“Every corner of the world has the potential to be the site of history”
This book has a unique premise, exploring the history of the world through specific places around the world.
These places vary in size and shape, from an entire valley which mankind emerged to a cave where one of mankind’s greatest religions did. Some of these places served a singular purpose, but some have had curious histories in which they have been used for a purpose, forgotten, then remembered and repurposed. Some places, like the Temple Mount in the Holy Lands are important to different tribes of people for different reasons.
One of the features I most appreciated in this book was it’s commitment to consciously avoid being too Eurocentric in it’s goal of telling world history in a unique way. Because of this I found myself very interested in chapters including that about early Korean and Chinese histories, both of which are due more exposure to willing Western readers. The first chapter telling the story about families of archaeologists who shared a passion looking for skeletons of man’s ancestors in a Tanzanian valley, helped to remind the reader how it is the unique characters of history that bring places alive.
I appreciate this book for approaching history telling in a way that is unique and accessible. In fairness, many of the 50 historical places it mentions could have several books each written about them, not including events including them. I found it continually fascinating how some places mentioned were the centre of attention for many years, only to be forgotten not too long after, but then restored by some conscientious citizen conservationists. The way we people can perceive places can change dramatically over time. Take Kilmainham Gaol in Dublin for instance. It was once infamously the sight of the execution of the leaders of the 1916 Easter Rising. It was later used by the pro-treaty forces on the Irish Civil War. A few decades after this the place was simply abandoned, only to be reopened after a public campaign to restore it as a historical site.
I only have to walk down the street to realise the ultimate point of writing a book such as this is. I live in Bristol in a part of town called Old Market, so called after being the Old Market for Bristol Castle, long since taken apart by Oliver Cromwell. The site of Bristol Castle is now a park, made after the rubble was cleared away from the Bristol Blitz that happened during the Second World War. Some survivors of the Bristol Blitz to this day cannot bring themselves to come to the city centre due to the scenes of horror they saw. As I look over the park from my local gym I see a beautiful park, while they see something else. History marches on.