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Little History of the World [Mīkstie vāki]

4.10/5 (32269 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 304 pages, height x width x depth: 216x140x27 mm, weight: 367 g, 40 b-w illus.
  • Sērija : Little Histories
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Sep-2008
  • Izdevniecība: Yale University Press
  • ISBN-10: 030014332X
  • ISBN-13: 9780300143324
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 17,87 €
  • Grāmatu piegādes laiks ir 3-4 nedēļas, ja grāmata ir uz vietas izdevniecības noliktavā. Ja izdevējam nepieciešams publicēt jaunu tirāžu, grāmatas piegāde var aizkavēties.
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  • Ielikt grozā
  • Piegādes laiks - 4-6 nedēļas
  • Pievienot vēlmju sarakstam
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 304 pages, height x width x depth: 216x140x27 mm, weight: 367 g, 40 b-w illus.
  • Sērija : Little Histories
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Sep-2008
  • Izdevniecība: Yale University Press
  • ISBN-10: 030014332X
  • ISBN-13: 9780300143324
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Presents a brief, narrative history of the world for young readers, from the Stone Age up to the end of World War II. In 1935, with a doctorate in art history and no prospect of a job, the 26-year-old Ernst Gombrich was invited by a publishing acquaintance to attempt a history of the world for younger readers. Amazingly, he completed the task in an intense six weeks, and Eine kurze Weltgeschichte für junge Leser was published in Vienna to immediate success, and is now available in seventeen languages across the world.Toward the end of his long life, Gombrich embarked upon a revision and, at last, an English translation. A Little History of the World presents his lively and involving history to English-language readers for the first time. Superbly designed and freshly illustrated, this is a book to be savored and collected.In forty concise chapters, Gombrich tells the story of man from the stone age to the atomic bomb. In between emerges a colorful picture of wars and conquests, grand works of art, and the spread and limitations of science. This is a text dominated not by dates and facts, but by the sweep of mankind’s experience across the centuries, a guide to humanity’s achievements and an acute witness to its frailties.The product of a generous and humane sensibility, this timeless account makes intelligible the full span of human history.

Recenzijas

In simple, vivid prose, Gombrich surveys the human past from pre-history to his own time. . . . Lucky children will have this book read to them. Intelligent adults will read it for themselves and regain contact with the spirit of European humanism at its best.Anthony Grafton, Wall Street Journal

This little history has aged amazingly well.New York Times Book Review

A marvellous antidote to history without chronology: the whole experience of human history, from prehistory to the Second World War, compressed into a flowing narrative. . . . [ Gombrich] excels in creating a sense of the continuities of historythe ways in which human nature has not budged over the millennium, and the smallness of the differences between people. A delight.Daily Telegraph

Gombrich opens with the most magical definition of history I have ever read. . . . Tolerance, reason and humanity . . . suffuse every page of the Little History.Amanda Vickery, Guardian Review

Gombrich knows precisely how to converse with his audience, intelligent children between nine and thirteen. He uses powerful imagery to convey the sheer length of time that separates us from the dinosaurs.Andrew Roberts, FT Magazine

The book is intellectually valuable, and unusual; rather than breaking history into eras or artificial categories . . . Gombrich contextualizes them all and gives the vast unfolding of the Western world one wise, simple narrative. . . . For adults, it is full of delightful reminders as well as forgotten or never-known tidbits. As for younger readers . . . [ the book] is a treasure for them.Katie Haegele, Philadelphia Inquirer

I am going to buy ten copies of this book and give it to my ten favourite children. . . . This is a book which teaches what it is to be civilised by its very tone, which is one of gentleness, curiosity and erudition.A. N. Wilson, Times Literary Supplement

What was the bestselling title this Christmas at Foyles in London? Hilary Mantels Man Booker Prizewinning Wolf Hall? Stieg Larssons The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo? Cormac McCarthys The Road? Dan Browns The Lost Symbol? No. It was E. H. Gombrichs A Little History of the World.Mark Sanderson, Sunday Telegraph

A Little History of the World by E. H. Gombrich is a bedtime treat to share with my two children and proof that brilliance and perspicacity neednt be stuffy.Bettany Hughes, The Times

A remarkable book, written in an amiable, conversational style, effortlessly explaining, without condescension, difficult matters like the achievements of Charlemagne, the monetary system of medieval Europe and the ideas of the Enlightenment. . . . This resurrected history deserves reading for all its delights.Edward Rothstein, New York Times

