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The Earth Transformed : An Untold History

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The Earth Transformed : An Untold History

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Climate change is real. There is no question that global warming will have a dramatic impact on a significant part of the world's population. Scientific models predicting famine, large-scale migration and the failure and collapse of cities are right to do so - because history is filled with cases where this is precisely what happened. In Climate Change and the Making of History, acclaimed historian Peter Frankopan draws on new scientific archives to reveal how environmental change has shaped our world: from the fall of the Ming dynasty in China, to the emergence of Viking society, to the collapse of Angkor. Ranging from the beginning of recorded history to the present today, he explores how religions and language can trace their evolution to climate change, and demonstrates that contemporary concerns about pollution, damage and altering climatic patterns are nothing new; rather, they follow in a long tradition of humankind's efforts to make sense of and live within the natural world. By turns revolutionary and revelatory, invigorating and incisive, Climate Change and the Making of History is a manifesto for human action, rooted in the lessons offered up by our past.

Peter Frankopan

Peter Frankopan (born 22 March 1971) is a British historian, writer, and hotelier.Frankopan's first book of history, The First Crusade: The Call from the East, was published in 2012. The book received a five-star review from Nicholas Shakespeare in The Telegraph. He called it a "persuasive and bracing work" and said "Peter Frankopan is not yet well known, but he deserves to be. In 2015, his book The Silk Roads: A New History of the World was published. Writing in the Telegraph, Bettany Hughes praised it as a "charismatic and essential book",[8] while Anthony Sattin, writing in The Guardian, called it "ambitious" and "full of insight but let down by factual errors". Frankopan's follow-up book, The New Silk Roads: The Present and Future of the World (Bloomsbury Publishing), was published in 2018.

Title

The Earth Transformed : An Untold History

Author

Peter Frankopan

Publisher

Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

Number of Pages

696

Category

  • History
  • First Published

    JAN 2023

    Climate change is real. There is no question that global warming will have a dramatic impact on a significant part of the world's population. Scientific models predicting famine, large-scale migration and the failure and collapse of cities are right to do so - because history is filled with cases where this is precisely what happened. In Climate Change and the Making of History, acclaimed historian Peter Frankopan draws on new scientific archives to reveal how environmental change has shaped our world: from the fall of the Ming dynasty in China, to the emergence of Viking society, to the collapse of Angkor. Ranging from the beginning of recorded history to the present today, he explores how religions and language can trace their evolution to climate change, and demonstrates that contemporary concerns about pollution, damage and altering climatic patterns are nothing new; rather, they follow in a long tradition of humankind's efforts to make sense of and live within the natural world. By turns revolutionary and revelatory, invigorating and incisive, Climate Change and the Making of History is a manifesto for human action, rooted in the lessons offered up by our past.
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