Arama sonuçları

Şuraya atla: kullan, ara
  • ...the Mongolic peoples can be traced back to the [[Donghu people|Donghu]], a nomadic confederation occupying eastern Mongolia and [[Manchuria]]. The identity of ...as the [[Murong]], [[Duan (tribe)|Duan]] and [[Tuoba]]. Their culture was nomadic, their religion [[shamanism]] or [[Buddhism]] and their military strength f
    79 KB (10.862 kelime) - 12:17, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...nally a title for a sovereign or a military ruler, widely used by medieval nomadic Mongolic and later Turkic tribes living to the north of China. "Khan" also ...while, as their military might repeatedly proved a serious threat to such empires as China and kingdoms in Central Asia.{{citation needed|date=July 2013}}{{t
    26 KB (3.821 kelime) - 12:36, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...rio-[[Anatolia]]n frontier area between the Byzantine and various caliphal empires * {{cite book|editor=[[Dawn Chatty]]|title=Nomadic societies in the Middle East and North Africa: entering the 21st century|ye
    20 KB (3.102 kelime) - 10:39, 4 Eylül 2019
  • |status = [[Nomadic empire]] ...h and 14th centuries and was the largest [[List of largest empires#Largest empires by land area and population|contiguous land empire]] in history.<ref>Morgan
    108 KB (16.440 kelime) - 12:59, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...n]] (Emperor) of the [[Mongol Empire]], which became the [[World's largest empires|largest contiguous empire]] in history after his death. He came to power by uniting many of the [[nomadic tribe]]s of [[Northeast Asia]]. After founding the Empire and being proclai
    99 KB (15.120 kelime) - 13:00, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...the Mongolic peoples can be traced back to the [[Donghu people|Donghu]], a nomadic confederation occupying eastern Mongolia and [[Manchuria]]. The identity of ...as the [[Murong]], [[Duan (tribe)|Duan]] and [[Tuoba]]. Their culture was nomadic, their religion [[shamanism]] or [[Buddhism]] and their military strength f
    79 KB (10.862 kelime) - 19:03, 25 Mart 2017
  • |status = [[Nomadic empire]]<br/>[[Division of the Mongol Empire]] ....|last3=Hall|first3=Thomas D | title = East-West Orientation of Historical Empires | journal = Journal of world-systems research|date=December 2006 |volume=12
    72 KB (10.914 kelime) - 19:09, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...[[Mongol invasion of Rus'|Mongol invasion]] and became tributaries of the nomadic [[Golden Horde]] in the 13th century.<ref> ...df|archivedate=February 22, 2007|title=East-West Orientation of Historical Empires|publisher=Journal of World-Systems Research, Vol. 12 (no. 2)|pages=219–22
    253 KB (34.667 kelime) - 19:22, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...ans]], [[Sogdians]] and [[Khwarezmian language|Chorasmians]], and the semi-nomadic [[Scythians]] and [[Parthians]]. The ancient sedentary population played an ...eloped in the region; instead, the area was for millennia dominated by the nomadic horse peoples of the [[steppe]].
    61 KB (8.681 kelime) - 19:23, 25 Mart 2017
  • Approximately 30% of the population is [[nomad]]ic or semi-nomadic; [[Horse culture in Mongolia|horse culture]] is still integral. The majorit ...founded the [[Mongol Empire]], which became the largest [[List of largest empires|contiguous land empire]] in history. His grandson [[Kublai Khan]] conquere
    105 KB (15.046 kelime) - 21:01, 8 Eylül 2019
  • |status = [[Nomadic empire]]<br/>[[Division of the Mongol Empire]] {{Empires}}
    23 KB (3.245 kelime) - 11:04, 26 Mart 2017
  • ==Islamic empires== ...f official stamp or seal. This usage persisted in the early modern Islamic Empires ([[Ottoman Empire]], [[Mughal Empire]]), and in some of their modern succes
    11 KB (1.599 kelime) - 17:39, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Taagepera|first1=Rein|title=Size and Duration of Empires: Growth-Decline Curves, 600 B.C. to 600 A.D.|journal=Social Science History ...of evidence to support it".<ref>''History and historiography of the Nomad Empires of Central Eurasia''. D Sinor. Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientarum Hung. 5
    23 KB (3.431 kelime) - 18:19, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Taagepera|first1=Rein|title=Size and Duration of Empires: Growth-Decline Curves, 600 B.C. to 600 A.D.|journal=Social Science History ...of evidence to support it".<ref>''History and historiography of the Nomad Empires of Central Eurasia''. D Sinor. Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientarum Hung. 5
    23 KB (3.431 kelime) - 18:19, 26 Mart 2017
