The Caspian World
Connections and Contentions at a Modern Eurasian Crossroads

Contributor(s)
Amanat, Abbas (editor)
Gledhill, Kevin (editor)
Nejad, Kayhan A. (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
The Caspian World is a wide-ranging exploration of the strategic, political, and commercial significance of the Caspian Sea, a site where empires—Russian, Persian, Ottoman, and British—competed, warred, and collaborated. As with the Mediterranean, the Indian Ocean, or the Black Sea, the geography of the Caspian Sea creates a sphere of unique political dynamics and possibilities, and the essays in this volume describe the role of the Caspian as a force of connection, as well as a source of threats, to the states on its shores.
Rather than narrating history through binary, state-to-state relationships, however, The Caspian World uncovers the sea as a space of multi-sided exchanges and numerous centers, tracing how the Caspian has shaped the commercial, intellectual, diplomatic, and imperial projects throughout the region.
Contributors: Ulfat Abdurasulov, Abbas Amanat, Elena Andreeva, George Bournoutian, Iurii Demin, Layla S. Diba, Etienne Forestier-Peyrat, Kevin Gledhill, Guido Hausmann, Kayhan A. Nejad, Matthew P. Romaniello, Saghar Sadeghian, Alisa Shablovskaia, Ernest Tucker, Denis V. Volkov, Murat Yaşar, Rustin Zarkar
Keywords
geography, Qajar Iran, Russian Empire, Persianate, Volga, imperial projects, state-building projects, CaucasusISBN
9781501777172, 9781501781292, 9781501781278Publisher
Cornell University PressPublisher website
cornellpress.cornell.eduPublication date and place
2025Classification
European history
Middle Eastern history
Historical geography

