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Top Books on tartar
1. The tartar steppe
ISBN10 Number - 0856355925
Date of Publication - 1985
Number of Pages 214
Publisher - Carcanet
Places in the book - Manchester
2. The tartar steppe
ISBN10 Number - 0879239921
Date of Publication - 1995
Number of Pages 198
Publisher - D.R. Godine
Places in the book - Boston
3. Le tartare
ISBN10 Number - 1375120425
Date of Publication - Jul 20, 2017
Number of Pages 212
Publisher - Gale NCCO, Print Editions
4. The tartar steppe
ISBN10 Number - 0141184124
Date of Publication - Sep 07, 2000
Number of Pages 240
Publisher - Penguin Books Ltd
5. The tartar steppe
ISBN10 Number - 1841959286
Date of Publication - 2007
Number of Pages 265
Publisher - Canongate
Places in the book - Edinburgh ; New York
6. Le tartare
ISBN10 Number - 137512045X
Date of Publication - Jul 20, 2017
Number of Pages 216
Publisher - Gale NCCO, Print Editions
7. To catch a tartar
ISBN10 Number - 0938692569
Date of Publication - 1994
Number of Pages 293
Publisher - Yale Center for International and Area Studies,Distributor, Yale University Southeast Asia Studies
Places in the book - New Haven, Conn
8. Thousand years of the tartars
Date of Publication - 2014
Number of Pages 318
Publisher - Taylor & Francis Group
9. A thousand years of the tartars. --
ISBN10 Number - 071290381X
Number of Pages 288
Places in the book - New York
10. Hooky catches a tartar
ISBN10 Number - 0333413091
Date of Publication - 1986
Number of Pages 192
Publisher - Macmillan
Places in the book - London
11. The tartar khan's englishman
"Author Gabriel Ronay discovered the existence of the Tartar Khan's English-born personal envoy, interpreter and spy in a thirteenth-century monastic chronicle. In this extraordinary biography he pieces together the remarkable career of the mysterious envoy." "The Mongol conqueror Genghis Khan (1167?-1227) built an empire stretching from the China Sea to Eastern Europe on the bones of massacred millions. Known for his ruthless carnage, he was also a brilliant ruler whose empire lasted until 1368." "It was his grandson, Batu, who carried the Mongol domination to the walls of bickering Christendom and beyond. The architect of the diplomatic drive that preceded the Tartar holocaust was a mysterious Englishman whose actions and diplomacy have left their stamp on the face of Europe." "Peppered with kings and warriors, missionary friars and mass murderers, this is the story of that intriguing individual. Gabriel Ronay lifts the cloak of anonymity to follow in his footsteps across countries and civilizations. He reconstructs his subject's adventures in King John's service, as an outcast in the Holy Land and eventually as the representative of awesome Tartar power."--BOOK JACKET