So sharp was Gombrichs intelligence and so lively his pen that it can be appreciated as much as literature as history. . . . There is not one of the 39 short chapters that is not enlivened by a sharp insight or arresting image.Tim Blanning, Sunday Telegraph

A enduring joy. . . . We have no shortage of historians eager to tell us what was important in the past and why; but few of them dare speak straight to the imagination of young people, to open their minds and to enrich their vision in the manner that Gombrich achieves so effortlessly here.Peter Furtado, Times Higher Education Supplement

A sophisticated narrative by the art historian which runs up to the First World War, written in language any child can understand.Lorna Bradbury, Daily Telegraph

"A remarkable book, written in an amiable, conversational style, effortlessly explaining, without condescension, difficult matters like the achievements of Charlemagne, the monetary system of medieval Europe and the ideas of the Enlightenment. . . . This resurrected history deserves reading for all its delights."Edward Rothstein, New York Times

This is an unusual work for Yale: a childrens history originally published 70 years ago. But it is a work one can quickly come to love. . . . Using vivid imagery, storytelling and sly humor, [ Gombrich] brings history to life in a way that adults as well as children can appreciate. The book displays a breadth of knowledge.Publishers Weekly (starred review)

The true fairy tale of the evolution of mankind.Die Zeit

A panoramic overview of history from the Stone Age to the 1990s that . . . manages to be entertaining and informative. . . . Gombrich, in other words, is a born teacher whose humanistic values are implicit in every word he wrote. . . . It has taken almost 70 years to reach English-speaking readers. It has been worth the wait: expertly translated, elegantly produced and charmingly illustrated by Clifford Harper, it will enchant any child.Joel Greenberg, The Australian

An engrossing kaleidoscopic account of global history from the ancient Egyptians to the Treaty of Versailles.Tristram Hunt, BBC History Magazine

This book . . . has been called the true fairytale of the evolution of mankind. I would happily go along with that and intend to give a copy as a stocking present to a favourite Godchild of mine.Richard Edmonds, Birmingham Post

Any adult reader will find plenty to nourish thought.John Whale, Church Times

I love the new translation of Gombrichs classic history for children. Both entertaining and informative, it makes perfect bedtime reading.Katy Lazenby, Western Morning News

The book charms, amuses and informs superbly. . . . In A Little History, Gombrich proves he is as much a story teller as a professor.Andrew Roberts, Daily Express

". . . this Little Book . . . is a thing of ripping yarns told at a rattling pace. Seventy years too late, I wish that the first edition had been available to me to read as often and over as many years as The Wind in the Willows, a book that grew in depth as I grew older. . . . Had I a dozen grandchildren (of any age) I'd order two dozen copies, one for the children, the other for their parents. Do not, from its title, underestimate this book."Brian Sewell, Evening Standard





". . . another charming work of history for children which is shortly to be published by Yale and first appeared in 1935. . . . It's as fresh now as it was then. If I were Ruth Kelly, the Education Secretary, I'd order a copy for myself. Then I'd make it prescribed reading for every primary school in the country."Melanie McDonagh, Evening Standard





"Christmas gift of the year is surely . . . A Little History of the World. This is a magical work for children. . . . Perfect for bedtime reading."John Banville, Irish Times





Featured by the 2006 Association of American University Presses (AAUP) in University Press Books for Public and Secondary School Libraries

A 2006 Book Sense Highlight

E. H. Gombrich was awarded the 1985 International Balzan Foundation Prize

Named a Favorite Book of 2005 by the Los Angeles Times

Selected by the Association of American University Presses as an Outstanding Book for Public and Secondary School Libraries, 2005

Imagine the full story of human habitation on our planet being told in such flowing prose that you want to read it out loud. If you cant imagine that, read A Little History of the World and experience it!"Patricia S. Schroeder, president and CEO of the Association of American Publishers and former U.S. Representative from Colorado

A brilliant piece of narrative, splendidly organised, told with an energy and confidence that are enormously attractive, and suffused with all the humanity and generosity of spirit that Gombrichs thousands of admirers came to cherish during his long and richly productive life. Its a wonderful surprise: irresistible, in fact.Philip Pullman

