The Resource What is beyond the river? : power, authority, and social order in Transoxania 18th-19th centuries, Andreas Wilde
What is beyond the river? : power, authority, and social order in Transoxania 18th-19th centuries, Andreas Wilde
Resource Information
The item What is beyond the river? : power, authority, and social order in Transoxania 18th-19th centuries, Andreas Wilde represents a specific, individual, material embodiment of a distinct intellectual or artistic creation found in University of Missouri Libraries.This item is available to borrow from 1 library branch.
Resource Information
The item What is beyond the river? : power, authority, and social order in Transoxania 18th-19th centuries, Andreas Wilde represents a specific, individual, material embodiment of a distinct intellectual or artistic creation found in University of Missouri Libraries.
This item is available to borrow from 1 library branch.
- Extent
- 3 volumes (xvi, 1,101 pages)
- Note
- Academy publication
- Contents
-
- Power, authority and social order
- ltạ ̄'at, Inqiyād and Īlī : obedience and subordination
- Farmān-bardārī and Khidhmatgārī : subjection and service
- Provision of resources by subordinated actors
- Jān-Sipārī : sacrifice and devotion
- Acts of favor, grace and compassion
- Marhạmạt, Shafaqat and Ināyat : terms for favor, benevolence and affection
- Particular acts of favor : patterns and situations
- Tarbiyat and Isṭinā' : nurture, promotion and marks of favor
- Patterns of gubernatorial appointments
- Qurbat : intimacy and affinity
- The concept of social order : guiding premises and cornerstones
- Bunuwwat and Farzandī : filiation and sonship
- Ri āyat and Hịmāyat (Hịrāsat, Hifāzạt) : attention, solicitude and protection
- Provision of resources by social superiors
- Back to the beginning : notions of fear and anxiety
- Conclusion
- Generosity and gift giving
- The terminology of the gift in the chronicles
- Gifts from below and instances of gift exchange
- Of jewels, horses and rare fabrics : objects of gift exchange
- Namak-khwurī : notions of gratitude and right behavior
- Institutions
- The motif of generosity in the example of Jāwush Bāy
- The Tūy and other festivities
- Qutluq Bāy donates a garden
- Conclusion
- Mediation and brokerage
- Tashafu' and Tawassul : intercession and forging connections
- Village elders : fragments from the sources
- Religious nobles as intermediaries
- The manghit chiefs as power brokers
- Insights into a Kingāsh
- Worldview(s)
- What makes an ideal intermediary?
- Conclusion
- The portrayal of order in bukharan chronicles
- Justice-dispensing and ordering ruler
- Hierarchies and spatial manifestations of social order
- Mullā Sharīf esteems kinship and genealogical order
- Causes of disorder
- Conclusion
- The superhuman protector and the role of destiny
- The chronicles as snapshots of social order
- Social order and inertia
- Conclusion
- Social order(s) in nineteenth-century transoxania
- The manghit period : rulers and milestones
- Muhạmmad Dānyāl Bī b. Khudāyār Bī
- Shāh Murād Bī
- Amīr Hạidar
- The succession struggle 1826-1827
- Amir Nasṛullah Khān
- The last three manghit Amīrs
- Social order at the Bukharan court
- Questions of power and authority
- Shāh Murād's image in nineteenth-century historiography
- Rituals of power at Amīr Hạidar's court
- Nasṛullah Khān : the lord of the auspicious conjunction
- Summary
- Russia's protectorate reconsidered
- The russian expansion : a chronological overview
- Russian protagonists and local power brokers
- The effects of the russian presence
- Summary
- Foreign images of transoxania's social order
- The omnipresence of power in human relations
- Foreign experiences of bukharan hospitality
- Trapped in the regional gift cycle
- Diverging worldviews, divergent tastes
- The Bukharan horse trade
- Summary
- Social order(s) in the Bukharan countryside
- Sharecropping, land tenure and patronage in Bukhara
- Institutionalized indebtedness
- Āqsaqāls according to foreign and secondary sources
- Āqsaqāls in Bukharan sources
- Power in networks
- On the selection and performance of Āqsaqāls
- Summary
- Making sense of the petition system
- Summary
- Conclusion
- Transoxania before and after 1868
- The formation of the nascent bukharan state
- Concluding remarks
- Why apply the social order concept?
