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Szilvia Kovács University of Szeged, Egyetem u. 2. 6722, Szeged, Hungary; Eötvös Loránd Research Network (ELKH)

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Márton Vér Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Heinrich-Düker-Weg 14, D-37073 Göttingen

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  • Allsen, Thomas T. 1989.‘Mongol Princes and Their Merchant Partners.’ Asia Major (Third Series) 2: 83126.

  • Allsen, Thomas T. 2001. Culture and Conquest in Mongol Eurasia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  • Allsen, Thomas T. 2010. ‘Imperial Posts, West, East and North: a Review Article.’ Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi 17: 237276.

  • Amster, Martin (ed.) 2005. From Silk to Oil: Cross-Cultural Connections Along the Silk Roads. New York: China Institute In America.

  • Barbaix, Sophie et al. 2020. ‘The Use of Historical Sources in a Multi-Layered Methodology for Karez Re-search in Turpan, China.’ Water History 12: 281297.

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  • Beckwith, I. Christopher 2009. Empires of the Silk Road. A History of Central Eurasia from the Bronze Age to the Present. Princeton And Oxford: Princeton University Press.

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  • Benkato, Adam 2018. Studies on the Sogdian Epistolary Tradition. [Berliner Turfantexte 41] Turnhout: Brepols.

  • Biran, Michal 2013. ‘The Mongol Empire: The State of the Field.’ History Compass 11/11: 10211033.

  • Biran, Michal 2015. ‘The Mongol Empire and Inter-Civilizational Exchange.’ In: Benjamin Z. Kedar and Merrey, E. Wiesner-Hanks (eds.) The Cambridge World History. Vol V.: Expanding Webs of Exchange and Conflict, 500 CE ‒ 1500 CE. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 534558.

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  • Biran, Michal 2018. ‘Mobility, Empire and Cross-Cultural Contacts in Mongol Eurasia.’ Medieval Worlds. Comparative & Interdisciplinary Studies 8: 135154.

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  • Biran Michal, Jonathan M. Brack and Francesca, Fiaschetti (Eds.) 2020. Along the Silk Roads in Mongol Eurasia: Generals, Merchants, Intellectuals. Oakland CA: University Of California Press.

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  • Bloom, Jonathan M. 2005. ‘Silk Road or Paper Road? ’ Silk Road 3/2: 2126.

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  • Dallos, Edina and Gábor Kósa (Eds.) 2018. Kultúrák találkozása és kölcsönhatása a Selyemút mentén: Ecsedy Ildikó születésének 80. évfordulójára [Meeting of Cultures Along the Silk Road. For the 80th Anniversary of the Birth of Ildikó Ecsedy]. Budapest: Szte Btk Altajisztikai Tanszék, Elte Távol-Keleti Intézet.

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  • Deweese, Devin 1994. Islamization and Native Religion in the Golden Horde: Baba Tükles and Conversion to Islam in Historical and Epic Tradition. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press.

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  • Durkin-Meisterernst, Desmond et al. (Eds.) 2004. Turfan Revisited: the First Century of Research into the Arts and Cultures of the Silk Road. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer Verlag.

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  • Elisseeff, Vadime 2000. ‘Approaches Old and New to the Silk Roads.’ In: Vadime Elisseef (ed.) The Silk Roads: Highways of Culture and Commerce. New York And Oxford And Paris: Berghahn Books And Unesco Publishing.

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  • Elverskog, Johan 2010. Buddhism and Islam on the Silk Road. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press.

  • Favereau, Marie 2018.‘The Mongol Peace and Global Medieval Eurasia.’ Zeitschrift für Globalgeschichte und vergleichende Gesellschaftsforschung 28/4: 4970.

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  • Felföldi, Szabolcs 2001. ‘A Prominent Hephthalite: Katulph and the Fall of the Hephthalite Empire.’ AOH 54/2‒ 3: 191202.

  • Fiaschetti, Francesca 2020. ‘Yang Tingbi: Mongol Expansion along the Maritime Silk Roads.’ In: BIRAN, BRACK and FIASCHETTI 2020: 83101.

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  • Foltz, Richard C. 1999. Religions of the Silk Road: Overland Trade and Cultural Exchange from Antiquity to the Fifteenth Century. New York: St. Martin’s Press.

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  • Frankopan, Peter 2015. The Silk Roads. A New History of the World. London And Oxford: Bloomsbury.

