When we think of Central Asia and Mongolia, most of us imagine nomadic horsemen, yurts, and the Silk Road. But David Christian’s A History of Russia, Central Asia, and Mongolia, Vol. 1 flips the script. Instead of viewing the steppe as a peripheral highway between civilizations, Christian centers as a distinct historical engine—one that developed its own logic of power, ecology, and social organization.
In the standard narratives of world history, the vast swath of land stretching from the Carpathian Mountains to the Pacific Ocean has often been treated as a periphery—a frozen wasteland of nomadic tribes waiting to be civilized by settled agriculturalists or to suddenly erupt under the hooves of the Mongol horde. But a seismic shift in historical understanding occurred with the publication of David Christian’s seminal work, A History of Russia, Central Asia, and Mongolia Vol. 1: Inner Eurasia from Prehistory to the Mongol Empire .