1001 Historic Sites You Must See Before You Die
|
| List Price: | $35.00 |
| Price: | $23.10 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
48 new or used available from $0.91
Average customer review:Product Description
Both casual travelers and dedicated history buffs will relish this visitor's guide to palaces, cathedrals, temples, battlefields, homes of great artists and statesmen--places and monuments that bear witness to thousands of years of human history. Packed with vivid color photos and detailed textual entries 1001 Historic Sites carries its readers off to places that include:
1001 Historic Sites makes a great book for browsing, an idea-packed source for vacation planning, a handy reference volume for students of history, and a sheer pleasure for the general reader.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #180368 in Books
- Published on: 2008-03-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 960 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780764160448
- Condition: USED - VERY GOOD
- Notes:
- Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
In this thick travel guide, Cavendish, a veteran travel writer and columnist for History Today magazine, assigns readers enough must-see agendas to fill several lifetimes. Well-organized by region and graced with thorough historical descriptions of each locale, this volume's impressive range incorporates everything from typical tourist destinations like Westminster Abbey, the Taj Mahal and the Great Wall of China, as well as unusual spots like the A-Bomb Dome in Hiroshima, Guinness Brewery in Dublin, and the Mercedes-Benz Factory in Stuttgart, Germany. What's missing is the information a tourist would need actually to visit these sites: directions, hours of operation, and other handy tips are overlooked. Probably too heavy handed for a casual tourist, this guide would be most useful for the experienced traveler or history buff.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review
From the Kirkus Reviews Feature interview with Richard Cavendish:
It begins in Dawson
City, a small town
in Canada that
birthed the Klondike
Gold Rush. It ends
with the imposing
stone heads that dominate
Easter Island’s
Rapa Nui National
Park. In between, armchair explorers will
find almost 1,000 pages of stunning photographs
and evocative thumbnail sketches of
the world’s greatest historical sites.
“It was
absolutely desperate,” says historian Richard
Cavendish of his daunting commission to
choose the attractions that would make the
cut.
“When I drew up the original contents list
and set off cheerfully on this job, I realized
that 1,001 places is a hell of a lot of places
when you’re trying to write them all down.
We tried to spread them all around the world
to the extent that we could and tried
to make them as varied as possible so they
weren’t all stately homes and churches.”
Many of the sites correspond to UNESCO’s
851 World Heritage Sites, and the book
earned a preface and high praise from Koïchiro
Matsuura, the organization’s director
general.
It’s a doorstop-sized volume, but
one Cavendish hopes will prove a valuable
resource to travelers around the globe.
“This
isn’t a book that anyone will sit down and
read from start to finish,” he says. “ I think it’s
a book that you dip into from time to time
when it’s nice to look at a few more entries.
The ideal outcome is that someone reads an
entry and thinks, ‘Gosh, that’s somewhere
that I would really like to see for myself. ’ ”
—Kirkus Reviews, May 1, 2008
“Here’s a vacation challenge: Visit as many historical sites as you can. If you can’t get there by train, plane or boat, let your fingers do the walking through the 960 pages of this colorful, insightful book.”
—Carol Parker, The Tampa Tribune, March 23, 2008
From the Inside Flap
(back cover)
This lively and informative guide explores the astonishing variety of places where human beings have left their mark—places that can still be visited and relished today. Each entry outlines the history of an outstanding site, with details on its construction and—where relevant—the architect or engineer who created it. Written and researched by an international team of historians and journalists, this comprehensive study spans the whole of human history, from the cradle of the human race to modern times.
(front flap)
1001 Historic Sites You Must See Before You Die is a comprehensive and sumptuous visual guide, and a one-stop compendium of the historically important must-see sites around the world. Join general editor Richard Cavendish and his international team of historians and journalists in an amazing virtual tour of the historically most significant sites you should see in your lifetime. From UNESCO heritage sites that preserve the wonders of the ancient world, such as the Great Wall of China and the pyramids of Egypt, to memorials that commemorate significant moments in the twentieth century, and from the Sterkfontein Caves near Johannesburg in South Africa—the “cradle of the human race�—to Checkpoint Charlie, the sites featured in this book invariably fascinate and astound their visitors.
Featuring more than 800 color photographs, 1001 Historic Sites You Must See Before You Die is both beautiful to look at and fascinating to read. You will find many of the great engineering works of the past and present —viaducts, bridges, ships—described within these pages, together with places of worship, such as the Wailing Wall, Jerusalem, and Orvieto Cathedral, Italy. Just as fascinating are key seats of power, from Versailles to the White House, and the world’s major battlefields, from Gettysburg to the Somme. Organized geographically, descriptions of world-famous structures stand beside those of forgotten fields that bear the imprint of historical events. The result is a collection that is enormous in scope and surprising in its variety.
Open this stunning and informative book and let it become your essential visual guide to the most inspiring sites around the world.
(back flap)
Richard Cavendish is a historian of ideas and an authority on Britain’s historic heritage. He writes a regular monthly column in History Today magazine. He is also the author of several books on history and the wonders of the world, as well as the editor of numerous travel guidebooks. He has lectured and broadcast in Britain, the U.S.A., Denmark, Canada, and Australia.
Customer Reviews
Major oversights hamper enjoyment
I love this series and normally give it a very wide berth and tend not to take it too seriously but rather regard it as a fun tool that provides a good starting off point. However, and with respect to the U.S. alone, the oversights are so glaring that I felt a need to add my two cents. When we're dealing with a country that in comparison with Europe and Asia that have two or three millennia's worth of history to draw back on, is so young that the TRULY historical places would seem obvious and somewhat limited, such exclusions are really inexcusable. Yes, most of the usual suspects are here, but check out those that were omitted. In no particular order:
Valley Forge
Independence Hall
Old North Church
St. Augustine Colonial Spanish Quarter & Castillo San Marco / Ft. Matanzas
Colonial Williamsburg
Ft. McHenry
French Quarter / Jackson Square & St. Louis Cathedral
Jefferson Memorial
The National Archives
Harvard University
House of the Seven Gables
Biltmore Estate
New York Stock Exchange
Salem Witch Museum
Ground Zero (Site of the World Trade Center)
Bunker Hill
Savannah Historic District
Falling Waters
Cathedral of St. John the Divine
Grant's Tomb
...to name a few. In their place, we get the following...
City Lights Bookstore
Disneyland
Universal Studios
Union Station - Los Angeles
Eastern State Penitentiary
Japanese Internment Camps
Kit Carson's Home
Virginia City
Golden Spike Historic Site
Grumman's Chinese Theatre
Forest Lawn Memorial Parks
Stonewall Inn
I'm not implying that the aforementioned, which were, in fact, included in the book, are not in their own right historic, because they are. But to leave out places such as Independence Hall, where both the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution were signed or Ft. McHenry, the place that inspired The Star Spangled Banner or Ground Zero, the site of the most monumental act of terrorism on U.S. soil or the historic center and fortifications of the oldest European settlement in what is the now the United States is just way too much to allow to go by without comment. Again, I take these publications with a grain of salt but when it's no longer a grain but rather a boulder, then heaving it over my shoulder isn't quite as easy.
Mind you, I'm focusing exclusively on the U.S. No doubt glaring omissions are not limited exclusively to said country.
Great Book
I am still enjoying this great book. Plenty of photographs to show the special places, along with good commentary and descriptions. Worthwhile guide book for world traveler.




