Frontier Empires
MTA
Afghanistan, the Northwestern Tracts, and India’s Borderlands in History
2nd Edition
*Frontier Empires* provides a comprehensive historical analysis of the northwestern borderlands connecting South and Central Asia, focusing on the regions encompassing modern-day Afghanistan and Pakistan. The book challenges the perception of these territories as static, peripheral zones, arguing instead that they have functioned for millennia as dynamic "lived borderlands"—vibrant crucibles of trade, culture, and power. By tracing the region's evolution from the ancient Buddhist kingdom of Gandhara and the Silk Road caravan networks to the sophisticated Persianate empires of the Mughals and Safavids, the text illustrates how the mountains and passes served as both strategic gateways and resilient refuges that shaped the rise and fall of various imperial projects.
The narrative shifts to the 19th and 20th centuries to examine the transformative impact of British colonial intervention. It details the strategic anxieties of the "Great Game," the disastrous consequences of the Anglo-Afghan Wars, and the formalization of the Durand Line, which arbitrarily partitioned the Pashtun heartland. The book explores how the British attempted to manage these "mountain republics" through a mix of indirect rule, specialized legal regimes like the Frontier Crimes Regulation, and punitive military expeditions. These colonial efforts to impose a "scientific frontier" on a fluid landscape created a legacy of administrative duality and ethnic fragmentation that persisted long after the British departure in 1947.
Following the Partition of India, the book analyzes the frontier's role as a primary theater for Cold War rivalries and modern global conflicts. It examines how the Soviet-Afghan War of the 1980s and the subsequent rise of the Taliban militarized the borderlands, giving rise to transnational militant networks and a burgeoning illicit drug economy. The text further scrutinizes the post-2001 international interventions, highlighting the complexities of nation-building, the controversial use of drone warfare in tribal agencies, and the recent efforts by Pakistan to physically fence a border that has historically remained porous.
Ultimately, *Frontier Empires* argues that contemporary security and governance challenges are deeply rooted in these historical layers. By treating frontiers as ongoing processes rather than fixed lines, the book suggests that the region’s stability depends on recognizing the enduring agency of its inhabitants and the historical mobility that defines the Hindu Kush and Indus plains. It concludes that the northwestern tracts are not merely "problems" to be solved by distant capitals, but are central engines of history where the tensions between imperial control and local autonomy continue to be negotiated.
MixCache.com
View booksMarch 4, 2026
44,914 words
3 hours 9 minutes
Get unlimited access to this book + all MixCache.com books for $11.99/month
Subscribe to MTAOr purchase this book individually below
$6.99 USD
Click to buy this ebook:
Buy NowFull ebook will be available immediately
- read online or download as a PDF file.
Full ebook will be available immediately
- read online or download as a PDF file.
$5 account credit for all new MixCache.com accounts!
Have a question about the content? Ask our AI assistant!
Start by asking a question about "Frontier Empires"
Example: "Does this book mention William Shakespeare?"
Thinking...