By Steppe, Desert, and Ocean: The Birth of Eurasia

By Steppe, Desert, and Ocean

The Birth of Eurasia
 
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Date of Publication:
 
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Product details:

ISBN13:9780199689187
ISBN10:01996891811
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:544 pages
Size:247x205x24 mm
Weight:1166 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 130 colour halftones; 150 maps; 28 plans
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Short description:

The story of the peoples of Eurasia, from the birth of farming to the expansion of the Mongols in the thirteenth century. An immense historical panorama set on a huge continental stage, this is also the story of how humans first started building the global system we know today.

Long description:
By Steppe, Desert, and Ocean is nothing less than the story of how humans first started building the globalized world we know today. Set on a huge continental stage, from Europe to China, it is a tale covering over 10,000 years, from the origins of farming around 9000 BC to the expansion of the Mongols in the thirteenth century AD.

An unashamedly 'big history', it charts the development of European, Near Eastern, and Chinese civilizations and the growing links between them by way of the Indian Ocean, the silk Roads, and the great steppe corridor (which crucially allowed horse riders to travel from Mongolia to the Great Hungarian Plain within a year). Along the way, it is also the story of the rise and fall of empires, the development of maritime trade, and the shattering impact of predatory nomads on their urban neighbours.

Above all, as this immense historical panorama unfolds, we begin to see in clearer focus those basic underlying factors - the acquisitive nature of humanity, the differing environments in which people live, and the dislocating effect of even slight climatic variation - which have driven change throughout the ages, and which help us better understand our world today.

[This book] demonstrates how wrong Kipling was: East may be East and West may be West, but over the millennia the twain have repeatedly met.
Table of Contents:
The Land and the People
The Domestication of Eurasia, 10,000-5000 BC
Horses and Copper: the Centrality of the Steppe, 5000-2500 BC
The Opening of the Eurasian Steppe, 2500-1600 BC
Nomads and Empires: The First Confrontations, 1600-6000 BC
Learning from Each Other: Interaction along the Interface, 600-250 BC
The Continent Connected, 250 BC-AD 250
The Age of Perpetual War, AD 250-650
The Beginning of a New World Order, AD 650-840
The Disintegration of Empires, AD 840-1150
The Steppe Triumphant, AD 1150-1300
Looking Backwards, Looking Forwards
Guide to Further Reading
Illustration Sources
Index