An Empire Within an Empire? Ethnic and Religious Realities in the Lands of Nogai (c.1270-1300)

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Aleksandar Uzelac

Absztrakt

The paper focuses on the internal conditions of the lands of Nogai, a side member of the Juchid lineage, streching at the height of his power from the basin of the Lower Dnieper in the east to the western fringes of the Wallachian plains. The Muslim, Latin, Byzantine, and Slavic contemporaries provide enough data for the critical assessment of the ethnic, religious, and demographic realities in Nogai’s Ulus. His territories included the heterogeneous urban communities in the Danube Delta and the northern Black Sea coast, and also the vast steppe areas inhabited by the descendants of Cumans, Alans and other pre-Mongol populations. Mongol newcomers were insignificant in numbers. Although Nogai formally converted to Islam, the presence of Catholic and Orthodox missionaries, Muslims, as well as a small Buddhist community, are documented in his lands. Nogai’s Ulus represented a heterogeneous multi-ethnic and multi-confessional space, united by his charisma and power, as well as Chinggisid ideology.

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Hogyan kell idézni
Uzelac, Aleksandar. 2019. „An Empire Within an Empire? Ethnic and Religious Realities in the Lands of Nogai (c.1270-1300)”. Chronica 18 (május):271-83. https://iskolakultura.hu/index.php/chronica/article/view/31990.
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