A History Of Russia Central Asia And | Mongolia Vol 1 Inner Eurasia From Prehistory To The Mongol Empire
Traces the evolution of the societies that would eventually become modern Russia and Ukraine.
Christian details the emergence of powerful confederations like the Xiongnu , who created the first empire to unify Inner Asia and even forced the Chinese Han Empire into tribute payments.
If you pick up Christian's book, be prepared for dense but rewarding prose. It is not a light narrative of battles and khans. It is a work of deep structural history. However, the effort pays off. Once you finish, you will never see a map of Eurasia the same way again. The empty spaces on the map—the steppes, the deserts, the frozen north—will suddenly seem full of people, horses, and a powerful, alternative history of power and survival.
He also explores the rise of powerful "pre-imperial" confederations, such as the (Liao dynasty) and the Jurchens (Jin dynasty), who ruled parts of northern China from the steppe. Crucially, these peoples were "sinicized"—they adopted Chinese bureaucratic methods. Christian argues that by 1200 CE, Mongolia was a fragmented, violent, and ecologically stressed zone. Into this volatile mix was born a child named Temüjin.