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Edge of Empires: A History of Georgia Paperback – March 11, 2019
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Beginning with the first intimations of the existence of Georgians in ancient Anatolia and ending with the volatile presidency of Mikheil Saakashvili, Rayfield deals with the country’s internal politics and swings between disintegration and unity, and divulges Georgia’s complex struggles with the empires that have tried to control, fragment, or even destroy it. He describes the country’s conflicts with Xenophon’s Greeks, Arabs, invading Turks, the Crusades, Genghis Khan, the Persian Empire, the Russian Empire, and Soviet totalitarianism. A wide-ranging examination of this small but colorful country, its dramatic state-building, and its tragic political mistakes, Edge of Empires draws our eyes to this often overlooked nation.
- Print length528 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherReaktion Books
- Publication dateMarch 11, 2019
- Dimensions6.25 x 1.6 x 9.25 inches
- ISBN-101789140595
- ISBN-13978-1789140590
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“The most comprehensive and up-to-date history of Georgia available in English. This tour de force explains why the small south Caucasus nation looks longingly to the west. A work of consummate erudition from Britain’s foremost expert on Georgian history and literature.” -- Tony Barber ― Financial Times, "Books of the Year"
“[An] ambitious and comprehensive history of a complex country. . . . Rayfield’s powerful theme is of brief periods of prosperity and security, ended by invasion, conquest, looting and despoliation.” ― Economist
“Basing his account on Georgian Chronicles, secondary literature, and archival materials as well as his in-depth knowledge of Georgian language and literature, Rayfield unleashes a whirlwind of battles, victories and defeats, invasions and annexations, dynastic arrangements, political shenanigans, and social and cultural changes . . . accompanied by a helpful chronology, detailed maps, and dynastic tables.” ― Times Literary Supplement
“Rayfield’s panoramic Edge of Empires is an impressive work that helps us understand why this south Caucasus nation of 6.4m people lodged in a hostile and unstable neighborhood looks so longingly to the West. . . . Edge of Empires is the most wide-ranging and reliable history of Georgia one is likely to find for many years to come.” ― Financial Times
Won ― Choice Magazine: CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Awards
“Rayfield offers the most comprehensive and detailed survey history of the country of Georgia to date. Although David Marshall Lang (1962), William Edward David Allen (1932), Kalistrat Salia (1983), and Ronald Grigor Suny (1989) have all written survey histories of Georgia in the past, Rayfield’s is the only one that takes readers from the region’s prehistory all the way up to recent demonstrations in 2011 against Georgia’s current government under Mikheil Saakashvili. . . . An excellent and indispensable reference for libraries, students, researchers, and general readers. Essential.” ― Choice
“Rayfield begins with archaeology and finishes with the upheavals of 2012. Breathtaking and breathless, his book is the equivalent of watching Shakespeare’s history plays in fast-forward mode or being put on the back of a Georgian steed and charged across the mountains of Khevsureti at daredevil speed.” ― International Affairs
“In [his] depth and attention to detail of more or less the whole of recorded Georgian history, Rayfield has produced the definitive one-volume work.” ― European History Quarterly
“This is a valuable work on a country that has not generally received sufficient attention in the literature. Rayfield, an expert on the twentieth century, is an excellent choice for the volume.” ― European Review of History
“This is a courageous book. In four hundred pages or so, the author attempts to chronicle the history of Georgia and Georgians over two millennia, bringing us in its final chapter to the closing years of the Saakashvili era in 2009–10. There is no doubt that Rayfield is the man to tackle this task, a linguist and historian who speaks Georgian and has studied its culture and politics for over three decades. The text is bright, straightforward, and speckled with irony and humor. . . . Rayfield takes us through two thousand years of Georgian history with pace and efficiency.” ― Slavonic and Eastern European Review
“This book will fascinate anyone interested in the turbulent, tangled past of the Georgians.” ― Reviews in History
"Rayfield’s work will serve as the reference text for the study of Georgian history in the English-speaking world for a long time. No truly comparable book, one that begins with Georgia’s emergence from legend into history and ends with an examination of the present Georgian dream government, exists in Western scholarship." ― Asian Affairs
“Rayfield is the English-speaking world’s incomparable guide to Georgia’s language, literature, and history. He revels in its fascinating complexities and, as we read him, so do we.” -- Thomas de Waal, author of “The Caucasus: An Introduction”
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Product details
- Publisher : Reaktion Books; 1st edition (March 11, 2019)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 528 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1789140595
- ISBN-13 : 978-1789140590
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.25 x 1.6 x 9.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #516,992 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #171 in Turkey History (Books)
- #1,048 in Russian History (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Customers find the book widely researched and comprehensive in its coverage of Georgia's history. However, the readability receives mixed feedback, with some customers finding it well written while others describe it as unreadable.
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Customers praise the book's comprehensive coverage of Georgia's history, with one customer noting its heavy reliance on facts.
"Clearly written book heavy on facts that demand the reader's attention...." Read more
"I enjoyed this book because it covered so much history of Georgia, perfect book for those wanting a thorough history without having to read 20..." Read more
"...; selects more carefully the facts he relates, and provides some narrative and analysis...." Read more
"Used as a reference book, this book offers up an authoritative, invaluable, and thorough history of Georgia by a master of Georgian literature and..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's readability, with some finding it well written while others describe it as unreadable.
