
The History of Central Asia
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A rarity - a labour of love, scholarship and high-class publishing ... an astounding achievement. * Literary Review * Many have written about Genghis Khan and his successors' national and international military campaigns. But seldom has the prose been so lucid and the illustrations so illuminating ... Under Baumer's expert guidance and firm hand, historians, religious scholars and the non-specialist can follow Genghis Khan's Islamic predecessors and the Mongols along the surface of the earth. * The Spectator *More details
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Content
- Cover
- Half-title
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Introduction
- I. Iranian-Muslim Dynasties in South-West Central Asia
- 1. Socio-religious Conflicts under Early Abbasid Rule
- Excursus: The Most Important Early Islamic Denominations
- The Sunnis
- The Shi' ites
- The Kharijites
- 2. The Barmakids and Tahirids
- 3. The Saffarids
- 4. The Samanids
- II. Central Asian Pioneers of Islamic Philosophy and Sciences
- 1. Early Scientists and Philosophers
- 2. The Golden Age of Science and Philosophy
- 3. On Astronomy and Towards a Theory of Evolution
- 4. An Anti-rationalist Counter-movement
- III. The Second Turkic Migrations to the West
- 1. The Pechenegs
- 2. The Oghuz
- 3. The Kipchaks
- Excursus: Turkic-Kipchak Equestrian Warriors in the Service of the Christian Kingdom of Georgia
- IV. Turco-Muslim Dynasties in Southern Central Asia
- 1. The Great Seljuks
- Excursus: The Ismailis of Alamut in the Seljuk Empire
- 2. The Karakhanids
- 2.1 The Unified Khaganate
- 2.2 The Western Khaganate
- 2.3 The Eastern Khaganate
- 3. The Ghaznavids
- 4. The Ghurids
- 5. The Ma'munids, Altuntashids and Anushteginids of Chorasmia
- V. Buddhist States of the Liao, Qara Khitai and Tanguts
- 1. The Liao Dynasty
- 2. The Qara Khitai, Central Asian Successors of the Liao
- 3. Minyak, the Tangut Empire
- Excursus: Pyotr Kozlov Discovers Khara-Khoto
- VI. The Rise of the Mongols
- 1. Sources for the History of the Mongols
- 2. Mongol Tribes in the Mid-twelfth Century and the Ancestors of Genghis Khan
- 3. Genghis Khan and the Creation of a Mongol Nation
- 4. Genghis Khan's International Campaigns
- VII. The United Mongol Empire
- 1. Great Khan Ögödei and the Construction of Karakorum
- 2. The Regency of Töregene and Great Khan Güyük
- Excursus: Spies, Diplomats and Missionaries: The Franciscan Monks Giovanni da Pian del Carpine and William of Rubruck
- 3. Möngke, the Last Great Khan of the United Mongol Empire
- VIII. The Independent Mongol Khanates
- 1. A Battle of Brothers
- 2. The Chinese Yuan Dynasty
- 2.1 Kublai Khan
- 2.1.1 A Hybrid Model of Government and Cultural Exchange with the West
- Excursus: Kublai Khan and the Polos
- 2.2 Kublai's Successors and the End of the Yuan Dynasty
- 2.3 Withdrawal to Mongolia and Establishment of the Northern Yuan Dynasty
- 3. The Chagatai Khanate
- 3.1 The Chagatai Khanate as Vassal of the Ögödeid Kaidu
- 3.2 The Khanate Regains its Independence
- 3.3 The Division of the Khanate
- 4. The Il-Khanids in Iran
- 4.1 The Non-Muslim Il-Khans
- Excursus: Rabban Bar Sauma and Rabban Markos: Nestorian 'Marco Polos' from Asia
- 4.2 The Muslim Il-Khans
- 4.3 The Cultural Legacy of the Il-Khanids
- 5. The Golden Horde
- 5.1 The Blue Horde of Batu Khan
- 5.2 The White Horde of Orda Khan
- IX. Timur-e Lang and the Timurids
- 1. Timur-e Lang's Military Campaigns
- Excursus: Two European Eyewitnesses: Ruy González de Clavijo and Johannes Schiltberger
- 2. Timur's Successors: the Timurids
- 3. Timurid Art and Architecture
- X. Outlook
- Appendices
- Appendix A: The Most Important Denominations of Islam and Early Muslim Dynasties Outside Central Asia
- Appendix B: The Most Important Dynasties of Central Asia from the Ninth to the Early Sixteenth Centuries
- Notes
- Bibliography
- List of Maps
- Photo Credits
- Acknowledgements
- Index
- Concepts
- People
- Places
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