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Bill Thayer

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Readings in Asian History

Asia is a very large place, home to many very different peoples whose histories were forged by a great variety of circumstances! Inevitably then, the page before you groups highly disparate resources: as I add to them, though, I expect my collection will take on more cohesion.

In roughly chronological order, this is what I have to offer:


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Vahan Kurkjian's History of Armenia is a much needed contribution to the Internet, filling a niche as it does — not to say a near-void — by providing a complete English-language history of his country from the earliest times. Not a scholar­ly work, but of benefit to any general reader not familiar with this beauti­ful land, its fascinating history, and its ancient churches and monasteries.

[ 506 pages of print
presented in 59 webpages; 63 images, 4 maps ]


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Deane Dickason's Wondrous Angkor, written when Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom were quite difficult to get to, is a very thorough guidebook to that extraordinary ancient site's monuments, history, and art; intelligently and often beauti­fully illustrated with the author's photographs.

[ 159 pages of print
presented in 12 webpages; 56 photos, 7 maps and plans ]


[image ALT: A rather arid landscape traversed by a wide river flowing towards the viewer; on which is superimposed the date '1916'. The river is the Araxes; the image serves as the icon on this site for 'The Revolt of 1916 in Russian Central Asia' by Edward Dennis Sokol.]

Once subject to Russia, some of the peoples of Turkestan have managed to free themselves, forming the modern nations of Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan; Tadjikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. The road to liberation has not been easy, however: The Revolt of 1916 in Russian Central Asia, by Edward Dennis Sokol, records the events of that year as well as those of the precursor rebellion of 1898, both revolts cruelly suppressed by Russia. Carefully documented, the book draws to a great extent on official Russian documents as well as the work of independent observers and scholars, native, Russian and foreign.

[ 183 pages of print
presented in 10 webpages, with 1 map ]


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A few journal articles, newspaper articles, and the like will also be forthcoming. For now, just one:

Archaeological Remains in Turkestan (Proceedings of the American School of Classical Studies in Rome, 1905, pp196‑216).


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Site updated: 14 Sep 24

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