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دسته بندی: تاریخ ویرایش: 3 نویسندگان: Felipe Fernandez-Armesto سری: ISBN (شابک) : 2015943205, 0134168232 ناشر: Pearson سال نشر: 2016 تعداد صفحات: 496 زبان: English فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 172 مگابایت
کلمات کلیدی مربوط به کتاب جهان: یک تاریخ: تاریخ جهان
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب The World: A History به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب جهان: یک تاریخ نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
Cover Title Page Copyright Page Brief Contents Contents Maps Special Features Getting the Most Out of the Maps in The World About Felipe Fernández-Armesto From the Author to the Reader Introducing the World A Note on Dates and Spellings Part I The Divergent Species: The Beginnings of Diversity, ca. 160,000 to ca. 3,000 Years Ago 1 Of Ice and Mud: From Africa to the World, from Foraging to Farming 1.1 The Beginnings of Divergence: Migration 1.1.1 Peopling the Earth 1.1.2 Explaining Migration 1.1.3 Consequences of Migration 1.2 The Acceleration of Divergence: Different Foraging Cultures 1.2.1 Climatic Fluctuations and Their Consequences 1.2.2 Divergent Responses 1.2.3 The Beginnings of Settled Life 1.3 The Beginnings of Farming 1.3.1 Herders’ Environments 1.3.2 Tillers’ Environments 1.4 The Spread of Agriculture 1.4.1 Europe and Central Asia 1.4.2 India 1.4.3 North America 1.4.4 Africa 1.4.5 The Pacific 1.5 So Why Did Farming Start? 1.5.1 Population Pressure 1.5.2 The Outcome of Abundance 1.5.3 The Power of Politics 1.5.4 Cult Agriculture 1.5.5 Climatic Instability 1.5.6 Agriculture by Accident 1.5.7 Production as an Outgrowth of Procurement 1.5.8 A Conservative Revolution? In Perspective: Seeking Stability 2 The Great River Valleys: Accelerating Change and Developing States 2.1 Growing Communities, Divergent Cultures 2.1.1 Intensified Settlement and Its Effects 2.2 The Ecology of Civilization 2.3 The Great Floodplains 2.3.1 The Ecology of Egypt 2.3.2 Shifting Rivers of the Indus Valley 2.3.3 Nature in Early Mesopotamia 2.3.4 The Good Earth of Early China 2.4 Configurations of Society 2.4.1 Settlement and Labor 2.4.2 Politics 2.4.3 Expansion In Perspective: What Made the Great River Valleys Different? 3 The Multiplication of Civilizations: Ambition and Instability 3.1 The Hittite Kingdom 3.1.1 The Growth of Trade 3.1.2 The Rise of the Hittites 3.1.3 Fragility and Fall: The End of Hatti 3.2 Instability and Collapse in the Aegean 3.2.1 Cretan Civilization 3.2.2 Mycenean Civilization 3.3 A General Crisis in the Eastern Mediterranean World? 3.3.1 The Egyptian Experience 3.3.2 The Roots of Instability 3.4 The Extinction of Harappan Civilization 3.4.1 The Evidence of the Rig Veda 3.4.2 The Environment of Stress 3.5 Conflict on the Yellow River 3.5.1 The Rise of Zhou 3.5.2 The Zhou Political System 3.6 State-Building in the Americas 3.6.1 Andean Examples 3.6.2 Developments in Mesoamerica 3.7 Assessing the Damage 3.7.1 Retrenchment in Egypt In Perspective: The Fatal Flaws The Big Picture: The World in 1000 B.C.E. Part II The Age of Empires from 1000 B.C.E. to 200 C.E. 4 Rebuilding the World: Recoveries, New Initiatives, and Their Limits 4.1 Trade and Recovery in