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Islamic Gunpowder Empires

Mirza Firuz Shah
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Reference ARC-1000001-2599

Book Information

Subject History
Subclass Timured/Mughal (History)
Year 2006.0
Volume -
Edition -
Publisher & Place Westview Press
Publisher Date 2006
ISBN 10|13 9780813313597

Description

I first conceived of this book as a graduate student in the early 1980s, began it as a project in 1990, and have taken twenty distracted years to complete it. Its purpose has remained constant: to provide a coherent, current, and accessible introduction to the Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal empires, using comparison to illuminate their distinctive features. Within that general mission, I sought to accomplish the following objectives: • to put the three empires in the context of their common background and political goals • to incorporate current historiography into a new synthesis rather than recycle the findings of earlier general accounts • to reevaluate the concept of the gunpowder empire and provide a more accurate and complete explanation of the growth and durability of the three empires • to explain the complex, diverse, and dynamic political ideologies of the empires • to present the empires as part of a connected Islamic world that was itself part of a more broadly connected global system in which commercial and cultural networks crossed political boundaries • to assess the issue of the decline of the three empires without reference to the eventual global superiority of the West • to depict the historiography of the empires as dynamic rather than static Islamic Gunpowder Empires is not a comprehensive history of the Islamic world in the early modern era; it is both spatially and topically incomplete. It excludes Morocco, sub-Saharan Africa, central Asia, and Southeast Asia and pays insufficient attention to social, cultural, and intellectual history. As a study of power and political order, it focuses on political, military, and economic history, on the problems of power and the burdens of power holders. It does not ignore social and cultural history entirely but seeks to place those topics in political context.

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