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The Edge of History | p. 1 |
The Origin of Kingship | p. 3 |
The Earliest Story | p. 10 |
The Rise of Aristocracy | p. 17 |
The Creation of Empire | p. 22 |
The Age of Iron | p. 30 |
The Philosopher King | p. 36 |
Firsts | p. 41 |
The First Written Records | p. 43 |
The First War Chronicles | p. 51 |
The First Civil War | p. 61 |
The First Epic Hero | p. 71 |
The First Victory over Death | p. 78 |
The First Reformer | p. 88 |
The First Military Dictator | p. 95 |
The First Planned Cities | p. 104 |
The First Collapse of Empire | p. 110 |
The First Barbarian Invasions | p. 118 |
The First Monotheist | p. 127 |
The First Environmental Disaster | p. 139 |
Struggle | p. 145 |
The Battle for Reunification | p. 147 |
The Mesopotamia Mixing Bowl | p. 155 |
The Overthrow of the Xia | p. 164 |
Hammurabi's Empire | p. 170 |
The Hyksos Seize Egypt | p. 178 |
King Minos of Crete | p. 183 |
The Harappan Disintegration | p. 192 |
The Rise of the Hittites | p. 196 |
Ahmose Expels the Hyksos | p. 202 |
Usurpation and Revenge | p. 206 |
The Three-Way Contest | p. 213 |
The Shifting Capitals of the Shang | p. 219 |
The Mycenaeans of Greece | p. 224 |
Struggle of the Gods | p. 229 |
Wars and Marriages | p. 238 |
The Greatest Battle in Very Ancient Times | p. 246 |
The Battle for Troy | p. 253 |
The First Historical King of China | p. 259 |
The Rig Veda | p. 264 |
The Wheel Turns Again | p. 267 |
The End of the New Kingdom | p. 275 |
The Dark Age of Greece | p. 281 |
The Dark Age of Mesopotamia | p. 285 |
The Fall of the Shang | p. 291 |
Empires | p. 297 |
The Mandate of Heaven | p. 299 |
The Bharata War | p. 306 |
The Son of David | p. 314 |
From Western to Eastern Zhou | p. 328 |
The Assyrian Renaissance | p. 335 |
New Peoples | p. 344 |
Trading Posts and Colonies | p. 354 |
Old Enemies | p. 363 |
Kings of Assyria and Babylon | p. 371 |
Spectacular Defeat | p. 382 |
The Decline of the King | p. 391 |
The Assyrians in Egypt | p. 399 |
Medes and Persians | p. 410 |
Conquest and Tyranny | p. 418 |
The Beginnings and End of Empire | p. 431 |
A Brief Empire | p. 443 |
Cyrus the Great | p. 455 |
The Republic of Rome | p. 469 |
Kingdoms and Reformers | p. 482 |
The Power of Duty and the Art of War | p. 491 |
The Spreading Persian Empire | p. 500 |
The Persian Wars | p. 514 |
Identity | p. 537 |
The Peloponnesian Wars | p. 539 |
The First Sack of Rome | p. 555 |
The Rise of the Ch'in | p. 563 |
The Macedonian Conquerors | p. 570 |
Rome Tightens Its Grasp | p. 584 |
Alexander and the Wars of the Successors | p. 591 |
The Mauryan Epiphany | p. 609 |
First Emperor, Second Dynasty | p. 613 |
The Wars of the Sons | p. 622 |
Roman Liberators and Seleucid Conquerors | p. 638 |
Between East and West | p. 649 |
Breaking the System | p. 659 |
The Problems of Prosperity | p. 668 |
New Men | p. 680 |
Empire | p. 697 |
Eclipse and Restoration | p. 712 |
The Problem of Succession | p. 717 |
The Edges of the Roman World | p. 735 |
Children on the Throne | p. 746 |
The Mistake of Inherited Power | p. 751 |
Savior of the Empire | p. 764 |
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved. |
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A lively and engaging narrative history showing the common threads in the cultures that gave birth to our own.
This is the first volume in a bold new series that tells the stories of all peoples, connecting historical events from Europe to the Middle East to the far coast of China, while still giving weight to the characteristics of each country. Susan Wise Bauer provides both sweeping scope and vivid attention to the individual lives that give flesh to abstract assertions about human history.
Dozens of maps provide a clear geography of great events, while timelines give the reader an ongoing sense of the passage of years and cultural interconnection. This old-fashioned narrative history employs the methods of ¡°history from beneath¡±¡ªliterature, epic traditions, private letters and accounts¡ªto connect kings and leaders with the lives of those they ruled. The result is an engrossing tapestry of human behavior from which we may draw conclusions about the direction of world events and the causes behind them.
13 illustrations, 80 maps
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