Listing 1 - 10 of 21 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Regional documentation --- Samarkand --- Bukhara
Choose an application
Rénovation architecturale --- Architecture islamique --- Patrimoine architectural --- Bukhara --- Uzbekistan
Choose an application
Regional documentation --- Aral Lake --- Orenburg --- Bukhara --- Syr Darja
Choose an application
Born in Franconia, the son of a rabbi, Joseph Wolff (1795-1862) was baptised in 1812, moved to England in 1819, and became a Christian missionary. He travelled widely in the Near East, Middle East and Central Asia, enduring shipwreck, robbery and disease. His Researches and Missionary Labours among the Jews, Mohammedans, and Other Sects (1835) and the miscellaneous Travels and Adventures (1861) are also reissued in this series. First published in 1845 and reissued here in the revised second edition of that year, this two-volume work records Wolff's journey to the Emirate of Bukhara (in present-day Uzbekistan) to investigate the disappearance of two British officers. In Volume 2, Wolff offers further observations on the region's culture, religion and military history. He discovers that the missing men had been executed by one of the Emir's subordinates, Abdul Samut Khan, who also attempted to kill Wolff, though he narrowly escaped.
Stoddart, Charles, --- Conolly, Arthur, --- Khanate of Bukhara --- Asia, Central --- Description and travel. --- Bukhara Khanate --- Bukharskoe khanstvo --- Bokhara (Khanate) --- Bukhara --- Bukhoro (Khanate) --- Bukharah (Khanate) --- Bukharskiĭ ėmirat --- Khanat of Bokhara --- Emirate of Bukhara --- Bukhara (Khanate) --- Bochara (Khanate) --- Boukhara (Khanate) --- Transoxiana --- Bukharskai︠a︡ Narodnai︠a︡ Sovetskai︠a︡ Respublika (Russia)
Choose an application
Born in Franconia, the son of a rabbi, Joseph Wolff (1795-1862) was baptised in 1812, moved to England in 1819, and became a Christian missionary. He travelled widely in the Near East, Middle East and Central Asia, enduring shipwreck, robbery and disease. His Researches and Missionary Labours among the Jews, Mohammedans, and Other Sects (1835) and the miscellaneous Travels and Adventures (1861) are also reissued in this series. First published in 1845 and reissued here in the revised second edition of that year, this two-volume work records Wolff's journey to the Emirate of Bukhara (in present-day Uzbekistan) to investigate the disappearance of two British officers. Volume 1 begins with chapters covering Wolff's background and previous travels, before focusing on his mission to find the missing men, his initial investigations in Persia, and his arrival in Bukhara, noting details of the people and culture.
Stoddart, Charles, --- Conolly, Arthur, --- Khanate of Bukhara --- Asia, Central --- Description and travel. --- Bukhara Khanate --- Bukharskoe khanstvo --- Bokhara (Khanate) --- Bukhara --- Bukhoro (Khanate) --- Bukharah (Khanate) --- Bukharskiĭ ėmirat --- Khanat of Bokhara --- Emirate of Bukhara --- Bukhara (Khanate) --- Bochara (Khanate) --- Boukhara (Khanate) --- Transoxiana --- Bukharskai︠a︡ Narodnai︠a︡ Sovetskai︠a︡ Respublika (Russia)
Choose an application
In the first half of the eighteenth century, Central Asia's Bukharan Khanate descended into a crisis from which it would not recover. Bukharans suffered failed harvests and famine, a severe fiscal downturn, invasions from the north and the south, rebellion, and then revolution. To date, efforts to identify the cause of this crisis have focused on the assumption that the region became isolated from early modern globalizing trends. The Bukharan Crisis exposes that explanation as a flawed relic of early Orientalist scholarship on the region. In its place, Scott Levi identifies multiple causal factors that underpinned the Bukharan crisis. Some of these were interrelated and some independent, some unfolded over long periods while others shocked the region more abruptly, but they all converged in the early eighteenth century to the detriment of the Bukharan Khanate and those dependent upon it. Levi applies an integrative framework of analysis that repositions Central Asia in recent scholarship on multiple themes in early modern Eurasian and world history.
