Table Of ContentReviews
THE	GUARDIAN	Crammed	with	truly	fabulous	stories	of	fighting	and	love	and
violent	death	…	this	profound	and	exhilarating	book	turns	the	struggle	of	the
people	of	the	Caucasus	to	remain	independent	of	Russia	into	a	universal	saga	…
it	is	no	wonder	Shamyl	had	such	a	powerful	influence	on	Tolstoy	and	Pushkin.
LAURENCE	KELLY	It	is	on	The	Sabres	of	Paradise,	with	its	unforgettable
picture	of	the	Imam	Shamyl	and	the	religious	wars	in	which	he	was	a	central
figure,	that	Lesley	Blanch’s	reputation	rests	most	firmly.	The	events	she
chronicles,	as	Philip	Marsden	reminds	us,	have	suddenly	become	hugely	topical:
two	genocidal	wars	in	Chechnya,	the	rebirth	of	Russian	nationalism,	the	attempt
to	impose	its	values	on	a	Muslim	clan	and	tribe,	heir	of	Shamyl’s	traditions,	the
struggle	between	what	Marsden	describes	as	‘two	worlds,	two	battles,	two
societies.’
NEW	YORK	TIMES	BOOK	REVIEW	Twentieth-century	Russia	is	only
nineteenth-century	Russia	writ	large.	Miss	Blanch’s	book	is	therefore	especially
welcome	for	she	has	provided	a	gallery	of	Russian	portraits	and	in	the	course	of
her	story	outlined	Russian	foreign	policy	through	most	of	the	nineteenth	century.
I	can	imagine	no	better	introduction	to	modern	Russia.
PHILIP	MARSDEN	Like	Tolstoy’s,	Lesley	Blanch’s	sense	of	history	is
ultimately	convincing	not	because	of	any	sweeping	theses,	but	because	of	its
particularities,	the	quirks	of	individuals	and	their	personal	narratives,	their
deluded	ambitions,	their	vanities	and	passions.
HAMISH	BOWLES	writes	in	Jacqueline	Kennedy:	The	White	House	Years
(2001)	Jacqueline	Kennedy	and	Khrushchev	maintained	a	spirited	badinage
through	dinner.	Mrs	Kennedy	had	recently	read	The	Sabres	of	Paradise,	Lesley
Blanch’s	dashing	history	of	the	Muslim	tribes’	resistance	to	Russian
expansionism	in	the	Caucasus,	and	attempted	to	engage	the	Soviet	premier	in
conversation	on	the	subject.	He	responded	with	the	comparative	numbers	of
teachers	per	capita	in	the	Soviet	and	Tzarist	Ukraine.	She	cut	him	off	with	the
playful	riposte,	‘Oh,	Mr	Chairman,	don’t	bore	me	with	statistics’.
First	published	in	Great	Britain	in	1960	by	John	Murray	Limited.
This	electronic	edition	published	in	2015	by	BookBlast	ePublishing,
a	division	of	BookBlast	Limited,	P.O.	Box	20184,	London	W10	5AU.
Copyright	©	Lesley	Blanch,	1960.
The	moral	right	of	the	author	has	been	asserted.
Copyright	this	electronic	edition	©	Georgia	de	Chamberet,	2015.
All	rights	reserved.	You	may	not	copy,	distribute,	transmit,	reproduce	or	otherwise	make	available	this
publication	(or	any	part	of	it)	in	any	form,	or	by	any	means,	(including	without	limitation	electronic,	digital,
optical,	mechanical,	photocopying,	printing,	recording	or	otherwise)	without	the	prior	written	permission	of
the	publisher.	Any	person	who	does	any	unauthorised	act	in	relation	to	this	publication	may	be	liable	to
criminal	prosecution	and	civil	claims	for	damages.
Mobi	ISBN	978-0-9930927-1-8
Print	ISBN	978-0-9930927-2-5
BookBlast	has	been	online	since	2000	and	is	trademarked	in	the	UK	and	the	US.
Visit	www.bookblast.com	to	find	out	more	about	the	authors	and	their	books.
Scanned	by	www.digitisemybooks.co.uk
Conversion	and	cover	by	www.mousematdesign.com
Cover	portrait:	Shamyl,	Imam	of	Daghestan	in	1859,	portrait	by	Thomas	Horscheldt.
From	the	first	edition	of	The	Sabres	of	Paradise.
