AN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE OF MONGOL HORSE TRAINING, CARE, AND MANAGEMENT:
General Material Designation
[Thesis]
First Statement of Responsibility
R. I. V. Meserve
Title Proper by Another Author
SELECTED TEXTS
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Indiana University
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
1987
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
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394
DISSERTATION (THESIS) NOTE
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Ph.D.
Body granting the degree
Indiana University
Text preceding or following the note
1987
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
A key role in shaping the history of Inner Asia has been played by the horse from its first domestication to modern times. Surprisingly little work has been done on existing hippological texts in general and particularly on Mongol treatises. The dissertation attempts to fill this lacuna. Part I of the study focuses on the accounts of travelers to the Mongols, the earliest of these dates from the thirteenth century and the latest appears in the early twentieth century. Parts II-IV contain translations and commentaries of selected texts on Mongol hippology. Included are translations on horse administration during the Yuan period from the Yuan shih. These are followed by the translation of two Chakhar Mongolian manuscripts: (1) Mori temege-u ebedcin-i j asaqu ar usd\gammausd a anu on veterinary medicine and (2) Mori temege-u soyil usd\gammausd a neilegulju uyaqu qauli bicig on the care of horses during the four seasons. Selections from a modern Mongol book on animal husbandry, Mal aj u aqui deger-e ben ya usd\gammausd akij u aj illaqu tuqai arad-tu ogku sana usd\gammausd al-a sur usd\gammausd al (Ulaanbaatar, 1945) are also contained in this study. The final section, Part V, places Mongol horse training methods within the historical aspect of Inner Asian civilization.