A Traveller's History of China provides a concise but fascinating
journey from the country's earliest beginnings right up to the creation
of the economic powerhouse that is today's China. Stephen Haw carries
the reader back in time to the prehistoric civilizations of 4,000 years
ago, and from there to the centuries of China's silk trade with the
less-developed countries of Europe. Some of the most significant
inventions of the pre-modern world, including paper, gunpowder, and the
magnetic compass originated in China and were then transmitted to the
West. The author describes the glories of the Tang and Song Dynasties,
which saw the creation of the great Chinese cities to the period of its
decline and the efforts of Europe to conquer and subdue this giant land.
It covers the tumult and triumphs of the Chinese revolution and the
dramatic changes in political policies since the late 1970s, which have
now made it one of the world's fastest-developing countries.