Results 161 to 170 of about 942 (184)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Le Turkestan oriental et les Oirats
Études mongoles, 1974Akimuskin Oleg Fëdorovič, Bassanoff Namtcha. Le Turkestan oriental et les Oirats. In: Études mongoles, cahier 5, 1974. pp. 157-163.
Akimuskin, Oleg Fëdorovič +1 more
openaire +2 more sources
The Oirat Heart Sutra on Birch Bark from Ablakit
Manuscripta Orientalia. International Journal for Oriental Manuscript Research, 2022The Clear Script was created in 1648, but most of the surviving manuscripts and xylographs written in this alphabet date back to a much later period, the 18th—19th centuries. Until recently the letter of Galdan Boshogtu Khan addressed to the Tsar of Russia in 1691 was considered to be the earliest surviving document in the Clear Script.
openaire +1 more source
Oirat and Kalmyk, the Western Mongolic languages
2020Oirat and Kalmyk constitute the western branch of Mongolic languages. “Oirat” is a general signifier of dialects having common features, whose speakers live scattered in a vast territory of North Eurasia (Mongolia, China, Russia, and Kyrgyzstan). Kalmyk originates from Oirat, but became a separate language in a Turkic and Russian environment in Eastern
openaire +1 more source
Marriage, Family and Politics: The Ilkhanid-Oirat Connection
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 2016AbstractThe Chinggisids clearly favoured specific in-law clans through policies of repeated marriage over generations. This paper charts the fortunes of one such clan, the Oirats, who first joined the Chinggisids when Chinggis Khan and Börte's daughter Chechiyegen wedded an Oirat prince. Thereafter Chechiyegen's own daughters married back to the Toluid,
openaire +1 more source

