Authors: Christopher I. Beckwith
Tags: #History, #General, #Asia, #Europe, #Eastern, #Central Asia
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INDEX
The index that appeared in the print version of this title was intentionally removed from the e-Book. Please use the search function on your e-Reading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
Aachen, Aix-la-Chapelle
Abahai.
See
Hung Taiji
‘Abbâs I, Safavid shâh
‘Abbâs II, Safavid shâh
Abbasid Revolution
Abbasid Caliphate, Abbasids
See also
Arab Empire
‘Abd al-Malik, Umayyad caliph
‘Abd al-Raḥman, governor of Spain
‘Abû al-’Abbâs, first Abbasid
caliph
Abû Bakr, first caliph
Abû Ja’far al-Mansûr, second Abbasid
caliph
Abû Sa’îd, last Il-Khan
Abû Yazîd al-Bistâmî, first Sufi mystic
Adrianople, Battle of
Aetius, Flavius, Roman general
Afghanistan, Afghan Civil
War
See also
Sur
Afonso de Albuquerque
Agni.
See
Karashahr
Agra
Akbar, Mughal emperor
Ak-Koyunlu
Aksu
Al-Akhfash al-Ausat.
See
Al-Mujâshi’î
of Balkh
Alamut
Alans
Albanian
Albazin
Al-Birûnî
Aleppo
Alexander the Great
Al-Fârâbî, Avennasar
Al-Farghânî, Alfraganus
Al-Ghazâlî, Algazel
Algorithmus.
See
al-Khwârizmî
Al-Ḥajjâj ibn Yûsuf, Umayyad
governor-general
Alhambra
‘Alî, fourth caliph
Al-Khwârizmî, Algorithmus
alliances, Allied Powers
Allies Arab-Chinese,
Axis Central
Powers Ch’ing-Russian
Mongolian-Soviet Paekche-
Koguryo-Japanese T’ang-Silla Tibetan-Western Turk
alligators
Al-Ma’mûn, Abbasid caliph
Al-Mujâshi’î of Balkh, actual author of
al-Kitâb,
Al-Mu’tasim, Abbasid caliph
Alp Arslan, Seljuk ruler
Alpha Male Hierarchy
Alptigin, Samanid-Ghaznavid ruler
Altai Mountains
Altan Khan
Alutâr, king of Ferghana
Al-Walîd I, Umayyad caliph
Al-Wâthiq, Abbasid caliph
Amazons
American Indians
Amursana, Junghar leader
Anacharsis, Scythian philosopher
Anagai, Avar kaghan
Anatolian
Anglo-Saxons
Angora Battle of
An-hsi, Pacified West Protectorate,
An Lu-shan, T’ang rebel
An-nan, Annam
Anthony, David W.
Arab Empire, Arabs
first civil war
Arabs in Spain
(see
Spain, Arabs in)
Araxes River
architecture
destruction of
See also
Modernism: in architecture
Ardaric, King of the Gepids
Ardawân (Artabanus V), Parthian ruler
Ardaxšēr (Ardashir Papakan)
Ariq Böke, Mongol leader
Aristotle
Armenia, Armenians
Armenian
Arnulfings, Pippinids.
See
Pippin
Árpád, Hungarian ruler
arrows, arrowheads
Arsacids.
See
Parthians
Aršilas, A-shih-na, royal clan of the Türk
art, artists, artworks
See also
architecture;
Modernism: in architecture;
Modernism, in the arts; Modernism:
in music; Modernism: in painting;
Modernism: in poetry; music;
painting; poetry
Art
anthropomorphism of
Artavasdos, Byzantine leader
Assassins, Ismâ’îlî order
Assyrians
Astrakhan Khanate
Asvin, Wu-sun
name origin myth,
Atatürk, Mustafa Kemal
Atil, Itil, capital of the Khazars
Âtiśa, Buddhist teacher
Atlakh, Battle of
Attila the Hun
Aurangzeb, Mughal emperor
autarkic theory.
See
non-autarkic theory
automobiles
Ava
Avars (Jou-jan), Avar Empire
identity problem
Averroës, Ibn Rushd
Avestan, Avesta
Avicenna.
See
Ibn Sînâ
Ayutthaya, Ayodhya
‘Ayn Jalût, Battle of
Baatur Khungtaiji, Junghar ruler,
Babur, first Mughal emperor
Babylonians
Bactra.
See
Balkh
Bactria, Bactriana
conquest by Alexander the Great
conquest by Hephthalites
conquest by Tokharians
Bactria-Margiana Archaeological
Complex
Baghdad
Baibaghas, Oirat khan
Balâsâghûn
Balkh (Bactra)
Baltic
Balûr.
See
Bruźa
Bandar ‘Abbâs
Bangkok
barbarian, barbarians,
meaning of
Chinese non-equivalents of
bards
Barlas, Barulas
Barmakids, Barmecides
barrow
Bâšak, king of Ferghana
Basmïl
Basra
Batu
Bâyazîd, Ottoman sultan
Baykand, Paykand
Beauty, the Beautiful
Béla IV, king of Hungary
Beowulf,
Berke, son of Batu
Berlin
Beshbalik
Bihzad
Bilgä Kaghan, Eastern Türk ruler,
birds, in origin myths
black.
See
Modernism: in painting
Black Death
Bleda, brother of Attila
Blue Horde.
See
Sibir
Bolshevism.
See
communism
Bod,
native name of Tibet
Bombay
bombs.
See
firearms
Bon, form of Tibetan Buddhism
Bonn
bows
Boxer Rebellion
Brezhnev
Britain, British
British India
bronze
Bronze Inscriptions
Bruźa, Balûr
bubonic plague.
