Introduction; 1. Imperial space; 2. Imperial ideologies: cultural practices; 3. Imperial institutions: armies, bureaucracies and elites; 4. Imperial frontier encounters; 5. Imperial crises; 6. Imperial legacies; Conclusion: transition.
A major new account of the Eurasian borderlands as 'shatter zones' which have generated some of the world's most significant conflicts.
After thirty years as Professor of History and Chair for ten years at the University of Pennsylvania, Alfred J. Rieber went to Budapest in 1995 to chair and reorganise the History Department at the Central European University. Since then he has taught hundreds of students from the Eurasian borderlands. His first visit to the Soviet Union came in January 1956 followed by his participation in the first year of the cultural exchange at Moscow State University (1958–9). Over the past fifty years, he has continued his scholarly visits and travels throughout Eurasia, going as far east as the Buryat Mongol Republic. His publications include works on Soviet foreign policy, Russian social history and the comparative history of frontiers. His American and European doctoral students have published widely in the history of the Eurasian borderlands. Professor Rieber's work on frontiers has been translated into Russian, Polish and Ukrainian and he has won two teaching awards in the USA and two in Hungary, as well as a Prize from the American Philosophical Society. His scholarship has been supported by fellowships from the Ford Foundation, the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Council for Soviet and East European Studies, National Endowment for the Humanities, St Antony's College, Oxford and the Inter-University Committee on Travel Grants.
'A compelling demonstration of the central importance of
borderlands and frontier disputes in Eurasian states. Its broad
comparative sweep provides insights not only into the sources on
international conflict, but also into the dynamics of internal
reform enacted to bring borderlands more effectively under central
control.'3 Richard S. Wortman, Bryce Professor Emeritus of European
Legal History, Columbia University
'This volume is an impressive feat of dedicated scholarship.
Employing a mode of analysis that he calls 'geo-cultural', Alfred
J. Rieber interprets the political and social history of Eurasia as
a story in which certain frontiers play an absolutely essential,
indeed informative role. It is safe to say that people who read
this book will never see frontiers in the same way as before.' Ilya
Vinkovetsky, Associate Professor of History, Simon Fraser
University
'No-one who reads this book can fail to gain new perspectives on
much of modern history, not to mention the constant crises of both
Europe and Asia today.' The Times Literary Supplement
'Borderlands are back. From the Baltic to the Balkans, from Ukraine
and the Caucasus through Central Asia, old fault lines from old
empires have once again taken on political relevance in world
politics. Alfred J. Rieber's ambitious book looks at their
formation and interaction with five imperial centers over five
centuries through a study of the Habsburg, Ottoman, Russian,
Iranian, and Chinese empires.' Thomas J. Barfield, American
Historical Review
'[Rieber] has produced an encyclopedic political history of
mid-fifteenth- through twentieth-century Eastern Europe and much of
Asia (except for the Arab and Indian worlds), with many forays into
the Middle Ages and an emphasis on the period since 1815. The book
includes an imposing wealth of factual material and comparisons,
and a vast array of footnotes covering secondary literature in many
languages on practically every important question related to the
rise and decline of empires.' Seymour Becker, Ab Imperio
'What is new about this book is a holistic vision of patterns of
conflict determined by the existence of complex, interconnected and
fluid frontiers … In its broad territorial and chronological span
as well as its rich tapestry of historical detail, the book is
written in the worthy tradition of the École des Annales … This
should become a standard work, equally insightful for the academic
specialist and for students of history.' Irina Marin, The English
Historical Review
'This is an impressive, complex, and comprehensive work that
reflects a lifetime of scholarly study. It is also a study that
focuses on borderlands within continental empires that, at least in
the historiography of the modern era, tend to play a subordinate
role to European overseas empires. For this reason alone, it is a
refreshing approach to the broader subject of empire and
borderlands.' Jonathan E. Gumz, Journal of Modern History
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