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The Sasanian Empire at War : Persia, Rome, and the Rise of Islam, 224-651
The Sasanian Empire at War : Persia, Rome, and the Rise of Islam, 224-651
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Author(s): Decker, Michael J.
ISBN No.: 9781594163692
Pages: 320
Year: 202209
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 48.30
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"In reading Michael J. Decker's T he Sasanian Empire at War: Persia, Rome, and the Rise of Islam, 224-651 , I was surprised to see so many place names that I had come to know from covering the recent American war in Iraq. Essentially the Sasanians rose by fighting the Roman Empire along the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers in Mesopotamia. The Persians besieged the Roman garrison in what is now Tikrit, best known nowadays as Saddam Hussein's hometown. In A.D. 363, the Roman emperor Julian the Apostate defeated a Persian force just outside today's Falluja, where the Americans fought two long, hard battles in 2004. He was mortally wounded in a subsequent battle near today's Samarra, a city between Mosul and Baghdad.


When I accompanied a U.S. Army patrol on the bank of the Diyala River northeast of Baghdad, I was unaware that the Eastern Roman emperor Heraclius had marched his own army there in 628. In the estimation of Decker, a historian at the University of South Florida, the Sasanians excelled at balancing strategic threats from the west (the declining Roman Empire) and the east (the rise of the Huns and then the Turks). Ultimately what brought them down was an unexpected new foe from the south -- Arabic warriors riding under the banner of Islam in the 630s and 640s. I put the book down wondering what unforeseen threat might bring down the United States."-- Thomas E. Ricks, New York Times Book Review "This important book provides a comprehensive analysis of an empire too often overlooked.


Based on meticulous scholarship of all extant sources, Decker provides much-needed insight into the Sasanian empire and its critically important role in Middle Eastern history before the spread of Islam. This will be the standard text for years to come."-- William Cummings, Chair of Humanities and Cultural Studies, University of South Florida "Michael Decker brings us an opportune insight into the military dynamics of the Sasanians. Their empire is central to the understanding of eastern late antiquity, but traditionally portrayed from a Mediterranean perspective as an unfamiliar, external menace. Reality on the ground was of course more complex, as elegantly revealed by Decker. Easy to read and still rigorous, this book is a wonderful contribution to both scholarship and the wider literary market."-- Adriaan De Man, United Arab Emirates University.


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