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The Steppe and the Sea: Pearls in the Mongol Empire, Hardcover/Thomas T. Allsen - University of Pennsylvania Press


The Steppe and the Sea: Pearls in the Mongol Empire, Hardcover/Thomas T. Allsen
224 Lei

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(10-07-2024)
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Description In 1221, in what we now call Turkmenistan, a captive held by Mongol soldiers confessed that she had swallowed her Pearls in order to safeguard them.
In Allsen\'s analysis, Pearls illuminate Mongolian exceptionalism in Steppe history, the interconnections between ov.
He also sheds light on the ways in which Mongols\' marketing strategies made use of not only myth and folklore but also maritime communications networks created by Indian-Buddhist and Muslim merchants skilled in cross-cultural commerce.
Tracking the circulation of Pearls across time, he highlights the importance of different modes of exchange--booty-taking, tributary relations, market mechanisms, and reciprocal gift-giving.
He argues that overland and seaborne trade flourished simultaneously, forming a dynamic exchange system that moved commodities from east to west and north to south, including an enormous quantity of pearls.
Focusing first on the acquisition, display, redistribution, and political significance of pearls, Allsen shows how the very act of forming such a vast nomadic Empire required the massive accumulation, management, and movement of prestige goods, and how this process brought into being new regimes of consumption on a continental scale.
Allsen examines the importance of pearls, as luxury good and political investment, in the Mongolian empire--from its origin in 1206, through its unprecedented expansion, to its division and decline in 1370--in order to track the varied cultural and commercial interactions between the northern steppes and the southern seas.
Thomas T.
Pearls, valued for aesthetic, economic, religious, and political reasons, were the ultimate luxury good of the Middle Ages, and the Chingissid imperium, the largest contiguous land Empire in history, was their unmatched collector, promoter, and conveyor.
On finding several pearls, Chinggis Qan (Genghis Khan) ordered that they cut open every slain person on the battlefield.
She was immediately executed and eviscerated.
Description In 1221, in what we now call Turkmenistan, a captive held by Mongol soldiers confessed that she had swallowed her Pearls in order to safeguard them


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