- The added scientific value of the social order concept
- Institutionalization processes
- The end of chronicle writing
- Glossary
- Appendices
- Genealogical tables
- Weights and currencies
- List of revenues from the Tūmānāt of Transoxania (in 1833)
- Table of tribes and districts supplying troops for Nasṛullah Khān's army
- Maps
- Bibliography
- Indices
- Symbolic power
- Acknowledgments
- Authority and social order
- Patronage, gift exchange and mediation
- Patron-Client relations
- Generosity, reciprocity and gift giving
- Mediation and brokerage
- Conclusion
- Historical overview : social order in Mā Warā al-Nahr
- The geographical setting of Mā Warā' al-Nahr
- The Uzbeks and their Turko-Mongol legacy
- Uzbek origins and waves of migration
- Preface
- Social order in the Turko-Mongol World
- Social order in Uzbek-dominated Transoxania
- Shifts of power and social change
- Mā Warā' al-Nahr in the early eighteenth century
- The rise of Amirid Principalities
- Miyānkāl : the intermediate land
- The Khitạ'̄ī-Qipchāq
- The Yetī Ūrūgh
- The Qatạghān
- Nūr and the Northern Mountains of Miyānkāl
- Note on transliteration
- The Burqūt and the Turkomān Yūzī
- Hịsạr̄-i Shādmān
- Ūrā Tippa and other towns in the Sir Daryā Region
- The Yūz and ming tribes
- Qarshī (Nasaf, Nakhshab)
- The manghit
- Khuzār
- The Sarāy
- Shahr-i Sabz : The "Green city"
- The Ūng wa Sūl Alliance and the Kīnakās
- Introduction
- Shīrābād, Bāysūn and the Iron Gate
- The Qungrāt
- Tirmidh
- The Naymān
- Samarqand : the "Paradisiacal city"
- Chahār Jūy
- The Qalmāq (Junghār, Uirāt)
- Ūrgūt and Kūhistān
- The city of Bukhara
- Deserts and mountains
- The Oxus and Mā Warā' al-Nahr in history
- The inhabitants of the peripheries
- Conclusion
- The figurations of power in eighteenth-century transoxania
- The circumstances under the last Tuqay-Timurids
- The major power shifts under Abū'l-Faiż Khān
- Muhạmmad Rahịm Bī Yūz of Hịsạr̄
- Ni, matullah Bī Naymān of Tirmidh
- Ibrāhīm Bī Kīnakās of Shahr-i Sabz
- Farhād Bī Ūtārchī of Samarqand
- Khudāyār Bī and the Rise of the Manghit
- Notes on the sources
- The Yetī Ūrūgh, the Qataghān and the struggle for Karmīna
- The Ahl-i Mahramīya : eunuchs, slave soldiers and astrologers
- The Jūybārī Khwājas
- Foreign glimpses of Bukhara's social order : Florio Benevini's account
- Summary
- Nādir Shāh's Conquest of Mā Warā' al-Nahr
- The first Iranian campaign (Autumn 1737)
- Nādir Shāh's measures after the Conquest of Bukhara
- The immediate effects of the Iranian presence
- Summary
- The secondary literature
- The creation of Muhạmmad Rahịm̄ Khān's Herrschaftsverband
- The Amirid Elite
- Patterns of mobility
- Tribespeople, kinship and formative aspects of patronage
- The population
- The Yētī Ūrūgh Amīrs of Miyānkāl
- The Kīnakās Amīrs of Shahr-i Sabz
- Mūsā Bī of Ūrgūt
- Fāżil Bī Yūz of Ūrā Tippa
- Muhạmmad Amīn Bī Yūz of Hịsạr̄
- Islamic societies in history : state of knowledge
- The Qungrāt Amīrs of Bāysūn and Shīrābād
- Conclusion
- The institutionalization of manghit authority
- The Wilāyāt-i Mahṛūsa as a Herrschaftsverband
- The order of things in eighteenth-century chronicles
- Preconditions for the forging of personal ties
- The image of the protectors from the perspective of the protégés
- Rituals of power : The Bay'a and Kūrnish
- Notions of loyalty and obedience
- Ikhlās, Hawā-khwāhī and other terms for loyalty
- Isbn
- 9783700178668
- Label
- What is beyond the river? : power, authority, and social order in Transoxania 18th-19th centuries
- Title
- What is beyond the river?
