Russia's Orient: Imperial Borderlands and Peoples, 1700–1917Daniel R. Brower, Edward J. Lazzerini Indiana University Press, 1997年6月22日 - 339 頁 " . . . the first study of the Russian Empire in English which attempts in a sophisticated way, using the latest developments in colonial studies, to deal not only with imperial rule but with the mutual encounter with the non-Russian peoples. . . . a new paradigm for looking at the imperial history of tsarist Russia." —Ronald Grigor Suny |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 37 筆
... Kazakhs who committed barïmta were criminals . At the same time , Kazakhs con- tinued to practice barïmta as custom . Over the course of the nineteenth century , this apparent standoff of Kazakh and Russian legal and cultural ...
... Kazakhs to official courts - to the people's court , to the uezd nachal'nik , and even as high as the steppe governor - general in Omsk . But what is also clear from court cases and official observers is the inability of the Russian ...
... Kazakhs of the Middle Horde , as opposed to the Little Horde Kazakhs , who were called " Orenburg Kirgiz . " After 1868 , territorial identifiers were dropped , and all Kazakhs were simply called " Kirgiz ” of the Little , Middle , or ...