The Great Game: Britain, Russia, and the Secret War for Central Asia (eBook)

The Great Game: Britain, Russia, and the Secret War for Central Asia (eBook)

Oliver F. Pennington
Oliver F. Pennington
Prezzo:
€ 8,99
Compra EPUB
Prezzo:
€ 8,99
Compra EPUB

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EPUB
Cloud: Scopri di più
Compatibilità: Tutti i dispositivi
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Umar
Codice EAN: 9798235445543
Anno pubblicazione: 2026
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Descrizione

The Great Game: Britain, Russia, and the Secret War for Central Asia by Oliver F. Pennington Somewhere in the mountains of Central Asia, a man is counting his steps. He has been walking for four months. He carries no maps because maps would get him killed. Instead, he carries a rosary whose beads he clicks with each hundredth pace, a thermometer hidden in his walking staff, and a memory trained to hold compass bearings and mountain profiles until nightfall, when he can sketch them by candlelight inside his tent. He is an Indian schoolteacher working for the British Empire in the deepest secrecy, and the information in his head will shape the borders of nations. Nobody will ever know his name. This is the story that Oliver F. Pennington has finally told in full: the century-long secret war between Britain and Russia across Afghanistan, Persia, and the Himalayas, fought not in open battle but in intelligence, deception, personal courage, and the calculated cruelty of empires that treated entire countries as instruments of their competition. It is a story of staggering scale and intimate horror. Seventeen thousand soldiers and camp followers who marched out of Kabul in January 1842 and were dead within a week, swallowed by mountain passes and Afghan rifles and a cold that froze men where they stood. A British officer alone in a besieged city, with no authorization and no backup, talking an Afghan garrison into holding its walls against a Persian army for eleven months. Two young officers from rival empires meeting by accident on a frozen plateau at fifteen thousand feet, sharing food and conversation while each quietly mapped what the other was doing. And underneath all of it, the question that nobody in London or Saint Petersburg could bring themselves to answer honestly: what right did they have to be there at all? Pennington does not flinch from that question. He also does not reduce this history to simple moral accounting. The men who played the Great Game were not villains performing villainy. They were people of their time, shaped by institutions and assumptions they had not chosen, doing work they believed was necessary and sometimes genuinely was. The tragedy is not that they were monsters. The tragedy is that they were ordinary, and ordinary people with enough power can produce consequences that last for centuries. Those consequences are not historical. They are the news. The borders drawn by British and Russian negotiators in the 1890s are the borders that Afghanistan and Pakistan dispute today. The Persia divided into spheres of influence in 1907 without Persian consent became the Iran whose distrust of outside powers has defined its foreign policy ever since. The Central Asian republics that emerged from Soviet dissolution in 1991 carry the shape of decisions made by Russian administrators in the 1860s. The Great Game did not end. It evolved. This book is for readers who want history that reads like the best fiction without sacrificing a single fact. It is for anyone who has watched the news from Afghanistan or Iran or Central Asia and wondered how the world got this way. It is for the person who has never thought of the nineteenth century as relevant and is about to discover that it never stopped being so. The mountains are still there. The passes are still the passes. The game is still being played. Come and understand how it started.