- Title remainder
- power, authority, and social order in Transoxania 18th-19th centuries
- Statement of responsibility
- Andreas Wilde
- Title variation
-
- What is beyond the river?
- Power, authority, and social order in Transoxania 18th-19th centuries
- Title variation remainder
- power, authority, and social order in Transoxania eighteenth-nineteenth centuries
- Subject
-
- History
- Khanat Buchara
- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 18th century
- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 19th century
- Khanate of Bukhara -- Social conditions
- Khanate of Bukhara -- Social life and customs
- Manners and customs
- Power (Social sciences)
- Power (Social sciences) -- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 18th century
- Power (Social sciences) -- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 19th century
- Social classes
- Social classes -- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 18th century
- Social classes -- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 19th century
- Social conditions
- Social structure
- Social structure -- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 18th century
- Social structure -- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 19th century
- Transoxanien
- Transoxiane
- 1700-1899
- Asia -- Khanate of Bukhara
- Language
-
- eng
- ara
- eng
- Cataloging source
- OHX
- http://library.link/vocab/creatorName
- Wilde, Andreas
- Illustrations
-
- maps
- genealogical tables
- Index
- index present
- LC call number
-
- DK948.84
- AS142
- LC item number
-
- .W55 2016
- .V31 Bd.877
- Literary form
- non fiction
- Nature of contents
- bibliography
- Series statement
-
- Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Philosophisch-Historische Klasse. Sitzungsberichte
- Veröffentlichungen zur Iranistik
- Series volume
-
- 877. Band
- NR. 80
- http://library.link/vocab/subjectName
-
- Khanate of Bukhara
- Khanate of Bukhara
- Social classes
- Social classes
- Social structure
- Social structure
- Power (Social sciences)
- Power (Social sciences)
- Khanate of Bukhara
- Khanate of Bukhara
- Transoxanien
- Khanat Buchara
- Manners and customs
- Power (Social sciences)
- Social classes
- Social conditions
- Social structure
- Asia
- Transoxiane
- Label
- What is beyond the river? : power, authority, and social order in Transoxania 18th-19th centuries, Andreas Wilde
- Note
- Academy publication
- Bibliography note
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 989-1029) and indexes
- Carrier category
- volume
- Carrier category code
-
- nc
- Carrier MARC source
- rdacarrier
- Content category
- text
- Content type code
-
- txt
- Content type MARC source
- rdacontent
- Contents
-
- Power, authority and social order
- ltạ ̄'at, Inqiyād and Īlī : obedience and subordination
- Farmān-bardārī and Khidhmatgārī : subjection and service
- Provision of resources by subordinated actors
- Jān-Sipārī : sacrifice and devotion
- Acts of favor, grace and compassion
- Marhạmạt, Shafaqat and Ināyat : terms for favor, benevolence and affection
- Particular acts of favor : patterns and situations
- Tarbiyat and Isṭinā' : nurture, promotion and marks of favor
- Patterns of gubernatorial appointments
- Qurbat : intimacy and affinity
- The concept of social order : guiding premises and cornerstones
- Bunuwwat and Farzandī : filiation and sonship
- Ri āyat and Hịmāyat (Hịrāsat, Hifāzạt) : attention, solicitude and protection
- Provision of resources by social superiors
- Back to the beginning : notions of fear and anxiety
- Conclusion
- Generosity and gift giving
- The terminology of the gift in the chronicles
- Gifts from below and instances of gift exchange
- Of jewels, horses and rare fabrics : objects of gift exchange
- Namak-khwurī : notions of gratitude and right behavior
- Institutions
- The motif of generosity in the example of Jāwush Bāy
- The Tūy and other festivities
- Qutluq Bāy donates a garden
- Conclusion
- Mediation and brokerage
- Tashafu' and Tawassul : intercession and forging connections
- Village elders : fragments from the sources
- Religious nobles as intermediaries
- The manghit chiefs as power brokers
- Insights into a Kingāsh
- Worldview(s)
- What makes an ideal intermediary?
