Editions Télémaque 2007 14x20x2cm. 2007. Broché. 202 pages. Très bon état
Reference : 100061844
ISBN : 2753300453
Livres-sur-sorgue
M. Philippe Arnaiz
04 90 26 49 32
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, Brepols, 2022 Hardback, 469 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:12 b/w, 1 col., 2 tables b/w., Language(s):English, Latin. ISBN 9782503595528.
Summary This is a novel, interdisciplinary study of the Mongol military campaign in Eastern Europe (1241-1242) ? the North, as thirteenth-century Europeans saw the region ? in the works of contemporary English chronicler, Matthew Paris of St Albans Monastery. Tracing the journey of his sources, the volume explores thirteenth-century information networks against the backdrop of the struggle between Emperor Frederick II and Pope Innocent IV. Parallel to the history of information, the subject of the study is the Chronica majora and its afterlife, Matthew's chronicle world where the sometimes fictitious (and often very real) episodes of the Mongol story unfold. Tracing major landmarks in the meta-history of the Chronica majora, the author wishes to emancipate Matthew Paris as a historian ? one in the series of a multitude of others who continue to write and rewrite the history of the Mongol invasion across centuries of historiography. The volume is a handy companion both to scholars of English historiography and those who want to read critically the oft-cited primary sources of the history of the Mongol military operations in Europe. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations, Abbreviations Introduction Chapter 1. Inside the Book Mise-en-ab me Within and Without The North by the Northwest Chapter 2. Outside the Book The Book in the Scriptorium The Scriptorium in England England in the European Networks Chapter 3. Fright: Mongols in the North and East (1237-1240) 1237: Chaldeans, Medes, Persians, and Armenians 1238: Northbound to Hungaria major 1239: Dacia, Gothia, Frisia 1240: False Alarm and Irruption Chapter 4. Fight: Mongols in the Middle (1241) Holy War on the Mongols The First 1241 Cluster The Second 1241 Cluster Chapter 5. Flight: Rivaling Stories of Retreat (1243-1248) 1243: The Tartar Khan's Englishman 1244: Frederick's Triumph 1244: The Man from Russia 1245-1248: Endgame Chapter 6. Letters from the Afflicted Lands in the Additamenta Chapter 7. The Afterlife of Matthew's Mongol Story Chronicles and their Afterlife Back to the Future: Modern historiography Vice prologi Appendix 1: List of Manuscripts Manuscripts containing the Chronica majora and its fragments / continuations Manuscripts containing Matthew Paris's Flores historiarum, and its fragments / continuations Flores manuscripts listed in medieval catalogues Notes on transcription Further appendices Bibliography Index
Turnhout, Brepols, 2013 softcover, 149 pages ., 156 x 234 mm, ISBN: 978-2-503-53152-6 languages: English. ISBN 9782503531526.
This book argues that the relations between the Mamluk Sultanate of Syria and Egypt and the Ilkhanate, the Mongol state in Iran and the surrounding countries, were of a military, political-diplomatic, social and cultural nature. The relations between the Mamluk Sultanate of Syria and Egypt and the Ilkhanate, the Mongol state in Iran and the surrounding countries, were of a military, political-diplomatic, social and cultural nature. They had a profound impact not only on these states themselves, their ruling elites and the general population, but also on neighboring countries and beyond. The history of the eastern Mediterranean, Anatolia, Arabia and the Caucasus can hardly be understood without taking into consideration these complicated relations, whose impact was also felt in the other Mongol states to the east, and in the more westerly and northern parts of Europe. One can perhaps even speak of a thirteenth century ?world war?: on one side were arrayed the Mamluks and the Mongol Golden Horde of southern Russia, at times Genoa and the Byzantine empire, and even for a short while the kingdom of Sicily under the Hohenstaufen, while on the other side we find the Ilkhanate, the Venetians (albeit still trading with the Mamluks), the states of western Europe, the Papacy, the Armenians of both the Caucasus and Cilicia, and Georgia. To this we could add minor, but still important players, such as the Bedouin of Syria, the Seljuqs of Rum (Anatolia), the Turcoman of that country, and other local elements. Far away, the Mongols of Central Asia and the Great Khan in China also had an impact on affairs along the Mediterranean coast and southwest Asia. But this was not only a matter of war, which between the Mamluks and Ilkhanid Mongols continued from 1260-1320. There were intricate diplomatic relations; polemics and ideological sparring; defections, immigrations and transfers of populations; cultural influences; and, the impact on social life, economics and demography. The present volume is based on four lectures given at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes in Paris in February 2007, and first provides an overview of the military struggle between these two regional powers, continues with a detailed discussion of the ideological posturing and sparring between them ? both before and after the conversion of the Mongols to Islam in the 1290s, and finally reviews and compares how the Mamluks and Mongols presented themselves to the local, mainly Muslim, populations that they ruled. The book provides an analysis of an important chapter in Middle Eastern, Asian and world history. Languages : English.
HISTORIA. 2023. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. Environ 130 pages illustrées en couleur. . . . Classification Dewey : 70.49-Presse illustrée, magazines, revues
SOMMAIRE : Gengis khan big bang mongol, chef militaire hors du commun, etat mobile, conquete de la chine de l'iran de l'europe de l'est, grand echange mongol - kose gad le tsunami venu d'asie centrale- the hu metal hurlant- cuisine fusion des mongols- sorqaqtani une femme a la tete de l'empire ... Classification Dewey : 70.49-Presse illustrée, magazines, revues
Reference : bd-82c4b301715a3d3c
Hafizov G. The Dissolution of the Mongol Empire and the Formation of Ulus Juchi./Khafizov G.G. Raspad Mongolskoy imperii i obrazovanie Ulusa Dzhuchi. Hafizov G. The Dissolution of the Mongol Empire and the Education of Ulus Djuchi. Kazan. Tatar Book Publishing House. 2000. 96 p. We have thousands of titles and often several copies of each title may be available. Please feel free to contact us for a detailed description of the copies available. SKUbd-82c4b301715a3d3c.
Smirnov A. P. Ancient history of the Chuvash people (before the Mongol conquest). In Russian (ask us if in doubt)/Smirnov A. P. Drevnyaya istoriya Chuvashskogo naroda (do mongol'skogo zavoevaniya).. Short description: In Russian (ask us if in doubt).edited by A. V. Artsikhovsky. Cheboksary. Chuvashgosizdat. 1948 82 p. We have thousands of titles and often several copies of each title may be available. Please feel free to contact us for a detailed description of the copies available. SKUalb33849580d1b9f7a1