This page has information to help with the HIST492 course How to Be an Emperor or Empress (Asia). The time period is 7th-20th century. Asia in this context includes China, India, Central/Inner Asia (Mongols, Turks), and Japan. Anyone doing research on this and related historical topics (Asia, Asian history, Asian civilization) should find this page useful.
Reference Resources | Circulating Items | Terms to Search in Library Catalog | Print Indexes | Research Databases | Journals Owned by CSU | World Wide Web Resources
Print (and a few Electronic) Resources
Reference Resources--Encyclopedias & More
Encyclopedias can be a great place to start your research, get an overview of your topic, or help you narrow your area of focus. Morgan Library has a number of encyclopedia sets that may be useful to you as you begin your research. Encyclopedias are located in the Reference collection, so they may not be checked out. General encyclopedias can also be extremely useful.
For this particular historical topic, it will be important to consider not only history, but politics, religion, philosophy, and attire. The powerfully dressed emperor or empress is more likely to keep his or her people in line. ("Dress for Success" pretty much applies to everyone, but especially political leaders.)
Circulating Items: Morgan Stacks, Movable Shelves & Storage Books
Titles of Interest Not Owned by CSU
Items may be requested from the Regional Catalog Prospector by CSU affiliates.
Example Dissertations (May or May not be Available Full Text)
Terms to Search in Library Catalog Sage & Regional Catalog Prospector
Subject headings are the most efficient search for identifying books in the library catalog. Identify useful books in the library catalog SAGE (and the Regional Catalog Prospector) doing a (LC) Subject search for:
Asia Bibliography |
Japan History 19th century |
Terms and subjects will vary from source to source. In addition, terminology changes over time, so it will be necessary to be creative (i.e. know your history) in order to succeed in identifying articles of interest.
Take note that the exact terms and types of terms will vary from index (database) to index. Case (capitalization) does not matter when doing searches. Use Truncation and proximity operators to do advanced searching. When the full text of an article is not available, use the
button to find out if the article is available full text in another electronic location. Also check for printed versions. If not available at CSU, request the article from Interlibrary Loan.
-->Click here for information about evaluating Web sites.
General | Japanese History | Chinese History | India History | Turkey History | Mongolia History | Other
Internet East Asian History Sourcebook. Fordham University.
Subset of texts derived from the three major online Sourcebooks: Internet Ancient History Sourcebook, Internet Medieval Sourcebook, and Internet Modern History Sourcebook. Provides links out to various types of sites, some of them secondary sources.
Asia and Pacific History and Culture. Encyclopedia Smithsonian.
Asian art, games, timeline of Chinese history (neat graphics), gardens, statues, etc.
Historical Maps of Middle East and Southwest Asia. also Southeast Asia and Japan and Asia Continent and South Asia and East Asia. Alabama Maps.
Links to before 1825; sections link past 1900. Maps can be zoomed in and zoomed out upon.
Go to view the map collection in the LUNA 6.0 Browser. Type in "Asia" into the keyword search to find maps from the 18th and 19th centuries. Click on maps to enlarge. Zoom larger and smaller. Additional information about some maps is provided.
Emperors of the Sangoku, the "Three Kingdoms," of India, China, & Japan. Copyright (c) Kelley L. Ross. Los Angeles Valley College.
Lengthy document with many maps and tables (with dynasties). After the introduction there is an extensive index.
East Asia. Various authors. (c) All Empires.
Overview with links to histories of China and Japan.
Tokugawa Japan 1603-1868. Jeff Sellen , Charles J. Dunn , Richard Hooker, Washington State University.
Summary of activities for samurai, farmers, craftspeople, merchants, and other groups.
Correspondence between William II of Holland and Tokugawa Ieyoshi,the Shogun of Japan, 1844.
Letters, translated into English. From Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan, Vol. XXXIV, 1907.
The History of Early Modern Japan: A Selected Source Bibliography. Lee A. Makela. HIS 372/572. Cleveland State University.
A lengthy bibliography on Japan during the Tokugawa Period between 1600 and 1868. Check the library catalog Sage (and Prospector) for local ownership.
Japan in World History. Lucien Ellington. Japan Teaching Module. Component 3. University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.
Overview begins around 550-1185 and goes through the present in five parts. Each part ends with a link to a useful page with additional links and information for that era. Includes recommended reading.
Photographic Views of Meiji: A Portrait of Old Japan. Richard Gadd. The Monterey Museum of Art.
Hand-tinted photographic images from 1870-1885. Information about the time period in Japan. Brief biographical information about the photographers.
