An important component of the Mongol empire that emerged after 1206 were the personnel recruited from Central and West Asia who submitted to or were conquered by the Mongols. These men (known in Mongol China as “ semuren”) served as advisors and tutors to the Mongol elites, and as administrators and technicians in the sedentary societies conquered by the Mongols, and they constituted a distinctive group in Yuan China. Considerable scholarship has been devoted to prominent individual semuren, but few studies have attempted to study the semuren diachronically, as a class across the entire Yuan dynasty. This dissertation addresses this lacunae; it examines one prominent family of semuren, the Uyghur Xie family, from the time they entered China...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation is a study of the Mongolian royal marriage...
Temüder (d. 1322) was an influential Mongol official of the Yuan dynasty in the early fourteenth cen...
Temüder (d. 1322) was an influential Mongol official of the Yuan dynasty in the early fourteenth cen...
Qubilai (1215-1295) and his Yuan dynasty (1260-1388) brought critical change to the Great Mongol Emp...
The Mongol empire (1206–1368) caused massive transformations in the composition and functioning of e...
The Mongol empire (1206–1368) caused massive transformations in the composition and functioning of e...
Subjects and Masters by Michael C. Brose answers the question, “Who really ran the Mongol empire?” T...
[[abstract]]Abstract Surviving in the Conflicts: Borderers Who Swing between Liao and Regime in Nor...
The paper examines the etnogenesis of the Mongol tribes from the period of the Rouran and Shiwei tri...
This article is about an outstanding political figure Yelü Chucai (1189–1242), who was the main adv...
Inspired by the recent approaches of the New Qing History school centering on ethnicity and empire a...
Temüder (d. 1322) was an influential Mongol official of the Yuan dynasty in the early fourteenth cen...
Temüder (d. 1322) was an influential Mongol official of the Yuan dynasty in the early fourteenth cen...
Temüder (d. 1322) was an influential Mongol official of the Yuan dynasty in the early fourteenth cen...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation is a study of the Mongolian royal marriage...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation is a study of the Mongolian royal marriage...
Temüder (d. 1322) was an influential Mongol official of the Yuan dynasty in the early fourteenth cen...
Temüder (d. 1322) was an influential Mongol official of the Yuan dynasty in the early fourteenth cen...
Qubilai (1215-1295) and his Yuan dynasty (1260-1388) brought critical change to the Great Mongol Emp...
The Mongol empire (1206–1368) caused massive transformations in the composition and functioning of e...
The Mongol empire (1206–1368) caused massive transformations in the composition and functioning of e...
Subjects and Masters by Michael C. Brose answers the question, “Who really ran the Mongol empire?” T...
[[abstract]]Abstract Surviving in the Conflicts: Borderers Who Swing between Liao and Regime in Nor...
The paper examines the etnogenesis of the Mongol tribes from the period of the Rouran and Shiwei tri...
This article is about an outstanding political figure Yelü Chucai (1189–1242), who was the main adv...
Inspired by the recent approaches of the New Qing History school centering on ethnicity and empire a...
Temüder (d. 1322) was an influential Mongol official of the Yuan dynasty in the early fourteenth cen...
Temüder (d. 1322) was an influential Mongol official of the Yuan dynasty in the early fourteenth cen...
Temüder (d. 1322) was an influential Mongol official of the Yuan dynasty in the early fourteenth cen...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation is a study of the Mongolian royal marriage...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation is a study of the Mongolian royal marriage...
Temüder (d. 1322) was an influential Mongol official of the Yuan dynasty in the early fourteenth cen...
Temüder (d. 1322) was an influential Mongol official of the Yuan dynasty in the early fourteenth cen...