  • Galambos, Imre 2020. Dunhuang Manuscript Culture. [Studies in Manuscript Cultures 22.] Berlin And BosTon: De Gruyter.

  • Hao, Chunwen 2020. Dunhuang Manuscripts: An Introduction of Texts from the Silk Road. [Trans. Stephen F. Teiser] Diamond Bar: Portico Publishing Company.

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  • Hansen, Valerie 2017 2. The Silk Road. A New History. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.

  • Hedin, Sven 1938. The Silk Road. London: George Routledge And Sons.

  • Hitch, Doug 2009. The Special Status of Turfan. [Sino-Platonic Papers 186.] Philadelphia: Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of Pennsylvania.

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  • Honeychurch, William 2015. ‘From Steppe Roads to Silk Roads. Inner Asian Nomads and Early Interregional Exchange.’ In: Reuven Amitai And Michal Biran (eds.) Nomads as Agents of Cultural Change. The Mongols and Their Eurasian Predecessors. Honolulu: University Of Hawaiʻi Press, 5087.

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  • Hoppál, Krisztina 2020. ‘Rome, China and West-East Intercultural Communication in Antiquity: An Ar-chaeological Perspective.’ Studies on Cultures along the Silk Roads 2: 5683.

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  • Jackson, Peter 2000. ‘The State of Research: The Mongol Empire, 1986–1999.’ Journal of Medieval History 26: 189210.

  • Jacq-Hergoualc’h, Michel 2001. The Malay Peninsula Crossroads of the Maritime Silk Road (100 BC ‒ 1300 AD). Leiden: Brill.

  • Kauz, Ralph (Ed.) 2010. Aspects of the Maritime Silk Road: from the Persian Gulf to the East China Sea. WiesBaden: Harrassowitz.

  • Kovács, Szilvia 2020. ‘Taydula: A Golden Horde Queen and Patron of Christian Merchants.’ In: BIRAN, BRACK and FIASCHETTI 2020, 194212.

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  • Kuroda, Akinobu 2009.‘The Eurasian Silver Century, 1276–1359: Commensurability and Multiplicity.’ Jour-nal of Global History 4/2: 245269.

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  • Liu, Xinru 2010. The Silk Road in World History. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.

  • Lundysheva, Olga and Anna Turanskaya 2020. ‘Old Uyghur Fragments in the Serindia Collection: Prov-enance, Acquisiton, Processing.’ Written Monuments of the Orient 6/2: 4364.

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  • Matsui, Dai 2009. ‘Mongol Globalism Attested by the Uigur and Mongol Documents.’ Studies in the Hu-manities (Volume of the Cultural Sciences) 22: 3342.

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  • Matsui, Dai 2021. Old Uigur Administrative Orders from Turfan. [Berliner Turfantexte 4X.] Turnhout: BrePols. (Forthcoming).

  • Meinert, Carmen (Ed.) 2016. Transfer of Buddhism Across Central Asian Networks (7th to 13th Centuries). Leiden: Brill.

  • Mertens, Matthias 2019. ‘Did Richthofen Really coin “the Silk Road?”’. The Silk Road 17: 19.

  • Morgan, David 2007 2. The Mongols. Oxford and Malden and Victoria: Blackwell Publishing.

  • Morgan, David 2015. ‘Mongol Historiography since 1985: The Rise of Cultural History.’ In: Reuven Amitai And Michal Biran (eds.) Nomads as Agents of Cultural Change. The Mongols and Their Eurasian Predecessors. Honolulu: University Of Hawaiʻi Press, 271282.

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  • Moriyasu, Takao 2019. Corpus of the Old Uighur Letters from the Eastern Silk Road. [Berliner Turfantexte 46.] Turnhout: Brepols.

  • Noonan, Thomas S. 2000. ‘The Fur Road and the Silk Road: the Relations between Central Asia and Northern Russia in the Early Middle Ages.’ In: Csanád Bálint (ed.) Kontakte zwischen Iran, Byzanz und der Steppe im 6.–7. Jh. Budapest: Publicationes Instituti Archaeologici Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae, 285301.

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  • Polgár, Szabolcs József 2019. ‘The Character of the Trade between the Nomads and their Settled Neighbours in Eurasia in the Middle Ages.’ In: Hao Chen (ed.) Competing Narratives between Nomadic People and their Sedentary Neighbours. [Studia Uralo-altaica 53.] Szeged: University Of Szeged, Department Of Altaic Studies, 253263.

