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War, Violence, and Collapse: The Middle East in History

by Hui Wang
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Current price ₹1,907.00
Original price ₹2,209.00
Original price ₹2,209.00
Original price ₹2,209.00
(-14%)
₹1,907.00
Current price ₹1,907.00

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Book cover type: Paperback
  • ISBN13: 9789190115794
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Subject: N/A
  • Publisher: Hui Wang
  • Publisher Imprint: Hui Wang
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 192
  • Original Price: GBP 16.99
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 195 grams
  • BISAC Subject(s): Middle East / General

War, Violence, and Collapse: The Middle East in History, opens with a simple question that kept pushing me back to the archives and the map: what actually happened when the global war crashed into the Middle East? I follow a cast of leaders who stood at the edge of ruin and had to choose between survival, loyalty, and ambition - from Abdul Hamid II, the deposed sultan whose long shadow still shaped Ottoman politics, to Mustafa Kemal, the battlefield officer who would become the architect of modern Turkey, and to Sharif Husayn (Husayn ibn Ali), the Sharif of Mecca who would spark the Arab Revolt. These were not distant figures merely reacting to Europe's storms; they were actors shaping events that would decide the fate of empires.

As the narrative pushes forward, the war spreads fast and brutally across deserts, mountains, and river plains. From Sarikamish in the high Caucasus to Deir ez-Zor on the Euphrates, from the embattled city of Van to long convoys into exile and shattered hope, violence remade entire communities and polities. Meanwhile Verdun and Jutland thundered in Europe, and the Arab Revolt flared across desert tracks and coastal towns. My book argues that these fronts were never separate worlds but facets of a single expanding catastrophe - a vast convulsion that dragged soldiers, civilians, and rulers alike into its deadly orbit.

Ideas mattered as much as armies. The rise of Islam under Muhammad and the early caliphs cast a long, indelible shadow over later conflicts, and at a pivotal crossroads where faith, empire, and rebellion collided stood Sharif Husayn ibn Ali - the Sharif of Mecca whose revolt would reshape the map of the Middle East. Figures such as T. E. Lawrence and Gertrude Bell slipped into a quieter, hidden war for influence, intelligence, and control - a war fought with promises, maps, and carefully chosen words.

The turning point of 1917 brought new forces into the arena. Lenin and Woodrow Wilson emerged as symbols of radically different futures, while blockade, hunger, and sheer exhaustion pushed societies toward breaking. From the Schlieffen Plan to the Kiel mutiny, from America's entry into the war to Wilson's Fourteen Points, the book traces how grand designs unraveled and how ordinary people ultimately paid the price.

The final chapters follow the collapse itself. Bulgaria is the first of the Central Powers to crumble-signing an armistice at Salonika on 29 September 1918-and that initial rupture sets the pace. Empires begin to unravel. From the Armistice of Mudros on 30 October to the Armistice of Compi�gne on 11 November, old orders fall apart faster than anyone had expected. I wrote this book to show that war destroys more than armies-it shatters illusions and reshapes political life. If you want to understand why the modern Middle East bears the lines and wounds it does, and how a global war turned local struggles into lasting scars, this book invites you to read on.

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