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Books with author John Harwood

  • The Ghost Writer

    John Harwood

    Paperback (Harcourt, March 15, 2004)
    The Ghost Writer
  • Ghost Writer

    John Harwood

    Paperback (Vintage Books USA, April 7, 2005)
    Book by Harwood, John
  • The War for Power and Knowledge

    John Haywood

    Paperback (Anness, June 26, 2003)
    This wonderful visual, thematic history book focuses on how humankind explored the boundaries of knowledge and power. Step-by-step projects for recipes, costumes, and model-making are inspired by the skills of the past, while pictorial timelines plot key people and events.
    T
  • World Atlas of the Past: The Age of Discovery Volume 3: 1492 TO 1815

    John Haywood

    Hardcover (Oxford University Press, July 27, 2000)
    This volume in the World Atlas of the Past series combines 34 newly rendered full-color maps with exquisite art and photographs and engrossing narrative to trace the history of civilization in the Age of Discovery, from 1492 to 1815. This state-of-the-art book boasts extensive coverage of the countries and civilizations of Africa, the Americas, Asia, and Europe, which makes it a perfect fit with the global studies and world history curriculum. Each section features a full-page regional map showing such historical events as global migration, wars, and the shift of imperial boundaries, and a highlight map that illustrates a particular aspect of politics or culture. These clear and easy-to-understand maps show how cities have developed, flourished, and declined, how geographical centers have changed, and how countries and continents have interacted over time. The accompanying text captures the key historical facts of the period, while sidebars focus on art and artifacts to bring each period to life. A chronology within each section provides ready reference. The volume includes a glossary of terms, suggestions for further reading, and an index.
  • The Viking Saga

    John Haywood

    Hardcover (Head of Zeus, Feb. 1, 2016)
    A magisterial history of the Vikings that fully reflects the extraordinary geographical range of their activities, from Newfoundland in the west to Baghdad in the east The violent and predatory society of Dark Age Scandinavia left a unique impact on the history of medieval Europe. From their chill northern fastness, Norse warriors, explorers, and merchants raided, traded, and settled across wide areas of Europe, Asia, and the North Atlantic from the late 8th to the mid-11th century. This history narrates their story region by region, focusing on places where key events were played out, from the sack of Lindisfarne in 793 to the murder in Iceland in 1241 of the saga-writer Snorri Sturluson. Such episodes are fascinating in themselves, but also shed crucial light on the nature of Viking activity—its causes, effects, and the reasons for its decline. In 800 the Scandinavians were barbarians in longboats bent on plunder and rapine; by 1200, their homelands were an integral part of Latin Christendom. John Haywood tells, in authoritative but compellingly readable fashion, the extraordinary story of the Viking Age.
  • World Atlas of the Past: 4-volume set

    John Haywood

    Hardcover (Oxford University Press, Sept. 2, 1999)
    The World Atlas of the Past combines over 100 newly rendered full-color maps with exquisite art and photographs and engrossing narrative to trace the history of humankind from its tentative beginnings to the present. This state-of-the-art set boasts extensive coverage of the major civilizations of Africa, the Americas, Asia, and Europe, which makes it a perfect fit with the global studies and world history curriculum. Each section features a full-page regional map showing such historical events as global migration, wars, and the shift of imperial boundaries, and a highlight map that illustrates a particular aspect of politics or culture. These clear and easy-to-understand maps show how cities have developed, flourished, and declined, how geographical centers have changed, and how civilizations have interacted over time. The accompanying text captures the key historical facts of the period, while sidebars focus on art and artifacts to bring each civilization to life. A chronology within each section provides ready reference. Each volume includes a glossary of terms, suggestions for further reading, and an index. The 4 volumes are: Volume 1. THE ANCIENT WORLD: Earliest Times to 1 BC Volume 2. THE MEDIEVAL WORLD: AD 1 to 1492 Volume 3. THE AGE OF DISCOVERY: 1492-1815 Volume 4. MODERN TIMES: 1815 to the Present
  • World Atlas of the Past: The Medieval World Volume 2: AD 1 To 1492

    John Haywood

    Hardcover (Oxford University Press, July 27, 2000)
    This volume in the World Atlas of the Past series combines 34 newly rendered full-color maps with exquisite art and photographs and engrossing narrative to trace the history of civilization in the Classical and Medieval Ages, from AD 1 to 1492. This state-of-the-art book boasts extensive coverage of the civilizations of Africa, the Americas, Asia, and Europe, which makes it a perfect fit with the global studies and world history curriculum. Each section features a full-page regional map showing such historical events as global migration, wars, and the shift of imperial boundaries, and a highlight map that illustrates a particular aspect of politics or culture. These clear and easy-to-understand maps show how cities have developed, flourished, and declined, how geographical centers have changed, and how civilizations have interacted over time. The accompanying text captures the key historical facts of the period, while sidebars focus on art and artifacts to bring each period to life. A chronology within each section provides ready reference. The volume includes a glossary of terms, suggestions for further reading, and an index.
  • World Atlas of the Past: Modern Times Volume 4: 1815 to the Present

    John Haywood

    Hardcover (Oxford University Press, July 27, 2000)
    This volume in the World Atlas of the Past series combines 34 newly rendered full-color maps with exquisite art and photographs and engrossing narrative to trace the history of civilization in the Modern Age, from 1815 to the present. This state-of-the-art book boasts extensive coverage of the countries of Africa, the Americas, Asia, and Europe, which makes it a perfect fit with the global studies and world history curriculum. Each section features a full-page regional map showing such historical events as global migration, wars, and the shift of imperial boundaries, and a highlight map that illustrates a particular aspect of politics or culture. These clear and easy-to-understand maps show how cities have developed, flourished, and declined, how geographical centers have changed, and how countries and continents have interacted over time. The accompanying text captures the key historical facts of the period, while sidebars focus on art and artifacts to bring each period to life. A chronology within each section provides ready reference. The volume includes a glossary of terms, suggestions for further reading, and an index.
  • Living History: What Life was Like in Ancient Times

    John Haywood

    Hardcover (Anness, Feb. 8, 2006)
    This magnificent illustrated encyclopedia explores every aspect of human history from the growth of farming , work and trade through science, crafts and technology to the importance of art, culture and entertainment.
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  • Medieval Europe

    John Haywood

    Library Binding (Raintree, Sept. 13, 2007)
    Haywood, John
  • Victoria

    Joshua Harwood

    Paperback (Highlands Press, )
    None
  • World Atlas of the Past: The Ancient World Volume 1: Earliest Times to 1 BC

    John Haywood

    Hardcover (Oxford University Press, July 27, 2000)
    This volume in the World Atlas of the Past series combines 34 newly rendered full-color maps with exquisite art and photographs and engrossing narrative to trace the history of civilization from in the Ancient World, from prehistory to 1 BC. This state-of-the-art book boasts extensive coverage of the civilizations of Africa, the Americas, Asia, and Europe, which makes it a perfect fit with the global studies and world history curriculum. Each section features a full-page regional map showing such historical events as global migration, wars, and the shift of imperial boundaries, and a highlight map that illustrates a particular aspect of politics or culture. These clear and easy-to-understand maps show how cities have developed, flourished, and declined, how geographical centers have changed, and how civilizations have interacted over time. The accompanying text captures the key historical facts of the period, while sidebars focus on art and artifacts to bring each civilization to life. A chronology within each section provides ready reference. The volume includes a glossary of terms, suggestions for further reading, and an index.