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Lost Enlightenment: Central Asia's Golden Age from the Arab Conquest to Tamerlane Hardcover – October 13, 2013
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S. Frederick Starr
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Print length680 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherPrinceton University Press
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Publication dateOctober 13, 2013
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Dimensions6.5 x 1.75 x 9.5 inches
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ISBN-100691157731
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ISBN-13978-0691157733
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Lost Enlightenment is a remarkable and accessible scholarly tour de force."---David Morgan, Times Literary Supplement
"Honorable Mention for the 2013 PROSE Award in European and World History, Association of American Publishers"
"Lost Enlightenment is a most amazing book, one with--if we are lucky--the potential to shape global public thinking for decades ahead. . . . Lost Enlightenment is an entirely readable, informative and even entertaining book. Although it might surely serve as an inspiration to the modern inhabitants of Central Asia, it should also serve as a warning to any modern nation and civilization that it is tempted to intolerance."---Dimitry Chen, Asian Review of Books
"The true value of the book is that it presents comprehensively collated data and sources, amalgamated in chronological order, about the history, culture, material life and sciences in mediaeval Central Asia, pre- and post-Islamisation. Furthermore, the author's reasoning for the rise and decline of Central Asia’s Enlightenment is nothing short of impeccably convincing. Finally, based on the author’s arguments, one may come to appreciate the value of mediaeval Central Asia as a model for the modern world."---Peter Nicolaus, Iran and the Caucasus
"One of Choice's Outstanding Academic Titles for 2014"
"This ambitious and much-needed book will be an eye-opener for many readers. S. Frederick Starr shows that Central Asia, often viewed today as a backwater, produced some of the most outstanding minds of the Middle Ages."―Peter B. Golden, author of Central Asia in World History
"In this graceful, luxuriant history, Starr recovers the stunning contributions of Central Asia scientists, architects, artists, engineers, and historians during the four centuries that began just before the Arab onslaught of the eight century and lasted until the Mongol siege in the thirteenth century. . . . The book offers a lucid exploration of the era's intricate philosophical and theological debates and a succinct depiction of its poetry and art, enhanced by many illustrations." ― Foreign Affairs
"This book does a marvelous job of highlighting the contributions of medieval intellectuals from Central Asia to the history of world civilizations. . . . It is a very informative and readable book."---Richard Foltz, Fezana Journal
"For more than three hundred years the Islamic world exercised the scientific and philosophical mastery of Europe. With compelling urgency and lucidity, Lost Enlightenment tells the story of the rise and tragic demise of this golden age of Islamic learning in Central Asia. It is a story whose lesson we should never be allowed to forget."―Anthony Pagden, author of The Enlightenment: And Why It Still Matters
From the Inside Flap
"Lost Enlightenment brilliantly re-creates for us the world of Central Asia, which for centuries was not a backwater but a center of world civilization. With a sure mastery of the large historical sweep as well as an eye for detail, Fred Starr has written an important book that will be a resource for years to come."--Francis Fukuyama, author ofThe Origins of Political Order
"For more than three hundred years the Islamic world exercised the scientific and philosophical mastery of Europe. With compelling urgency and lucidity,Lost Enlightenment tells the story of the rise and tragic demise of this golden age of Islamic learning in Central Asia. It is a story whose lesson we should never be allowed to forget."--Anthony Pagden, author ofThe Enlightenment: And Why It Still Matters
"From 800 to 1200, Central Asia was the world's most advanced civilization in the sciences, mathematics, medicine, law, and art. Starr'sLost Enlightenment thoughtfully explains this astonishing evolution and its end."--Henry A. Kissinger
"Fred Starr makes the most persuasive case yet that medieval Central Asia was a major center of civilization and high culture--and what a picture emerges."--Richard W. Bulliet, Columbia University
"Drawing on his vast knowledge and experience of Central Asia, Fred Starr provides a brilliant account of the history and culture of the land that produced some of the greatest Islamic scholars, scientists, saints, artists, and architects. Thanks to this book, the Central Asian enlightenment is no longer as lost as some might think."--Seyyed Hossein Nasr, George Washington University
"A delight to read, this is a fine survey of the intellectual and cultural history of Central Asia by a distinguished historian. By showing the remarkable discoveries in astronomy, mathematics, medicine, and other fields made by Central Asians from the earliest times, Lost Enlightenment is certain to surprise many readers by challenging traditional misconceptions of the region. The book's biographical approach makes for lively reading. Anyone interested in the Silk Roads will find it enthralling."--Morris Rossabi, author of The Mongols: A Very Short Introduction
"This ambitious and much-needed book will be an eye-opener for many readers. S. Frederick Starr shows that Central Asia, often viewed today as a backwater, produced some of the most outstanding minds of the Middle Ages."--Peter B. Golden, author ofCentral Asia in World History
From the Back Cover
"Lost Enlightenment brilliantly re-creates for us the world of Central Asia, which for centuries was not a backwater but a center of world civilization. With a sure mastery of the large historical sweep as well as an eye for detail, Fred Starr has written an important book that will be a resource for years to come."--Francis Fukuyama, author of The Origins of Political Order
"A fantastic book."--President Ashraf Ghani of Afghanistan
"For more than three hundred years the Islamic world exercised the scientific and philosophical mastery of Europe. With compelling urgency and lucidity, Lost Enlightenment tells the story of the rise and tragic demise of this golden age of Islamic learning in Central Asia. It is a story whose lesson we should never be allowed to forget."--Anthony Pagden, author of The Enlightenment: And Why It Still Matters
