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- The Far Edges of the Known World
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Description
Product details
| Published | 14 May 2025 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 384 |
| ISBN | 9781526653789 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Publishing |
| Dimensions | 234 x 153 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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This is the book for expanding your ancient history horizon. Owen Rees skilfully brings little known places filled with amazing ancient history away from the periphery and into the spotlight
TRISTAN HUGHES, host of The Ancients podcast
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A wide-ranging tour of the fringes of the ancient world
Patrick Kidd, THE TIMES
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A notable recent trend in popular history is the revival of interest in the ancient world … Now Owen Rees joins the merry band with a strikingly original take on the subject … Rees relies significantly on archaeological evidence that has emerged only recently. His exploration of the outer fringes of empire, beneath the notice of what he calls 'spoilt aristocrats' like Ovid, is nothing if not wide-ranging. In his uncovering of forgotten stories of life on the periphery, he roams from the empty northern uplands of Hadrian's Wall, the chilly mileposts where Roman African legionaries shivered and grumbled, to the ruins of Volubilis in the burning Moroccan desert
Nigel Jones, SPECTATOR
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This refreshingly original tour of the ancient world's lesser-known locales challenges readers to imagine familiar stories from the other side for a change . . . By highlighting how cultural partisans of the past shaped how history was told, Rees aims to help readers see beyond the stereotyping that bluntly divided the ancient world into tidy categories such as civilised and uncivilised, citizen and barbarian. His book is a reminder that while neatly defined narratives may seem appealing, the truth is rarely so straightforward
Michael Patrick Brady, WALL STREET JOURNAL
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A true tour of horizons, the ancients' and our own. Exploring ancient worlds beyond Greece and Rome, Owen Rees illuminates the dimmer corners of the Mediterranean as well as societies on other sands and seas, from Kenya to Ukraine. Fascinating questions arise: When is a border a boundary? When is a site a city? And when are people 'classics'?
JOSEPHINE QUINN, author of How the World Made the West
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In this path-breaking and vital book, Owen Rees opens new perspectives on ancient history, exploring nomadic and settled cultures that flourished beyond the 'civilized' epicenters of Greece and Rome, to reveal surprising connections, from Hadrian's Wall and the Scythian steppes to Africa's Rift Valley, the Khyber Pass, and Southeast Asia
ADRIENNE MAYOR, author of The Amazons
























