History of Empires Top Ten Book List

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Empires have been among the most influential polities on social, political, and a variety of cultural events. However, how they change, in time and place, is important and can shape subsequent periods for generations. The books indicated here provide overviews and details understanding of key empires and events that shaped the world, lasting until today.

Top Ten List

1. Burbank, J. & Cooper, F. (2010) Empires in world history: power and the politics of difference . Princeton, Princeton Univ. Press. If you want a book that looks at a variety of polities and applies a different perspective into how empires came about and the world they shaped then this one is one of the more unique ones. It looks at how diversity within empires, particularly in the east, was often contrasted from the West. Empires in the Middle East and east Asia sustained themselves by using the strengths of ethnic and religious diversity rather than emphasizing their own brand of religion or socio-cultural group. This contrasts from Empires such as the Byzantine and later European empires.


2. Kwarteng, K. (2015) War and gold: a five-hundred-year history of empires, adventures and debt. Paperback ed. London, Bloomsbury. This is a book that looks at how great wealth achieved through empires and conquest often lead to the eventual collapse and downfall of great states. In essence, when states become empires, they sow the seeds of their downfall by becoming adopted to a new financial and wealth system. While this usually enriches the empire, over time this system becomes unsustainable, leading to collapse in the financial system and state.

3. Keep, J.L.H. (2002) A history of the Soviet Union, 1945 - 1991: last of the empires . Reissued with updated bibliogr. Oxford, Oxford Univ. Press. This deep analysis by Keep looks at the Soviet Union in the context of an empire, where it attempts to instill its ideology on the different lands in which became part of the Soviet Union. Using archives uncovered after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the book details political, cultural, social, and economic development and how the state functioned.