言語

ショッピングカート

カートは空です...



【ここから本文】

History of the Caucasus, volume 2: In the shadow of great powers.

著者名:
Baumer, Christoph
出版元:
I.B. Tauris
頁数:
viii,376p. photos. maps
刊行年:
2024
ISBN:
9780755636280

Caucasus -- History

In the Shadow of Great Powers is the second volume of Christoph Baumer's History of the Caucasus. It covers the period from the Seljuk domination of the Southern Caucasus around 1050 CE to the present day. After the Kingdom of Georgia's golden age of independent power and cultural blossoming in the 12th and early 13th centuries, the Caucasus was overrun by the Mongols and soon disintegrated into innumerable smaller kingdoms, principalities and khanates. At the same time, an Armenian kingdom in exile maintained a precarious independence in Cilicia, today's southern Turkey, by applying a three-way diplomatic policy balanced between the Mongol Il-Khanate, the Crusader states and, to a lesser degree, the Mameluke Empire.


I. A Fragmented Identity: An Introduction to Contemporary Ethnic and Political Conditions in the Caucasus
II. In the Wake of International Great-Power Politics
  1.The Golden Age of Georgia
  2.The Mongol incursions and supremacy
III. The Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia
  1.Semi-independent Armenian warlords and Muslim Armenian viziers
  2.The Rubenids of Cilicia: From principality to kingdom
  3.The Kingdom of Cilician Armenia
IV. The South Caucasus under Turkmen, Ottoman and Iranian Safavid Domination
  1.Georgia and the devastations of Timur-e Lang
  2.The partition of Georgia
  Excursus: The Armenian catholicosate's return to Etchmiadzin and a renewed schism
  3.The South Caucasus as battleground for eight Ottoman–Safavid wars
  4.The South Caucasus under Safavid rule
  Excursus: The Armenian Mekhitarist congregation
  5.A brief reunification of Kartli and Kakheti and the foundation of independent khanates
V. First Russian Advances into the North Caucasus
  1. The defence pact of 1557 between Kabarda and Russia
  2. The Cossacks and the first Russian military lines
  3. Mongol Kalmyks in the North-Eastern Caucasus
VI. The Caucasus under Russian Rule
  1.From the Treaty of Georgievsk (1783) to the annexation of Georgia in 1801
  2.Iran's interlude with Napoleon and Russia's conquest of the South Caucasian khanates and sultanates
  3.The resistance of North Caucasian mountain peoples
  3.1Yermolov's first offensives north of the Greater Caucasus
  3.2The jihad of the imams
  3.3The conquest, resettlement and expulsion of the Circassians
  4.Russian administration and the rise of nationalism
  5.The Russian conquest of former West Armenia 1877–78
  Excursus: Oil-drilling at Baku and the Nobel brothers
  6.The emergence of nationalist and social-revolutionary parties, Armenian massacres and ethnic unrest
  6.1Armenian nationalist and socialist parties in the Russian and Ottoman empires
  6.2Georgian socialists
  6.3Pan-Turkism and socialism in the South Caucasian Muslim provinces
VII. A Short-Lived Independence and Foreign Interventions
  1.World War I, the Armenian Genocide and the collapse of the Russian Empire
  2.The Transcaucasian Republic, the declaration of independence of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia, and foreign interventions
  2.1The short-lived Transcaucasian Republic
  2.2Ethnic and social conflicts in Georgia
  2.3The Republic of Armenia
  2.4The race for Baku
  2.5War in Karabakh, Nakhchivan, Zangezur and Kars
  2.6Armenia and the Paris Peace Conference
  3.The Russian Civil Wars 1917–1920 and the short-lived North Caucasian states
VIII. Under Soviet Rule
  1.Soviet consolidation of power, collectivization and Stalin's purges
  2.Operation Edelweiss: The battle for the Caucasus in World War II
  Excursus: Richard Sorge, Stalin's master spy
  3.Deportations and the start of the Cold War
  4.Political stagnation and the rise of nationalism
IX. Independence in the South Caucasus
  1.The disintegration of the Soviet Union
  2.The Armenian declaration of independence and the issue of Karabakh
  3.The Azerbaijani declaration of independence and the development of the oil and gas industry
  4.The First Karabakh War 1992–1994
  5.Georgian independence and the South Ossetian and Abkhazian wars
X. Autonomy and Failed Independence in the North Caucasus
  1. The northern region: Rostov, Krasnodar, Adygea, Stavropol and Kalmykia
  2. The western and central region: Karachay-Cherkessia, Kabardino-Balkaria, North Ossetia–Alania and Ingushetia
  3. The Eastern region: Chechnya and Dagestan
XI. The Caucasus in the Twenty-First Century
  1.Republics and regions of the northern Caucasus
  2.The independent republics in the southern Caucasus
  2.1Azerbaijan
  2.2The Second Karabakh War, 27 September–10 November 2020
  2.3Armenia
  2.4Georgia
  2.4.1The Georgian–Russian War, 7–12 August 2008
  2.4.2Georgia, Abkhazia and South Ossetia since the 2008 war
  3.Outlook

No.
42723
価格:
8,169円


2025年 04月 02日 35327058 リクエスト (2015年 06月 19日 より)

Copyright © 2005 Nagara Books

Powered by osCommerce (Koshoten.net2)

ナガラ図書(株)113-0033 東京都文京区本郷5-24-6 本郷大原ビル4階   (TEL) 03-3812-6679(FAX) 03-3812-6918  

NAGARA BOOKS LTD.  Hongo-Ohara Bldg. 4F, 5-24-6 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033 JAPAN