I am interested in
history, because its our history that defines us, and the environment
in which we all live.
To understand history is to know
the future. In view of the current concerns about Moslem terrorism I decided
to read “A History of the Arab Peoples” by Albert Hourani
Extract from a review
“Hourani (Emeritus Fellow, St. Anthony's College, Oxford) is the
author of several well-known books on the Middle East, including Arabic
Thought in the Liberal Age (Cambridge Univ. Pr., 1983) and The Emergence
of the Modern Middle East (Univ. of California Pr., 1980). This work,
the first full-scale single-volume history of the Arabic-speaking peoples
of the Islamic world in several decades, begins with Islam's rise in the
7th century and carries the rich and imposing story of Arab civilization
to the late 1980s. In broad, sweeping strokes, Hourani moves easily from
mosque to marketplace, from sultan to imam , from nomad to city-dweller,
from Mohammed to Sadat. He dwells on the Ottoman Empire and on the European
colonialism that followed, and concludes with a discussion of the modern
resurgence of Islam that offers hope to thousands of Muslims and appears
so threatening to Westerners. Written by a master historian, this work
is now the definitive study of the Arab peoples. Recommended for interested
laypersons and scholars; required reading for all specialists.”
Nearer to home here are links to
a number of my favourite historical resources
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