Roger Crowley read English at Cambridge before going to live in Istanbul. His particular interests are the Byzantine, Venetian, and Ottoman empires, seafaring, and eyewitness history. He is the author of three books on the empires of the Mediterranean and its surroundings: Constantinople: the last great siege(2005), Empires of the Sea (2008) and City of Fortune: How Venice won and lost a naval empire(2011). His website address is www.rogercrowley.co.uk, where he blogs about history.
‘I shall tell the story of the tremendous perils and the loss of Constantinople, which I observed at close quarters with my own eyes.’ Leonard of Chios.
Constantinople: The Last Great Siege tells the story of one of the great forgotten events of world history - the fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks in1453.
For a thousand years Constantinople was quite simply the city: fabulously wealthy, imperial, intimidating - and Christian. Single-handedly it blunted early Arab enthusiasm for Holy War; when a second wave of Islamic warriors swept out of the Asian steppes in the Middle Ages, Constantinople was the ultimate prize: ‘The Red Apple’. It was a city that had always lived under threat. On average it had survived a siege every forty years for a millenium – until the Ottoman Sultan, Mehmet II, twenty-one years old and hungry for glory, rode up to the walls in April 1453 with a huge army, ‘numberless as the stars’
Constantinople is the taut, vivid story of this final struggle for the city told largely through the accounts of eyewitnesses. For fifty-five days a tiny group of defenders defied the huge Ottoman army in a seesawing contest fought on land, at sea – and underground. During the course of events, the largest cannon ever built was directed against the world’s most formidable defensive system, Ottoman ships were hauled overland into the Golden Horn, and the morale of defenders was crucially undermined by unnerving portents. At the centre is the contest between two inspirational leaders, Mehmed II and Constantine XI, fighting for empire and religious faith, and an astonishing finale in a few short hours on 29 May 1453 – a defining moment for medieval history.
Constantinople is both a gripping work of narrative history and an account of the war between Christendom and Islam that still has echoes in the modern world.
發表於2024-12-19
Constantinople 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
圖書標籤: 曆史 歐洲 拜占庭 英文原版 的 小說
對軍事迷來說可能很好看,對於城堡攻防的描寫比較枯燥,對曆史事件的交待比較清晰。
評分對軍事迷來說可能很好看,對於城堡攻防的描寫比較枯燥,對曆史事件的交待比較清晰。
評分對軍事迷來說可能很好看,對於城堡攻防的描寫比較枯燥,對曆史事件的交待比較清晰。
評分對軍事迷來說可能很好看,對於城堡攻防的描寫比較枯燥,對曆史事件的交待比較清晰。
評分對軍事迷來說可能很好看,對於城堡攻防的描寫比較枯燥,對曆史事件的交待比較清晰。
Constantinople 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載