Preface xv
Once Upon a Time
1(4)
The past and memory
Before there were any people
Dragon like creatures
Earth without life
Sun without earth
What is history?
The Greatest Inventors Of All Time
5(5)
The Heidelberg jaw
Neanderthal man
Prehistory
Fire
Tools
Cavemen
Language
Painting
Making magic
The Ice Age and the Early Stone Age
Pile dwellings
The Bronze Age
People like you and me
The Land By The Nile
10(7)
King Menes
Egypt
A hymn to the Nile
Pharaohs
Pyramids
The religion of the ancient Egyptians
The Sphinx
Hieroglyphs Papyrus
Revolution in the old kingdom
Akhenaton's reforms
Sunday, Monday
17(7)
Mesopotamia today
The burial sites at Ur
Clay tablets and cuneiform script
Hamurabi's laws
Star worship
The origin of the days of the week
The Tower of Babel
Nebuchadnezzar
The One And Only God
24(5)
Palestine
Abraham of Ur
The Flood
Moses' bondage in Egypt and the year of the departure from Egypt
Saul, David, Solomon
The division of the kingdom
The destruction of Israel
The prophets speak
The Babylonian Captivity
The Return
The Old Testament and faith in the Messiah
IC-A-N-R-E-A-D
29(2)
Writing with the alphabet
The Phoenicians and their trading posts
Heroes And Their Weapons
31(6)
The songs of Homer
Schliemann's excavations
Sea
raider kings
Crete and the labyrinth
The Dorian migration
The songs of the heroes
Greek tribes and their colonies
An Unequal Struggle
37(7)
The Persians and their faith
Cyrus conquers Babylon
Cambyses in Egypt
Darius's empire
The Ionian revolt
The first punitive Expendition
The second Punitive Expendition and the Battle of Marathon
Xerxes' campaign
Thermopylae
The Battle of Salamis
Two Small Cities In One Small Land
44(7)
The Olympic Games
The Delphic Oracle
Sparta and Spartan education
Athens
Draco and Solon
The People's Assembly and tyrants
The time of Pericles
Philosophy
Sculpture and painting
Architecture
Theatre
The Enlightened One And His Land
51(6)
India
Mohenjo-Daro, a city from the time of Ur
The Indian migrations
Indo-European languages
Castes
Brahma and the transmigration of souls
`This is you'
Prince Gautama
The Enlightenment
Release from suffering
Nirvana
The followers of the Buddha
A Great Teacher Of A Great People
57(5)
China in the time before Christ
The emperor of China and the princes
The meaning of Chinese writing
Confucius
The importance of practices and customs
The family
Ruler and subject
Lao-tzu
The Tao
The Greatest Adventure Of All
62(11)
The Peloponnesian War
The Delphic War
Philip of Macedon
The Battle of Chaeronea
The decline of the Persian empire
Alexander the Great
The destruction of Thebes
Aristotle and his knowledge
Diogenes
The conquest of Asia Minor
The Gordion Knot
The Battle of Issus
The conquest of Tyre and the conquest of Egypt
Alexandria
The Battle of Gaugamela
The Indian expedition
Porus
Alexander, ruler of the Orient
Alexander's death and his successors
Hellenism
The library of Alexandria
New Wars And New Warriors
73(7)
Italy
Rome and the myth of Rome's foundation
Class warfare
The twelve tablets of the law
The Roman character
Rome's capture by the Gauls
The conquest of Italy
Pyrrhus
Carthage
The First Punic War
Hannibal
Crossing the Alps
Quintus Fabius Maximus
Cannae
The last call to arms
Scipio's victory over Hannibal
The conquest of Greece
Cato
The destruction of Carthage
An Enemy Of History
80(3)
The Emperor Shih Huang-ti of Ch'in
The burning of the books
The princes of Ch'in and the naming of China
The Great Wall of China
The Han ruling family
Learned officials
Rulers Of The Western World
83(9)
Roman provinces
Roads and aqueducts
Legions
The two Gracchi
Bread and circuses
Marius
The Cimbri and the Teutones
Sulla
Gladiators
Julius Caesar
The Gallic Wars
Victory in the civil war
Cleopatra
The reform of the calendar
Caesar's murder
Augustus and the empire
The arts
The Good News
92(5)
Jesus Christ
The teaching of the Apostle Paul
The Cross
Paul preaching to the Corinthians
The cult of the emperor
Nero
Rome burns
The first Christian persecutions
The catacombs
Titus destroys Jerusalem
The dispersal of the Jews
Life In The Empire And At Its Frontiers
97(7)
Tenements and villas
Therms
The Colosseum
The Germans
Arminius and the battle in Teutoburg forest
The Limes
Soldiers and their gods
Trajan's expeditions in Dacia