Khanate of Bukhara --- History. --- Bukhara Khanate --- Bukharskoe khanstvo --- Bokhara (Khanate) --- Bukhara --- Bukhoro (Khanate) --- Bukharah (Khanate) --- Bukharskiĭ ėmirat --- Khanat of Bokhara --- Emirate of Bukhara --- Bukhara (Khanate) --- Bochara (Khanate) --- Boukhara (Khanate) --- Transoxiana --- Bukharskai︠a︡ Narodnai︠a︡ Sovetskai︠a︡ Respublika (Russia) --- Crises --- History --- 1700-1799
Choose an application
Ẓafar-nāma is the title of a number of Persian works, in poetry or prose, mostly in glorification of some ruler or dynasty. As examples one could cite the Ẓafarnāmā-yi Tīmūrī (9th/15th cent.), the Ẓafarnāma-yi Shāh Jahān (11th/17th cent.), or the Ẓafarnāma-yi Kābūl (13th/19th cent.). The anonymous Ẓafarnāma-yi Khusrawī published here clearly stands in that tradition. Composed in 1279/1862-63, it was written with the purpose of recording the major events and achievements in the reign of the Manghit ruler of Bukhara, Amīr Sayyid Naṣrallāh b. Ḥaydar (reg. 1257-77/1841-60), preceded by an account of the happenings that led to his coming to power. The Manghits of the Khanate of Bukhara were a Turco-Mongolian dynasty that ruled over Transoxania between 1756 and 1920. The present work gives a detailed, insider account of many of the events that shaped the history of the region halfway the nineteenth century. As such, it is an invaluable and much-needed source of information.
Amīr Naṣr Allāh Bahādur, --- Khanate of Bukhara --- Asia, Central --- History
Choose an application
Muslims --- History --- Islamic countries --- Khanate of Bukhara (Uzbek S.S.R.) --- Soviet Union --- Foreign relations --- History.
Choose an application
Ẓafar-nāma is the title of a number of Persian works, in poetry or prose, mostly in glorification of some ruler or dynasty. As examples one could cite the Ẓafarnāmā-yi Tīmūrī (9th/15th cent.), the Ẓafarnāma-yi Shāh Jahān (11th/17th cent.), or the Ẓafarnāma-yi Kābūl (13th/19th cent.). The anonymous Ẓafarnāma-yi Khusrawī published here clearly stands in that tradition. Composed in 1279/1862-63, it was written with the purpose of recording the major events and achievements in the reign of the Manghit ruler of Bukhara, Amīr Sayyid Naṣrallāh b. Ḥaydar (reg. 1257-77/1841-60), preceded by an account of the happenings that led to his coming to power. The Manghits of the Khanate of Bukhara were a Turco-Mongolian dynasty that ruled over Transoxania between 1756 and 1920. The present work gives a detailed, insider account of many of the events that shaped the history of the region halfway the nineteenth century. As such, it is an invaluable and much-needed source of information.
Amīr Naṣr Allāh Bahādur, --- Khanate of Bukhara --- Asia, Central --- History --- History
Choose an application
This book explores how to locate the sources which influenced the political, social, and ideological stance of a famous Turkestani Jadid thinker, writer, journalist and scholar, 'Abdurra'uf Fitrat (1886-1938), thus also putting in perspective some overall intellectual trends in Turkestan, especially in Bukhara in the early 1910s. Based on Fitrat's early publications the book discusses what intellectual milieu it was that shaped his worldview in the early 1910s, a worldview that could be designated as a first attempt at "freedom and sovereignty through Islam". A thorough review of these publications also brings greater clarity to the issue of Fitrat's ethnical identity, which sheds light on how he related to the worldwide community of Muslims and how he positioned himself towards political unity of the Muslim World.Furthermore, by scrutinizing Fitrat's intellectual legacy of 1910-1915, this book highlights some of the origins of Jadidism in Turkestan and places Turkestani Jadidism in the context of worldwide Muslim reformism at the turn of the 20th century.
Islam and politics --- Jadidism --- SOCIAL SCIENCE / Islamic Studies. --- 'Abdurra'uf Fitrat. --- Bukhara. --- Jadidism. --- Pan-Islam. --- Zhadidchilik --- Islamic education --- Islamic sects
Listing 1 - 10 of 21 | << page >> |
Sort by
|