Description

Book Synopsis
Volume Two tracks the protean history of political domination from the very beginnings of state formation in the Bronze Age up to the present.

Trade Review
The two volumes that form The Oxford World History of Empire successfully provide a nuanced and critical understanding and analysis of the empire project. The impression left with the reader at the end of the two volumes is a crucial understanding of imperialism. By shifting the gaze away from Eurocentric frameworks, we are provided with a significant insight into the formation of new empires and dynasties across the globe and throughout time. Perhaps of most significance, these volumes, by placing European colonialism into a global context reveal not only its short-lived and fragile nature, but also point out that imperialism was not a recent phenomenon, in fact the impact of empire has been strong and enduring throughout history. * History: The Journal of the Historical Association *
The second volume is a tour-de-force narration and analysis of empire building. Through providing a history of history, the second volume successfully not only places the history of empire in the context of other imperial formations, forming to provides the reader with a thorough world history of empire. This is a significant historiographical work that successfully dispels myths about the stagnation of the non-European world, and the dominance of Europe, and yet collectively these chapters allow us to trace and identify deep commonalities in the imperial condition harking back to the third millennium BCE and spanning across the globe and through time. * History: The Journal of the Historical Association *
The juxtaposition of various empires makes fascinating reading. These very engaging volumes will be a delightful read for any scholars interested in the history of empires. They will also make an excellent addition to any collection as a good general study of empires and an excellent starting point for research into specific empires. Highly recommended. * CHOICE *
A veritable milestone-a project bringing together the top authorities in academe for a discussion on divergence and commonality of empires across history. The dimensions here are truly global unlike the Eurocentric framework that blighted empire studies from 30 years ago. In that sense and in many other ways, this History is unsurpassed. * Explorations in World History *

Table of Contents
Vol. II - The History of Empires List of Contributors Prolegomena PETER FIBIGER BANG Part 1. Bronze to Iron Age The Near-Eastern "Invention" of Empire (3rd Millennium to 300 BCE) PETER FIBIGER BANG 1. Egypt, Old to New Kingdom (2686-1069 BCE) JUAN CARLOS MORENO GARCÍA 2. The Sargonic and Ur III Empires PIOTR STEINKELLER 3. Empires of Western Asia and the Assyrian World Empire GOJKO BARJAMOVIC 4. The Achaemenid Persian Empire: From the Medes to Alexander MATTHEW W. WATERS 5. Ancient Mediterranean City-State Empires: Athens, Carthage, Early Rome WALTER SCHEIDEL Part 2. The Classical Age The Formation of Large World Empires on the Margins of Eurasia: The Mediterranean and China (323 BCE-600 CE) PETER FIBIGER BANG 6. Hellenistic Empire: The Dynasties of the Ptolemies and the Seleucids CHRISTELLE FISCHER-BOVET 7. The Mauryan Empire HIMANSHU PRABHA RAY 8. The First East Asian Empires: Qin and Han MARK EDWARD LEWIS 9. The Roman Empire PETER FIBIGER BANG 10. The Parthian and Sasanian Empires MATTHEW P. CANEPA 11. The Kushan Empire CRAIG BENJAMIN Part 3. The Ecumenic Turn Eclipse of the Old World and the Rise of Islam (600-1200) PETER FIBIGER BANG 12. The Caliphate ANDREW MARSHAM 13. The Tang Empire MARK EDWARD LEWIS 14. Srivijaya JOHN N. MIKSIC 15. The Khmer Empire MICHAEL D. COE 16. The Byzantine Empire, 641-1453 AD ANTHONY KALDELLIS 17. Charlemagne, the Carolingian Empire and Its Successors ROSAMOND McKITTERICK Part 4. The Mongol Moment The Rise of Ghenghis Khan and the Central Asian Steppe Followed by Regional Reassertion PETER FIBIGER BANG 18. The Mongol Empire and the Unification of Eurasia NIKOLAY KRADIN 19. The Ming Empire DAVID M. ROBINSON 20. The Delhi Sultanate as Empire SUNIL KUMAR 21. Caliphs, Popes, Emperors, Kings and Sultans: The Imperial Commonwealth of Medieval Islam and Western Christendom JACOB TULLBERG 22. The Venetian Empire LUCIANO PEZZOLO 23. The Mali and Songhay Empires BRUCE S. HALL Part 5. Another World The Separate but Parallel Path of Imperial Formations in the Precolonial Americas PETER FIBIGER BANG 24. The Aztec Empire MICHAEL E. SMITH AND MAËLLE SERGHERAERT 25. The Inca Empire R. ALAN COVEY Part 6. The Great Confluence The Culmination of Universal Empires and the Conquest of the New World: Agrarian Consolidation and the Rise of European Commercial and Colonial Empires (1450-1750) PETER FIBIGER BANG 26. The Ottoman Empire DARIUSZ KOLODZIEJCZYK 27. The Mughal Empire RAJEEV KINRA 28. The Habsburg Monarchy and the Spanish Empire, 1492-1757 JOSEP M. DELGADO AND JOSEP M. FRADERA 29. The Qing Empire: Three Governments in One State and the Stability of Manchu Rule PAMELA KYLE CROSSLEY 30. The Portuguese Empire (1415-1822) FRANCISCO BETHENCOURT 31. The Dutch Seaborne Empire: Qua Patet Orbis LEONARD BLUSSÉ 32. The First British Empire: Atlantic Empire and the Peoples of the British Monarchy, 1603-1815 NICHOLAS CANNY Part 7. The Global Turn The Age of European Colonialism, Subjection of Old Agrarian Empires to the European-Led World Economy and Nationalist Secessions (1750-1914) PETER FIBIGER BANG 33. Deconstructing the British Empire: Between Repression and Reform C. A. BAYLY 34. An Imperial Nation-State: France and Its Empires DAVID TODD 35. The Russian Empire, 1453-1917 DOMINIC LIEVEN 36. Late Spanish Empire: Reform and Crisis, 1762-1898 JOSEP M. FRADERA 37. US Expansionism during the Nineteenth Century: "Manifest Destiny" AMY S. GREENBERG 38. The Kinetic Empires of Native American Nomads PEKKA HÄMÄLÄINEN 39. Ottoman Turkey and Qing China: Response and Decline, 1774-1937 MICHAEL A. REYNOLDS AND RANA MITTER 40. The Sokoto Caliphate MURRAY LAST Part 8. The 20th Century The Collapse of Colonial Empires and the Rise of Super-Powers PETER FIBIGER BANG 41. The German and Japanese Empires: Great Power Competition and the World Wars DANIEL HEDINGER AND MORITZ VON BRESCIUS 42. Decolonization and Neocolonialism STUART WARD 43. The Soviet Union GEOFFREY HOSKING 44. "America's Global Imperium" ANDREW PRESTON 45. Epilogue: Beyond Empire? FREDERICK COOPER Index of Places, Names and Events