Marcus Aurelius's battles near Vienna
Warrior-emperors
The decline of Italy
The spread of Christianity
Diocletian's reforms
The last Christian persecution
Constantine
The founding of Constantinople
The division of the empire
Christianity becomes the religion of the state
The Storm
104(6)
The Huns
The Visigoths
The Migrations
Attila
Leo the Great
Romulus Augustulus
Odoacer and the end of antiquity
The Ostrogoths and Theodoric
Ravenna
Justinian
The Pandects of Justinian and the Agia Sophia
The end of the Goths
The Lombards
The Starry Night Begins
110(5)
`The Dark Ages'?
Belief and superstition
Stylites
Benedictines
Preserving the inheritance of antiquity
The importance of the northern monasteries
Clovis's baptism
The role of the clergy in the Merovingian kingdom
Boniface
There Is No God But Allah, And Muhammad Is His Prophet
115(8)
The Arabian desert
Mecca and the Kaaba
Muhammad's background and life
Persecution and flight
Medina
The battle with Mecca
The last sermon
The conquests of Palestine, Persia and Egypt
The burning of the Alexandrian library
The siege of Constantinople
The conquests of North Africa and Spain
The battles of Tours and Poitiers
Arab culture
Arabic numerals
A Conqueror Who Knows How To Rule
123(7)
The Merovingians and their stewards
The kingdom of the Franks
Charlemagne's battles in Gaul, Italy and Spain
The Avars
Battles with the Saxons
The Heldenlieder
The crowning of the emperor
Harun al-Rashid's ambassadors
The division and decline of the Carolingian empire
Svatopluk
The Vikings
The kingdoms of the Normans
A Struggle To Become Lord Of Christendom
130(7)
East and West in Carolingian times
The blossoming of culture in China
The Magyar invasion
King Henry
Otto the Great
Austria and the Babenbergs
Feudalism and serfdom
Hugh Capet
The Danes in England
Religious appointments
The Investiture Controversy
Gregory VII and Henry IV
Canossa
Robert Guiscard and William the Conqueror
Chivalrous Knights
137(7)
Horsemen and knights
Castles
Bondsmen
From noble youth to knight: page, squire, dubbing
A knight's duties
Minstrelsy
Tournaments
Chivalrous poetry
The Song of the Nibelungen
The First Crusade
Godfrey of Bouillon and the conquest of Jerusalem
The significance of the crusades
Emperors In The Age Of Chivalry
144(12)
Frederick Barbarossa
Barter and the money-based economy
Italian towns
The empire
The resistance and defeat of Milan
The dubbing feast at Mainz
The Third Crusade
Frederick II
Guelphs and Ghibellines
Innocent III
The Magna Carta
Sicily's rulers
The end of the Honestaufens
Ghengis Khan and the Mongol invasion
The lack of an emperor and `fist-law'
The Kyffhauser legend
Rudolf of Habsburg
Victory over Otakar
The power of the House of Habsburg is established
Cities and Citizens
156(7)
Markets and towns
Merchants friars and penitential priests
The persecution of Jews and heretics
The Babylonian Captivity of the popes
The Hundred Years War with England
Joan of Arc
Life at court
Universities
Charles IV and Rudolf the Founder
A New Age
163(9)
The burghers of Florence
Humanism
The rebirth of antiquity
The flowring of art
Leonardo da Vinci
The Medici
Renaissance popes
New ideas in Germany
The art of printing Gunpowder
The downfall of Charles the Bold
Maximilian, the Last Knight
Mercenaries
Fighting in Italy
Maximilian and Durer
A New World
172(8)
The compass
Spain and the conquest of Granada
Columbus and Isabella
The discovery of America
The modern era
Columbus's fate
The conquistadores
Hernando Cortez
Mexico
The fall of Montezuma
The Portuguese in India
A New Faith
180(7)
The building of the Church of St Peter
Luther's theses
Luther's forerunner, Hus
The burning of the papal bull
Charles V and his empire
The sack of Rome
The Diet of Worms
Luther at the Wartburg
The translation of the Bible
Zwingli
Calvin
Henry VIII
Turkish conquests
The division of the empire
The Church At War
187(6)
Ignatius of Loyola
The Council of Trent
The Counter Reformation
The St Bartholomew's Day Massacre
Philip of Spain
The Battle of Lepanto
The revolt of the Low Countries
Elizabeth of England
Mary Stuart
The sinking of the Armada
English trading posts in America
The East India Companies
The beginnings of the British empire
Terrible Times
193(7)
The Defenestration of Prague
