The First European

The First European

Author: Pierre Briant

Publisher: Harvard University Press

Published: 2017-01-02

Total Pages: 313

ISBN-13: 0674972864

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“A truly remarkable forgotten chapter of European intellectual history, laid out with passion and integrity.” (The Wall Street Journal) The exploits of Alexander the Great were so remarkable that for centuries after his death the Macedonian ruler seemed a figure more of legend than of history. Thinkers of the European Enlightenment, searching for ancient models to understand contemporary affairs, were the first to critically interpret Alexander’s achievements. As Pierre Briant shows, in the minds of eighteenth-century intellectuals and philosophers, Alexander was the first European: a successful creator of empire who opened the door to new sources of trade and scientific knowledge, and an enlightened leader who brought the fruits of Western civilization to an oppressed and backward “Orient.” In France, Scotland, England, and Germany, Alexander the Great became an important point of reference in discourses from philosophy and history to political economy and geography. Voltaire, Montesquieu, and Robertson asked what lessons Alexander’s empire-building had to teach modern Europeans. They saw the ancient Macedonian as the embodiment of the rational and benevolent Western ruler, a historical model to be emulated as Western powers accelerated their colonial expansion into Asia, India, and the Middle East. “This important work. . . . confirms once more that the life-trajectory of the Macedonian conqueror remains an inexhaustible cultural resource.” —Sanjay Subrahmanyam, University of California, Los Angeles, author of Empires Between Islam and Christianity


The Progress of Maritime Discovery

The Progress of Maritime Discovery

Author: James Stanier Clarke

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2010-12-02

Total Pages: 1044

ISBN-13: 1108023851

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A study of the navigational methods and naval history of early societies until 1498, first published in 1803.


An Archival Journey through the Qatar Peninsula

An Archival Journey through the Qatar Peninsula

Author: Sue-Ann Harding

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2022-09-05

Total Pages: 361

ISBN-13: 3031038452

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This book retrieves from the archives people, places and perspectives normally overlooked to tell an original and expansive history of the Qatar Peninsula, paying close attention to landscape and the natural world. The arc of the book moves geographically through the landscape and chronologically through selected sources, drawing on digitised maps, manuscripts, hydrographic surveys, government records, traveller accounts, early photographs, archaeological and ethnographic reports. While these are standard sources recruited by Qatar to tell its own singular, streamlined history, this book is a subversive reading of those sources. It braids together elusive and precarious stories – difficult to find, at risk of being lost, and never before brought together into a single volume – to write a more complicated story of place. Through them, we can reimagine a place that, like many in the world, works hard to control a limited set of stories about itself. Readers who know something about Qatar will be surprised by the book’s nuances and details. Readers who know little or nothing will be drawn in to discover that, even in the most out-of-the-way and inhospitable places, deserts are never empty.


From Cyrus to Seleukos

From Cyrus to Seleukos

Author: Pierre Briant

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2021-02-01

Total Pages: 351

ISBN-13: 9004460659

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The present volume is a collection of articles published in English by Professor Pierre Briant of the Collège de France, in various forms over the past three decades.