Turkey: A Short History

by Norman Stone

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Book cover for Turkey

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"Arresting ... Stone's Turkey breaks the popular mould and introduces its readers to a place beyond their presumptions" --The Sunday Times

In Turkey: A Short History the celebrated historian Norman Stone deftly conducts the reader through the fascinating and complex story of Turkey's past, from the arrival of the Seljuks in Anatolia in the eleventh century to the modern republic applying for EU membership in the twenty-first. It is an account of epic proportions, featuring rapacious leaders such as Genghis Khan and Tamerlane, the glories of Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent, and Kemal Ataturk, the reforming genius and founder of modern Turkey.

For six hundred years Turkey was at the heart of the Ottoman Empire, a superpower that brought Islam to the gates of Vienna and stretched to North Africa, the Persian Gulf, and the river Volga. Stone examines the reasons for the astonishing rise and the long decline of this world empire and how for its last hundred years it became the center of the Eastern Question, as the Great Powers argued over a regime in its death throes. Then, as now, the position of Turkey--a country balanced between two continents--provoked passionate debate. Stone concludes the book with a trenchant examination of the Turkish republic created in the aftermath of the First World War, where East and West, religion and secularism, and tradition and modernization are vibrant and sometimes conflicting elements of national identity.
  • ISBN13 9780500771556
  • Publish Date 25 March 2013 (first published 6 February 2012)
  • Publish Status Transferred
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Thames & Hudson Ltd
  • Format eBook
  • Language English