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The Sabres of Paradise: Conquest and Vengeance in the Caucasus

Product ID : 40781602


Galleon Product ID 40781602
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About The Sabres Of Paradise: Conquest And Vengeance In

The struggle of the people of the Caucasus to remain independent of Russia is disturbingly relevant to our world today.The definitive biography of Imam Shamyl which took six years to complete. Research was done in Russia and the Caucasus, including tracing his descendants in Turkey and Egypt. Also a historical narrative, there are beautiful descriptions of the Caucasus – a region of supreme natural beauty and mighty mountain ranges – and the campaigns in which Lermontov and Tolstoy participated.During the Caucasian Wars of Independence of 1834-1859, the warring mountain tribes of Daghestan and Chechnya united under the charismatic leadership of the Muslim chieftain known as the ‘Lion of Daghestan’. For years, Shamyl defied his enemy, the Tsar, who had taken his eldest son as a hostage to St Petersburg. Shamyl captured in turn two Georgian princesses (from the Tzarina’s entourage), a French governess, and the children, and kept them in his harem until they could be exchanged for his son. BRIAN ALDISS ― “A book as thick with flavour as roast wild boar, tusks and all. One of the most nutritious books I have ever read.”PHILIP MARSDEN ― “Like Tolstoy’s, her sense of history is ultimately convincing not because of any sweeping theses, but because of its particularities, the quirks of individuals and their personal narratives, their deluded ambitions, their vanities and passions.”HAMISH BOWLES in Jacqueline Kennedy: The White House Years ― “Jacqueline Kennedy and Khrushchev maintained a spirited badinage through dinner. Mrs Kennedy had recently read The Sabres of Paradise, Lesley Blanch’s dashing history of the Muslim tribes' resistance to Russian expansionism in the Caucasus, and attempted to engage the Soviet premier in conversation on the subject. He responded with the comparative numbers of teachers per capita in the Soviet and Czarist Ukraine. She cut him off with the playful riposte, “Oh, Mr Chairman, don’t