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季风帝国:印度洋及其入侵者的历史
(uk) Richard Hall
This book reconstructs the history of Indian Ocean civilization and its gradual decline under the control of Western invaders. Through extraordinary narrative ability and keen analysis, author Richard Hall describes how the emergence of Europeans from the 16th century onwards irreversibly changed the lives of people along the Indian Ocean: prosperous kingdoms were conquered, and previous religious and ethnic relations fell into chaos; and, with the emergence of Western capitalism, ancient trade patterns soon became extinct. However, although European guns could create new empires in the East, their vast populations made it impossible for Westerners to suppress the East for long. In the thousands of years of changes in the Indian Ocean, African giants have formed the long western flank of the Indian Ocean and have played almost no role other than acting as silent bystanders. But after the mid-19th century, the potential of the various ethnic groups in sub-Saharan Africa was fully tested, and the monsoon of history blew again. This book reproduces the author's understanding of foreign cultures from a subtle and unobstructed perspective. This epic work is sure to inspire and inspire reading.
This book reconstructs the history of Indian Ocean civilization and its gradual decline under the control of Western invaders. Through extraordinary narrative ability and keen analysis, author Richard Hall describes how the emergence of Europeans from the 16th century onwards irreversibly changed the lives of people along the Indian Ocean: prosperous kingdoms were conquered, and previous religious and ethnic relations fell into chaos; and, with the emergence of Western capitalism, ancient trade patterns soon became extinct. However, although European guns could create new empires in the East, their vast populations made it impossible for Westerners to suppress the East for long. In the thousands of years of changes in the Indian Ocean, African giants have formed the long western flank of the Indian Ocean and have played almost no role other than acting as silent bystanders. But after the mid-19th century, the potential of the various ethnic groups in sub-Saharan Africa was fully tested, and the monsoon of history blew again. This book reproduces the author's understanding of foreign cultures from a subtle and unobstructed perspective. This epic work is sure to inspire and inspire reading.