Leiden ; Boston: Brill, 2005. — 572 p. — (Brill’s Inner Asian Library. Vol. 11). — ISSN: 1566-7162; ISBN: 90-04-14096-4.
Notes on Dates and Transliterations
Early ContactsEarly Pastoral Societies of Northeast China: Local Change and Interregional Interaction during c. 1100–600 BCE
Gideon Shelach Beasts or Humans: Pre-Imperial Origins of the Sino-Barbarian Dichotomy. Yuri Pines
Early Eurasian Nomads and the Civilizations of the Ancient Near East (Eighth-Seventh Centuries BCE). Askold I. Ivantchik
The Pre-Mongol PeriodWhat Nomads Want: Raids, Invasions and the Liao Conquest of 947. Naomi Standen
True to Their Ways: Why the Qara Khitai Did Not Convert to Islam. Michal Biran
The Turks of the Eurasian Steppes in Medieval Arabic Writing. Yehoshua Frenkel
The Mongol Empire and Its SuccessorsThe Mongols and the Faith of the Conquered. Peter Jackson
The Great Yasa of Chinggis Khan Revisited. David Morgan
A Reappraisal of Güyüg Khan. Hodong Kim
War and Peace between the Yuan Dynasty and the Chaghadaid Khanate (1312–1323). Liu Yingsheng
The Resolution of the Mongol-Mamluk War. Reuven Amitai
Mongols and Merchants on the Black Sea Frontier in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries: Convergences and Conflicts. Nicola Di Cosmo
Nomad and Settled in the Timurid Military. Beatrice Forbes Manz
Into the Modern PeriodThe Mongols and China: Cultural Contacts and the Changing Nature of Pastoral Nomadism (Twelfth to Early Twentieth Centuries). Elizabeth Endicottcontents
Russia and the Eurasian Steppe Nomads: An Overview. Moshe Gammer
Contemporary Pastoralism in Central Asia. Anatoly M. Khazanov and Kenneth H. Shapiro