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  • Pritsak, Omeljan 1988. ‘The Distinctive Features of the Pax nomadica.’ In: Ovidio Capitani (ed.) Popoli delle steppe: Unni, Avari, Ungari; 23–29 aprile 1987. [Dettimane die Studio del Centro Italiani di Studi sull’alto medioevo XXXV] Spoleto: Presso La Sede Del Centro, 749780.

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  • Raschmann, Simone-Christiane (Ed.) 2007. Alttürkische Handschriften. Teil 13: Dokumente Teil 1. [Verzeichnis der Orientalischen Handschriften in Deutschland 13,21.] Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag.

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  • Raschmann, Simone-Christiane (Ed.) 2009. Alttürkische Handschriften. Teil 14: Dokumente Teil 2. [Verzeichnis der Orientalischen Handschriften in Deutschland 13,22.] Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag.

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  • Raschmann, Simone-Christiane and Osman Fikri Sertkaya (Eds.) 2016. Alttürkische Handschriften. Teil 20. Alttürkische Texte aus der Berliner Turfansammlung im Nachlass Reşid Rahmeti Arat. [Verzeichnis der Orientalischen Handschriften in Deutschland 13,28.] Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag.

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  • Rezakhani, Khodadad 2010. ‘The Road That Never Was: The Silk Road and Trans-Eurasian Exchange.’ Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 30/3: 420433.

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  • Richthofen Ferdinand Freiherrn Von 1877a. China. Ergebnisse eigener Reisen und darauf gegründeter Studien. Mit XXIX Holzschnitten und XI Karten. Bd. I. Berlin: Reimer.

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  • Richthofen, Ferdinand Freiherrn Von 1877b. ‘Über die zentralasiatischen Seidenstrassen bis zum 2. Jh. n. Chr.’ Verhandlungen der Gesellschaft für Erdkunde zu Berlin 4: 96122.

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  • Russell-Smith, Lilla 2005. Uygur Patronage in Dunhuang: Regional Art Centres on the Northern Silk Road in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries. [Brill’s Inner Asian Library, vol. 14.] Leiden And Boston: Brill.

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  • Schafer, Edward H. 1963. The Golden Peaches of Samarkand. A Study of T’ang exotics. Berkeley And Los Angeles: University Of California Press.

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  • Silverstein, Adam J. 2007. Postal Systems in the Pre-Modern Islamic World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  • Sims-Williams, Nicholas 2012. Bactrian Documents from Northern Afghanistan. I: Legal and Economic Documents. (Revised Edition). London: The Nour Foundation.

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  • Spengler Iii, Robert N. 2019. Fruit from the Sands. The Silk Road Origins of the Foods We Eat. Oakland: University Of California Press.

  • Stark, Sören 2015.‘Luxurious Necessities: Some Observations on Foreign Commodities and Nomadic Polities in Central Asia in the Sixth to Ninth Centuries.’ In: Jan Bemmann And Michael Schmauder (eds.) Complexity of Interaction along the Eurasian Steppe Zone in the First Millenium CE. [Bonn Contributions to Asian Archaeology, Vol. 7.] Bonn: Universität Bonn Institut Für VorUnd Frühgeschichtliche Archäologie, 463502.

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  • De La Vaissière, Étienne 2014. ‘Trans-Asian Trade, or the Silk Road Deconstructed (Antiquity, Middle Ages).’ In: Larry Neal and Jeffrey G. Williamson (eds.) The Cambridge History of Capitalism. Volume I. The Rise of Capitalism: From Ancient Origins to 1848. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 101124.

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  • Vér Márton 2019. Old Uyghur Documents concerning the Postal System of the Mongol Empire. [Berliner Turfantexte 43.] Turnhout: Brepols.

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  • Whitfield, Susan 2015 2. Life along the Silk Road. London: John Murray.

  • Wood, Frances 2003. The Silk Road: Two Thousand Years in the Heart of Asia. London: British Library.

  • Yang, Liang Emlyn et al. (Eds.) 2019. Socio-Environmental Dynamics along the Historical Silk Road. Cham: Springer.

  • Yoshida, Yutaka 2019. Three Manichaean Sogdian Letters unearthed in Bäzäklik, Turfan. Kyoto: Rinsen Book Co.

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Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae
Language English
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1950
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ISSN 0001-6446 (Print)
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