
New Books Network The Far Edges of the Known World: A New History of the Ancient Past
Feb 17, 2026
Owen Rees, interdisciplinary researcher and ancient history scholar, offers a fresh look at life on imperial borderlands. He surveys 6,000 years across three continents. He highlights vibrant multicultural frontier cities, nomadic monumentalism, hybrid identities, and how archaeology upends center-focused stories.
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Reframe History From The Edges
- The book covers ~6,000 years across three continents and reframes ancient history from borderlands, not imperial centers.
- Dr Owen Rees argues periodization (classical/medieval) and center-periphery maps are subjective and misleading.
Question Centered Narratives
- Rees rejects single-center narratives and treats Roman/Greek texts as one perspective among many.
- He uses archaeology and local evidence to invert imperial storytelling and reveal other lived experiences.
Case Studies Driven By Evidence And Curiosity
- Rees chose case studies where rich archaeological or documentary evidence survives, like Egypt and Hadrian's Wall.
- Some chapters began from curiosity, such as hearing a podcast about Koloa in Vietnam and following the trail.


