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pro vyhledávání: '"Richard Foltz"'
Autor:
Richard Foltz
Publikováno v:
Entangled Religions - Interdisciplinary Journal for the Study of Religious Contact and Transfer, Vol 3 (2016)
This contribution offers a review of: Peter Wick & Volker Rabens (eds.): Religions and Trade. Religious Formation, Transformation and Cross-Cultural Exchange between East and West. Leiden: Brill, 2014. xx + 374 pages, €147.00/$180.00, ISBN 978-90-
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/35eaf51630474a78be1ce62036405b7f
Autor:
Richard Foltz
In this comprehensive and up to date history, from prehistoric proto-Indo-Iranian times to the post-Soviet period, Richard Foltz traces the complex linguistic, cultural and political history of the Tajiks, a Persian-speaking Iranian ethnic group from
Autor:
Richard Foltz
Home of one of the world's most ancient and enduring civilizations, Iran has been at the nexus of world history for the past three thousand years. Situated at the crossroads between East and West, it has been marked by its encounters with other cultu
Autor:
Richard Foltz
Publikováno v:
Iran and the Caucasus. 26:362-375
The migration of North Caucasian peoples into Ottoman Anatolia during the early 1860s included some five thousand Muslim Ossetes who settled first in the Sarıkamış district and later moved further west. While today the descendants of these migrant
Autor:
Richard Foltz
Publikováno v:
Caucasus Survey. 11:107-109
Autor:
Richard Foltz
Publikováno v:
Iran and the Caucasus. 24:38-52
The Rekom Shrine located in the Tsey Valley of North Ossetia-Alania is one of the most important sites in the Ossetian popular religion, which in modern times is often referred to as the Uatsdin. The shrine is dedicated to Uastyrdzhi, an Ossetian cul
Autor:
Richard Foltz
Publikováno v:
Journal of the American Academy of Religion. 88:296-298
Autor:
Richard Foltz
Publikováno v:
Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture. 13:314-332
The Scythians, a warlike, pastoral-nomadic, Iranian-speaking people who dominated the Eurasian steppes throughout the first millennium BCE, are known to us through the accounts of Herodotus and other Greek writers of antiquity. The Scythians’ langu