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Tamerlane: Sword of Islam, Conqueror of the World (2004)

par Justin Marozzi

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342676,073 (3.44)9
Tamerlane the Great ranks alongside Alexander as one of the world's great conquerors yet the detail of his life is scarcely known in the West. He was not born to a distinguished family, nor did he find his apprenticeship easy - at one point his mobile army consisted only of himself, his wife, seven companions and four horses, but his dominion grew with astonishing rapidity. In the last two decades of the 14th century and at the beginning of the 15th he blazed through Asia. Cities were razed to the ground, inhabitants tortured without mercy, sometimes enemies were buried - more commonly they were decapitated. On the ruins of Baghdad, Tamerlane had his princes erect a pyramid of 90,000 heads.… (plus d'informations)
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I'm sure the narration, addressed to the wider world audience won't lose anything should the long portion dedicated to Marlowe's Tamburlaine play was absent. It's a different class altogether (History of Early Modern English Literature, perhaps?) to consider this piece in Tamerlane's biography, no doubt overburdened with details more pertinent to the book's title. Marlowe's book is not a primary source to be trusted (he never been anywhere close to Asia) let alone to spread over dozens of pages (which is achievable if you start profoundly quoting Middle English verses verbatim).

Flashbacks to author's personal visits to modern Uzbekistan and surrounding countries? Some references are interesting, whilst majority reads like travelogue. Isn't it another genre again? The whole idea of returning to modern Uzbekistan and chewing current attitudes of power and ordinary people, the historical treatment of the memory of Tamerlane, to me lies without the limits of pure biography. Or maybe I opened an altogether wrong book? I just wanted to learn about the ruler/warrior and his time, sorry.

  Den85 | Jan 3, 2024 |
Genocide justified. ( )
  jerry-book | Jan 26, 2016 |
I seldom long for a biography by the mid-century writer, Harold Lamb but in dealing with this slight effort by Justin Marozzi, I did. There is a good deal more on travelling in the current Central Asia than there is good stuff on the Fifteenth Century conqueror. That said, there might be fifty pages on Tamerlaine here, but not much more. Don't bother with this book. ( )
  DinadansFriend | Aug 21, 2015 |
A thoughtful history of Timur The Lame (Tamerlane), his legacy and the efforts of the young nation of Uzbekistan to claim him as a much needed symbol of national unity. Reading this its impossible not to be impressed by the sheer drive and relentlessness of Timur, although its less clear why his troops did not eventually grow sated with conquest as, for example, did Alexander's. The relative paucity of sources does Maruzzi no favours, but it is a topic that would have been worth investigating. If plunder was the troops main motivation, surely some time to enjoy the spoils of war would have been appreciated?
Marozzi also makes much of Timur's military brilliance but reading his accounts one is taken more by the tactical ineptness of some of his opponents, or perhaps their sheer folly in resisting him. The Christian kingdom of Georgia, for example, was ravaged 6 times by the marauding Tatars - it might have been wise to make at least a show of a conversion to Islam?
Having said that, Marozzi also makes it clear that Timur wore his Islam lightly, and that his jihads against other Muslim rulers or Christians were merely pretexts for conquest, rather than the reason for them. Although happy to be "The Scourge Of God" when the occasion demanded, he was also happy for his troops to carouse drunkenly after battle, and he never took the Haj for example.
Marozzi's thesis that Tamerlane was not only a great military leader, but a great statesman is harder to swallow. He may have commissioned some beautiful mosques and other architecture, but the general destruction and mass slaughter that accompanied most of his military victories cannot be explained, as Marozzi attempts, as an unfortunate strategic necessity.
Never the less this is a fascinating portrait of one of history's most remarkable figures, and is highly recommended. The contrast between the current desolation of most of Timur's territories, compared to their relative splendor just 7 centuries ago, is particularly stark. Europeans may be startled, as I was, to learn that Timur turned away from laying waste to Eastern Europe on the assumption there was no city worth sacking whereas some of the most impoverished parts of Asia were once highly prized possessions; a reminder, as is the short duration of Timur's empire, of the impermanence of most successful societies ( )
  Opinionated | Jan 28, 2012 |
An indulgent, scattered, and rambling history of Tamerlane, if I can call it that. In fact, the book is more rightly a mish-mash of history, travologue, apologia, and literary criticism all rolled into one. The effect is to confuse the historical narrative, which is quite complicated already. At times it almost feels like the history is of secondary concern to Marozzi, just an incidental pretext to launch in to rants about Marlowe's play about Tamerlane, or into flights of poetic fancy describing how the light reflected off certain bejeweled walls in Tamerlane's presence. Nor are these defects ameliorated by any great insights concerning the historical period or about the character of Tamerlane himself. Concerning the latter, Marozzi's objectivity scarcely ever rises above the level of hero worship. The atrocities and brutalities committed by Tamerlane are meticulously recorded, only to be completely forgotten as Marozzi passionately defends his hero against the impudence of other historians. ( )
  death.hilarious | Apr 9, 2009 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 6 (suivant | tout afficher)
‘We are very proud of Amir Temur,’ the Uzbek ambassador to the Court of St James’s told Justin Marozzi. ‘We do not call him Tamerlane.’ Nevertheless this is the title of Marozzi’s biography, and perhaps the publishers insisted it be marketed as Tamerlane, which is Temur-i-Lan or Temur the Lame, the name Amir Temur not being immediately recognisable. But clearly to style him Tamerlane is like calling Richard III ‘Crouchback’ or ‘Crookback’.

