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Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi 21 (2014/15)
Festschrift for Thomas T. Allsen in Celebration of His 75th Birthday
journal:
volume: 21 (2014/15)
pages/dimensions: 303 pages - 121 ill., 2 maps, 6 tables, 1 schemata - 16 × 24
language: english, russian
binding: Paperback
edition: annual
publishing date: 01.01.2015
prices: 98,00 Eur[D]
ISBN: 978-3-447-09891-5
98,00 Eur

The focus of Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi is on the political, social, economic and linguistic history of the peoples of the Eurasian steppes and adjoining regions from late antiquity to the Mongol Empire and its successor states. Among its primary concerns are questions regarding the Iranian steppe peoples, the Huns, the Oghur and Bulghar Turkic peoples, the Sabirs, the Avars, the Khazars and other peoples of the Türk Empire, the Hungarians, Pechenegs, Cumans and peoples of the Mongol Empire. The periodical also touches on many points in the history of the Slavic world, Crimea, Byzantium, Iran, the Caucasus, the lands of Islam and the peoples of Central and Northern Europe, and it elucidates various questions of Turkic and steppe history.

From the contents:
Christopher P. Atwood, Chikü Küregen and the Origins of the Xiningzhou Qonggirads
Michal Biran, Encounters Among Enemies: Preliminary Remarks on Captives in Mongol Eurasia
Stephen F. Dale, Ibn Khaldun, the Yüan and Îl-Khân Dynasties
Nicola Di Cosmo, Why Qara Qorum? Climate and Geography in the Early Mongol Empire
Ruth Dunnell, Xili Gambu and the Myth of Shatuo Descent: Genealogical Anxiety and Family History in Yuan China
Xinru Liu, Naga and Dragon: An Animal Cult in Ancient India and Central Asia

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