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Posts by Márton Vér

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❄️🐻‍❄️ Finally some positive news from Hungary. As record cold and snow hit Central Europe, polar bear cubs at Nyíregyháza Zoo are seeing real snow for the very first time in their lives. (Video by the zoo.)

3 months ago 553 167 5 24
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Accumulating Notes

Everyday writings, often following no fixed plan, are likely to account for the majority of all handwritten production in human history. The new volume of Studies in Manuscript Cultures explores how the practice of taking notes shapes written artefacts and vice versa.

Open access!
uhh.de/csmc-notes

4 months ago 10 7 0 1

This probably counts as shameless self-advertisement, but here is an interview about my ERC project.

4 months ago 2 3 0 0

Thank you very much Gulsen!

4 months ago 1 0 0 0
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We’re celebrating a milestone today: 50 volumes of ‘Studies in Manuscript Cultures’! Join us for a look back at the series’ history and a glimpse into the newest volumes:

uhh.de/csmc-smc-jub...

Hybrid event, all welcome!

Almost all volumes are open access – plenty to read for the holiday season!

4 months ago 19 7 1 1

11. The history discipline venerates the single authored work too much and often discourages collaboration

8 months ago 126 11 4 1
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Glad my graduate alma mater cut 60 degree programs in subjects that require people to think so that they could offer this. Looking forward to living in a world full of Prompt Engineers.

8 months ago 1311 277 61 125
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Apparently National Taiwan Museum is having a exhibit called "Kublai Khan and His Era" through October 12.

#MongolSky

9 months ago 10 5 0 0

2026 will mark the fourth consecutive year that the study of Mongol Eurasia has been presented in separate panels at @imc-leeds.bsky.social. Here is the call for papers. Spread the word and come along! #mongolsky #tengri #medievalsky
www.academia.edu/143008741/Ca...

8 months ago 14 6 0 0
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Thanks again for this exchange, and I hope we can find a format to keep the discussion alive. These topics deserve more than a few fleeting posts.

9 months ago 2 0 0 0

On this last point, by the way, Nik Matheou has a very thoughtful review article coming out soon in the English Historical Review. Definitely worth reading when it’s out.

9 months ago 2 0 1 0

Another sign of these unconscious prejudices is the recurring urge to explain Mongol violence in the conquest period. As far as I know, no sedentary empire conquered territory by handing out flowers to local populations.

9 months ago 2 0 1 0

Curiously, this “brain-drain” narrative always has to be emphasised in the case of the Mongols, whereas for the Romans, the British, the Chinese, or any other sedentary empire makers we rarely feel the need to justify the same dynamic.

9 months ago 1 0 1 0

Yes, the Mongols needed help in specific tasks (e.g. taxing sedentary populations, or setting up their postal system in the Caucasus). But they excelled at identifying and integrating the right people for the job.

9 months ago 0 0 1 0

The second point is what Lenny summarised brilliantly: “the assumption that the Mongols are not civilised enough to run their own state.” That idea is part of a broader sedentary bias against nomads that still shapes much of our field.

9 months ago 1 0 1 0

Simon pointed to a pervasive Euro- or Westcentrism (if that’s a term), while I tried to bring up our tendency to project modern categories of nation, language and ethnicity onto premodern contexts. Both habits are deeply entrenched and equally problematic.

9 months ago 2 0 1 0

Still, I’d like to pick up on two threads I found particularly stimulating. The first concerns the 19th-century or colonial legacies of our disciplines, and the dual consequences they carry for our understanding of the past.

9 months ago 2 0 1 0

Our exchange touched on at least 3–4 major issues that each deserve a workshop or roundtable of their own. I’m not sure Bluesky is the ideal forum to explore them in depth, I’m not active enough here to do that meaningfully.

9 months ago 2 0 1 0

First of all, thank you both. Over the past two days, your thoughts kept me reflecting on questions that lie at the heart of our broader field. They were so engaging they even helped distract me during a long dentist appointment today.

9 months ago 2 0 1 0
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Secondly, in an extremely interdisciplinary field as ours, it is important to be tolerant of others' 'mistakes', because we will undoubtedly make similar ones if we venture beyond our own disciplinary boundaries. In other words, does anyone remember how many source languages are discussed in CHME?

9 months ago 2 0 1 0

All this said, I just want to make two points. Firstly, historical reality is usually much more complex than the purist linguistic attitudes inherent in most of our disciplines due to their 19th-century origins would suggest. (I often catch myself being influenced by them too...)

9 months ago 2 0 2 0

This language policy resulted in a situation in which, in most of the territories of the empire, most of the administrators referred to the postal system as 'yam', while most taxpayers and administrators probably called it 'zhan' or one of its Chinese variants.

9 months ago 2 0 1 0

They only introduced Mongolian at the highest levels, and sometimes quite late. For example, from the Chaghataid Ulus, we have a decree issued in the name of Arigh Böqe in Old Uyghur from 1259, whereas the earliest datable Mongolian decree is from the early 14th century, if I am not mistaken.

9 months ago 2 0 1 0

but we might don't want to represent more puristic linguistic views than the Mongols did. At least they had seemingly no problem with that in the jam-system elčis were riding ulagha. We also know, that the Mongols let the local administrative languages in usage in the local and regional levels,

9 months ago 1 0 1 0

I mean, I have been thinking about this system for a while, and the y-/j-spelling isn't even among the top fifty most interesting questions I have. Perhaps at this point it would be good to mention some intentionally provocative thoughts :) Philological accuracy is essential,

9 months ago 1 0 1 0

As always, accurate :) I think it's an acceptable approach to use the 'jam' spelling when talking about the YMU — if I'm not mistaken, I mostly used it as well — but I don't mind if someone uses a different spelling, as long as we understand each other.

9 months ago 1 0 1 0

The Turkic (Old Uyghur) pronunciation is also "yam", and as many peculiarities of the early Mongol relay system and a good deal of it's terminology goes back to it's Central Asian predecessors, I don't see it as a major problem.

9 months ago 2 0 2 0
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The Digitales Turfan Archiv, Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademische der Wissenschaften, has digistised collections of the various materials found in Turfan, including Mongolian and Uyghur materials of the Mongol Empire.
#Mongolsky #tengri #mongolempire

1 year ago 20 10 1 0
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📢 The latest 'Document of the Month' is available now at invisibleeast.web.ox.ac.uk. Mateen Arghandehpour writes on a land sale deed in Old Uyghur.

🔍 Find this - and nearly 300 new #documents - in the third release on www.invisible-east.org!

#digitalhumanities #olduyghur #medievalsky #skystorians

1 year ago 6 3 0 0