunpowder artillery in fixed positions. Finally,
the book explains how the seemingly unmartial King Charles VII of
France all but drove the English into the sea, succeeding where so
many of his predecessors had failed.
The 8th century heralded the start of a golden age in the history
of the Islamic world. At this time, the Sunni Muslim 'Abbasid
Caliphate, with its capital at Baghdad, ruled virtually the entire
Islamic world. Islamic military power peaked in the 9th century,
but by the end of this golden age in the 11th century, the 'Abbasid
Caliphs had little political and virtually no military power.
Featuring numerous photographs of artefacts and eight full colour
plates by Graham Turner, David Nicolle's book examines the
recruitment, organization, weaponry and uniforms of the armies of
the Caliphates from 862-1098.
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