Cultural Horizons of India
author: Musashi Tachikawa
edition: 1990, International Academy of Indian Culture and Aditya Prakashan
pages: 2743
Topic: History
The new paradigms of Mongolia
This chapter describes The new paradigms of Mongolia located on page 105 of volume Volume 6 in the book Cultural Horizons of India compiled by Musashi Tachikawa. This book comprises 50 years of research material of Lokesh Chandra and represents a thorough study of the ancient culture of India, dealing with Tantra, Buddhism, Art, Archaeology, Language and Literature in 7 volumes.
Volume 6 includes studies that have been finalised during the last five years. The first chapter deals with pensive images seated in half-locked posture (hankaza) found in China, Korea and Japan.
This book covers the research articles and general surveys of Professor Lokesh Chandra. For example, this chapter describes The new paradigms of Mongolia. Everything together represents a huge collection of writings related to languages such as Sanskrit, Iranian, Sino-Japanese, Tibetan, Thai, Greek, Latin, Celtic, and Slavic..
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You can look up the meaning of the phrase “The new paradigms of Mongolia” according to 28 books dealing with History. The following list shows a short preview of potential definitions.
Triveni Journal
Against the above drop an attempt is made in this paper to seek a post-colonial experiential paradigm in the short fiction of Ngugi Wa Thiongo, the leading writer of Kenya. For this purpose about ten short stories of Ngugi have been chosen. Most of them were published in various magazines including Pinpoint, Kenya Weekly News, Transition, The New African, Zuka, Ghala, Joe....
Read full contents: Resurgence of the Native: The Thematic Paradigm in the Short Fiction of Nguri Wa Thiongo
Settlement in Early Historic Ganga Plain [by Chirantani Das]
Thus, within the scope of our research we are trying to take a comprehensive look at different facets of the settlement paradigms within the time line of 6th century BCE to 3rd century CE through the case studies of Rajagriha–Nalanda and Varanasi–Sarnath nuclei of urban cum nodal points....
Read full contents: Part 4 - Scope of our work
The Great Buddhist Emperors of Asia [by Shibani Dutta]
Mongolia lies to the north of China beyond a big desert. Siberia lies to the north of Mongolia. The geography of Mongolia is varied with the Gobi desert to the south and with cold mountainous regions to the north. The whole of Mongolia is considered to be part of the Mongolian Plateau. Landlocked Mongolia is located between Russia to the north and China to the south. The country is marked by extreme heat and coldness. Mongolia with such geographical features was the homeland of Hunas....
Read full contents: Chapter 10 - Emperor Kublai Khan (1215 A.C.–1294 A.C.)
Total 28 books found: See all results here.
Summary:
You can return to the book Index to buy or shop for other books, or you can read the available online pages below:
[Cultural Horizons of India: index]
[About the Author (Lokesh Chandra)]
[Volume 1 (summary)]
[Volume 1 (preface)]
[Volume 2 (summary)]
[Volume 3 (summary)]
[Volume 4 (summary)]
[Volume 5 (summary)]
[Volume 6 (summary)]
[Volume 7 (summary)]