The Christianisation of large parts of central and south-central Asia goes back to the latter part of the fourth century reaching – at the latest from the beginning of the eighth century – the Turfan oasis, as testified by the discovery of Christian texts coming from the ruins of the monastery of Shüī-pang near Bulayïq, approximately ten kilometres north of Turfan. The article focuses on the Sogdian tradition
In the present article some unpublished Buddhist Sogdian texts belonging to the German Turfan collec...
This article presents the problem of religious processes, one of the most significant aspects of ear...
Christianity is usually known throughout history for its expansion, “from the Middle East to Europe ...
We are able to verify the variety of the religions of the Sogdians by the text fragments found in th...
In spite of a very well-established tradition of philological and linguistic studies, few efforts ha...
Based on a corpus coming from the Turfan oasis (in present-day Xinjiang, People’s Republic of China)...
On the basis of a thorough philological-linguistic study, the book aims primarily at reintegrating t...
The task which I set myself when I undertook to study the text of the Greater Bundahisn was at that ...
By outlining the main codicological features of the Christian Iranian manuscript fragments, and, in ...
The “Upper Monastery” at Mosul was an important centre of liturgical development and reform of the A...
The article examines the process of the spread of Islam in Tsunta, i. e., in the southwestern part ...
It is by now widely acknowledged that between late antiquity and the first centuries of Islam, Syri...
The civilization background of Transoxiana and Chorasmia in the ancient era is of utmost grandeur to...
This article is designed in the first, to dig out some illuminating historical facts that the Sassan...
This contribution deals with patterns in language contact by listing and discussing the Iranian lexi...
In the present article some unpublished Buddhist Sogdian texts belonging to the German Turfan collec...
This article presents the problem of religious processes, one of the most significant aspects of ear...
Christianity is usually known throughout history for its expansion, “from the Middle East to Europe ...
We are able to verify the variety of the religions of the Sogdians by the text fragments found in th...
In spite of a very well-established tradition of philological and linguistic studies, few efforts ha...
Based on a corpus coming from the Turfan oasis (in present-day Xinjiang, People’s Republic of China)...
On the basis of a thorough philological-linguistic study, the book aims primarily at reintegrating t...
The task which I set myself when I undertook to study the text of the Greater Bundahisn was at that ...
By outlining the main codicological features of the Christian Iranian manuscript fragments, and, in ...
The “Upper Monastery” at Mosul was an important centre of liturgical development and reform of the A...
The article examines the process of the spread of Islam in Tsunta, i. e., in the southwestern part ...
It is by now widely acknowledged that between late antiquity and the first centuries of Islam, Syri...
The civilization background of Transoxiana and Chorasmia in the ancient era is of utmost grandeur to...
This article is designed in the first, to dig out some illuminating historical facts that the Sassan...
This contribution deals with patterns in language contact by listing and discussing the Iranian lexi...
In the present article some unpublished Buddhist Sogdian texts belonging to the German Turfan collec...
This article presents the problem of religious processes, one of the most significant aspects of ear...
Christianity is usually known throughout history for its expansion, “from the Middle East to Europe ...