See
Black Death
Buddhism among early Turks,
among Kushans among
Manchus among Mongols,
among Tanguts canon
in Central Asia in China,
influence on early Islam,
in Tibet
See also individual sects
Bukhara, Bukharan Kingdom
king of
Bulgars, Danubian
Bulgars, Volga
Bulge, Battle of the
Bulghar
Bumïn.
See
Tumïn
bunnies.
See
rabbits
bushi,
samurai
Byzantine Empire, Eastern Roman
Empire
See also
Romans
Cabral, Pedro Alvarez
Caesar, Julius
Caffa
Cage, John
Calcutta
Calicut
caliphate.
See
Arab Empire
Cambaluc, Khanbalik.
See
Peking
cannons.
See
firearms
Canton
Carl, Charles Martel, Frankish Mayor of the Palace
Carolingian Dynasty
Carolingian Revolution
Catalaunian Fields, Battle of the
cats
Celeres, early Roman comitatus
Celtic, Celts
Central Asia, definition of
Central Eurasia: definition of
peoples of subregions of
Central Eurasian Culture Complex
typical knives of
Central Steppe, defined
Chaghatai Horde
châkars,
Central Asian comitatus
warriors
Arab caliphs’
King of the
Ch’ang-an
Chang Ch’ien
chariot Chinese
word for earliest,
Egyptian as
funeral vehicle Hittite
Mitanni
Mycenean Greek
in Shang China
chariot warriors
Charlemagne, Carolus Magnus, Carolingian king
Charles the Bald, Frankish king
Chechens, Chechnya
Ch’iang, Chiang
feminine character name
Chiang Kai-shek
Ch’ien-lung Emperor
Childeric I, king of the Franks
Ch’i-lien ‘Heavenly’ Mountains
Ch’in, Chinese kingdom and dynasty
Chin, late Classical dynasty
Chin, medieval dynasty.
See
Jurchen Empire
China, People’s Republic of communists
China, Republic of, Nationalists
Chinese Empire, Chinese
See also
China;
individual dynasties
Chinese language, genesis of
formation of writing
system
Ch’ing Dynasty
See also
Manchu-Chinese Empire
chinggis,
meaning of
Chinggis Khan, Temüjin
friends of
See also
comitatus: individual examples
Ch’ing-t’ang kingdom
Ch’in Shih Huang-ti, first emperor of
Ch’in Dynasty
See also
Ch’in
Chionites
Chlothar II, Lothair, Frankish king
Chos,
form of Tibetan Buddhism
Chou Dynasty conquest of Shang,
origin myth
Christianity among Byzantines,
among Franks in
Hungary in Japan
Chungking
Chung-tu.
See
Peking
Chu Yüan-chang, founder of Ming
Dynasty
Cimmeria, Cimmerians
cities
—capitals and metropolises, location of
—in Central Asia
See also individual cities
—Chinese
See also individual cities
—fortified
—in the Littoral zone
See also individual cities
—in the steppe zone
See also individual cities
City of Peace
Clovis I, Hludovicus, King of the
Franks
Coghtu Taiji
coinage, coins
Cold War
college
—Buddhist
vihâra,
destruction
of
See also
Nawbahâr
—European-American university
in modern Central Eurasia
—European
college
—Islamic
madrasa
destruction of
Cologne
Colombo
comitatus
burial camp of
cost lack of
ranks and categories and
trade
(see also
gold; silk)
—adoption by peripheral peoples: by
Arabs in Central Asia by
Arabs in Spain by Byzantines
by T’ang Chinese
—individual examples: An Lu-shan’s
Attila’s
Chinggis Khan’s
Qutayba ibn
Muslim’s Tamerlane’s
—Islamicized form
—national examples: Anglo-Saxon, in
Beowulf,
Germanic
Hephthalite Hittite
Hsiung-nu
Japanese Khazar Khitan
Khwarizmian
Koguryo Mitanni
Mongol Mongol, in the
Secret
History,
Persian
early Roman Rus
Scythian Sogdian
Tibetan
Türk Uighur
communism, radical socialism
See also
China, People’s
Republic of; Maoism; Soviet Union
Constantine V, Byzantine emperor
Constantinople
continental trade system.
See
Silk Road system
Cossacks
creole, defined
See also
Proto-Indo-European, diaspora of
Ctesiphon
Cyrus, Persian founder
Dacia, Dacians
Dagobert I, Frankish king
Dalai Lama Fifth,
Sixth Seventh
Fourteenth
Damascus
Daqîqî
Darius, second Persian ruler
Delhi
democracy, democratic,
Dengizikh, son of Attila
Depression, the Great
Dgelugspa sect of Buddhism,
Di Cosmo, Nicola
Diu Battle of
Dnieper River, god of
domes, Heavenly
donkey
Dorgon, Manchu prince-regent
Eastern Steppe, defined
East Turkistan
republics
Edo
Eliot, T. S.,
Ellac, eldest son of Attila
Elteriš Kaghan, founder of Second Türk
Empire
emperor
Empress Dowager, Manchu-Ch’ing,
Enrique III, Henry III, king of Castile
and León
epic poetry, oral
Erdeni Zuu
Ermak.
See
Yermak Timofeyevich
Ermanaric, king of the Ostrogoths,
Ernac, Irnikh, son of Attila
Esen Taiši, Oirat ruler
Eudo of Aquitaine
Eurasia Littoral zone of (see
Littoral); peripheral cultures of
European Union
Evenkis
Fârâb.
See
Utrâr
fascism
Ferghana
Firdausî
firearms,
First Story
First World War.
See
World War I
Four Garrisons of An-hsi
Franks
See also
Carolingian Dynasty; Merovingian
Dynasty
French Revolution
friends,
comitatus members
fundamentalism.
See
Modernism:
religious
Galdan Boshughtu Khan, Junghar