For
Edna	and	Marston	Fleming
with	love
The	Sabres	of	Paradise
Contents
Cover	page
Reviews
Title	page
Copyright
Dedication
Map
Introduction
Part	One
The	Time
The	Setting
Shamyl
The	Holy	War
The	Time	of	the	Shariat
The	Tzar
The	Warriors
The	Cossacks
The	Struggle
The	Imam
Tiflis
Part	Two
Excess
Hostage
Crowns	and	Cupolas
Shadows	on	the	Mountains
Loyalties
Voronzov	Glories
Dargo
Treachery
Hadji	Mourad
The	North
Bariatinsky
Madame	Drancy
Tsinandali
The	Great	Aoul
Part	Three
A	Captivity
A	Sacrifice
A	Farewell
An	Exchange
A	Defeat
Another	World
An	Acceptance
An	End
Epilogue
Genealogical	Notes	on	Shamyl	and	his	wives	and	children
Authors	Note
Acknowledgements
Bibliography
About	the	Author
Other	books	by	Lesley	Blanch
Position	of	the	Caucasus.
Introduction
The	Caucasians	wrote	love	poems	to	their	daggers,	as	to	a	mistress	and	went	to
battle,	 as	 to	 a	 rendez-vous.	 Fighting	 was	 life	 itself	 to	 these	 darkly	 beautiful
people	−	the	most	beautiful	people	in	the	world,	it	was	said.	They	lived	and	died
by	the	dagger.	Battle-thrusts	were	the	pulse	of	the	race.	Vengeance	was	their
creed,	violence	their	climate.	‘I	am	at	my	eleventh	head,’	boasted	a	Caucasian
princeling,	a	twelve	year	old,	who	spoke	French	with	a	Parisian	accent	which
won	the	admiration	of	Alexander	Dumas	and	who	coveted	his	father’s	bag	of
twenty-four	 rebel	 heads,	 severed	 as	 contribution	 to	 the	 pacification	 of	 the
province.	The	baby	prince	Georghi	Melikov,	at	an	age	when	he	might	have	been
sucking	his	thumb,	was	running	it	over	the	blade	of	his	kindjal,	or	two-edged
dagger,	 lisping	 that	 it	 had	 been	 made	 for	 him	 by	 Mourtazali	 the	 celebrated
armourer.	When	Agha	Mahommed,	‘the	Persian	Eunuch’,	took	Tiflis	in	1795,
his	troops	raped	all	the	women	they	fancied	and	as	a	memento	of	their	victory
they	hamstrung	the	right	leg	of	every	virgin	taken.	But	the	women,	too,	knew
how	to	fight,	for	they	were	believed	to	descend	from	the	Amazons.	Beneath	their
veils	they	wore	a	dagger.	When	the	inhabitants	of	Akhulgo	were	besieged	by	the
invading	 Russian	 army	 in	 1837,	 women	 fought	 beside	 men;	 when	 their
ammunition	had	gone,	they	flung	down	rocks	on	the	oncoming	troops;	when
there	were	no	more	rocks,	the	men	hurled	themselves	to	death,	on	the	bayonets
below.	And	when	the	men	were	gone,	the	women	flung	down	their	children	as
living	missiles,	and	leapt	after	them.	Such	was	their	desperate	resistance.	Such
was	this	climate	of	violence.
Severed	enemy	heads	or	hands	were	always	good	coinage	in	the	Caucasus.	A
Tousheen	 girl’s	 dowry	 was	 reckoned	 in	 these	 trophies.	 The	 more	 dashing	 a
young	Caucasian	delikan,	or	brave,	the	more	severed	hands	dangled	from	his
saddle	bow.	Right	hands,	of	course;	left	hands	hardly	counted	and	the	loss	of	one
never	stopped	a	Caucasian	from	fighting.	Sliced-off	ears,	a	less	cumbersome
method	of	indicating	the	number	of	heads	taken,	were	usually	strung	along	the
whip	thong.	When	one	Chechen	chieftain	found	his	son	dead	of	wounds,	he	cut
his	 body	 into	 sixty	 pieces	 and	 sent	 out	 horsemen	 across	 the	 mountains	 and
valleys,	each	with	a	fragment,	to	be	given	to	his	kinsmen	and	vassals.	For	each
piece,	 an	 enemy	 head	 was	 returned.	 Thus	 was	 his	 son’s	 death	 avenged.
Vengeance,	 vendetta	 or	 kanly,	 was	 often	 pursued	 through	 three	 or	 four
generations,	decimating	whole	families,	till	there	was	no-one	left.	A	household
was	only	reckoned	poor,	only	pitied,	when	there	was	no-one	fit	to	fight.
Description:PHILIP MARSDEN: Like Tolstoy’s, Lesley Blanch’s sense of history is ultimately convincing not because of any sweeping theses, but because of its particularities, the quirks of individuals and their personal narratives, their deluded ambitions, their vanities and passions.THE GUARDIAN: Crammed wi