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Friday’s Five: Leader Biographies (courtesy of Mohamed my husband)

I asked my husband to pick five biographies for leaders he thought helped shape and change history and he gave me a list.  Of course he didn’t stop at five.  My husband is a very interesting young man and also very intelligent,  he is also somewhat of a  history.

Napolean Bonaparte

What I already know

He was short.

He was exiled in Saint Helena.

He was married to Josephine, divorced her and remarried a great niece of Marie Antoinette

Book Recommendation

Napolean’s Road to Glory

Hitler

What I already know

He kicked the jews out of Germany

He was a racist

He was an incredible orator and could move the crowds

His mustache was ugly.

Book Recommendation

Mein Kempf

Hitler: A Biography

Fidel Castro

What I already know

He ruled Cuba for ages.

His buddy/comrade Che Guevara (Argentenian Doctor) helped him.

He handed the presidency over to his brother because of ill health.

Book Recommendation

Fidel Castro: My Life: A Spoken Autobiography

Anwar El Sadat

What I already know

He was a dictator

He smoked a pipe

He was married twice, his second wife was Gihan el Sadat.

He was kicked out of the army

He was part of the Free Officers movement but did not take part in the revolt itself, went to the movies instead.

He is very controversial.

Book Recommendation

In Search of Identity

Franklin Roosevelt

What I already know

He was in a wheelchair.

He gave the OK for the atomic bomb.

He was a president for four terms.

Book Recommendation

Autobiography of Theodore Roosevelt

Regardless of what I think of these men or whether I agree with their effect on history they were all notable men.  History must be read and understood for the future to be planned smartly.

Stay tuned next week for my own list of great people.

P.S.  It is sad that the list does not include any women.

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A history of Egypt

A History Of Egypt“A generation which ignores history has no past and no future.”  Robert Anson Heinlein

I have always enjoyed reading history books.  I probably read them more like a novel than a serious work of non fiction, first because I find it more entertaining that way, second because I don’t beleive everything I read.  Napoleon Bonaparte is said to have said “History is the version of past events that people have decided to agree upon”.  That said I am currently reading a book called “A History of Egypt: From the Arab Conquest to the Present“.  I had recently come across a post which listed Egypt’s rulers from the beggining of time till the present.   The interesting point was that never have the Egyptian people chosen their own ruler, and that for most of history the rulers were foreigners (apparently nothing has changed much in Egypt).

An excerpt from the book;:

At first the Egyptians tended to look down on the less refined Arabs. Amr, a man of wit and discernment, allegedly decided to teach the Egyptians a lesson. He gave a three-day banquet, to which all were invited. On the first day he served camels as the main course, much to the disgust of the Egyptians who were accustomed to more delicate fare, but the Arabs fell to with hearty appetites. The next day he served the delicacies of Egypt, and his men wiped the boards clean with an equally voracious appetite. On the third day he had his soldiers parade in battle formation while he addressed the crowd: ‘The first day’s entertainment was to show you the plain food of the desert Arabs; the second was to show you that we can also appreciate the finer things in the conquered lands; the third day is to show you that we still retain our martial valour.’ The lesson was not lost on the Egyptians. Caliph Umar approved Amr’s finesse and commented that the art of warfare depended on wisdom as well as on the use of force.

The book is divided into seven parts:

  • The Arab conquest of Egypt to the end of the Ayyubi dynasty, 639–1250
  • The age of the mamluks, 1250–1516
  • The Ottoman age, 1516–1805
  • The beginning of the state system, 1805–1922
  • The liberal experiment, 1922–52
  • The Nasser years, 1952–70
  • From Sadat to Mubarak, 1970 to the present day

It is interesting, appears to be unbiased and is written simply yet is proof that history books can be just as entertaining as best selling novels.

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