This thesis investigates Chinggisid-Timurid conceptions of rulership and political community in relation to territory, focusing on Perso-Islamic Central Asia and Iran during the period 1370–1530. It also discusses the thirteenth-century Mongol-ruled world for backdrop, and highlights the distinctiveness of the said conceptions through comparisons with contemporaneous European and East Asian/Ming Chinese conceptions of the same. This is a study of a chapter in the history of “international states system” before the European model of international states system became the global standard. The political culture of the Chaghatayids, Ilkhanids, and Timurids included conceptions of rulership and political community vis-à-vis territory that were...
This is the published version of a book chapter, which has been uploaded with permission from the pu...
This is the published version of a book chapter, which has been uploaded with permission from the pu...
Defining the state Mongolia’s history has encompassed a broad tapestry of state formation, from noma...
This thesis investigates Chinggisid-Timurid conceptions of rulership and political community in rela...
This study provides a new interpretation of how political authority was conceived and transmitted by...
When Činggis Qan died in 1227, the Mongol Empire was a confederation of steppe peoples engaged in co...
Since Činggis Qan’s unification of various peoples on the Mongolian plateau in 1206, the Mongols qui...
Prior to the rise of the Mongol World Empire, Transoxiana was perenially caught between the ambition...
The Mongols (Ilkhan), Timurids, and Safavids were the three kingdoms in Iran. The three kingdoms pla...
This book explores the causes and consequences of Chinggis Khan's invasion of Khorasan in the 13th c...
As a result of the Mongol invasion and its subsequent disorder,political and socio-economic structur...
At the beginning of the thirteenth century, Cinggis-qan, who had unified Mongolia, gave each of his ...
DOI: 10.5564/mjia.v0i13.10Mongolian Journal of International Affairs No.13 2006 pp.77-8
Qubilai (1215-1295) and his Yuan dynasty (1260-1388) brought critical change to the Great Mongol Emp...
For nearly a millennium, a large part of Asia was ruled by Turkic or Mongol dynasties of nomadic ori...
This is the published version of a book chapter, which has been uploaded with permission from the pu...
This is the published version of a book chapter, which has been uploaded with permission from the pu...
Defining the state Mongolia’s history has encompassed a broad tapestry of state formation, from noma...
This thesis investigates Chinggisid-Timurid conceptions of rulership and political community in rela...
This study provides a new interpretation of how political authority was conceived and transmitted by...
When Činggis Qan died in 1227, the Mongol Empire was a confederation of steppe peoples engaged in co...
Since Činggis Qan’s unification of various peoples on the Mongolian plateau in 1206, the Mongols qui...
Prior to the rise of the Mongol World Empire, Transoxiana was perenially caught between the ambition...
The Mongols (Ilkhan), Timurids, and Safavids were the three kingdoms in Iran. The three kingdoms pla...
This book explores the causes and consequences of Chinggis Khan's invasion of Khorasan in the 13th c...
As a result of the Mongol invasion and its subsequent disorder,political and socio-economic structur...
At the beginning of the thirteenth century, Cinggis-qan, who had unified Mongolia, gave each of his ...
DOI: 10.5564/mjia.v0i13.10Mongolian Journal of International Affairs No.13 2006 pp.77-8
Qubilai (1215-1295) and his Yuan dynasty (1260-1388) brought critical change to the Great Mongol Emp...
For nearly a millennium, a large part of Asia was ruled by Turkic or Mongol dynasties of nomadic ori...
This is the published version of a book chapter, which has been uploaded with permission from the pu...
This is the published version of a book chapter, which has been uploaded with permission from the pu...
Defining the state Mongolia’s history has encompassed a broad tapestry of state formation, from noma...