| Poland: An Illustrated History (Hippocrene Illustrated Histories) |  | Author: Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski Publisher: Hippocrene Books Category: Book
List Price: $19.95 Buy New: $12.74 You Save: $7.21 (36%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 507790
Media: Hardcover Edition: Revised Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 273 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7 x 5 x 1.1
ISBN: 0781812003 Dewey Decimal Number: 947 EAN: 9780781812009 ASIN: 0781812003
Publication Date: October 15, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Product Description Formed over a thousand years ago, the Polish state experienced a golden age in the period after 1385 when Poland and Lithuania voluntarily united, creating a huge commonwealth that extended from the Baltic to the Black Sea. After defeating Germany in 1410, Poland played a civilising role in Balto-Slavic Europe as Polish became known as the language of civility, elegance and diplomacy throughout the region, and Poland garnered a reputation as a country of legal innovations and for tolerance among its people. Poland was the first European state to adopt the concept of due process under law (nearly 300 years before England would do so), the principle of 'habeas corpus', and the idea of "no taxation" without representation long before the colonies were founded in North America.In addition, Poland provided a homeland for Jews facing extinction in medieval and early modern Europe; at one time, 80 per cent of all Jews world-wide lived in Poland. Twentieth century Poland boasts 19 Nobel Prize winners including the poet Czeskaw Milosz, writer Henryk Sienkiewicz and scientist Marie Curie, who patriotically named her discovery of a new radioactive element polonium. This revised edition includes over 50 photographs, illustrations, timelines and maps that chart Poland's shifting territorial boundary lines and depicts a country rich in historical, cultural, political, and social events. New colour photographs have also been added, and the historical narrative is complemented by fascinating asides on Polish art, literature, music, architecture and folklore.
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| Customer Reviews:
Weakest April 12, 2005 1 out of 4 found this review helpful
I was hoping for a good general history that might also be suitable for teens, etc. But it is both shallow and somewhat nationalistic, overall inferior to many others easily available. (see davies and zymoski)
A worthy effort but could have been great! September 3, 2001 22 out of 22 found this review helpful
The amount of scholarship and sheer number of facts included in this book are quite amazing. The effort put into assembling all this information must have been prodigious. Unfortunately the book does have several drawbacks. First it reads as if it was not edited before publication and in some areas looks like it was written on a home computer. Not only are there quite a few mispellings of easy words (almost certainly just typos that were never caught) but in my copy there are unexplained gaps in the sentences which then inexplicably begin again at the beginning of the next line. Also the illustrations although numerous are not of very high quality from a technical viewpoint. The closeup pictures of individual people are fine but some of the reproduced paintings are totally uninterpretable. In one of a supposed cavalry charge in my copy all you can make out are a few horses and a tower surrounded by smoke because of the poor reproduction (page 150). Also it should be noted that all of the pictures are black and white except for the beautiful picture of the winged horsemen on the front of the cover. The included maps also may have been quite useful in their original format but after being reduced to fit into this rather small page format leave much to be desired. Finally the book reads more like a chronicle or an outline for a history book in that many chapters are merely one sentence listings of various Polish accomplishments strung together page after page. In summary I would give 5 stars for effort and 3 stars for execution for a combined score of 4. People already familiar with Polish history and with Polish historical individuals may get more out of the book than people looking for an illustrated introductory history. A short explanation of the pronunciation of Polish names would have been very helpful to non-Polish readers like myself. Can anyone explain just what the author meant by Positivism which is used in many different locations but if it was explained in the book I must have missed it? Still glad I read this book and I did learn a lot from it but it had the potential to be really great with a few improvements.
A Profusely-Illustrated Atlas of Polish History February 7, 2001 This one-of-a-kind atlas covers every major episode of history--from prehistoric times to the present. Must reading!
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