newb3e
BANNED
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2007
- Messages
- 12,545
- Reaction score
- -32
- Country
- Location
wow mate ill surely look for the books you mentioned thankyou sir!If you're into history books then try skipping through two Iranian history books, "Iran, Empire of the Mind" and "The Turban for the Crown". The first book is very detailed about Nader Shah's most trusted man, who happened to be Ahmad Shah Abdali and it briefly speaks of Abdali's family's journey between Kirman (in current day Iran) and Harat/Herav (as it was formerly known as)
The latter just briefly speaks of Nader Shah's conquest of Kandahar and Abdali's role in gaining control over his paternal hometown, and his birth place (which in the book is mentioned as Herat). Surprisingly Multan is nowhere mentioned in either of the books
The Sur were known as ethnic Afghans. Again "Iran, Empire of the Mind" refers them as that. At the time there was no Afghanistan, there was Khorasan and before that Ariana. Ghaznawid was a Persianised Turkic empire, Ghorid were Persian empire, Hotak and Abdali were Pashtun empires. They originated from present day Afghanistan but they were empires of particular ethnic group, not within any border or nationality
Iran, Empire of the Mind is a good read. Even Persian book Shahnameh gives a brief introduction into various Islamic empires throughout Central Asia, South Asia and Middle East.
Alternatively if you type name of any Islamic conquest you want to search about on google, you might find some good reads on books.google which many times provides links to some authentic books
yeh i am subscribed to caspian and ollie bye i am also subscribed to crawh course but i dint look into it in detail will do now...and as for two other channels you suggested i dint know about them so thankyou for your recommendation.Wikipedia is good provided the claims are backed up by proper citations (some are, some aren't). Work done by BBC (e.g their website and documentaries) are also reliable. Zaid Hamid also has some very good lectures on Islamic conquerors. Crash Course History and Caspian Report on YouTube also have some videos on the topic, again, generally reliable and interesting. Ollie Bye is another YouTube channel with maps that detail the expansion of many Muslim empires throughout their lifetime, I would also recommend the channel Kings and Generals, and Baz Battles, which go into detail about the actual battles that took place during the Islamic conquests.
Generally speaking, it's good to read up multiple sources on the same topic, take the material that overlaps (without being a complete copy-paste) and appears to fit in with the history as most probably factual.
Like I said, Abdalis birthplace is disputed. It's best to leave it at that.
Pashtuns were typically referred to as Afghans, as that was the historical name for them. Even KPK and FATA used to be called Afghania (that's what the A in Pakistan stands for).
but i was looking for a book or books i find books better than youtube or wikipedia.