the Middle East 4.1.1 The Phoenician Experience 4.1.2 The Assyrian Empire 4.1.3 The Babylonian Revival 4.2 Greece and Beyond 4.2.1 The Greek Environment 4.2.2 Greek Colonialism 4.2.3 Early Greek Society 4.2.4 The Spread of State-Building and City-Building 4.3 Empires and Recovery in China and South Asia 4.3.1 The Zhou Decline 4.3.2 The Indian Ocean: Relocated Centers of Culture 4.4 The Frustrations of Isolation 4.4.1 Developments in North America 4.4.2 New Initiatives in Africa In Perspective: The Framework of Recovery 5 The Great Schools: New Thinking in the Age of Sages 5.1 The Thinkers 5.1.1 The Jews 5.1.2 Secular Thinking 5.2 The Thoughts 5.2.1 Religious Thinking 5.2.2 Political Thinking 5.2.3 Challenging Illusion 5.3 The Structures of Thought In Perspective: The Reach of the Sages 6 The Great Empires: Cultural Exchange in Big States 6.1 Routes That Drew the Old World Together 6.1.1 The Sea Routes of the Indian Ocean 6.1.2 Land Routes: The Silk Roads 6.2 Persia 6.2.1 The Persian Heartland 6.2.2 The Persian Government 6.2.3 The Persian–Greek Wars 6.2.4 The Empire of Alexander the Great 6.3 The Rise of Rome 6.3.1 The Roman Frontiers 6.3.2 Ruling the Empire 6.3.3 Imperial Culture and Commerce 6.3.4 The Celts 6.4 The Beginnings of Imperialism in India 6.4.1 Government 6.4.2 Asoka and His Mental World 6.5 Chinese Unity and Imperialism 6.5.1 Unity Endangered and Saved 6.5.2 The Menace from the Steppes 6.6 Beyond the Empires 6.6.1 Japan and Korea 6.6.2 The Western Eurasian Steppe 6.6.3 Mesoamerica In Perspective: The Legacies The Big Picture: The World in 200 C.E. Part III Fitful Transitions from the Third Century to the Tenth Century 7 Postimperial Worlds: Problems of Empires in Eurasia and Africa 7.1 The Western Roman Empire and Its Invaders 7.1.1 Changes in the Roman Empire 7.1.2 The “Barbarian” West 7.2 Steppelanders and Their Victims 7.2.1 China 7.2.2 India 7.3 New Frontiers in Asia 7.3.1 Korea 7.3.2 Funan 7.4 The Rise of Ethiopia 7.5 The Crises of the Sixth and Seventh Centuries 7.6 Justinian and the Eastern Roman Empire 7.7 The New Barbarians 7.8 The Arabs 7.8.1 Islam 7.8.2 The Arabs against Persia and Rome 7.9 The Muslim World 7.10 Recovery and Its Limits in China 7.10.1 Rise of the Tang 7.10.2 Empress Wu 7.10.3 Tang Decline 7.11 In the Shadow of Tang: Tibet and Japan 7.11.1 Tibet 7.11.2 Japan In Perspective: The Triumph of Barbarism? 8 The Rise of World Religions: Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism 8.1 Commerce and Conflict: Carriers of Creeds 8.1.1 War 8.1.2 Trade 8.2 Monarchs and Missionaries 8.2.1 In Christendom 8.2.2 In the Buddhist World 8.2.3 The Margins of Christendom 8.2.4 Islam and the Turks 8.3 Trickle Down: Christianization and Islamization 8.4 Religious Lives: The World of Monks and Nuns 8.4.1 Christian Monasticism 8.4.2 Buddhist Monks 8.4.3 Sufism 8.4.4 Religious Women In Perspective: The Triumphs of the Potential World Religions 9 Remaking the World: Innovation and Renewal on Environmental Frontiers in the Late First Millennium 9.1 Isolation and Initiative: Sub-Saharan Africa and the Americas 9.1.1 African Geography 9.1.2 American Geography 9.2 The Islamic World and the Environment 9.3 Frontier Growth in Japan 9.4 India and China 9.4.1 India 