Ohio State is in the process of revising websites and program materials to accurately reflect compliance with the law. While this work occurs, language referencing protected class status or other activities prohibited by Ohio Senate Bill 1 may still appear in some places. However, all programs and activities are being administered in compliance with federal and state law.

NOMADIC AND SEDENTARY RELATIONS: OPEN QUESTIONS AND NEW PERSPECTIVES IN CENTRAL ASIAN MILITARY HISTORY

April 17, 2013
10:20 am - 11:50 am
Dulles Hall

THE DEPARTMENTS OF HISTORY AND NEAR EASTERN LANGUAGES AND CULTURES, THE CENTER FOR SLAVIC AND EAST EUROPEAN STUDIES, THE MIDDLE EAST STUDIES CENTER, AND
THE EAST ASIAN STUDIES CENTER PRESENT:
 
BEATRICE MANZ
TUFTS UNIVERSITY

 
NOMADIC AND SEDENTARY RELATIONS
OPEN QUESTIONS AND NEW PERSPECTIVES IN CENTRAL ASIAN MILITARY HISTORY

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 2013 168 DULLES HALL 10:20–11:50AM
Beatrice Manz is Professor of Middle Eastern and Inner Asian History at Tufts University. A specialist in the Timurid Empire (1370–1506), she has authored The Rise and Rule of Tamerlane (Cambridge University Press, 1989), and Power, Politics and Religion in Timurid Iran (Cambridge University Press, 2007). Professor Manz has also authored the chapter, “The Mongols,” for the New Cambridge History of Islam. She is currently at work on a history of nomads in the Middle East from the rise of Islam to the present, and a study of nomadic empires for the Cambridge History of War.