Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Beg, Empire, and Agrarian Developments in Central Asia, 1500–1750
- 2 Capitalist Imperatives and Imperial Connections, 1759–1825
- 3 The “Holy Wars” of the Uprooted, 1826–30
- 4 The “Just and Liberal Rule” of Zuhūr al-Dīn, 1831–46
- 5 Global Crises of Oasis Capitalism, 1847–64
- Conclusion
- Appendixes
- A-2. Arable land in Eastern Turkestan, 1759–1950 (Unit: <i>mu</i>)
- B-1. Muslim Notables Submitting to the Qing, 1697–1760
- c. <i>Muslim Aristocrats: Muslims Residing in Xinjiang</i>
- D-2. Waqf Donations in the Oasis, 1750–1911
- E-1. Oasis Rural Settlements in Yarkand, 1770s–1870s
- Bibliography
- Index
(p.vii) Acknowledgments
(p.vii) Acknowledgments
- Source:
- Borderland Capitalism
- Publisher:
- Stanford University Press
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- Title Pages
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Beg, Empire, and Agrarian Developments in Central Asia, 1500–1750
- 2 Capitalist Imperatives and Imperial Connections, 1759–1825
- 3 The “Holy Wars” of the Uprooted, 1826–30
- 4 The “Just and Liberal Rule” of Zuhūr al-Dīn, 1831–46
- 5 Global Crises of Oasis Capitalism, 1847–64
- Conclusion
- Appendixes
- A-2. Arable land in Eastern Turkestan, 1759–1950 (Unit: <i>mu</i>)
- B-1. Muslim Notables Submitting to the Qing, 1697–1760
- c. <i>Muslim Aristocrats: Muslims Residing in Xinjiang</i>
- D-2. Waqf Donations in the Oasis, 1750–1911
- E-1. Oasis Rural Settlements in Yarkand, 1770s–1870s
- Bibliography
- Index