- Conclusion
- The portrayal of order in bukharan chronicles
- Justice-dispensing and ordering ruler
- Hierarchies and spatial manifestations of social order
- Mullā Sharīf esteems kinship and genealogical order
- Causes of disorder
- Conclusion
- The superhuman protector and the role of destiny
- The chronicles as snapshots of social order
- Social order and inertia
- Conclusion
- Social order(s) in nineteenth-century transoxania
- The manghit period : rulers and milestones
- Muhạmmad Dānyāl Bī b. Khudāyār Bī
- Shāh Murād Bī
- Amīr Hạidar
- The succession struggle 1826-1827
- Amir Nasṛullah Khān
- The last three manghit Amīrs
- Social order at the Bukharan court
- Questions of power and authority
- Shāh Murād's image in nineteenth-century historiography
- Rituals of power at Amīr Hạidar's court
- Nasṛullah Khān : the lord of the auspicious conjunction
- Summary
- Russia's protectorate reconsidered
- The russian expansion : a chronological overview
- Russian protagonists and local power brokers
- The effects of the russian presence
- Summary
- Foreign images of transoxania's social order
- The omnipresence of power in human relations
- Foreign experiences of bukharan hospitality
- Trapped in the regional gift cycle
- Diverging worldviews, divergent tastes
- The Bukharan horse trade
- Summary
- Social order(s) in the Bukharan countryside
- Sharecropping, land tenure and patronage in Bukhara
- Institutionalized indebtedness
- Āqsaqāls according to foreign and secondary sources
- Āqsaqāls in Bukharan sources
- Power in networks
- On the selection and performance of Āqsaqāls
- Summary
- Making sense of the petition system
- Summary
- Conclusion
- Transoxania before and after 1868
- The formation of the nascent bukharan state
- Concluding remarks
- Why apply the social order concept?
- The added scientific value of the social order concept
- Institutionalization processes
- The end of chronicle writing
- Glossary
- Appendices
- Genealogical tables
- Weights and currencies
- List of revenues from the Tūmānāt of Transoxania (in 1833)
- Table of tribes and districts supplying troops for Nasṛullah Khān's army
- Maps
- Bibliography
- Indices
- Symbolic power
- Acknowledgments
- Authority and social order
- Patronage, gift exchange and mediation
- Patron-Client relations
- Generosity, reciprocity and gift giving
- Mediation and brokerage
- Conclusion
- Historical overview : social order in Mā Warā al-Nahr
- The geographical setting of Mā Warā' al-Nahr
- The Uzbeks and their Turko-Mongol legacy
- Uzbek origins and waves of migration
- Preface
- Social order in the Turko-Mongol World
- Social order in Uzbek-dominated Transoxania
- Shifts of power and social change
- Mā Warā' al-Nahr in the early eighteenth century
- The rise of Amirid Principalities
- Miyānkāl : the intermediate land
- The Khitạ'̄ī-Qipchāq
- The Yetī Ūrūgh
- The Qatạghān
- Nūr and the Northern Mountains of Miyānkāl
- Note on transliteration
- The Burqūt and the Turkomān Yūzī
- Hịsạr̄-i Shādmān
- Ūrā Tippa and other towns in the Sir Daryā Region
- The Yūz and ming tribes
- Qarshī (Nasaf, Nakhshab)
- The manghit
- Khuzār
- The Sarāy
- Shahr-i Sabz : The "Green city"
- The Ūng wa Sūl Alliance and the Kīnakās
- Introduction
- Shīrābād, Bāysūn and the Iron Gate
- The Qungrāt
- Tirmidh
- The Naymān
- Samarqand : the "Paradisiacal city"
- Chahār Jūy
- The Qalmāq (Junghār, Uirāt)
- Ūrgūt and Kūhistān
- The city of Bukhara
- Deserts and mountains
- The Oxus and Mā Warā' al-Nahr in history
- The inhabitants of the peripheries
- Conclusion
- The figurations of power in eighteenth-century transoxania
- The circumstances under the last Tuqay-Timurids
- The major power shifts under Abū'l-Faiż Khān
- Muhạmmad Rahịm Bī Yūz of Hịsạr̄
