👨‍💼 CUSTOMER CARE NO +918468865271

⭐ TOP RATED SELLER ON AMAZON, FLIPKART, EBAY & WALMART

🏆 TRUSTED FOR 10+ YEARS

  • From India to the World — Discover Our Global Stores

🚚 Extra 10% + Free Shipping? Yes, Please!

Shop above ₹5000 and save 10% instantly—on us!

THANKYOU10

The Last Apocalypse: Europe at the Year 1000 A.D.

Sale price Rs.1,080.00 Regular price Rs.1,350.00
Tax included


Genuine Products Guarantee

We guarantee 100% genuine products, and if proven otherwise, we will compensate you with 10 times the product's cost.

Delivery and Shipping

Products are generally ready for dispatch within 1 day and typically reach you in 3 to 5 days.

Get 100% refund on non-delivery or defects

On Prepaid Orders

Author: Reston Jr., James

Brand: ANCHOR BOOKS

Color: Multicolor

Binding: paperback

Format: Deckle Edge

Number Of Pages: 336

Release Date: 16-02-1999

Part Number: Refer to Sapnet.

Details: Product Description


Accomplished historical author James Reston, Jr., presents the enthralling saga of how the Christian kingdoms converted, conquered, and slaughtered their way to dominance in Europe as the year 1000 approached.
 
Through Reston's brilliant narrative and engaging portraits of the unforgettable historical characters who embodied the struggle for the soul of Europe, students are introduced to a pivotal period in history during which an old order was crumbling, and terrifying, confusing new ideas were gaining hold in the populace. From the righteous fury of the Viking queen Sigrid the Strong-Minded, who burned unwanted suitors alive; to the brilliant but too-cunning Moor, al-Mansur the Illustrious Victor; to the aptly named English king Ethelred the Unready; to the abiding genius of the age, Pope Sylvester II—warrior kings and concubine empresses, maniacal warriors and religious zealots bring this stirring period to life.


About the Author


James Reston, Jr., is the author of thirteen books, including
Warriors of God,
The Last Apocalypse, and
Galileo: A Life. He has written articles for
The New Yorker,
Esquire,
Vanity Fair,
Time,
Rolling Stone, and many other publications; three plays; and the scripts for three
Frontline documentaries. He lives with his family in the suburbs of Washington, DC.


Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.


As Olaf Trygvesson sailed across the North Sea toward home, he must have felt the nobility and the grandeur of his holy mission.  He was a hybrid of Odysseus and Michael, avenger, exile, and zealot all in one.  He was coming, in justice and in glory, as the royal scion of Harald Fairhair's race, as the king of whom great deeds were predicted in the name of Norway and in the name of Christ.  He was returning to avenge the death of his father, the exile of his mother, the slavery of his youth.  His passion was to convert his heathen homeland, and he was prepared for holy war.  By his athletic stature, by his superior skill in the martial art, by his campaigns across the Baltic and through England, and by his zealot's faith, he was the Viking warrior
non pareil: bold, cruel, and skilled.

As he approached Norway's shore, Olaf possessed no fine sense of what Christianity meant, especially its gentler side.  But he must have had some sense of the calendar.  The world was approaching the thousandth year after Christ's birth, and with it, Christ the King would come a second time.  There would be a final climactic battle between the forces of good and evil.  It was not hard for Olaf to view Earl Hacon as the Antichrist.  The earl was the murderer of his father, the rapist of Norway's daughters, and the high priest of heathenism.  Nor was it hard to imagine Hacon's soldiers as the forces of Gog and Magog.

If there was any imagery in the Christian bible to which a Viking warrior, raised in the heathen tradition, could relate, it was the magical language of Revelation.  For beasts and monsters, giants and trolls were the most familiar of notions.

"And as I stood upon the sand of the sea and saw a beast rise up out of the sea, having seven heads and ten horns, and upon his horns ten crowns, and upon his heads the name of blasphemy," reads Revelation 13 about the first beast.  "And the beast which I saw was like unto a leopard, and his feet were as the feet of a bear, and his mouth as the mouth of a lion; and the dragon gave him his power, and his meat, and his great authority."

How different was that from the apocalypse of the heathens?  For in the villages and temples of Olaf's upbringing, in Norway and in Russia, there had been talk of Ragnarok, that terrible end-time when the world sinks into moral chaos, into anxiety and greed, into an intoxication with gold, when brothers kill brothers and incest is rampant.  In this wolf's age, Odinn becomes an agent of violent death and is himself killed violently, when war breaks out between the Vanir and the Aesir, and the

EAN: 9780385483360

Package Dimensions: 7.9 x 5.2 x 1.0 inches

Languages: English