Chapter
Open Access
Epilogue: The Persianate Millennium
-
Brian Spooner
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Illustrations ix
- A Note on Transliteration xi
- Preface and Acknowledgements xiii
- Introduction The Frontiers of the Persianate World (ca. 800–1900) 1
-
Part I. Pan-Eurasian Expansions, ca. 1400–1600
- 1. Imperial Ambitions, Mystical Aspirations: Persian Learning in the Ottoman World 75
- 2. Persian at the Court or in the Village? The Elusive Presence of Persian in Bengal 93
- 3. The Uses of Persian in Imperial China: Translating Practices at the Ming Court 113
- 4. Persian and Turkic from Kazan to Tobolsk: Literary Frontiers in Muslim Inner Asia 131
-
Part II. The Constraints of Cosmopolitanism, ca. 1600–1800
- 5. Marking Boundaries and Building Bridges: Persian Scholarly Networks in Mughal Punjab 159
- 6. A Lingua Franca in Decline? The Place of Persian in Qing China 175
- 7. Speaking “Bukharan”: The Circulation of Persian Texts in Imperial Russia 193
- 8. Lingua Franca or Lingua Magica? Talismanic Scrolls from Eastern Turkistan 207
-
Part III. New Empires, New Nations, ca. 1800–1920
- 9. Conflicting Meanings of Persianate Culture: An Intimate Example from Colonial India and Britain 225
- 10. De-Persifying Court Culture: The Khanate of Khiva’s Translation Program 243
- 11. Dissidence from a Distance: Iranian Politics as Viewed from Colonial Daghestan 259
- 12. From Peshawar to Tehran: An Anti-imperialist Poet of the Late Persianate Milieu 279
- Epilogue: The Persianate Millennium 301
- Glossary 317
- List of Contributors 319
- Index 323
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Illustrations ix
- A Note on Transliteration xi
- Preface and Acknowledgements xiii
- Introduction The Frontiers of the Persianate World (ca. 800–1900) 1
-
Part I. Pan-Eurasian Expansions, ca. 1400–1600
- 1. Imperial Ambitions, Mystical Aspirations: Persian Learning in the Ottoman World 75
- 2. Persian at the Court or in the Village? The Elusive Presence of Persian in Bengal 93
- 3. The Uses of Persian in Imperial China: Translating Practices at the Ming Court 113
- 4. Persian and Turkic from Kazan to Tobolsk: Literary Frontiers in Muslim Inner Asia 131
-
Part II. The Constraints of Cosmopolitanism, ca. 1600–1800
- 5. Marking Boundaries and Building Bridges: Persian Scholarly Networks in Mughal Punjab 159
- 6. A Lingua Franca in Decline? The Place of Persian in Qing China 175
- 7. Speaking “Bukharan”: The Circulation of Persian Texts in Imperial Russia 193
- 8. Lingua Franca or Lingua Magica? Talismanic Scrolls from Eastern Turkistan 207
-
Part III. New Empires, New Nations, ca. 1800–1920
- 9. Conflicting Meanings of Persianate Culture: An Intimate Example from Colonial India and Britain 225
- 10. De-Persifying Court Culture: The Khanate of Khiva’s Translation Program 243
- 11. Dissidence from a Distance: Iranian Politics as Viewed from Colonial Daghestan 259
- 12. From Peshawar to Tehran: An Anti-imperialist Poet of the Late Persianate Milieu 279
- Epilogue: The Persianate Millennium 301
- Glossary 317
- List of Contributors 319
- Index 323