This article examines the corpus of Syro-Turkic Christian gravestones found in Inner Mongolia, with the overall purpose of placing them within a broader context of both Ongut Turkic Christianity and other Christian gravestones found elsewhere in Central Asia and China. The text, translation, and a brief commentary are given for each Turkic inscription in Syriac script from the Inner Mongolian corpus for which the authors have legible images and/or rubbings, with a focus on the names and titles found on the gravestones. Special attention is given to Wangmuliang gravestone no. 33, which appears to mention the place where the deceased came from.</p
In 1950s, two fourteenth-century tombstones with Latin inscriptions were discovered in Yangzhou, Chi...
We, humans, mirror our cultural characteristics in death just as we do in life. This study focuses o...
Turkic Runic inscriptions, discovered in Mongolia during the second half of the 20th century and esp...
This article examines the corpus of Syro-Turkic Christian gravestones found in Inner Mongolia, with ...
This article examines the corpus of Syro-Turkic Christian gravestones found in Inner Mongolia, with ...
AbstractThe article examines monuments of Turkic ancient letters found in South Siberia, Middle Asia...
Item ВДсэ-524 in the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg is an amulet scroll written in Syriac ...
This article examines a fragmentary Christian text from Turfan written in Uyghur which contains an e...
The author takes a closer look at the Nestorian remains of Öngöt in Inner Mongolia. He introduces a ...
Tarih boyunca Orta Asya coğrafyasında bulunan Türkler arasında birçok din kabul görmüş, Nestûrî Hris...
In spite of a very well-established tradition of philological and linguistic studies, few efforts ha...
The author recalls the discovery from 1720 onwards of the Old Turkish (circa 8th-10th c.) tombstone ...
Dans cet ouvrage, l’A. s’intéresse à la plus ancienne présence chrétienne en Mongolie intérieure. Le...
The medieval Turks of the eastern Asian steppe are known for funerary finds exalting horsemanship an...
Hakas ve Tuva bölgesinde Yenisey ırmağı kıyılarında dağınık olarak bulunan Yenisey yazıtlarının meti...
In 1950s, two fourteenth-century tombstones with Latin inscriptions were discovered in Yangzhou, Chi...
We, humans, mirror our cultural characteristics in death just as we do in life. This study focuses o...
Turkic Runic inscriptions, discovered in Mongolia during the second half of the 20th century and esp...
This article examines the corpus of Syro-Turkic Christian gravestones found in Inner Mongolia, with ...
This article examines the corpus of Syro-Turkic Christian gravestones found in Inner Mongolia, with ...
AbstractThe article examines monuments of Turkic ancient letters found in South Siberia, Middle Asia...
Item ВДсэ-524 in the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg is an amulet scroll written in Syriac ...
This article examines a fragmentary Christian text from Turfan written in Uyghur which contains an e...
The author takes a closer look at the Nestorian remains of Öngöt in Inner Mongolia. He introduces a ...
Tarih boyunca Orta Asya coğrafyasında bulunan Türkler arasında birçok din kabul görmüş, Nestûrî Hris...
In spite of a very well-established tradition of philological and linguistic studies, few efforts ha...
The author recalls the discovery from 1720 onwards of the Old Turkish (circa 8th-10th c.) tombstone ...
Dans cet ouvrage, l’A. s’intéresse à la plus ancienne présence chrétienne en Mongolie intérieure. Le...
The medieval Turks of the eastern Asian steppe are known for funerary finds exalting horsemanship an...
Hakas ve Tuva bölgesinde Yenisey ırmağı kıyılarında dağınık olarak bulunan Yenisey yazıtlarının meti...
In 1950s, two fourteenth-century tombstones with Latin inscriptions were discovered in Yangzhou, Chi...
We, humans, mirror our cultural characteristics in death just as we do in life. This study focuses o...
Turkic Runic inscriptions, discovered in Mongolia during the second half of the 20th century and esp...