Temur has been neglected by western European historians. This is not surprising when you think that until quite recently Byzantium was terra incognita even to those graduating with degrees in history from good universities. So for us Temur has been Marlowe’s Tamburlaine mocking captive kings, ‘pampered jades of Asia’, for their inability to pull his carriage more than twenty miles a day. ‘It is,’ Marozzi writes, ‘one of history’s small ironies that a man who took such care to ensure his place in posterity by having his civil and military record meticulously chronicled should find his posthumous reputation in the hands of an Elizabethan playwright with a taste for the sensational.’ There is, however, much justice: Temur’s story is indeed sensational.

Born comparatively insignificant, this Tatar chief become a conqueror on a scale scarcely matched by Alexander the Great or Napoleon. He came to control all central Asia. He defeated the army of the Ottoman empire and took the sultan prisoner. He overcame the Persians, invaded India, advancing as far as Delhi, and, in old age, was preparing war against the Ming dynasty of China. Within the Muslim world, Marozzi, writes, he ‘is a household name, usually revered as a great conqueror and propagator of the faith’ — though, when convenient, he reverted to the shamanist practices of his Mongol ancestors and predecessors. ‘The question whether he was a good Muslim or whether he abided by Mongol customs misses the point. Temur was interested in either code insofar as it supported his designs of conquest.’ That was the purpose of his life: conquest and domination. He was as ruthless a conqueror as Genghis Khan, but unlike Genghis

Temur was a creator as much as a destroyer. The splendid mosques and madrassahs [of Samarkand], the parks and the palaces, each of them a wonder of the world, revealed an appreciation of artistic excellence and architectural beauty that was entirely foreign to Genghis.

Marozzi has no doubt that in achievement as in scale Temur’s empire surpassed anything to be found in the contemporary 14th- and early 15th-century Europe. The Spanish ambassador, Ruy Gonzalez Clavijo, was amazed by the splendour of Temur’s court as by the achievements of his army.

He was monstrously cruel, both carefully and carelessly cruel. The inhabitants of cities that resisted him were massacred. We are told, though the figures may be exaggerated, of piles of skulls, 70,000 or even 90,000 in number. The record of slaughter is appalling, and ultimately tedious.

So also, at this distance, are the battles and the campaigns, all the more so because the evidence for these accounts is unavoidably insufficient. Temur did, reputedly, leave memoirs, but these exist only in a Persian translation that appeared more than 200 years after his death. Marozzi concludes that ‘they are best regarded as specious’, adding, however, that ‘the state-controlled academia in Uzbekistan — which since the 1990s has been required to support the official Temur revival — considers both [there are two books] to be beyond reproach’. This is not, perhaps, persuasive.

