What is your favorite historic book that you own or have read?
What is your favorite historic book that you own or have read?
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The Prince by Machiavelli.
Admiral Horthy's memoirs. It's a window into a long-dead era, and an important source of information for a part of the war that's largely ignored in the west.
Plutarch Parralel Lives
Do you mean a historical book or a book about history?
Book from history or about history
The Prince! It's the only one I've read unless you count the art of war
That's a good one. Suetonius' twelve Caesars for me.
Don Quixote. Literally the best story ever.
Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, and
The Ciano Diaries.
The Betrothed
Comunidades campesinas. Cambios y permanencias, by Flores Galindo. In particular the article wrote by Trelles.
Colonial history.
>try to find Gibbon in uni's library
>it's only available on request and can't be loaned
fugg
Gods and Generals
Historical fiction about the Civil War
Luttwak's Coup d'Etat. Short, simple, solid.
>Admiral Horthy's memoirs
Got a link to an english translation?
Tfw found Gibbons decline and fall of the Roman Empire and Twelve Caesars for $4 total at a secondhand book store
The Bible.
If you're talking about Holy Bible...how do you get part the genealogy? Is it important?
Europe and the People Without History by Eric R. Wolf. Best overall history of Western capitalism/trade/imperialism I've read
Yes, actually.
>hungarianhistory.com
I have a hardback copy of the original 1957 English printing, but if you want your own bound copy they're like $25 on Amazon.
The stuff he wrote about his experiences in the 19th Century Austro-Hungarian navy are incredible. I don't know of any other primary sources in English about that stuff.
GG&S, it's like my bible.
Romance of the Three Kingdoms
#TeamShu
epic bait
>reading work by a materialist utilitarian modern
>Reading a book about Roman history by a Whig faggot who was high on 'Muh
Enlightenment'
Better fucking be the KJV
KJV...thou art a cunt.
same here, bought it cheap a few days ago
it's the annotated butthurt priest version as well
I always loved Herodotus. The way he jumps around between things in digressions really appeals to me for some reason.
There's no point reading the Decline and Fall without the 'footnotes'. It has since been surpassed as an actual history. It even uses sources that have been completely debunked as false like "Ossian".
Noice.
livy early history of rome
The Black Book of Communism.
>KJV
ISHYGDDT
Inside the Third Reich so far
Historica books i've only read that, and some books concerning the Seven Years War and the Thirty Years' War
Our Oriental Heritage
Of Spies and Stratagems was pretty interesting
I just bought a copy of the knife man: blood, body snatching, and the birth of modern surgery, hasn't been delivered yet but I'm so excited.
Rape of Nanking affected me deeply. Dad that the author committed suicide soon after publishing it because of the harassment she received.
Hobsbawm's "Age of Extremes: The Short Twentieth Century".
It had a level of insight and detail about the early Soviet Union that has been unmatched anywhere else. He uses statistics of various economic metrics to show why the Soviet economy for a time during the depression was seen as a possible alternative and why its economy boomed so much early. He also went into detail on how it floundered and collapsed later. A very revealing and eye opening read just for that subject.
war and peace
Madness and Civilisation
The History of the Peloponnesian War by Thucydides.
Herodotus' Histories.
>that part when the Persians invade the Scythian lands
>the Persian emperor's counsellors advise him not to invade the Scythian lands, since Scythians are nomadic horsemen and there wasn't a single city worth conquering north of present day Kazakhstan-Ukraine
>the Persian emperor gives a fuck and marches with a million men (Herodotus) north of the Caspian sea/Black sea region
>during the duration of the war, the bulk of the Scythian tribes just limit to resettle everyday, camping a marching day distance from the Persian army
>finally, the Scythians amass for a great battle against the Persians
>when the Scythians are about to charge against the Persian ranks with their horseme army, a hare appears out of nowhere, in the middle of the battlefield
>the Scythian tribesmen prefer to chase the hare instead of clashing the Persians in the decissive battle
>then, the Persian emperor is humiliated and says, "Fuck this shit, we are returning to Persia".
Beautiful.
Bookmarked
US Grant's memoir. I really didn't expect to find the book so affecting.