Lost Enlightenment: Central Asia's Golden Age from the Arab Conquest to Tamerlane

Lost Enlightenment: Central Asia's Golden Age from the Arab Conquest to Tamerlane

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Book Info

Author

Starr, S. Frederick

Word Count

170,000 words

based on page count

Pages

680 pages

Edition Publisher

Princeton University Press

Edition Publish Date

2013-10-13

Identifiers

ISBN-10: 0691157731

ISBN-13: 9780691157733

Description

In This Sweeping And Richly Illustrated History, S. Frederick Starr Tells The Fascinating But Largely Unknown Story Of Central Asia's Medieval Enlightenment Through The Eventful Lives And Astonishing Accomplishments Of Its Greatest Minds--remarkable Figures Who Built A Bridge To The Modern World. Because Nearly All Of These Figures Wrote In Arabic, They Were Long Assumed To Have Been Arabs. In Fact, They Were From Central Asia--drawn From The Persianate And Turkic Peoples Of A Region That Today Extends From Kazakhstan Southward Through Afghanistan, And From The Easternmost Province Of Iran Through Xinjiang, China. Lost Enlightenment Recounts How, Between The Years 800 And 1200, Central Asia Led The World In Trade And Economic Development, The Size And Sophistication Of Its Cities, The Refinement Of Its Arts, And, Above All, In The Advancement Of Knowledge In Many Fields. Central Asians Achieved Signal Breakthroughs In Astronomy, Mathematics, Geology, Medicine, Chemistry, Music, Social Science, Philosophy, And Theology, Among Other Subjects. They Gave Algebra Its Name, Calculated The Earth's Diameter With Unprecedented Precision, Wrote The Books That Later Defined European Medicine, And Penned Some Of The World's Greatest Poetry. One Scholar, Working In Afghanistan, Even Predicted The Existence Of North And South America--five Centuries Before Columbus. Rarely In History Has A More Impressive Group Of Polymaths Appeared At One Place And Time. No Wonder That Their Writings Influenced European Culture From The Time Of St. Thomas Aquinas Down To The Scientific Revolution, And Had A Similarly Deep Impact In India And Much Of Asia. Lost Enlightenment Chronicles This Forgotten Age Of Achievement, Seeks To Explain Its Rise, And Explores The Competing Theories About The Cause Of Its Eventual Demise. Informed By The Latest Scholarship Yet Written In A Lively And Accessible Style, This Is A Book That Will Surprise General Readers And Specialists Alike.-- The Center Of The World -- Worldly Urbanists, Ancient Land -- A Cauldron Of Skills, Ideas, And Faiths -- How Arabs Conquered Central Asia And Central Asia Then Set The Stage To Conquer Baghdad -- East Wind Over Baghdad -- Wandering Scholars -- Khurasan : Central Asia's Rising Star -- A Flowering Of Central Asia : The Samanid Dynasty -- A Moment In The Desert : Gurganj Under The Mamuns -- Turks Take The Stage : Mahmud Of Kashgar And Yusuf Of Balasagun -- Culture Under A Turkic Marauder : Mahmud's Ghazni -- Tremors Under The Dome Of Seljuk Rule -- The Mongol Century -- Tamerlane And His Successors -- Retrospective : The Sand And The Oyster. S. Frederick Starr. Includes Bibliographical References (pages 541-609) And Index.

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