Peter B. Golden
Autor(a) de Central Asia in World History (New Oxford World History)
About the Author
Peter B. Golden is Professor Emeritus of History and Director of the Middle Eastern Studies Program, Rutgers University.
Obras de Peter B. Golden
The World of the Khazars : New Perspectives : Selected Papers from the Jerusalem 1999 International Khazar Colloquium… (2007) — Editor — 16 cópias
Khazar Studies: An historico-philological inquiry into the origins of the Khazars (Bibliotheca orientalis Hungarica ;… (1980) 8 cópias
Nomads and Sedentary Societies in Medieval Eurasia (Essays on Global and Comparative History) (1998) 7 cópias
The King's Dictionary. The Rasūlid Hexaglot: Fourteenth Century Vocabularies in Arabic, Persian, Turkic, Greek,… (2000) — Editor — 5 cópias
Associated Works
Empires and Exchanges in Eurasian Late Antiquity: Rome, China, Iran, and the Steppe, ca. 250–750 (2018) — Contribuinte — 9 cópias
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Nome padrão
- Golden, Peter B.
- Nome de batismo
- Golden, Peter Benjamin
- Data de nascimento
- 1941
- Sexo
- male
- Nacionalidade
- USA
- Educação
- Queens College (BA|1963)
Columbia University (MA|1968; PhD|1970) - Ocupação
- historian
- Organizações
- Rutgers University
Membros
Resenhas
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Associated Authors
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 10
- Also by
- 1
- Membros
- 174
- Popularidade
- #123,126
- Avaliação
- 4.2
- Resenhas
- 3
- ISBNs
- 19
- Idiomas
- 1
Well, there are some gaps; most notably, the Yuan dynasty is only treated peripherally, presumably because it got the better part of a volume to itself in the Cambridge History of China*. For less obvious reasons, there's no chapter or section focusing on the Jungar**, whose created what was arguably the last great steppe empire in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries before coming up second best against the Qing. They play major roles in several chapters, but always as enemies of the group or state in focus.
The early chapters about the rise of the Mongol Empire and the early stages of its disintegration didn't interest me too much; while competent, they tell stories I've read in more detailed versions elsewhere. More interesting were the middle and later chapters detailing the evolutions of steppe polities in the late middle and early modern ages, as well as their gradual incorporation in the Russian and Qing empires.
* In another form of overlap, di Cosmo's chapter here on the Qing conquests in the steppes, the Tarim basin, and Tibet is very similar to his chapter on the same in the Cambridge History of China volume on the early Qing dynasty.
** AKA Junghar, Dzungar, Zungar, and other variants. They're sometimes also known as Kalmyks, Qalmaqs, or Qalmïqs.… (mais)