The Seclusion of Japan. 32 - Tokugawa Iemitsu, "Closed Country Edict of 1635" and "Exclusion of the Portuguese, 1639." Sara Watts. Wake Forest University.
Introduction discussing Christianity's presence in Japan and then text of the edicts.
The Age of Hakkenden. Dream Train Internet (Japan).
Definitions of samurai terms, Maps. Summaries of wars. According to the site, Hakkenden "was a best seller novel in the late Tokugawa Shogun's period, early 19th century. It was published in 1814-1842, just before U.S.Navy Commodore Perry's first visit to Japan (1853)."
Japanese Chronological Table. National Museum of Japanese History (Japan).
Chronology covers ca. 100,000 B.C. to 1983. Main activities and events.
History of Yamaguchi Prefecture. (C) Yamaguchi Prefecture. Japan.
Selective Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan, and world chronology from 611 to 1871. Definitions of terms is provided in this English-language version.
Tokugawa Shogunate: A Taste for Blood, Arts and Culture. Michael Dunn. Special to The Japan Times. Nov. 22, 2007.
Description and discussion of items in the exhibition "Legacy of the Tokugawa — The Glories and Treasures of the Last Samurai Dynasty" at the Tokyo National Museum. (The show closed on Dec. 2, 2007.)
Digital Gallery. National Archives of Japan. Link is to English version.
Documents, maps, scrolls, photographs, drawings, and posters.
About Licenses for Trade between Japan and Ming China. Calligraphy Stories. Mamoru Shimosaka, Satoshi Ichida. English translation Melissa M. Rinne. Kyoto National Museum.
History of trade (and when it was not allowed), what was traded, and description of what trade it. Starts in the 9th century.
Sociology of Japanese Rulership and Religion. Weberian Sociology of Religion.
"This study examines the historical relationships between rulership and religion in Japan from the viewpoint of Max Weber's sociology." Jump to sections of the text. Bibliography. Page has frames.
Nichiren, Buddhist Prophet of the Truth. Weberian Sociology of Religion.
Excerpts from words, theses on truth, and letters. Some of the links out do not work.
Michinoku (The Yamato Court and The Deep North). History and Tradition. Fukushima Prefecture.
History of the Japanese government from the 4th century.
Japan Center for Asian Historical Records (JACAR). National Archives of Japan.
There are eight articles with rules of use of the database. "This site provides access to official documents—dating from the Meiji era through 1945—of the Japanese Cabinet, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, as well as the Army and Navy." Need Djvu loaded to View digital images in Djvu or JPEG.
Tokyo National Museum. Japan.
Information about exhibitions. Items available to view online from Japan, China, and Korea, India and Southeast Asia, and more.
History of Kyoto. Kyoto City Web.
Chronology of events.
Japan Photo History. Philbert Ono. Wiki format.
Photo history starts in 1646. One image is from 1851. Under construction, but a lot of material already available. Links to Japan's own Photoguide, a kind of Flickr.
Chinese Cultural Studies: A Brief Chinese Chronology. Paul Halsall. Brooklyn College, now at University of North Florida .
Provides three views of Chinese history: traditional dynastic, outline of Genet and derived from Elvin.
Beijing's History. Beijing: A Guide to China's Captial City.
Starts with half a million years ago and continues to the present. Links out to historical sites, tales of streets, and more.
About China. CRIENGLISH Online. (English link here, but available in multiple languages.)
"Tab" links to: territory, resource & population; political system, nations & religions; architecture; history; traditional Chinese medicine; classic literature; folklores; customs; people in history; online museum; folk arts; and more.
Powerful Empresses in Chinese History. All-China Women's Federation. November 13, 2007.
Lives of three empresses.
Jade Bear-Dragons Corroborate Yellow Emperor Legend. China through a Lens.
Discussion of finds of historical documents, archaeologist's finds, and a case for a "jade" age.
China's Postal Service: A Brief History.
Click on descriptions to see images of postal objects (letters, post offices, etc.)
Texts and Documents: China. History Department. Hanover College.
Links out to materials categorized by: General; Classical Period; Era of Division and the Tang Dynasty; Late Imperial China; 20th Century China; and Resources. Many are primary sources. Not all links are active--many of them are not, but ones that work are useful.
Yuan China. Timothy May. North Georgia College and State University.
History of the dynasty.
Han Emperor Wu-ti's Interest in Central Asia and Chang Chien's Expeditions. Silkroad Foundation.
Overview of Western Han (207 BC-9 AD) period.
A number of the regions of India have posted information about their history online. Include below are a few examples of these, along with other types of sources.
