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History of Central Asia: The Age of Decline and Revival [Kietas viršelis]

4.67/5 (16 ratings by Goodreads)
(Independent Scholar)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 384 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 292x250x36 mm, weight: 2388 g, 181 colour
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Apr-2018
  • Leidėjas: I.B. Tauris
  • ISBN-10: 1788310497
  • ISBN-13: 9781788310499
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 384 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 292x250x36 mm, weight: 2388 g, 181 colour
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Apr-2018
  • Leidėjas: I.B. Tauris
  • ISBN-10: 1788310497
  • ISBN-13: 9781788310499
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
For more than a hundred years, Central Asia was the heartland of the mightiest military power on the planet. But after the fragmentation of the all-conquering Mongol polity, the region began a steep decline which rendered this former domain of horse lords peripheral to world affairs. The process of deterioration reached its nadir in the second half of the nineteenth century, when the former territories and sweeping steppes of the great khans were overrun by Tsarist Russia.

In the concluding volume of his acclaimed Central Asia quartet, Christoph Baumer shows how China in the east, and Russia in the northwest, succeeded in throwing off the Mongol yoke to become the masters of their own previous rulers. He suggests that, as traditional transcontinental trade routes declined in importance, it was the 'Great Game' – or cold war between Imperial Russia and Great Britain – which finally brought Central Asia back into play as a region of strategic importance. This epic history concludes with an assessment of the transition to modern independence of the Central Asian states and their struggle to contain radical Islamism.

Recenzijos

For students of both history and cultural geography, the careful, well-referenced summaries of the activities of many political entities and nomadic peoples over time are a practical starting point into an area of study previously not well served ... The author is flying the flag for a kind of scholarship which is too rarely seen. * Asian Affairs * This book will be a fine guide for anyone seeking to understand the forces involved or trying to forecast the effects of China's Belt and Road initiative on the chequerboard of Central Asia. * Literary Review * This book brings us to the present day and the emergence of the newly independent 'stans' and their growing influence and economic power. It brings to a triumphant conclusion Baumer's majestic History of Central Asia and I cannot see how this four-volume series can ever be bettered. * The Geographical Review *

