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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs East Asia Program &nbsp\;p
 resent Lord of Lords: Chinese Rulership in Fifteenth-Century Eurasia &nbsp
 \;A Talk by David M. Robinson\, Robert H.N. Ho Professor in Asian Studies\
 , Professor of History\, Colgate University Observers of many stripes--sch
 olars\, pundits\, politicians\, military strategists—fiercely debate China
 ’s present and future role in the world\, perhaps most especially in Asia.
  This talk offers a view of the past. It explores the relationship between
  Chinese emperors of the fifteenth century and the single most important g
 roup of foreign elites in east Eurasia\, Mongol nobles who were heir to th
 e political and military legacy of Genghis khan.&nbsp\; It argues that the
  emperors of the late fourteenth and fifteenth centuries acted as lords of
  lords\, keen to win the support and allegiance of Mongol nobles.&nbsp\; T
 his talk will argue first\, the relationship between the emperor and forei
 gn elites formed an integral part of imperial rulership and second\, the C
 hinese throne was deeply embedded in east Eurasia. &nbsp\;For more informa
 tion\, please contact Havva Karakas-Keles at&nbsp\;hkarakas@syr.edu&nbsp\;
 Sponsoring Departments: East Asia Program\, Moynihan Institute of Global A
 ffairs\, Department of History
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DTSTART:20180920T160000Z
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SUMMARY:Lord of Lords: Chinese Rulership in Fifteenth-Century Eurasia - EAP
UID:RFCALITEM639141776786778387
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs </p><p
 >East Asia Program &nbsp\;</p><p>present <br></p><p><br></p><p><strong>Lor
 d of Lords: Chinese Rulership in Fifteenth-Century Eurasia &nbsp\;</strong
 ></p><p>A Talk by David M. Robinson\, Robert H.N. Ho Professor in Asian St
 udies\, Professor of History\, Colgate University<br></p><p> Observers of 
 many stripes--scholars\, pundits\, politicians\, military strategists—fier
 cely debate China’s present and future role in the world\, perhaps most es
 pecially in Asia. This talk offers a view of the past. It explores the rel
 ationship between Chinese emperors of the fifteenth century and the single
  most important group of foreign elites in east Eurasia\, Mongol nobles wh
 o were heir to the political and military legacy of Genghis khan.&nbsp\; I
 t argues that the emperors of the late fourteenth and fifteenth centuries 
 acted as lords of lords\, keen to win the support and allegiance of Mongol
  nobles.&nbsp\; This talk will argue first\, the relationship between the 
 emperor and foreign elites formed an integral part of imperial rulership a
 nd second\, the Chinese throne was deeply embedded in east Eurasia. &nbsp\
 ;</p>For more information\, please contact Havva Karakas-Keles at&nbsp\;<a
  href="mailto:hkarakas@syr.edu">hkarakas@syr.edu</a>&nbsp\;<p>Sponsoring D
 epartments: East Asia Program\, Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs\, Dep
 artment of History</p>
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