Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Fall of the Ottomans
The Fall of the Ottomans: The Great War in the Middle East, 1914-1920 | Eugene Rogan
9 posts | 3 read | 8 to read
The final destruction of the Ottoman Empire - one of the great epics of the First World War, from bestselling historian Eugene Rogan For some four centuries the Ottoman Empire had been one of the most powerful states in Europe as well as ruler of the Middle East. By 1914 it had been drastically weakened and circled by numerous predators waiting to finish it off. Following the Ottoman decision to join the First World War on the side of the Central Powers the British, French and Russians hatched a plan to finish the Ottomans off: an ambitious and unprecedented invasion of Gallipoli... Eugene Rogan's remarkable new book recreates one of the most important but poorly understood fronts of the First World War. Despite fighting back with great skill and ferocity against the Allied onslaught and humiliating the British both at Gallipoli and in Mesopotamia (Iraq), the Ottomans were ultimately defeated, clearing the way for the making, for better or worse, of a new Middle East which has endured to the present.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
TheAromaofBooks
post image
Pickpick

I've been slowly plowing through this nonfiction for quite a while now. While interesting, it was a bit dry, and I can struggle with nonfiction in the best of circumstances haha While I didn't walk away with specific names and dates memorized, this did give me a good overview of Middle Eastern theater in WWI, a topic I knew pretty much nothing about going in. I was especially struck by the end of the book, seeing the foundations for many of the ⬇

TheAromaofBooks (cont'd) current-day problems in that area being laid. Unless you're actually interested in the topic, it isn't a book I'd particularly recommend, but I did find it interesting and informative, and it gave me a new layer of perspective for the Great War.

#BookSpinBingo
2y
60 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
Vansa
post image

#12Booksof2020 @Andrew65
This well researched book is a compelling account of a theatre of WWI I haven't read about,and from a different perspective-that of the Turkish army.His accounts of key battles leaves you on the edge of the seat,backed by beautiful maps to help you understand the geography.I learnt so much about the origins of the schisms dividing the Middle East.Hugely reinforces the "Lions led by donkeys" view of the leadership!

10 likes1 stack add
blurb
Vansa
post image

#WeekendReads @rachelsbrittain
1. The tagged book. Absolutely riveting.
2. Moonraker by Ian Fleming! Absolute cracker of a book
3. I guess Sweet Sorrow, by David Nicholls- set during summer holidays !
Have a good week!

quote
Vansa
post image

Absolutely fascinating. So this is how all the pieces fall into place.

quote
Vansa
post image

How fascinating. So TE Lawrence had an already disaffected populace with festering resentments to work with!

BarbaraBB Have you read this one, @Texreader 😃?! 3y
Texreader What a surprise given my ottoman year, I have not! 🤣🤣 3y
Vansa @Texreader any recommendations? I'm very interested in the Ottoman Empire! 3y
Texreader @Vansa The rise of the Ottoman Empire is a prominent plot point in The Historian. They also were mentioned in three more books I was reading almost at the same time. It was bizarre. 3y
9 likes1 stack add4 comments
quote
Vansa
post image

Lions led by donkeys alright. Amazing to know that Atatürk put his own life on the line and led from the front. At one of the foremost theatres of war, no less.

7 likes1 stack add
blurb
Vansa
post image

#WeekendReads @rachelsbrittain
1. Absolutely gripping ,tagged book.
2. Fierce attachments by Vivian Gornick! One of my favourite books this year.
3. I'm gifting my dad Agnes Poirier's book on the Left Bank, and my husband 2 notebooks- all of these ordered from Shakespeare & co. Paris! Can't wait for that!

blurb
kingdomofbookss
post image

I have long been interested in the Ottoman Empire. One of the most unique empires the world has ever seen! What's been going on in Syria, Palestine and Iraq has its roots in the Ottoman Empire and it's collapse during and after The Great War.

23 likes3 stack adds
review
FaisalJ
post image
Pickpick

In depth look at the Ottoman Empire involvement in WW1 leading to its eventual collapse. I would of liked more from the Ottomans point of view rather than the British. However a very interesting read especially around that theatre of war. 8/10

MrBook I've seen this book. Thanks for the great insight! 8y
3 likes1 stack add1 comment