Beyond the Imperial Frontier

Beyond the Imperial Frontier
Title Beyond the Imperial Frontier PDF eBook
Author Vincent O'Malley
Publisher Bridget Williams Books
Pages 579
Release 2014-09-15
Genre History
ISBN 1927277531

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Beyond the Imperial Frontier is an exploration of the different ways Māori and Pākehā ‘fronted’ one another – the zones of contact and encounter – across the nineteenth century. Beginning with a pre-1840 era marked by significant cooperation, Vincent O’Malley details the emergence of a more competitive and conflicted post-Treaty world. As a collected work, these essays also chart the development of a leading New Zealand historian.

Rome beyond the imperial frontier

Rome beyond the imperial frontier
Title Rome beyond the imperial frontier PDF eBook
Author Mortimer Wheeler
Publisher
Pages 224
Release 1955
Genre
ISBN

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Rome Beyond the Imperial Frontiers

Rome Beyond the Imperial Frontiers
Title Rome Beyond the Imperial Frontiers PDF eBook
Author Mortimer Wheeler
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 1971
Genre Rome
ISBN

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Beyond the Frontier

Beyond the Frontier
Title Beyond the Frontier PDF eBook
Author Edward Palmer Thompson
Publisher Stanford University Press
Pages 124
Release 1997
Genre History
ISBN 9780804728973

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E. P. Thompson, one of the preeminent British historians of the second half of the twentieth century, considers the circumstances surrounding the death of his older brother Frank as a British Liaison Officer with the Bulgarian partisans in 1944.

Beyond the Steppe Frontier

Beyond the Steppe Frontier
Title Beyond the Steppe Frontier PDF eBook
Author Sören Urbansky
Publisher Princeton University Press
Pages 386
Release 2020-01-28
Genre History
ISBN 0691195447

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A comprehensive history of the Sino-Russian border, one of the longest and most important land borders in the world The Sino-Russian border, once the world’s longest land border, has received scant attention in histories about the margins of empires. Beyond the Steppe Frontier rectifies this by exploring the demarcation’s remarkable transformation—from a vaguely marked frontier in the seventeenth century to its twentieth-century incarnation as a tightly patrolled barrier girded by watchtowers, barbed wire, and border guards. Through the perspectives of locals, including railroad employees, herdsmen, and smugglers from both sides, Sören Urbansky explores the daily life of communities and their entanglements with transnational and global flows of people, commodities, and ideas. Urbansky challenges top-down interpretations by stressing the significance of the local population in supporting, and undermining, border making. Because Russian, Chinese, and native worlds are intricately interwoven, national separations largely remained invisible at the border between the two largest Eurasian empires. This overlapping and mingling came to an end only when the border gained geopolitical significance during the twentieth century. Relying on a wealth of sources culled from little-known archives from across Eurasia, Urbansky demonstrates how states succeeded in suppressing traditional borderland cultures by cutting kin, cultural, economic, and religious connections across the state perimeter, through laws, physical force, deportation, reeducation, forced assimilation, and propaganda. Beyond the Steppe Frontier sheds critical new light on a pivotal geographical periphery and expands our understanding of how borders are determined.

Rome and the Worlds beyond its Frontiers

Rome and the Worlds beyond its Frontiers
Title Rome and the Worlds beyond its Frontiers PDF eBook
Author Daniëlle Slootjes
Publisher BRILL
Pages 274
Release 2016-10-05
Genre Social Science
ISBN 9004326758

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Rome and the Worlds Beyond Its Frontiers examines interactions between those within and those beyond the boundaries of Rome, with an eye to the question of contested identities and identity formations.

Imperial Frontier

Imperial Frontier
Title Imperial Frontier PDF eBook
Author Dr Hugh Beattie
Publisher Routledge
Pages 431
Release 2013-12-16
Genre Social Science
ISBN 113683964X

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Describes British relations with the Pashtun tribes of Waziristan in the years after the annexation of the Punjab in 1849, offering the most detailed historical account that has so far been written of relations between the British Government of India and the tribes along this (or any) part of the north-west Frontier in this period.