- Ni, matullah Bī Naymān of Tirmidh
- Ibrāhīm Bī Kīnakās of Shahr-i Sabz
- Farhād Bī Ūtārchī of Samarqand
- Khudāyār Bī and the Rise of the Manghit
- Notes on the sources
- The Yetī Ūrūgh, the Qataghān and the struggle for Karmīna
- The Ahl-i Mahramīya : eunuchs, slave soldiers and astrologers
- The Jūybārī Khwājas
- Foreign glimpses of Bukhara's social order : Florio Benevini's account
- Summary
- Nādir Shāh's Conquest of Mā Warā' al-Nahr
- The first Iranian campaign (Autumn 1737)
- Nādir Shāh's measures after the Conquest of Bukhara
- The immediate effects of the Iranian presence
- Summary
- The secondary literature
- The creation of Muhạmmad Rahịm̄ Khān's Herrschaftsverband
- The Amirid Elite
- Patterns of mobility
- Tribespeople, kinship and formative aspects of patronage
- The population
- The Yētī Ūrūgh Amīrs of Miyānkāl
- The Kīnakās Amīrs of Shahr-i Sabz
- Mūsā Bī of Ūrgūt
- Fāżil Bī Yūz of Ūrā Tippa
- Muhạmmad Amīn Bī Yūz of Hịsạr̄
- Islamic societies in history : state of knowledge
- The Qungrāt Amīrs of Bāysūn and Shīrābād
- Conclusion
- The institutionalization of manghit authority
- The Wilāyāt-i Mahṛūsa as a Herrschaftsverband
- The order of things in eighteenth-century chronicles
- Preconditions for the forging of personal ties
- The image of the protectors from the perspective of the protégés
- Rituals of power : The Bay'a and Kūrnish
- Notions of loyalty and obedience
- Ikhlās, Hawā-khwāhī and other terms for loyalty
- Control code
- 957715489
- Dimensions
- 23 cm.
- Extent
- 3 volumes (xvi, 1,101 pages)
- Isbn
- 9783700178668
- Media category
- unmediated
- Media MARC source
- rdamedia
- Media type code
-
- n
- Other control number
- 9783700178668
- Other physical details
- maps, genealogical tables
- System control number
- (OCoLC)957715489
- Label
- What is beyond the river? : power, authority, and social order in Transoxania 18th-19th centuries, Andreas Wilde
- Note
- Academy publication
- Bibliography note
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 989-1029) and indexes
- Carrier category
- volume
- Carrier category code
-
- nc
- Carrier MARC source
- rdacarrier
- Content category
- text
- Content type code
-
- txt
- Content type MARC source
- rdacontent
- Contents
-
- Power, authority and social order
- ltạ ̄'at, Inqiyād and Īlī : obedience and subordination
- Farmān-bardārī and Khidhmatgārī : subjection and service
- Provision of resources by subordinated actors
- Jān-Sipārī : sacrifice and devotion
- Acts of favor, grace and compassion
- Marhạmạt, Shafaqat and Ināyat : terms for favor, benevolence and affection
- Particular acts of favor : patterns and situations
- Tarbiyat and Isṭinā' : nurture, promotion and marks of favor
- Patterns of gubernatorial appointments
- Qurbat : intimacy and affinity
- The concept of social order : guiding premises and cornerstones
- Bunuwwat and Farzandī : filiation and sonship
- Ri āyat and Hịmāyat (Hịrāsat, Hifāzạt) : attention, solicitude and protection
- Provision of resources by social superiors
- Back to the beginning : notions of fear and anxiety
- Conclusion
- Generosity and gift giving
- The terminology of the gift in the chronicles
- Gifts from below and instances of gift exchange
- Of jewels, horses and rare fabrics : objects of gift exchange
- Namak-khwurī : notions of gratitude and right behavior
- Institutions
- The motif of generosity in the example of Jāwush Bāy
- The Tūy and other festivities
- Qutluq Bāy donates a garden
- Conclusion
- Mediation and brokerage
- Tashafu' and Tawassul : intercession and forging connections
- Village elders : fragments from the sources
- Religious nobles as intermediaries
- The manghit chiefs as power brokers
- Insights into a Kingāsh
- Worldview(s)
- What makes an ideal intermediary?