Marozzi is fascinated by Temur and his extraordinary career. He quotes lavishly from the Spanish envoy, Clavijo, and also from two early biographers, the Persian court historian Sharaf ad-din Ali Yazdi, and the Syrian Ahmed ibn Arabshah, the former a panegyrist, the latter a severe critic. Arabshah had been a boy of eight or nine when Temur’s army sacked his native city of Damascus in 1401, four years before the Amir’s death. Both writers, however careful their research may have been, must be considered secondhand authorities, not necessarily to be trusted, even when their bias is discounted.

Marozzi, however, has not restricted himself to a mere biography, one which must inevitably have a good many of the ‘must haves’ and ‘may haves’, speculations with which biographers flesh out narratives when facts are lacking or are doubtful. He has combined the biography with vivid accounts of his own travels in central Asia, visiting the sites associated with Temur, and comparing their condition then and now, and also with Temur’s posthumous history, especially in the 20th century.

Temur was persona non grata in Soviet times, principally because it was feared that he might serve as a focus for nationalist resistance to the Communist party. So, according to a specialist on Temur whom Marozzi interviewed in Tashkent four years ago, when in 1968 the then president of the Uzbek Academy of Sciences published a book on Temur, it was suppressed, and ‘the Soviets mobilised other historians to destroy his career’. In Soviet times you saw only ‘Temur the barbarian, Temur the destroyer, Temur the tyrant’. One might have thought that Stalin would have entertained some fellow-feeling for Temur, as he did for Ivan the Terrible, but of course Stalin was a Georgian, and Temur, who invaded and laid waste Georgia in five wars, has always been regarded as a villain there.

Now things have changed. He has been rehabilitated in Uzbekistan, and has become the symbol of its recovered nationality. Wedding parties are photographed under his statue, and President Islam Karimov (himself once a Communist apparatchik) identifies with ‘the Uzbek hero’. The official organ of Karimov’s party declares that ‘the policies of our President, directed at giving due respect to the spirit of our ancestors, teach us all to be worthy of those qualities embodied by Amir Temur’. ‘Like Temur,’ Marozzi observes laconically, ‘the Uzbek resident does not tolerate opposition on any level.’ Temur is back.

The West too may have something to learn from Temur, or at least Messrs Bush and Blair may. ‘A leader of impressive intellect and infinite cunning, Temur placed a premium on good, timely intelligence, the lifeblood of his many campaigns. A vast network of spies fanned out from Samarkand across his lands and into the kingdoms and empires of those he sought to conquer.’ His spies ranged from noblemen and clerics to ‘elegant drunkards, witty singers, aged procuresses and crafty old women.’ One wonders if the CIA is so well served.

Marozzi, though never allowing us to forget Temur’s crimes, has also been captivated by the extraordinary man who called himself ‘Lord of the Fortunate Conjun- ction, Emperor of the Age, Conqueror of the World’; and this book is itself captivating, a delightful and fortunate conjunction between the world of Temur then and that world transformed today, between history and journalism. It is also a book which very agreeably dispels one’s ignorance about a remarkable man, a fascinating landscape, and an extraordinary period of history.
ajouté par thegeneral | modifierThe Spectator (Aug 21, 2004)
 

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Tamerlane the Great ranks alongside Alexander as one of the world's great conquerors yet the detail of his life is scarcely known in the West. He was not born to a distinguished family, nor did he find his apprenticeship easy - at one point his mobile army consisted only of himself, his wife, seven companions and four horses, but his dominion grew with astonishing rapidity. In the last two decades of the 14th century and at the beginning of the 15th he blazed through Asia. Cities were razed to the ground, inhabitants tortured without mercy, sometimes enemies were buried - more commonly they were decapitated. On the ruins of Baghdad, Tamerlane had his princes erect a pyramid of 90,000 heads.

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