The Oxford World History of Empire Volume Two The

    Product form

    £213.93

    Includes FREE delivery

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 4 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Peter Fibiger Bang, C. A. Bayly, Walter Scheidel

    Out of stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of The Oxford World History of Empire Volume Two The by Peter Fibiger Bang

      Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
      Publication Date: 03/03/2021
      ISBN13: 9780197532768, 978-0197532768
      ISBN10: 0197532764

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Volume Two tracks the protean history of political domination from the very beginnings of state formation in the Bronze Age up to the present.

      Trade Review
      The two volumes that form The Oxford World History of Empire successfully provide a nuanced and critical understanding and analysis of the empire project. The impression left with the reader at the end of the two volumes is a crucial understanding of imperialism. By shifting the gaze away from Eurocentric frameworks, we are provided with a significant insight into the formation of new empires and dynasties across the globe and throughout time. Perhaps of most significance, these volumes, by placing European colonialism into a global context reveal not only its short-lived and fragile nature, but also point out that imperialism was not a recent phenomenon, in fact the impact of empire has been strong and enduring throughout history. * History: The Journal of the Historical Association *
      The second volume is a tour-de-force narration and analysis of empire building. Through providing a history of history, the second volume successfully not only places the history of empire in the context of other imperial formations, forming to provides the reader with a thorough world history of empire. This is a significant historiographical work that successfully dispels myths about the stagnation of the non-European world, and the dominance of Europe, and yet collectively these chapters allow us to trace and identify deep commonalities in the imperial condition harking back to the third millennium BCE and spanning across the globe and through time. * History: The Journal of the Historical Association *
      The juxtaposition of various empires makes fascinating reading. These very engaging volumes will be a delightful read for any scholars interested in the history of empires. They will also make an excellent addition to any collection as a good general study of empires and an excellent starting point for research into specific empires. Highly recommended. * CHOICE *
      A veritable milestone-a project bringing together the top authorities in academe for a discussion on divergence and commonality of empires across history. The dimensions here are truly global unlike the Eurocentric framework that blighted empire studies from 30 years ago. In that sense and in many other ways, this History is unsurpassed. * Explorations in World History *

