Showing posts with label the heirs of muhammad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the heirs of muhammad. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Starred Review in Library Journal for Barnaby Rogerson's THE LAST CRUSADERS

Library Journal awards a star for The Last Crusaders: The Hundred-Year Battle for the Center of the World, by Barnaby Rogerson: "Author Rogerson (The Heirs of Muhammad) focuses not on the more famous Crusades from 1095 and 1291 but on a later series of clashes between various Christian and Muslim forces in and around the Mediterranean, beginning with Portugal's capture of the city of Ceuta in 1415 and ending with the battles at Lepanto in 1571 and Alcácer Quibir in 1578. The author imbues his text with an excellent sense of person and place, presenting not only the exploits of both Christians and Muslims on the battlefield but also their shifting alliances and internal struggles. He also explores how military technologies and the expansion of trade and exploration helped shape the conflicts. This thoroughly readable book provides a vibrant and well-organized account of this tumultuous, lesser-known period of history. Highly recommended for both students and general readers."

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Barnaby Rogerson's THE LAST CRUSADERS Praised in ForeWord Magazine

Coming next month is Barnaby Rogerson's The Last Crusaders: The Hundred Year Battle for the Center of the World, a new study of the late Crusades. Here's a glowing notice from ForeWord Magazine: "The world of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries was shaped by two powerful forces: religion and gunpowder—a devastating combination. In The Last Crusaders Barnaby Rogerson paints a vivid canvas, sweeping in scope and full of memorable detail, of the hundred-and-fifty-year struggle between the Hapsburg and Ottoman Empires for control of the Mediterranean.

The period from 1450 to 1590 changed the face of world history. It saw the creation of the first great nation states—Spain, Portugal, Austria, Turkey, and the countries of North Africa. The boundaries drawn then remain national, cultural, linguistic, and religious boundaries today. The author’s purpose is to explain the “last great tectonic shift” in the balance of power in the Old World. “We should all hear these stories at least once,” he writes, “if we are to have any understanding of our modern age.” Readers will indeed be struck by the similarities to our own day. Like the atom bombing of Hiroshima, the destruction of Constantinople by Turkish artillery in 1453 sent a shock wave around the world (the Turks’ biggest gun could throw a 1200 lb. granite ball over a mile) and launched a ruinously expensive arms race. Cannons were the ICBMs of their day and there ensued a race among the great nations to forge as many as possible. Skilled weapons makers (many of them Jews expelled from Spain in 1493) were in high demand and often willing to work for the highest bidder. And, like uranium today, sources of saltpeter, an ingredient of gunpowder, were bitterly fought over. Terror, too, became a legitimate weapon of war. No captive city escaped savage pillaging and rape. Both sides routinely practiced impaling, dismemberment, flaying alive, enslavement or forced conversion of whole populations.


Against this background, we meet the great figures of the age: the intellectual Prince Henry the Navigator; the cunning and ruthless Ferdinand of Spain; the chivalrous Charles V; and the legendary sultans, Mehmet the Conqueror and Suleyman the Magnificent. The minor actors are equally compelling—secret agents, pirate captains, and turncoats and traitors of every stripe. In colorful vignettes, we rub shoulders with Turkish Janissaries, Genoese mercenaries, Portuguese explorers, Moroccan corsairs, and galley slaves. The author is especially good at narrating in gripping, and often grisly, detail the great sieges and battles that punctuated this struggle. The book is furnished with excellent maps, a useful chronological chart, numerous illustrations, and a very full bibliography. The writing is engaging and vivid, never pedantic. Any history buff will find this book a pleasure." - Bruce Macbain


Thursday, May 01, 2008

New in Paperback: Barnaby Rogerson's THE HEIRS OF MUHMAMMAD

The critically acclaimed The Heirs of Muhammad: Islam's First Century and the Origins of the Sunni-Shia Split, by Barnaby Rogerson, is now available in paperback. The Washington Post noted that the author "writes with verve and gusto, turning the life stories of the heroes of Islam's first century into an engaging epic." The Heirs of Muhammad was named one of the American Library Association's Top 10 Books of the Year in Religion.