- Conclusion
- The portrayal of order in bukharan chronicles
- Justice-dispensing and ordering ruler
- Hierarchies and spatial manifestations of social order
- Mullā Sharīf esteems kinship and genealogical order
- Causes of disorder
- Conclusion
- The superhuman protector and the role of destiny
- The chronicles as snapshots of social order
- Social order and inertia
- Conclusion
- Social order(s) in nineteenth-century transoxania
- The manghit period : rulers and milestones
- Muhạmmad Dānyāl Bī b. Khudāyār Bī
- Shāh Murād Bī
- Amīr Hạidar
- The succession struggle 1826-1827
- Amir Nasṛullah Khān
- The last three manghit Amīrs
- Social order at the Bukharan court
- Questions of power and authority
- Shāh Murād's image in nineteenth-century historiography
- Rituals of power at Amīr Hạidar's court
- Nasṛullah Khān : the lord of the auspicious conjunction
- Summary
- Russia's protectorate reconsidered
- The russian expansion : a chronological overview
- Russian protagonists and local power brokers
- The effects of the russian presence
- Summary
- Foreign images of transoxania's social order
- The omnipresence of power in human relations
- Foreign experiences of bukharan hospitality
- Trapped in the regional gift cycle
- Diverging worldviews, divergent tastes
- The Bukharan horse trade
- Summary
- Social order(s) in the Bukharan countryside
- Sharecropping, land tenure and patronage in Bukhara
- Institutionalized indebtedness
- Āqsaqāls according to foreign and secondary sources
- Āqsaqāls in Bukharan sources
- Power in networks
- On the selection and performance of Āqsaqāls
- Summary
- Making sense of the petition system
- Summary
- Conclusion
- Transoxania before and after 1868
- The formation of the nascent bukharan state
- Concluding remarks
- Why apply the social order concept?
- The added scientific value of the social order concept
- Institutionalization processes
- The end of chronicle writing
- Glossary
- Appendices
- Genealogical tables
- Weights and currencies
- List of revenues from the Tūmānāt of Transoxania (in 1833)
- Table of tribes and districts supplying troops for Nasṛullah Khān's army
- Maps
- Bibliography
- Indices
- Symbolic power
- Acknowledgments
- Authority and social order
- Patronage, gift exchange and mediation
- Patron-Client relations
- Generosity, reciprocity and gift giving
- Mediation and brokerage
- Conclusion
- Historical overview : social order in Mā Warā al-Nahr
- The geographical setting of Mā Warā' al-Nahr
- The Uzbeks and their Turko-Mongol legacy
- Uzbek origins and waves of migration
- Preface
- Social order in the Turko-Mongol World
- Social order in Uzbek-dominated Transoxania
- Shifts of power and social change
- Mā Warā' al-Nahr in the early eighteenth century
- The rise of Amirid Principalities
- Miyānkāl : the intermediate land
- The Khitạ'̄ī-Qipchāq
- The Yetī Ūrūgh
- The Qatạghān
- Nūr and the Northern Mountains of Miyānkāl
- Note on transliteration
- The Burqūt and the Turkomān Yūzī
- Hịsạr̄-i Shādmān
- Ūrā Tippa and other towns in the Sir Daryā Region
- The Yūz and ming tribes
- Qarshī (Nasaf, Nakhshab)
- The manghit
- Khuzār
- The Sarāy
- Shahr-i Sabz : The "Green city"
- The Ūng wa Sūl Alliance and the Kīnakās
- Introduction
- Shīrābād, Bāysūn and the Iron Gate
- The Qungrāt
- Tirmidh
- The Naymān
- Samarqand : the "Paradisiacal city"
- Chahār Jūy
- The Qalmāq (Junghār, Uirāt)
- Ūrgūt and Kūhistān
- The city of Bukhara
- Deserts and mountains
- The Oxus and Mā Warā' al-Nahr in history
- The inhabitants of the peripheries
- Conclusion
- The figurations of power in eighteenth-century transoxania
- The circumstances under the last Tuqay-Timurids
