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The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia

The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia

List Price: $25.00
Your Price: $25.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Should come with a warning label...
Review: ...that reads "not for the layman". Granted, I have only read about 100 pages of this book, but I doubt I will get to the end. It is divided into 3 sections on the Huns, Ghengis Khan, and Tamerlane. So far, so good, right? Nope. The author goes back and forth across such varied geographic areas and uses such far-flung place names so quickly that it is impossible for anyone without a PhD in Central Asian history or geography to keep up. Go ahead, I dare you to try. Now, I am not uneducated. I've read some great epic histories by Robert Massie and Steven Runciman that were hundreds of pages long and kept my interest to the very end. "Empire of the Steppes" barely held my interest at all.

There are a few reviews here that say this book is the best on it's subject; surely there has to be one written in the last 60 years that is better...there has to be!! One written for the more casual reader who wants to be engaged, not overwhelmed.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great work on the history of the steppe. Read it!
Review: A friend introduced this book to me. His opinion is you can't understand European history without understanding the history of the steppes. My opinion is that you can't understand the history of China without understanding the Steppes. This book covers both sides admiringly well despite its date (1939). From the time of dim prehistory to the last struggle of the once-great descendants of the Ghengis Khanate, Grousset described the greatest and mostly unknown saga of the peoples of the steppe. We find out the history of the Indo-European cultures in central Asia (Yes, this was decades before the discovery of the blonde mummies in China and Grousset could have predicted their discovery decades ago). We find out about the Kara-Kitai, the greatest enemy the Muslims of Asia ever faced (NOt the Crusaders). We were there when the Dzungars, last heir of Ghengis Khan was caught between the expanding Russian empire and the rising Manchu empire. Buy it, read it and world history will never be the same again.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: a must read
Review: A must read, if you like History. It is true, our undertanding of central asian history is much better now, but this doesnt change the value of this book. One of the books I re-read different parts of it again and again.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Was once the standard
Review: But Alas, no longer. Though still a very understudied region, the modern interpretation of Central Asian history is quite different from that which is laid out in this text. Still very valuable, but it must examined in conjunction with other, more recent, sources.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Well worth reading even after six decades
Review: I first read this book twelve years ago and have been fascinated with the history of the Central Asian steppes ever since. Rene Grousset was one of those rare writers who could infect the reader with the same enthusiasm and interest that he himself possessed. Naomi Walford did a fantastic job translating from the original French text and retaining the spirit of the work. The 600+ pages cover in chronological order the history of steppe tribes from the Scythians to the Dzungar realm in the late 18th century. Throughout the work Grousset conveys to the reader a detailed picture of the various Turkic, Mongol, and Manchu tribes (and to a lesser extent Indo-Eurpoean tribes), and how political and military control of the steppe regions shifted between these tribes over the centuries. There is also a great deal of coverage on the more well-known known conquerors (Genghis and Kublai Khan, Tamerlane) and their empires. The book contains a great number of quotes from passages recorded by many civilizations throughout history which had come in contact with these Central Asian peoples, and these coupled with Grousset's writing style portray the events and personalities of that distant age in a more intimate light. The fact that Indo-Europeans had co-existed in close proximity to Turkic-Mongol tribes and Chinese peoples long before recorded history was a fascinating revelation to me. In addition to documenting the geographic parameters of the more significant empires and their direct contact with cultures from Poland to Iraq to India to Japan, Grousset also shows how events in Central Asia have indirectly affected distant regions by causing a chain of population displacements that resulted in military conquests far away from Central Asia. Although Grousset often resorted to speculations which have proved in time to be inaccurate, the detraction from the book's overall quality is minimal. One can read one of the many up-to-date books on this subject to clean up Grousset's inaccuracies, but I personally have yet to find one that has been of comparable pleasure to read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Best Book on the Impact of Nomads on Sedentary Peoples
Review: Of the 50+ books I have read on Central Asia, this book is by far the most insightful. This is more than a history of Central Asia -- it is a whole treatise on the impact of the nomads on the sedentary peoples. The book also places a heavy emphasis on the origins of various peoples (Turks, Mongols, etc.) and their relationships. The displacement of the Indo-Europeans by the Turks in Central Asia (from western China to present-day Uzbekistan) also makes for facsinating reading. There is also detailed discussions about Genghis Khan and the Mongols -- frankly much better than most other books I've read that deal with only that topic.
On the negative side, the book focuses too much on Genghis Khan and generally has a pro-Mongol bias. Some of the maps are also quite unhelpful and do not correspond to the text too well.
Nonetheless, this old book is still the best around after all these years.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Best Book on the Impact of Nomads on Sedentary Peoples
Review: Of the 50+ books I have read on Central Asia, this book is by far the most insightful. This is more than a history of Central Asia -- it is a whole treatise on the impact of the nomads on the sedentary peoples. The book also places a heavy emphasis on the origins of various peoples (Turks, Mongols, etc.) and their relationships. The displacement of the Indo-Europeans by the Turks in Central Asia (from western China to present-day Uzbekistan) also makes for facsinating reading. There is also detailed discussions about Genghis Khan and the Mongols -- frankly much better than most other books I've read that deal with only that topic.
On the negative side, the book focuses too much on Genghis Khan and generally has a pro-Mongol bias. Some of the maps are also quite unhelpful and do not correspond to the text too well.
Nonetheless, this old book is still the best around after all these years.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best book about Steppes
Review: Se trata de un libro excelente. Lamentablemente los mapas los tengo en mala calidad, se trata de una traducción del ejemplar frances. Un libro indispensable para quienes estamos interesados en esta etapa crucial de la Historia.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Difficult but Worth It
Review: This book is absolutely complete and authoritative. It exhaustively covers the subject and is a panoramic history of the power of the nomadic peoples for over 2000 years until the sedentary world overtook them. I read it 20 years ago and still remember it with pleasure.

Two caveats, however: (1)Unless you can read it in a shorter time than most of us can afford, the interleaving of the book in geographical (rather than time) segments mean you have to have either a very good memory or a notepad, and (2)The translator did his work with a very academic tone. (I remember the use of the word "autochtonous" rather than "native" in one spot.)

Not an easy read, but worth the trouble.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The most detailed book ever written about Steppe History
Review: This book is truly a "work of historical art". It provides comprehensive text concerning many different groups residing in Central Asia, not only the Mongols. This book is a masterpiece and is a must-read for any history enthusiast. If you are looking for a book that tells you everything about Central Asian/Inner Asian/Mongol History, then you will strike oil with this one. It is the best thing close to an encyclopedia on Central Asian history and it has been a wonderful addition to my home library.


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