Showing posts with label john freely. Show all posts
Showing posts with label john freely. Show all posts

Friday, August 31, 2012

BEFORE GALILEO: The Birth of Modern Science in Medieval Europe


From John Freely, physicist, historian, and author of Aladdin’s Lamp, The Grand Turk, and The Lost Messiah comes Before Galileo: The Birth of Modern Science in Medieval Europe, a new book illuminating the history of science during the Dark Ages on sale this week!

According to many popular narratives of scientific history, modern science began with the heroic efforts of Galileo to gain acceptance for his revolutionary sun-centered world view of Copernicus. But where do his predecessors fit into the story? In reality, before Galileo’s time, an impressive succession of medieval scholars paved the way for the Scientific Revolution, laying the foundations for generations of theories and discoveries yet to come.

In Before Galileo, John Freely seeks to right this historical injustice by bringing to life Europe and Asia’s earliest minds and marvels. Leading readers on a journey through centuries of groundbreaking discoveries, Freely examines the pioneering research of the first European scientists, many of them monks whose influence ranged far beyond the walls of the monasteries where they studied and wrote and into the outer world as their ideas interacted with Byzantine and Islamic cultures, going beyond the philosophic and mathematical science of the works in the great Library of Alexandria to explore and enliven new worlds and peoples.

Offering a bold new perspective on scientific history, John Freely fills a notable gap in the story of modern science and places the great discoveries of the age in their rightful historical context. Discover the untold stories of revolutionary scholars, such as Ibn Sina and Gerard of Cremona, who helped convey Arab science to the Western world or Albertus Magnus, among the first to implement the modern scientific method as we know it today. With authoritative research, enlightening profiles, and illuminating connections, Before Galileo charts the early stages of the Scientific Revolution, shedding light on the Dark Ages and highlighting the Renaissance, to showcase the transmission and continuity of scientific knowledge from one generation to the next beginning more than a thousand years before Galileo was born.

Praise for BEFORE GALILEO:

“Revealing … Freely traces the transmission of ancient Greek philosophical and scientific works to the Islamic world.” – Kirkus Reviews

“Surprising … A detailed look at the lineage and transmission of scientific thought from the Greeks through the medieval era.” – Publishers Weekly

Monday, October 26, 2009

John Freely's THE GRAND TURK Examines the Life and Times of Sultan Mehmet II

In a new book released this month, scholar and historian John Freely looks at the life of Sultan Mehmet the Conquerer, who captured Constantinople at the age of 21 and went on to reshape the world. The Grand Turk is a vivid and detailed account of the life and conquests of the man described by contemporary Christian rulers as “Ruler of the Glorious Empire of the Turks, the Present Terror of the World.” Mehmet was the seventh Ottoman sultan. He was only 21 years old when he brought an end to the centuries-old Byzantine Empire. During his 30-year reign, he extended the borders of his realm across Anatolia (then called Asia Minor) and into Europe, reaching into Hungary and Italy. Three popes called for Crusades against him. Why? Because the city of Constantinople was more than just a city. When Constantine the Great moved his capital from Rome to Byzantium in A.D. 330, he did not just change the course of history, he made this city into the capital of the Holy Roman Empire. As such, it became a jewel almost as religiously important as Jerusalem itself.

Thursday, October 01, 2009

John Freely's THE GRAND TURK Reviewed in Booklist

Booklist offers a critique of The Grand Turk: Sultan Mehmet II—Conqueror of Constantinople and Master of an Empire, by John Freely: "The fall of the “impregnable city” of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks in 1453 ended the enfeebled Byzantine Empire; it also confirmed the emergence of a new, vibrant, and aggressive power that would control the southern and eastern rims of the Mediterranean. The Turkish assault on the city was led by Mehmet II, who was only 21. Freely, who has written numerous books on Turkish history, offers a well researched survey of Mehmet’s life and times. The author does an admirable job of separating myth from reality. Long despised by European Christians as a bloodthirsty tyrant, Mehmet is shown as a far more complicated figure. Given the serpentine nature of Ottoman dynastic politics, he was capable of ruthlessness and fratricidal violence. Yet, he was no thug. He could conduct diplomacy with subtle effectiveness and use it to avoid war when possible. Still, like Ottoman rulers before and after, his ultimate goal remained territorial expansion. A useful, informative survey that provides a balanced view of a seminal epoch in world history." — Jay Freeman