The Thirty Years War
Gustavus Adolphus
Wallenstein
The Peace of Westphalia
The devastation of Germany
The persecution of witches
The birth of a scientific understanding of the world
Nature's laws
Galileo and his trial
An Unlucky King And A Lucky King
200(6)
The Stuart King, Charles I
Cromwell and the Puritans
The rise of England
The year of the Glorious Revolution
France's prosperity
Richelieu's policies
Mazarin
Louis XIV
A king's lever Versailles
Sources of the government's wealth
The peasants misery
Predatory wars
Meanwhile, Looking Eastwards
206(7)
Turkish conquests
Insurrection in Hungary
The siege of Vienna Jan Sobieski and the relief of Vienna
Prince Eugene
Ivan the Terrible
Peter the Great
The foudning of St Petersburg
Charles XII of Sweden
The race to stralsund
The expansion of Russian might
A Truly New Age
213(7)
The Enlightenment
Tolerance, reason and humanity
Critique of the Enlighenment
The rise of Prussia
Frederick the Great
Maria TAheresa T
The Prussan army
The Grand Coalition
The Seven Years War
Joseph II
The aboliton of serfdom
Overhasty reforms
The American War of Independence
Benjamin Franklin
Human rights and negro slaves
A Very Violent Revolution
220(7)
Chaterine the Great
Louis XV and Lius XVI
Life at court
Jusitce and the landowning nobility
The Rococo
Marie Antoinette
The convoction
of the Estates
General
The stroming of the Bastille
The sovereignty of teh people
The National Assembly
The Jacobins
The guillotine and the Revolutionary Tribunal
Danton
Robespierre
The Reignof Terror
The sentencing of the king
The foreginers defeated
Reason
The Directory
Neighbouriongrepublics
The last Conqueror
227(13)
Napoleon in Corsica
To Paris
The siege of Toulon
The conquest of Italy
The Egyptian expedition
The coup d'etat
The cvonsualte and teh Code Napolean
Emporer of the French
Victory at Austeritz
The end of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation
Francis I
The Continental System
Victory over Russia
Spain and the War of Spanish Resistance
Aspern and Wagram
The German Uprising
The Grande Arme
The retreat from Moscow
The Battle of Leipzig
The Congress of Vienna Napoleon's return form Elba
Waterloo
St Helena
Men and Machines
240(8)
The Biedermeier era
Steam engines, steamships, locomotives, the telegraph
Spining machines and Mechanical looms
Coal and iron
Luddites
Socialist ideas
Marx and his theory of class war Libveralism
The revolutions of 1830 and 1848
Across teh Seas
248(7)
China before 1800
The opium war
The Taiping rebellion
China's submission
Japan in 1850
Revolution in support of the Midado
Japan's modernisation with foreign assistance
America after 1776
The slace states
The North
Abraham Lincoln
The Civil War
Two New States in Europe
255(9)
Europe after 1848
The Emperor Franz josef and Austria
The German Condfederation
France under Napoleor III
Russia Spain's decline
The liberation of the poeoples of the Balkans
The fight for Constantinople
The kingdom of Sardinia
Cavour
Garibaldi
Bismarck
The reform opf the army in deface of the constituion
The Battle of Koniggraz
Sedan
The founding of the German Empire
The Paris Commune
Bismarck's social reforms
Dismissal of the Iron Chancellor
Divding Up the World
264(9)
Industry
Markets and sources of raw materials
Britain and France
The Russo-Jaopanese War
Italy and Germany
The race to mobilize
Austria and teh East
The outbreak of the First World War
New weapons
Revolution in Russia
The American interrvention
The terms of peace
Scientific advance
End
The Small Par of The History of the World Which I Have Lived Through Myself: Looking Back
273
The growth of the world's population
The defeat of teh central
Erupean powrs during the First World War
The incitement of the masses
The disappearnce of tolerance from political life in Germany, Italy, Japan and Soviet Russia
Economic crisis and the Outbreak of the Second World War
Propaganda and reality
The murder of the Jews
The atomic bomb
The blessings of science
The collapse of the Communist system
International aid eforts as a reason for hope
E. H. Gombrich (19092001) was the author of many works, including the international bestsellers The Story of Art and Art and Illusion. He was director of the Warburg Institute of the University of London from 1959 to 1976.