Academic literature on the topic 'Ilkhāns – dynastie'

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Journal articles on the topic "Ilkhāns – dynastie"

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KAMOLA, STEFAN. "History and legend in the Jāmi` al-tawārikh: Abraham, Alexander, and Oghuz Khan." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 25, no. 4 (2015): 555–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1356186315000218.

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AbstractThis article explores the historical writings of Rashid al-Din Tabib (d. 1318) as part of a programme of political legitimisation for the Mongol Ilkhans of Iran. By considering both volumes of the Jami` al-tawārikh alongside one another and in their political context, it reveals aspects of the text that get lost when the dynastic and world history are treated in isolation. Rashid al-Din's presentation of legendary figures of communal identity from Perso-Islamic and Turko-Mongol traditions responds to immediate political conflicts between his patrons and their neighbours, the Jochid Mon
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Uyar, Mustafa. "Buqa Chīngsāng: Protagonist of Qubilai Khan’s Unsuccessful Coup Attempt against the Hülegüid Dynasty." Belleten 81, no. 291 (2017): 373–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.37879/belleten.2017.373.

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The study examines the coup attempt orchestrated by Qubilai Khan (1260-94), who desired to re-establish the 'Yeke Mongol Ulus' and to unify the separated Mongol khanates under the authority of the Yuan Empire. The coup was mounted against the Ilkhan Arghun (1284-91), who was the ruler of the Mongols in Iran, who had been showing signs of separation from the central administration since the time of Aḥmad Tegüder (1282-84). The protagonist of the unsuccessful coup was Amīr Buqa, a loyal commander of the Great Khanate. The article investigates the process, historical background and the results of
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STEWART, ANGUS. "Reframing the Mongols in 1260: The Armenians, the Mongols and the Magi." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 28, no. 1 (2017): 55–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1356186317000414.

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The irruption of the Mongols led to profound changes in the political, cultural and confessional climate of the thirteenth-century Near East. While many did not survive the initial onslaught and the years of turmoil that followed, and rulers that opposed the Mongols were largely swept away, the communities and dynasties that remained were forced to seek some sort of accommodation with the new overlords. While subjection to the Mongol yoke was far from desirable, rulers could seek to make the best of the situation, in the hope that the ambitions of the Mongols might come to match their own, or
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Ilkhāns – dynastie"

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Feizi, Mahsa. "Le paysage culturel de la plaine de Sultāniyya durant la période islamique." Lyon, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019LYSE2106.

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La ville de Sultāniyya est située dans une plaine reliant le centre de l'Iran à son nord-ouest, traversée par l’ancienne route de Qazvin à Zanjān. Les potentiels environnementaux créent un milieu favorable à la formation et au développement des implantations humaines. Les témoignages les plus importants de cette prospérité, résident non seulement dans les découvertes archéologiques du paléolithique jusqu'à nos jours, mais aussi dans la quantité considérable de sources écrites et illustrées dans lesquels divers aspects du paysage de la plaine de Sultāniyya sont abordés. Cependant, il n’existe a
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Mathias-Imbert, Claude-Yvette. "La céramique Il-Khanide et ses motifs décoratifs." Paris 4, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1993PA040007.

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L'analyse de la céramique Il-Khanide fabriquée en Iran entre 1258 et 1339 (carreaux et vaisselle), à partir de 850 spécimens, a permis de déterminer trois genres de motifs différents que l'on retrouve sur les miniatures, les métaux et d'autres supports. Les décors non-figuratifs comprennent des motifs géométriques qui centrent ou compartimentent l'espace, des végétaux traditionnels dans leur schéma ancien et de nouveaux éléments floraux qui s'expriment dans un espace libéré, l'épigraphie perpétue les compositions d'autrefois. La diversité du bestiaire distingue le monde aquatique (poissons et
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Ben, Azzouna Nourane. "La production de manuscrits en Iraq et en Iran occidental à l'époque des dynasties mongoles (les Ilkhanides et les Djalayirides, 656-814 / 1258-1411) : recherches sur les enlumineurs à Paris sous le règne de François 1er." Paris, EPHE, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009EPHE4003.

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L’étude porte sur une période phare de l’histoire du livre islamique. Elle met au jour un grand nombre de manuscrits inédits et propose une relecture d’autres manuscrits célèbres en examinant l’ensemble de la production dans ses différentes phases et différents niveaux. L’étude propose en outre une réflexion sur plusieurs problèmes importants de l’histoire de la calligraphie et du livre islamique d’une manière générale, comme celui du calligraphe Yāqūt al-Musta‘ṣimī, sa vie, sa carrière, son œuvre et son apport à l’histoire de la calligraphie, ainsi que son école ; ou le problème de l’élaborat
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Chaigne, Frantz. "L'enluminure dans l'empire Īl-khānide." Thesis, Paris 4, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PA040188.

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Le présent travail porte sur le décor enluminé des manuscrits produits en Iran et en Iraq sous domination mongole (1258 – c. 1350). Cette étude n’a pas seulement pour but de se pencher sur les structures scandant le manuscrit et sur leurs modes de remplissage, mais elle s’ouvre aussi sur les échanges culturels et artistiques dont ce décor est parfoisemblématique. La méthodologie retenue s’articule autour de deux axes principaux : la première fait appel à une « approche déconstructive » qui consiste en une suite de focalisations permettant de passer du macroscopique au microscopique. Il s’agit
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Book chapters on the topic "Ilkhāns – dynastie"

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Kamola, Stefan. "Mongol Dynastic History, 1302–1304." In Making Mongol History. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474421423.003.0003.

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The Blessed History of Ghazan (Tarikh-i Mubarak-i Ghazani) marked the culmination of several decades of historical writing that worked to integrate the Mongol ilkhans into historical and cultural patterns indigenous to the Middle East, but it was one of the first works produced under direct Ilkhanid patronage. This chapter surveys the historical writing of the early Ilkhanate before focusing on a series of works commissioned by Ghazan Khan (1295-1304) during the latter years of his reign. Of these, Rashid al-Din’s Blessed History provides the most concise, streamlined narrative, with the most compelling argument for the ilkhans’ legitimacy in the region. This chapter shows that to be a conscious production by Rashid al-Din for his Mongol patrons.
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Wing, Patrick. "The Jalayirs and the Early Ilkhanate." In The Jalayirids. Edinburgh University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474402255.003.0003.

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This chapter traces the career of Īlgā Noyan, ancestor of the Jalayirid dynasty, and his sons during the early Ilkhan period. Īlgā Noyan’s family was one of several Jalayir families in the service of the Ilkhan rulers. What becomes clear from an analysis of this period is that these Jalayir families did not coordinate their activities on the basis of any tribal solidarity, but instead competed with one another for favor and influence at the Ilkhanid court, and within the households of the Chinggisids. This chapter also highlights the significant role that Jalayir amirs played in Anatolia in this period, and how failed revolts there strengthened the position of the descendants of Īlgā Noyan in particular.
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