      Table of Contents
      Vol. II - The History of Empires List of Contributors Prolegomena PETER FIBIGER BANG Part 1. Bronze to Iron Age The Near-Eastern "Invention" of Empire (3rd Millennium to 300 BCE) PETER FIBIGER BANG 1. Egypt, Old to New Kingdom (2686-1069 BCE) JUAN CARLOS MORENO GARCÍA 2. The Sargonic and Ur III Empires PIOTR STEINKELLER 3. Empires of Western Asia and the Assyrian World Empire GOJKO BARJAMOVIC 4. The Achaemenid Persian Empire: From the Medes to Alexander MATTHEW W. WATERS 5. Ancient Mediterranean City-State Empires: Athens, Carthage, Early Rome WALTER SCHEIDEL Part 2. The Classical Age The Formation of Large World Empires on the Margins of Eurasia: The Mediterranean and China (323 BCE-600 CE) PETER FIBIGER BANG 6. Hellenistic Empire: The Dynasties of the Ptolemies and the Seleucids CHRISTELLE FISCHER-BOVET 7. The Mauryan Empire HIMANSHU PRABHA RAY 8. The First East Asian Empires: Qin and Han MARK EDWARD LEWIS 9. The Roman Empire PETER FIBIGER BANG 10. The Parthian and Sasanian Empires MATTHEW P. CANEPA 11. The Kushan Empire CRAIG BENJAMIN Part 3. The Ecumenic Turn Eclipse of the Old World and the Rise of Islam (600-1200) PETER FIBIGER BANG 12. The Caliphate ANDREW MARSHAM 13. The Tang Empire MARK EDWARD LEWIS 14. Srivijaya JOHN N. MIKSIC 15. The Khmer Empire MICHAEL D. COE 16. The Byzantine Empire, 641-1453 AD ANTHONY KALDELLIS 17. Charlemagne, the Carolingian Empire and Its Successors ROSAMOND McKITTERICK Part 4. The Mongol Moment The Rise of Ghenghis Khan and the Central Asian Steppe Followed by Regional Reassertion PETER FIBIGER BANG 18. The Mongol Empire and the Unification of Eurasia NIKOLAY KRADIN 19. The Ming Empire DAVID M. ROBINSON 20. The Delhi Sultanate as Empire SUNIL KUMAR 21. Caliphs, Popes, Emperors, Kings and Sultans: The Imperial Commonwealth of Medieval Islam and Western Christendom JACOB TULLBERG 22. The Venetian Empire LUCIANO PEZZOLO 23. The Mali and Songhay Empires BRUCE S. HALL Part 5. Another World The Separate but Parallel Path of Imperial Formations in the Precolonial Americas PETER FIBIGER BANG 24. The Aztec Empire MICHAEL E. SMITH AND MAËLLE SERGHERAERT 25. The Inca Empire R. ALAN COVEY Part 6. The Great Confluence The Culmination of Universal Empires and the Conquest of the New World: Agrarian Consolidation and the Rise of European Commercial and Colonial Empires (1450-1750) PETER FIBIGER BANG 26. The Ottoman Empire DARIUSZ KOLODZIEJCZYK 27. The Mughal Empire RAJEEV KINRA 28. The Habsburg Monarchy and the Spanish Empire, 1492-1757 JOSEP M. DELGADO AND JOSEP M. FRADERA 29. The Qing Empire: Three Governments in One State and the Stability of Manchu Rule PAMELA KYLE CROSSLEY 30. The Portuguese Empire (1415-1822) FRANCISCO BETHENCOURT 31. The Dutch Seaborne Empire: Qua Patet Orbis LEONARD BLUSSÉ 32. The First British Empire: Atlantic Empire and the Peoples of the British Monarchy, 1603-1815 NICHOLAS CANNY Part 7. The Global Turn The Age of European Colonialism, Subjection of Old Agrarian Empires to the European-Led World Economy and Nationalist Secessions (1750-1914) PETER FIBIGER BANG 33. Deconstructing the British Empire: Between Repression and Reform C. A. BAYLY 34. An Imperial Nation-State: France and Its Empires DAVID TODD 35. The Russian Empire, 1453-1917 DOMINIC LIEVEN 36. Late Spanish Empire: Reform and Crisis, 1762-1898 JOSEP M. FRADERA 37. US Expansionism during the Nineteenth Century: "Manifest Destiny" AMY S. GREENBERG 38. The Kinetic Empires of Native American Nomads PEKKA HÄMÄLÄINEN 39. Ottoman Turkey and Qing China: Response and Decline, 1774-1937 MICHAEL A. REYNOLDS AND RANA MITTER 40. The Sokoto Caliphate MURRAY LAST Part 8. The 20th Century The Collapse of Colonial Empires and the Rise of Super-Powers PETER FIBIGER BANG 41. The German and Japanese Empires: Great Power Competition and the World Wars DANIEL HEDINGER AND MORITZ VON BRESCIUS 42. Decolonization and Neocolonialism STUART WARD 43. The Soviet Union GEOFFREY HOSKING 44. "America's Global Imperium" ANDREW PRESTON 45. Epilogue: Beyond Empire? FREDERICK COOPER Index of Places, Names and Events

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account