"From 800 to 1200, Central Asia was the world's most advanced civilization in the sciences, mathematics, medicine, law, and art. Starr's Lost Enlightenment thoughtfully explains this astonishing evolution and its end."--Henry A. Kissinger
"Fred Starr makes the most persuasive case yet that medieval Central Asia was a major center of civilization and high culture--and what a picture emerges."--Richard W. Bulliet, Columbia University
"Drawing on his vast knowledge and experience of Central Asia, Fred Starr provides a brilliant account of the history and culture of the land that produced some of the greatest Islamic scholars, scientists, saints, artists, and architects. Thanks to this book, the Central Asian enlightenment is no longer as lost as some might think."--Seyyed Hossein Nasr, George Washington University
"A delight to read, this is a fine survey of the intellectual and cultural history of Central Asia by a distinguished historian. By showing the remarkable discoveries in astronomy, mathematics, medicine, and other fields made by Central Asians from the earliest times, Lost Enlightenment is certain to surprise many readers by challenging traditional misconceptions of the region. The book's biographical approach makes for lively reading. Anyone interested in the Silk Roads will find it enthralling."--Morris Rossabi, author of The Mongols: A Very Short Introduction
"This ambitious and much-needed book will be an eye-opener for many readers. S. Frederick Starr shows that Central Asia, often viewed today as a backwater, produced some of the most outstanding minds of the Middle Ages."--Peter B. Golden, author of Central Asia in World History
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Princeton University Press; 1st edition (October 13, 2013)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 680 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0691157731
- ISBN-13 : 978-0691157733
- Item Weight : 2.44 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.5 x 1.75 x 9.5 inches
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Best Sellers Rank:
#1,567,835 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #407 in Central Asia History
- #2,817 in Philosophy History & Survey
- #3,899 in General History of Religion
- Customer Reviews:
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Customer reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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It would have been easy to be overwhelmed by the plethora of places, events,and leading characters in this ambitious history. Add to that the fact that many of the dramatis personae had multiple names(birth,Arabic,known in the West as) and the potential for confusion is high. Not worrying about keeping everything straight(that's what a second reading is for)I found that a couple of hundred pages in the locations, events,and leading characters had been repeated enough that the confusion faded. S. Starr,the author follows various subjects such as the development of specific ideas, main characters, and waves of change more than a strict time line and again this became more clear as the book developed. All this said he has done a masterful job of presenting such a complex and fascinating subject-the interplay of various factors that lead to Central Asia being the most innovative,prosperous and invigorating place on the planet for hundreds of years. The ending saddened me as the twilight approached and I realized that we may never see again such a concentrated time and place with such an immense level of vitality again. He has done his best to weave diverse/warring ideas and personalities without watering them down to tepid pablum. My thanks for such a comprehensive overview that obviously involved so much effort and research. I plan on reading it again.
Our knowledge of this period is limited by the repeated destruction of libraries and other records over the centuries. But there has been a great deal of scholarly study, furthered by the gradual discovery of records excavated from ruins, and the translation of books to make them more widely available. So the author emphasizes in the preface that much remains to be learned.
“It is no exaggeration to say that strife within the community of Islam, the umma, the struggle of Suni versus Shiite, was more than anything else responsible for the closing of the Muslim mind in Central Asia.” The chapters showing how this happened, and the great minds involved in the retreat from reason toward doctrinal conformity, are a testimony to what might have happened. And it is a warning of the dangers today of the campaign by fundamentalists against knowledge in favor of biblical literalism, faith vs. evidence. It has happened before.
In the last paragraph of the book, the author expands from history to philosophy. “Meanwhile, it is well for the rest of the world, both East and West, to reflect on the fact that a region that some persist in viewing as marginal and backward was, over a number of centuries, the pivot of the political and economic world and the center of science, philosophy, and intellectual life on the Eurasian land mass. Is it not far wiser, then, to ask how this great movement of culture and ideas arose and endured as long as it did than to focus narrowly on its demise?”
Top reviews from other countries
Generally, I did not read many pages at a sitting, simply because every page is a gem. Half way through, I wondered when I would loose interest and set this big book aside. But I could NOT put it aside. To - today's mid-Asian peoples: your antecedents inspire us all; do be sure you know this story.
The achievements of the scientists, philosophers and writers of the Golden Age of the title deserve to be considered in the same breath as the Golden Age of Greece and the Hellenistic World that preceded them, and the European Renaissance that followed in their footsteps. That they are not is highly unfortunate, but Starr sets about correcting that in a style that treads the right line between displaying scholarly thoroughness on the one hand and the flair of a talented popular historian on the other. This book features both the sweeping discourses necessary to familiarise the reader with a little-known period of history, and intimate snapshots, such as that following the remarkable communication between Biruni and Ibn Sina, two of the brightest stars of this age.
The subject matter - ranging from mathematical and geographical advances to stylistic changes within poetry and discussions of metaphysics and logics - is diverse enough to pose a problem for an author to gather them together coherently. That Starr does so deftly, while at the same time never forgetting to tell the wider tale of the region, with its many competing religions and invading hordes, is a credit to his ability as a scholar and writer. I would recommend this book to anyone with an enthusiasm for history, science or simply learning. A marvellous book.
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