India and central Asia
Material type:
- 9788178243474
- 327.54058 IND
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Gandhi Smriti Library | 327.54058 IND (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 153930 |
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327.5405498 KOH India and Bhutan | 327.5405498 KOH From dependency to interdependence | 327.54055 Cultural parallels: India and Iran | 327.54058 IND India and central Asia | 327.540581 IND Indo-Afghan relations | 327.540581 SYE Indo-Afghan relations | 327.54059 SAN Domestic politics and foreign policy |
Central Asia has been a strategic region in world history because of its location in the Afro-Eurasian land mass, and because it was the hinge between several different ecological zones. From the border of the Iranian plateau to the edge of the Takla Makan desert, and from the foothills of the Kunlun Mountains to the Taiga zone of Siberia, Central Asia encompasses peoples who spoke many languages and practised various forms of livelihood. For historians who have been focused on individual civilizations, or the societies which have left written records, Central Asia has seemed an ocean full of dark energy. From time to time, barbaric nomads flew out from Central Asia to loot villages and destroy cities in East and South Asia, and even Europe. In recent decades, research on the lives of nomadic people on the steppe, archaeological excavations of urban settlements on oases along the Amu and Sir rivers, and the discovery of more Hellenistic remains have made scholars look at this region from a different perspective. Looking towards Central Asia from the Indian subcontinent shows that the dynamics in Central Asia were often the momentum for fundamental changes in history which brought new cultural elements to South Asia.
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