"Clearly written book heavy on facts that demand the reader's attention...." Read more
"...Transliteration of names was well done, though a bit tedious to keep going back to review how it was done...." Read more
"...While the book is well researched and well written, I found it got WAY too much into the weeds, and there was just a ridiculous amount of names and..." Read more
"...What I got was an obsessively meticulous 400 pages which was well written but basically incomprehensible...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 31, 2024Clearly written book heavy on facts that demand the reader's attention. Has Wikipedia open was I went through the book to understand various names and places mentioned. Great book but not a light read.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2020I enjoyed this book because it covered so much history of Georgia, perfect book for those wanting a thorough history without having to read 20 books to get there. Transliteration of names was well done, though a bit tedious to keep going back to review how it was done. Nonetheless it is a fun book as well because the author has that sort of dry wit vis a vis hixtory.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2012Donald Rayfield of the University of London starts from the Georgian Assyrian source 1200 BC. to go trough Tolkienesque profusion of names and figures absolutly far from any comprehension. The lack of interpretation or analogy is a shame.
The last time is underepresented and it could be more interesting for westerners.
All in all there is only a handful of foreigner specialists who are fluent in Georgian and are capable to write a History of Georgia.
This is a perfectly recommendable book.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 8, 2014Too much information packed into too short a space. Ironically, in the parts of Georgian history that are most undocumented, the author recounts every bit of information he seems to have been able to collect. So for example the pre-Christian and early Christian eras of Georgia are just a litany of leaders with similar names, and very little narrative or analysis. Same for the 16th - mid-18th Century period, when the country was in chaos following Tamerlane's invasion, broken into warring principalities, and trying to survive between the Ottomans to the West and the Persians to the East. These parts of the book are simply unreadable (I mean, you can read them, but they make no sense). On the other hand, when dealing with the parts of Georgia's history that are relatively well-documented - the peak of the country's power and unified monarchy in the high Middle Ages - from about the 11th Century through the 15th Century, the author takes a "higher view," selects more carefully the facts he relates, and provides some narrative and analysis. The coverage of the late 18th Century through the present is quite well done. It seems that Mr. Rayfield has a hard time working with periods where the historical record is thin, and deals with it by just piling in lists of facts and people and events that come from whatever sources exist. This book would be better if the history were unpacked and combined with a flow of narrative and analysis. The author should take more time with the periods that are thinly documented to construct a history with the available information that tells a story, or alternative stories; puts forth theories and hypotheses. I.e., what good historians do when working with eras in which the specific subject is not well documented. The book is almost like a précis or synopsis of what should be a 3 volume history of Georgia. As it is, I did learn a lot from reading it; one does emerge with an idea of a trend, even if one has to read pages and pages of mind-numbing detail to get to it. A well-written book would make this a more author-led, and less painful process.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 26, 2016Used as a reference book, this book offers up an authoritative, invaluable, and thorough history of Georgia by a master of Georgian literature and history. This is not a book you read from cover to cover.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2024Unless you are starting with an extensive knowledge of Georgian history and geography (including historical geography), don't bother. This book is a never-ending list of who ruled what region of Georgia when, with little to no attempt to place the individual reigns within any larger context. It is focused almost entirely on political history, with some related military and religious history, but minimal discussion of culture or economics.
My favorite part was when the author finally defined "dyophysitism" after using it a dozen times. By that point, surely any reader who didn't know what it meant had long ago looked it up--so why bother stating what it means now? Just a perfect example of how the author fails to place himself in the reader's shoes. Maybe if he wasn't so lost in listing every long-forgotten 9th c. kouropalates instead of communicating an accessible, digestible history of the country....
- Reviewed in the United States on August 17, 2013Covering three millennia, this widely researched, dauntingly detailed and magisterial work is a "must have" for any serious student of Georgian -- and Transcaucasian -- history. It will assuredly become the new standard, and will not be surpassed in the foreseeable future.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 4, 2020This is going to be a short review of a lengthy book.
While the book is well researched and well written, I found it got WAY too much into the weeds, and there was just a ridiculous amount of names and dates presented. While all of this information is certainly part of Georgia's history, it became unreadable and incomprehensible very quickly. This is a good book for historians or Georgia experts, but is too densely packed with information for anyone else.
I will be taking my first trip to Georgia next year, and was hoping for a book that would provide me (a "newbie" to the history of Georgia) a good introduction. This book was not it. I would have done better to pull up a Wikipedia page on the history of Georgia, which is exactly what I'm going to do.
To be honest, I don't need 300 pages on what happened in Georgia in the year 2000 years ago. I was hoping for information on its current political situation. This may be buried in the latter pages of the book, but I couldn't find it. I was skimming and out of patience by that time.
Top reviews from other countries
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ArcadiusReviewed in Germany on November 12, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Es gibt derzeit kein umfassenderes Werk zur Geschichte Georgiens.
Immens umfangreiches Geschichtswerk zur georgischen Geschichte, daher nicht leicht zu lesen. Mann sollte gute Vorkenntnisse haben und die nötige Geduld, dann jedoch wird der Leser mit ausuferndem Wissen reich belohnt.
- Lucy OwenReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 5, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting and concise
Well written and informative
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Antônio Coelho de Souza do NasciementoReviewed in Brazil on May 5, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente
Muito bom. Satisfeito
- José Andrés Acebo NiñoReviewed in Spain on September 25, 2019
3.0 out of 5 stars Well documented but may be lacks a little bit of rythm
Well documented, it includes a very well constructed and explained travel through Georgian history.
- Kindle CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 22, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars A superb history of the land now know as Georgia ...
A superb history of the land now know as Georgia. Rayfield takes the reader on a tour de force travel in time, bringing to life long forgotten kingdoms, and moving up till modern times. A must for everyone willing to discover this fascinating country.