Cargando…

What is beyond the river? : power, authority, and social order in transoxiania 18th-19th centuries /

"This book investigates the dialectics of power and social order in eighteenth and nineteenth-century Mā Warāʼ al-Nahr from an intrinsic perspective. Relying on a rich corpus of Bukharan primary sources, the study is a work of fundamental research that combines established traditions of socia...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: WILDE, ANDREAS
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: [Place of publication not identified] : AUSTRIAN ACADEMY OF SCIEN, 2016.
Colección:Sitzungsberichte der Philosophisch-Historischen Klasse Ser. ; 877.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Descripción
Sumario:"This book investigates the dialectics of power and social order in eighteenth and nineteenth-century Mā Warāʼ al-Nahr from an intrinsic perspective. Relying on a rich corpus of Bukharan primary sources, the study is a work of fundamental research that combines established traditions of social historical research and approaches borrowed from the social sciences. The resulting narrative stretches from the Mongols and Abu'l-Khairids to the eighteenth century and the late Tuqay-Timurids, when the established spatial-administrative framework crumbled into an archipelago of petty Uzbek principalities, chiefdoms and "city states," continuing with the Manghits and finishing in the late nineteenth century with the colonial penetration. While beginning with a conventional bird's-eye view of steppe society worldviews and established patterns of authority, the author soon abandons the sole dynastic focus and comes up with a range of local histories. The reader will be acquainted with places like Nūr, Shahr-i Sabz, Tirmidh, Ḥiṣār and other areas, which, having been dominated by competing military, religious and economic networks, remained partly outside the sphere of Tuqay-Timurid and later on Manghit authority. A large part of the book addresses the language employed in the chronicles by highlighting the semantics of key terms such as favor, loyalty or obedience. Those concepts are manifest in practices like patronage, mediation and gift exchange. Based on the materials of the Koshbegi Archive, the final part culminates in a range of micro-level studies of various socio-political domains in faraway villages and canal systems. Inspired by relational ideas of power, the analysis enhances our understanding of the factors that were decisive for social interaction in that period. Moreover, it gives fresh impulses to the debate on concepts of power and authority among historians and social scientists. This book investigates the dialectics of power and social order in eighteenth and nineteenth-century Mā Warāʼ al-Nahr from an intrinsic perspective. Relying on a rich corpus of Bukharan primary sources, the study is a work of fundamental research that combines established traditions of social historical research and approaches borrowed from the social sciences. The resulting narrative stretches from the Mongols and Abu'l-Khairids to the eighteenth century and the late Tuqay-Timurids, when the established spatial-administrative framework crumbled into an archipelago of petty Uzbek principalities, chiefdoms and "city states," continuing with the Manghits and finishing in the late nineteenth century with the colonial penetration. While beginning with a conventional bird's-eye view of steppe society worldviews and established patterns of authority, the author soon abandons the sole dynastic focus and comes up with a range of local histories. The reader will be acquainted with places like Nūr, Shahr-i Sabz, Tirmidh, Ḥiṣār and other areas, which, having been dominated by competing military, religious and economic networks, remained partly outside the sphere of Tuqay-Timurid and later on Manghit authority. A large part of the book addresses the language employed in the chronicles by highlighting the semantics of key terms such as favor, loyalty or obedience. Those concepts are manifest in practices like patronage, mediation and gift exchange. Based on the materials of the Koshbegi Archive, the final part culminates in a range of micro-level studies of various socio-political domains in faraway villages and canal systems. Inspired by relational ideas of power, the analysis enhances our understanding of the factors that were decisive for social interaction in that period. Moreover, it gives fresh impulses to the debate on concepts of power and authority among historians and social scientists."
Descripción Física:1 online resource
ISBN:9783700180371
3700180373
3700178662
9783700178668