  • {{for|empires established by the Göktürks|Turkic Khaganate}} ...wer in the region and established the [[Turkic Khaganate]], one of several nomadic dynasties which would shape the future geolocation, culture, and dominant b
    14 KB (1.990 kelime) - 18:21, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...omas D. Hall and Peter Turchin (2006). East-West Orientation of Historical Empires.Journal of World-Systems Research (University of Connecticut). 12 (no. 2): ...hku.hk/handle/10722/34790|title = The Northern Wei state and the Juan-juan nomadic tribe|date = |accessdate = 2015-11-16|website = |publisher = The University
    20 KB (2.472 kelime) - 18:24, 26 Mart 2017
  • In 2003, [[Walter Pohl]] summarized the formation of [[nomadic empire]]s:<ref>{{harvtxt|Pohl| 2003| pp=477–78}}</ref> 1. Many steppe empires were founded by groups who had been defeated in previous power struggles bu
    32 KB (4.663 kelime) - 18:27, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...lisher=Encyclopedia Britannica|accessdate=25 July 2015}}</ref> of [[nomads|nomadic peoples]] who, according to ancient Chinese sources, inhabited the eastern ...ongnu as the Hu (胡) people, even though this was more a blanket term for nomadic people in general; it only became an ethnonym for the Xiongnu during the Ha
    103 KB (15.025 kelime) - 18:27, 26 Mart 2017
  • {{For|other nomadic polities sometimes called "Huns"|Xiongnu|Kidarites|Hephthalite Empire|Khaza The '''Huns''' were a [[nomadic people]] who lived in [[Eastern Europe]], the [[Caucasus]], and [[Central A
    68 KB (10.472 kelime) - 18:28, 26 Mart 2017
  • {{Main article|Turkic migrations|Turkic tribal confederations|Nomadic empires}} ...ntury BCE.<ref name="Peter Zieme 2006, p. 64">Peter Zieme: The Old Turkish Empires in Mongolia. In: Genghis Khan and his heirs. The Empire of the Mongols. Spe
    116 KB (16.285 kelime) - 18:30, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...read, which was also influenced by Sogdian. Runes are widespread among the nomadic Turkic peoples in the early Middle Ages. ...a "desert aristocracy" that provided rulers for a number of [[Eurasia]]n [[nomadic empire]]s. Accounts of the Göktürk and [[Khazar]] [[khaganate]]s suggest
    27 KB (4.141 kelime) - 18:51, 29 Eylül 2019
  • |status_text = [[Nomadic empire]]<br/>[[Division of the Mongol Empire]] ...st3=Thomas D.|date=December 2006|title=East-West Orientation of Historical Empires|url=http://jwsr.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/jwsr/article/view/369/381|journal=Jo
    17 KB (2.452 kelime) - 19:19, 26 Mart 2017
  • |status = [[Nomadic empire]] ...Kazakhstan]], and [[Kyrgyzstan]]. The Dzungar Khanate was the last major [[nomadic empire]] left from the [[Mongol Empire]].
    42 KB (6.299 kelime) - 19:22, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...e [[empire]]s erected by the bow-wielding, horse-riding, [[Eurasian nomads|nomadic peoples]] in the [[Eurasian steppe]], from [[classical antiquity]] ([[Scyth ...es of that non-nomadic society. As the pattern is repeated, the originally nomadic dynasty becomes [[culturally assimilated]] to the culture of the occupied n
    28 KB (4.232 kelime) - 19:22, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...and the [[Eurasian Land Bridge]] in the modern era. It has been home to [[nomadic empire]]s and many large [[tribal]] [[confederations]] and ancient states t ...the oval ''[[Tarim Basin]]''. The Tarim Basin is too dry to support even a nomadic population, but around its edges rivers flow down from the mountains giving
    21 KB (3.038 kelime) - 19:23, 26 Mart 2017
  • |status = [[Nomadic empire]] ...) for this period in modern historiography.<ref>Bat-Ochir Bold - Mongolian nomadic society, p. 93</ref> On one side stood the [[Oirats]] (or Western Mongols)
    33 KB (4.999 kelime) - 19:43, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...as split between settled [[Transoxania]] (Ma Wara'un-Nahr) in the west and nomadic [[Moghulistan]] in the east. It is claimed that parts of them still spoke M [[Category:Dissolutions of empires]]
    13 KB (1.878 kelime) - 19:52, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...origins of more modern inhabitants are found among the forest hunters and nomadic tribes of [[Inner Asia]]. They inhabited a great arc of land extending gene ...ighth century BC, the inhabitants of Mongolian western part evidently were nomadic Indo-European speakers, either [[Scythians]]<ref name="studies">[http://cou
    25 KB (3.777 kelime) - 21:26, 26 Mart 2017
  • |status = [[Sinicization|Sinicized]] [[nomadic empire]]<br />[[Conquest Dynasties|Conquest Dynasty]]<br />[[Dynasties in C ...d Tietze 44" /> The Khitans suffered a series of military defeats to other nomadic groups in the region, as well as to the Chinese [[Northern Qi]] (550-577) a
    72 KB (10.706 kelime) - 21:29, 26 Mart 2017