History of India. I Love India.
History of the country, grouped by periods within longer time frames. Ancient to modern.
South and Southeast Asia. Various authors. (c) All Empires.
Overview with links to pages that give descriptions of different eras.
Indian Navy History. Admiral Sureesh Mehta. Naval Staff.
Page that gives an overview of India's maritime history (beginning in 2300BC).
Peopling of India. Madhav Gadgil et al. Centre for Ecological Sciences. Indian Institute of Science.
Examination of the "demographic history of India on the basis of a new investigation of mitochondrial DNA base sequences of 101 Indians."
History of Indian Census. Census of India.
Overview of India's population starting 3rd or 4th centuries BC.
Indian History: Ancient History. also Medieval History of India and History : Indian Freedom Struggle (1857-1947). Know India. Government of India.
Overview of India's history in three sections.
India History. Indiahistory.co.in
Summary of Indian history.
Royal History of Cooch Behar. Cooch Behar.
Overview. Includes dynasty family trees.
The Raja-Zamindar of Gaya, Bihar: History of the Raman family of Benaras (Varanasi) since 1540AD.
Brief overview, with images.
History of Dejeerling. Dejeerling, India.
History of Dejeerling starting with pre-independence.
The Mughals: Akbar. Richard Hooker. World Civilization.
Biographical information about the "greatest" emperor of India, Akbar.
Important Dates in Indian History. 123oye. India - Press Releases - Online Information Broadcast
3000BC to 2004.
Turkey: The Sixteen Great Turkish Empires. Ivan Sache.
Chronology starting in 204BC and going until 1922. Images of flags.
New Findings on the Mining History of Turkey around Tokat Region. Ergun Kaptan. Mineral Research and Exploration Institute of Turkey.
Article about Turkey history via mining techniques. PDF.
Turkish History in the Islamic Period. tbb.gen.tr
Overview of history from approximately 840 to 1857.
Turkey and Europe: A Historical Perspective. HALİL İNALCIK.
Starts in 7000BC to the late 1920s. Bibliography. PDF.
The Walls of Nicaea. Roberto Piperno.
Photographs of the walls with historical background.
Ancient Ephesus. Lance Jenott. Silk Road Seattle. University of Washington (2004).
History of the city. Images of coins, buildings (what is left of them), etc. Bibliography.
The Turkish Irruption. J. J. Saunders. A History of Medieval Islam. Routledge, London, chpt. 9.
Describes entry of Turks into Western Asia.
The Ottomans. Richard Hooker.
19th century history of the Ottoman Empire.
Turkish Empire. Catholic Encyclopedia.
Discusses geography, history, religion, etc. List of sources.
The History of Turkish Postal Stamps.
History of postage stamps in Turkey from 1840-1939.
The Ottoman Empire. (c) Royalty.nu
Extensive annotated book bibliography (link is to bookseller's Web site). Many advertisements, including pop-behind.
Steppe Nomads and Central Asia. Various authors. (c) All Empires.
History with chronology from approximately 1167 to 1502. See, for example, The Mongol Empire.
Genghis Khan and the Mongols. Frank E. Smitha. Macrohistory and World History.
Overview of the period with information about people and the interactions (often battles) with neighboring areas. List of recommended books.
Genghis Khan (1165-1227). Timothy May. North Georgia College and State University.
Biographical information about Chinggis Khan and his activities.
The Mongols in World History. Morris Rossabi. Asian Topics in World History. Columbia University.
Information about Chinggis (Genghis) Khan--link from this page to separate pages for additional information about him. Image gallery.
Empire of Genghis Khan, 1227. Maps, etc. Courtesy The Private Collection of Roy Winkelman.
Map of the empire in 1227. India, Persia, Turkestan, and Mongolia
The Life and Legacy of Chingis Khan. University of California, Berkeley. Stella Bourgoin (Institute of Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies). Office of Resources for International and Area Studies
Sections cover: What's in a Name?; His Origins; The Ger; Building an Empire; Why and How; Legacies; Some Internet Resources; and Endnotes (51 of them). Extensive.
National Museum of Mongolian History. Museums of Mongolia.
There are some images of exhibits available online (no descriptions). See also descriptions of other museums on Mongolia such as the The Bogd Khaan Palace Museum.
Other--Meanwhile in Rome (& Elsewhere)
Conflict of Pagans and Christians in the Roman Empire. Kenneth W. Harl. Annette Lindblom. Tulane.
List of Roman emperors.
Also found under History Library Web pages:
Medieval History (Europe & England).
How to Do Library Research | History
Content: Naomi Lederer