Daugiau informacijos

For more than a hundred years, Central Asia was the heartland of the mightiest military power on the planet.
Introduction 1(2)
I Descendants of the Genghis Khanids
3(42)
1 The Uzbek Khanate
5(18)
1.1 The Dynasty of the Abu'l-Khayrids
5(14)
1.2 The Dynasty of the Togha-Timurids (Astarkhanids)
19(4)
2 The Khanate of Chorasmia under the Arabshahids and Russia's First Advance
23(2)
3 The Khanate of Moghulistan and the Naqshbandi Khwajas
25(4)
4 The Descendants of the Golden Horde
29(16)
4.1 The Khanate of Kazan and the Small Khanates of Kursk and Kasimov
29(7)
4.2 The Great Horde, the Astrakhan Khanate, the Nogai Horde and the Khanate of Sibir
36(5)
4.3 The Khanate of the Crimean Tatars
41(4)
II The Descendants of the Timurids: the Dynasty of the Mughal in India and Afghanistan
45(16)
1 The Build-up of the Empire: from Babur to Akbar
47(5)
2 Stagnation and Decline: from Jahangir to Bahadur Shah II
52(9)
III A Reorganisation of Geography: North Central Asia Becomes a Periphery
61(40)
1 The Legacy of the Yuan: the Western Mongolian Oirats and the Genghis Khanid Eastern Mongols
63(7)
2 Altan Khan and the Revival of Buddhism: an Alliance between Mongol Rulers and Tibetan-Buddhist Hierarchs
70(6)
3 Russia Advances to the East
76(7)
Excursus: The Treaty of Nerchinsk: the Jesuits Jean-Francois Gerbillon and Thomas Pereira as Intermediaries between China and Russia
81(2)
4 The Dzungars: The Last Powerful Steppe Empire of Central Asia
83(8)
5 The Kazakh Hordes
91(5)
6 Migration and Exodus of the Kalmyks
96(5)
IV Afghanistan until 1837 and the Khanates of Central Asia until the Russian Conquest
101(22)
1 The Emergence of Afghanistan as a Tribal Alliance
102(9)
2 The Khanate of Chorasmia under the Qungrat and the Prelude to the Anglo-Russian Rivalry
111(4)
3 The Emirate of Bukhara and the Manghit Dynasty
115(4)
4 The Khanate of Kokand and the Dynasty of the Ming
119(4)
V The `Great Game': Central Asia as a Pivot of Russian and British Expansion Policy
123(50)
1 The Setting of the `Great Game' from Constantinople to Kabul
125(1)
2 A Two-pronged Russian Attack on Afghanistan and the Siege of Herat
126(5)
3 Dost Muhammad and the First Anglo-Afghan War: British Victory Transformed into Defeat
131(7)
4 The March to the Oxus: the Russian Conquest of the Uzbek Khanates
138(6)
5 Yaqub Beg's Emirate of Turkestan in Xinjiang
144(4)
6 Sher Ali and the Second Anglo-Afghan War
148(6)
7 Abdur Rahman, the Crisis of Panjdeh and the Anglo-Russian Agreement of 1895
154(12)
8 Kashgaria, Tibet, the Russo-Japanese War and the Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907
166(7)
VI The Drive for Sovereignty -- Central Asia between the World Wars
173(40)
1 Bukhara's and Khiva's Short-lived Independence
174(14)
Excursus: British Troops in East Persia, the Caucasus and Transcaspia and a German Expedition to Afghanistan -- a Revival of the Great Game
180(8)
2 Soviet Centralism in Central Asia
188(5)
3 Afghanistan's Sovereignty, 1919--78
193(8)
4 Mongolia as a Pawn of Major Regional Powers
201(6)
5 Xinjiang's Autonomy and the Era of Warlords, 1912--44
207(6)
VII A Multilateral Great Game in Afghanistan, 1978--92
213(16)
1 External Actors and Divergent Objectives
214(3)
2 Afghanistan's Communist Regime
217(2)
3 The Guerrilla War of the Islamic Mujahideen
219(5)
4 Afghanistan Loses the Peace: the So-called Afghan Civil War, 1989--92
224(5)
VIII Afghanistan Forces the Three Major Powers to Engage in a Joint Struggle against Islamic Extremism
229(22)
1 The Power Struggle of the Mujahideen, 1992--96
230(5)
2 The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan
235(2)
3 The US in Afghanistan and the Fall of the Taliban
237(4)
4 The Presidencies of Hamid Karzai and Ashraf Ghani
241(6)
5 An Initial Assessment
247(4)
IX The New Independence of Central Asian States
251(42)
1 Non-independent Republics and Regions of the Russian Federation
252(2)
2 The Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region
254(4)
3 Independent Mongolia
258(3)
4 The Central Asian Republics
261(32)
4.1 Central Asia within the Russia-China-US Triangle
261(6)
4.2 Kazakhstan
267(3)
4.3 Kyrgyzstan
270(6)
4.4 Uzbekistan
276(5)
4.5 Tajikistan
281(8)
4.6 Turkmenistan
289(4)
X Outlook
293(8)
Appendix The Most Important Dynasties of Central Asia from the Sixteenth to the Early Twentieth Century
301(56)
Notes
311(24)
Bibliography
335(18)
List of Maps
353(1)
Photo Credits
354(1)
Acknowledgements
355(2)
Index
Concepts
357(6)
People
363(5)
Places
368
Christoph Baumer - a leading explorer and historian of Central Asia, Tibet and China - has written several well-received books in the fields of history, religion, archaeology and travel. These include The Church of the East: An Illustrated History of Assyrian Christianity (2006, 2016), Traces in the Desert: Journeys of Discovery across Central Asia (2008) and China's Holy Mountain: An Illustrated Journey into the Heart of Buddhism (2011), all published by I.B.Tauris. He is President of the Society for the Exploration of EurAsia and is a member of the Explorers' Club, New York, and of the Royal Asiatic Society, the Royal Geographical Society and the Royal Society for Asian Affairs, London. Dr Baumer was the recipient in 2015 of the prestigious Sir Percy Sykes Medal, awarded to him by the Royal Society for Asian Affairs. The first three volumes of his magisterial four-volume history of Central Asia were released by I.B.Tauris, to much acclaim, in 2012, 2014 and 2016.