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The Cradle of Mankind: (Life in Eastern Kurdistan)电子书

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作       者:Edgar T. A. Wigram

出  版  社:eKitap Projesi

出版时间:2015-04-08

字       数:72.7万

所属分类: 进口书 > 外文原版书 > 文学/自传/回忆录

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Oliver Cromwell, the future Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, was born at Huntingdon on April 25, 1599, receiving his baptismal name from his uncle, Sir Oliver Cromwell of Hinchingbrooke, a mansion hard by the little town. It was at Huntingdon that the father of the infant, Robert Cromwell, had established himself, farming lands and perhaps also adding to his income by the profits of a brewhouse managed by his wife, Elizabeth—a descendant of a middle-class Norfolk family of Steward—originally Styward—which, whatever writers of authority may say, was not in any way connected with the Royal House of Scotland. "I was," said Cromwell in one of his later speeches, "by birth a gentleman, living neither in any considerable height nor yet in obscurity. I have been called to several employments in the nation, and—not to be overtedious—I did endeavour to discharge the duty of an honest man in those services to God and His people's interest, and to the Commonwealth." The open secret of Cromwell's public life is set forth in these words:—his aim being: first, to be himself an honest man; secondly, to serve God and the people of God; and thirdly, to fulfil his duty to the Commonwealth. In this order, and in no other, did his obligations to his fellow-creatures present themselves to his eyes. For the work before him it could not be otherwise than helpful that his position in life brought him into contact with all classes of society. What powers and capacities this infant—or indeed any other infant—may have derived from this or the other ancestor, is a mystery too deep for human knowledge; but at least it may be noted that the descent of the Cromwells from Sir Richard Williams, the nephew of Thomas Cromwell, the despotic Minister of Henry VIII., brought into the family a Welsh strain which may have shown itself in the fervid idealism lighting up the stern practical sense of the warrior and statesman.Of Oliver's father little is known; but his portrait testifies that he was a man of sober Puritanism, not much given to any form of spiritual enthusiasm—very unlike his elder brother, Sir Oliver, who had inherited not only the estate, but the splendid ways of his father, Sir Henry Cromwell—the Golden Knight—and who, after running through his property, was compelled to sell his land and to retire into a more obscure position. As the little Oliver grew up, he had before his eyes the types of the future Cavalier and Roundhead in his own family. So far as parental influence could decide the question, there could be no doubt on which side the young Oliver would take his stand. His education was carried on in the free school of the town, under Dr. Beard, the author of The Theatre of God's Judgments Displayed, in which a belief in the constant intervention of Providence in the punishment of offenders was set forth by numerous examples of the calamities of the wicked. Though Oliver afterwards learned to modify the crudeness of this teaching, the doctrine that success or failure was an indication of Divine favour or disfavour never left him, and he was able, in the days of his greatness, to point unhesitatingly to the results of Naseby and Worcester as evidence that God Himself approved of the victorious cause.
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The Cradle of Mankind:

Preface to First Edition

Note to Second Edition

Chapter I

Beyond the Pale of the Railway (Aleppo And Urfa)

Chapter II

A Land of Dust And Ashes (Diarbekr And Mardin)

Chapter III

The Marches of Ancient Rome (Dara And Nisibin)

Chapter IV

The Burden of Newer Nineveh (Mosul)

Chapter V

The Temple of the Devil (Sheikh Adi)

Chapter VI

The Skirts of the Mountains (Rabban Hormizd, Bavian, And Akra)

Chapter VII

An Oriental Vich Ian Vohr (The Sheikh of Barzan)

Chapter VIII

Master of Misrule (Neri And Jilu)

Chapter IX

The Debatable Land (Gawar, Tergawar, Mergawar)

Chapter X

Twigs of a Withered Empire (Urmi)

Chapter XI

A Land of Trouble And Anguish (Urmi to Van)

Chapter XII

Slough of Discontent (Van And the Armenians)

Chapter XIII

The Land of Prester John (Qudshanis)

Chapter XIV

The Great Canons (The Nestorian “Ashirets” of Hakkiari)

Chapter XV

Intruders In A Pandemonium (Amadia And Bohtan)

Chapter XVI

The Graves of Dead Empires (Mosul to Baghdad)

Chapter XVII

Our Smallest Ally

Chapter XVIII

Dead Sea Fruit

Glossary

Map of Eastern Kurdistan With Inset of Mesopotamia

Footnotes

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