- The major power shifts under Abū'l-Faiż Khān
- Muhạmmad Rahịm Bī Yūz of Hịsạr̄
- Ni, matullah Bī Naymān of Tirmidh
- Ibrāhīm Bī Kīnakās of Shahr-i Sabz
- Farhād Bī Ūtārchī of Samarqand
- Khudāyār Bī and the Rise of the Manghit
- Notes on the sources
- The Yetī Ūrūgh, the Qataghān and the struggle for Karmīna
- The Ahl-i Mahramīya : eunuchs, slave soldiers and astrologers
- The Jūybārī Khwājas
- Foreign glimpses of Bukhara's social order : Florio Benevini's account
- Summary
- Nādir Shāh's Conquest of Mā Warā' al-Nahr
- The first Iranian campaign (Autumn 1737)
- Nādir Shāh's measures after the Conquest of Bukhara
- The immediate effects of the Iranian presence
- Summary
- The secondary literature
- The creation of Muhạmmad Rahịm̄ Khān's Herrschaftsverband
- The Amirid Elite
- Patterns of mobility
- Tribespeople, kinship and formative aspects of patronage
- The population
- The Yētī Ūrūgh Amīrs of Miyānkāl
- The Kīnakās Amīrs of Shahr-i Sabz
- Mūsā Bī of Ūrgūt
- Fāżil Bī Yūz of Ūrā Tippa
- Muhạmmad Amīn Bī Yūz of Hịsạr̄
- Islamic societies in history : state of knowledge
- The Qungrāt Amīrs of Bāysūn and Shīrābād
- Conclusion
- The institutionalization of manghit authority
- The Wilāyāt-i Mahṛūsa as a Herrschaftsverband
- The order of things in eighteenth-century chronicles
- Preconditions for the forging of personal ties
- The image of the protectors from the perspective of the protégés
- Rituals of power : The Bay'a and Kūrnish
- Notions of loyalty and obedience
- Ikhlās, Hawā-khwāhī and other terms for loyalty
- Control code
- 957715489
- Dimensions
- 23 cm.
- Extent
- 3 volumes (xvi, 1,101 pages)
- Isbn
- 9783700178668
- Media category
- unmediated
- Media MARC source
- rdamedia
- Media type code
-
- n
- Other control number
- 9783700178668
- Other physical details
- maps, genealogical tables
- System control number
- (OCoLC)957715489
Subject
- History
- Khanat Buchara
- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 18th century
- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 19th century
- Khanate of Bukhara -- Social conditions
- Khanate of Bukhara -- Social life and customs
- Manners and customs
- Power (Social sciences)
- Power (Social sciences) -- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 18th century
- Power (Social sciences) -- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 19th century
- Social classes
- Social classes -- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 18th century
- Social classes -- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 19th century
- Social conditions
- Social structure
- Social structure -- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 18th century
- Social structure -- Khanate of Bukhara -- History -- 19th century
- Transoxanien
- Transoxiane
- 1700-1899
- Asia -- Khanate of Bukhara
Genre
Member of
- Sitzungsberichte (Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Philosophisch-Historische Klasse), 877. Bd
- Veröffentlichungen zur Iranistik, Nr. 80
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.library.missouri.edu/portal/What-is-beyond-the-river--power-authority-and/hbSjYfgwovM/" typeof="Book http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Item"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.library.missouri.edu/portal/What-is-beyond-the-river--power-authority-and/hbSjYfgwovM/">What is beyond the river? : power, authority, and social order in Transoxania 18th-19th centuries, Andreas Wilde</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.library.missouri.edu/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.library.missouri.edu/">University of Missouri Libraries</a></span></span></span></span></div>