After Tamerlane: The Rise and Fall of Global Empires, 1400-2000
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #8040 in Books
- Published on: 2008-03-06
- Binding: Paperback
- 592 pages
Editorial Reviews
Piers Brendon, The Independent, 4 May 2007
'In this marvellously illuminating book, John Darwin accepts much
but not all of the revisionist analysis. With an awesome grasp of global
history, he demonstrates that the continental peninsula of Europe was
peripheral for most of the time since the 14th-century conquests of
Tamerlane...Darwin sustains an intricate thesis with enormous panache.'
John Gray, Literary Review, April 2007
An astonishingly comprehensive, arrestingly fresh and vivid
history of the forces that underlie the world we live in today, After
Tamerlane sets aside ideologies in which European power - sometimes seen as
liberating and at others as diabolically oppressive - is the driving force
of modern development...After reading this masterpiece of historical
writing, one thing is clear. The world has not seen the last empire.
Maya Jasanoff, Guardian 12 May 2007
A work of massive erudition, After Tamerlane overturns smug
Eurocentric teleologies to present a compelling new perspective on
international history. Though the subject of empire stirs partisan passions
these days, Darwin exudes fairmindedness...Big topics demand big
treatments, yet few are brave or knowledgeable enough to hazard them.
Darwin has provided an ambitious, monumental and convincing reminder that
empires are the rule, not the exception, in world history.
Customer Reviews
Top notch!
This is a very ambitious book. It tries to examine the rise and fall of global empires over 500 years. The concentration is on the Ottoman, Mughal, Safavid (though quite slim on them), China, Japan, France, Britain, USA and Russia - with much briefer mention of other European powers such as the Dutch, Germans (Nazi Germany is given some page space) and the Beligians. Despite its great ambitions I think the book succeeds.
One way to describe this book is to call it the political version of Diamond's Guns Germs and Steel (but only for the last 500 years). Like GGS it looks into why certain states/nations/empires rise and why do others fall. GGS looks into the natural reasons and is detatched from political considerations (which is one of the many things that makes GGS so original). After Tamerlane concentrates far more on the political side and in this the author shows an impressively wide and deep knowledge.
Stunningly wide-ranging rereading of the history of empire
1492, Chris Columbus sailed the ocean blue. And so Europe conquered the world.
Or so we have been taught. What we've all forgotten (or ignored) is that there were other world powers. Before the British Empire, before the United States, there were the Ottoman, Chinese and Islamic empires that lasted far longer and had more influence than anything Europe produced.
Tamerlane was the last world-conqueror, a violent inheritor of Genghis Khan, whose empire ranged from Iran to China to Moscow. After his death in 1405, his empire fell apart and the modern world as we know it began to form. Princes in Muscovy began to take control of their neighbours; China's accelerated cultural progress began to stagnate; and Europe's sea-worthy nations began to extract wealth from their overseas conquests.
AFTER TAMERLANE is a fabulously balanced and wide-ranging revelation of world history of the past six hundred years, written by one of our preeminent historians. John Darwin is a true star. Up to now he has been too busy making other historians famous; now it's his turn. AFTER TAMERLANE reveals the seeds of the modern world; read this if you want to understand what fawned today's world events.