9.4.2 China 9.5 Southeast Asia 9.6 The Pacific 9.7 The Frontiers of Christendom In Perspective: The Limits of Divergence The Big Picture: The World in 1000 C.E. Part IV Contacts and Conflicts, 1000 C.E. to 1200 C.E. 10 Contending with Isolation: Initiatives in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries 10.1 American Developments: From the Arctic to Mesoamerica 10.1.1 Greenland and the North 10.1.2 The North American Southwest and the Mississippi Region 10.1.3 Mesoamerica 10.2 Around the Indian Ocean: Ethiopia, the Khmer, and India 10.2.1 East Africa: The Ethiopian Empire 10.2.2 Southeast Asia: The Khmer Kingdom 10.2.3 India: Economy and Culture 10.2.4 The Chola Kingdom 10.3 Eurasia’s Extremities: Japan and Western Europe 10.3.1 Japan 10.3.2 Western Europe: Economics and Politics 10.3.3 Western Europe: Religion and Culture In Perspective: The Patchwork of Effects 11 The Nomadic Frontiers: The Islamic World, Byzantium, and China 11.1 The Islamic World and Its Neighbors 11.1.1 The Steppelanders 11.1.2 The Crusades 11.1.3 The Invaders from the Sahara 11.1.4 The Progress of Sufism 11.2 The Byzantine Empire and Its Neighbors 11.2.1 Byzantium and the Barbarians 11.2.2 Basil II 11.2.3 The Era of Difficulties 11.2.4 Byzantium and the Crusaders 11.2.5 Byzantine Art and Learning 11.3 China and the Northern Barbarians 11.3.1 The End of the Tang Dynasty 11.3.2 The Rise of the Song and the Barbarian Conquests 11.3.3 Economy and Society under the Song 11.3.4 Song Art and Learning In Perspective: Cains and Abels The Big Picture: The World in 1200 C.E. Part V The Crucible: The Eurasian Crises of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries 12 The World the Mongols Made: Trans-Eurasian Links 12.1 The Mongols: Reshaping Eurasia 12.1.1 Genghis Khan 12.1.2 The Mongol Steppe 12.2 The Mongol World beyond the Steppes 12.2.1 China 12.2.2 Persia 12.2.3 Russia 12.3 The Limits of Conquest 12.3.1 Mamluk Egypt 12.3.2 Muslim India: The Delhi Sultanate 12.4 Europe In Perspective: The Uniqueness of the Mongols 13 The Revenge of Nature: Plague and Cold in the Fourteenth Century 13.1 Climate Change 13.2 The Coming of the Age of Plague 13.2.1 The Course and Impact of Plague 13.2.2 Moral and Social Effects 13.2.3 Medicine and Morals 13.2.4 The Jews 13.2.5 Beneficiaries of Plague: Women and Peasants 13.2.6 Peasant Millenarianism 13.3 The Limits of Disaster: Beyond the Plague Zone 13.3.1 India 13.3.2 Southeast Asia 13.3.3 Japan 13.3.4 Mali 13.4 The Pacific: Societies of Isolation 13.4.1 Easter Island 13.4.2 New Zealand 13.4.3 Ozette 13.4.4 Chan Chan In Perspective: The Aftershock 14 Expanding Worlds: Recovery in the Late Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries 14.1 Fragile Empires in Africa 14.2 Ecological Imperialism in the Americas 14.2.1 The Inca Empire 14.2.2 The Aztec Empire 14.3 New Eurasian Empires 14.3.1 The Russian Empire 14.3.2 Timurids and Ottomans 14.4 The Limitations of Chinese Imperialism 14.4.1 The Rise of the Ming 14.4.2 Zheng He 14.5 The Beginnings of Oceanic Imperialism 14.6 The European Outlook: Problems and Promise In Perspective: Beyond Empires The Big Picture: The World in 1491 Glossary Credits Index A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z