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Bregel Yu. An Historical Atlas of Central Asia

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Bregel Yu. An Historical Atlas of Central Asia
Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands, 2003. — 124 p. — (Handbook of Oriental Studies. Section eight. Central Asia ; vol. 9). — ISBN: 90-04-12321-0.
Bibliographical notes.
General legend.
Maps:
The principal geographical features and provinces.
Major archeological sites.
Central Asia at the time of Alexander the Great (4th century B.C.).
3rd-2nd centuries B.C.: Parthia, Bactria, and the Yuezhi.
1st century B.C. — 2nd century A.D.: Parthia, the Kushans, the Han, and the Xiongnu.
3rd-6th centuries A.D.: the Sasanids, Kidarites, and Hephthalites.
6th-7th centuries A.D.: the Sasanids, Soghd, and the First Türk Qaghanate.
The second half of the 7th century: early Arab raids, the Türgesh Qaghanate, the Tang expansion, and Tibet.
The first half of the 8th century: the Arab conquests, Türks, Tang, and Tibet.
From mid-8th to the end of the 9th century: the early Islamic period in the west; the Qarluqs and Uyghurs in the east.
10th century: the Samanids, Qarakhanids, Oghuz, Kimeks, and Qïpchaqs.
The central regions of Western Turkestan in the 10th century.
The early 11th century: the Ghaznavids, Qarakhanids, and Seljuks.
1040 to the end of the 11th century: the Seljuks and Qarakhanids.
The first half of the 12th century: the Seljuks, Qarakhanids, Khorezmshahs, Qara-Khitays.
The second half of the 12th century: the Qarakhanids, Khorezmshahs, Qara-Khitays, and the Ghurids.
The early 13th century: the Ghurids, Khorezmshahs, Qara-Khitays, and Küchlük.
The Mongol conquest.
The Mongol uluses in the 13th century.
The Mongol uluses from the early 14th century to the rise of Timur.
Timur, the Chaghatayids, and the ulus of Joch 1405-1468: the Timurids, Moghuls, and Özbeks.
Central Asia and Iran in the second half of the 15th century.
1469-1499: the Timurids, Moghuls, and Özbeks.
The Özbek conquest of Western Turkestan.
The first half of the 16th century (1510s-1550s): the Özbek khanates, the Qazaqs, and the Moghuls.
The second half of the 16th century: {Abdallah Khan, the {Arabshahids, and the Dasht-i Qïpchaq.
17th century: the Ashtarkhanids, Khorezm, the Qazaqs, and the Junghars.
The first half of the 18th century: Nadir Shah, Bukhara, Khorezm, the Qazaqs, and the Junghars.
The second half of the 18th century: Bukhara, Khorezm, Qoqand, the Qazaqs, and the Junghars.
The first half of the 19th century: Bukhara, Khorezm, Qoqand, the Qazaqs, and Russian expansion.
The second half of the 19th century: the Russian conquest of Western Turkestan.
Khorezm in the 18th-19th centuries.
The trade routes of Central Asia in the 17th-18th centuries.
The Özbek tribes in the 19th century.
The Turkmen tribes and their migrations (16th-19th centuries).
The Turkmen tribes and their migrations (19th-20th centuries).
The Turkmen tribes in the early 20th century.
The Qazaq tribes in the early 20th century.
The Qïrghïz tribes in the 20th century.
Bukhara (city) in the 19th century.
Samarqand (city) in the 19th century.
Khiva (city) in the 19th century.
Monuments of Islamic architecture.
The end of the 19th and the early 20th centuries: Western Turkestan under Russian rule.
Revolution and Civil War in Western Turkestan, 1917-1922.
The national delimitation of Central Asia and the creation of the Soviet republics.
Central Asia to the year 2000.
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