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Five Cities that Ruled the World: How Jerusalem, Athens, Rome, London, and New York Shaped Global History by Douglas Wilson

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: November 2009
  • 236pp
  • Sales Rank: 62,382

Reader Rating: (10 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: November 2009
    • Publisher: Thomas Nelson
    • Format: Paperback, 236pp
    • Sales Rank: 62,382

    Synopsis

    The gripping and illuminative story of how five cities-Jerusalem, Athens, Rome, London, and New York-shaped the course of global history.

    History unfolds in a wide tapestry, but some patterns and threads stand out from the others for their brilliance and importance in the bigger picture. Five Cities that Ruled the World examines how and why a handful of cities-Jerusalem, Athens, Rome, London, and New York-emerged in their respective times of influence to dominate the world stage, directing wealth and power, influencing faith and belief, commanding fear and allegiance, provoking wars and conquests, and shaping the world we live in today. Profiling their leaders, exploring their philosophies, following their armies into war, riding their merchant ships to ports of commerce, and watching as one eclipses the others, Douglas Wilson broadens our understanding and appreciation of these cities with piercing insights, curious details, and entertaining stories.

    Customer Reviews

    A better title: Freedom is Good--Five Exemplarsby sara97

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    February 06, 2010: How could a man this smart, how could as good a writer as Douglas Wilson write a book this bad? Five Cities that Ruled the World is a popular history giving an overview of Jeruselum, Athens, Rome, London, and New York. In the introduction Wilson informs the reader that he will be showing how "Jeruselum has bequeathed to us a legacy of spirit; Athens, reason and the mind; Rome, law; London, literature; and New York, industry and commerce." He also intends to explore the Platonic ideal of city with Revelation's Babylon and the heavenly City of God marking opposite ends of the spectrum.

    He then takes each of the cities in turn and . . . does what? Okay, so he writes about Jeruselum and spirit--but the concept of "spirit" is vague enough that one could write about just about anything and tie that in. The section on Athens is supposed to be about its legacy of reason and intellectual influence, but he's halfway through the chapter and spent a number of pages retelling the stories of the War with Troy and the Battle of Salamis before he even touches on their intellectual history. The chapters on Rome, London, and New York are even less tied to the "legacies" promised in the introduction. In each chapter Wilson meanders back and forth across history, from pre-history to modern times, cherry-picking battles, quotes, myths and incidents in pursuit of some agenda sensed but never quite articulated. It makes for increasingly bizarre reading because Wilson's prose is actually very good. He's often laugh-out-loud funny and his paragraphs are well constructed. But his paragraph and larger sections seem to have little or no connection to each other--at least in light of the schema he purports to be following. Where are the transitions? Where is the connective material?

    Finally, mercifully, the reader gets to the epilogue in which Wilson essentially says, "Aha! See what we've accidentally discovered along the way! Isn't it providential?" Well, no. It's not. We all learned the core of essay-writing in junior high school: 1. Tell me what you're going to tell me. 2. Tell it to me in detail. 3. Tell me what you just told me. Not: 1. Tell me what you're going to tell me. 2. Wander across 5000 years of history telling me things that almost have something to do with what you said you were going to do but not quite, and then 3. Suprise! Tell me you were really on about something else all together. The book is really about . . . Freedom. Freedom is good.

    I was still in the first chapter when the similarities with The Mainspring of Human Progress (a screed which constituted a large portion of my "Economics" education at my conservative Christian high school) struck me. The breezy narrative style and casual treatment of history are unmistakeable in their flavor. And I am grieved because I sympathize with the libertarian instincts of both these books. And bad books do not serve to advance the causes of good ideas; rather the reverse. And this poorly structured, agenda-heavy, historically dubious text, I am afraid, will do little but persuade Wilson's choir that their cause has been adequately defended, when it hasn't.

    Two stars out of five, because at least his retellings of many historical incidents are very good as scatter shot pieces of world history--whatever purpose they're supposed to be serving.

    Fine.by HappyJG

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    January 28, 2010: Read Douglas Wilson's 5 Cities That Ruled the World yesterday. It's a fine but superficial review of metropolitan history considering Jerusalem, Athens, Rome, London, and New York.

    Each city receives approximately 40 pages of attention. So, not much new or deep here (a quick look at Wikipedia would provide a similar amount of information).

    I did find the book readable and interesting. Wilson's voice is casual and comic, making history accessible. Unfortunately, he seems to oversimplify complex events, and his casual approach lacks authority.

    It's rare to encounter a history written through Christian eyes, refreshing really. Wilson seems acutely aware of God's role in bringing cities to power (and in destroying them).

    I liked what Wilson has to say about a city's rise and fall:

    "The life span of a city's greatness is characterized by risk, courage, and sacrifice at the beginning, and by luxury and self-indulgence at the end."

    I'd give the book a weak 3/strong 2 out of five.

    Okay. No fireworks.


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