Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

This is a rich study that makes important contributions to the historiography of the Russian Empire, sharpening our picture of an empire in which lines between colonizer and colonized were far from clear.

* The Middle Ground Journal *

Ross offers a fascinating, well-researched narrative that fills an important lacuna in our understanding of Russia's engagement with Islam. As her clearly clearly shows, Ross engages not only with topics related to the study of Islam but also with some of the key themes of Russian history: Empire and Nation, Islam and Modernity, and the way empire worked by mutual relations and not by a unidirectional vector of power and control. Her study of the Machkaran network of scholars provides an important corrective to an image of Islamic reform dominated by Central Asian and Crimean Jadidism; it is bound tostimulate further research.

-- Orel Beilinson * Euraian Geography and Economics *

Danielle Ross' monograph, Tatar Empire: Kazan's Muslims and the Making of Imperial Russia, offers a substantive and thought-provoking addition to the historiography of both the Russian Empire in general and its relationship with its subject Muslim peoples in particular. . . . Tatar Empire is a fascinating and well-written contribution to the field. It is recommended not only to scholars interested in the history of Russian-Muslim relations, but also to a wider audience of experts interested in questions of empire, religion, and the emergence of nationalism.

-- John M. Romero * Canadian-American Slavic Studies *

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments


Introduction: The Empire that Tatars Built


1. The Age of the Settler Ulamā


2. The Art of Accruing Scholarly Prestige


3. Colonial Trade and Religious Revival


4. A Shaykhly Rural Gentry


5. Knowledge, History-Writing, and Becoming Colonial


6. Muslim Cultural Reform and Kazan Tatar Cultural Imperialism


7. Fundamentalism, Nationalism, and Social Conflict


8. At War with the Tatar Kingdom


9. An Empire without Russians


Conclusion


Glossary


Bibliography


Index

Tatar Empire

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Thu 2 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Danielle Ross

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      Publisher: Indiana University Press
      Publication Date: 04/02/2020
      ISBN13: 9780253045706, 978-0253045706
      ISBN10: 0253045703

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review

      This is a rich study that makes important contributions to the historiography of the Russian Empire, sharpening our picture of an empire in which lines between colonizer and colonized were far from clear.

      * The Middle Ground Journal *

      Ross offers a fascinating, well-researched narrative that fills an important lacuna in our understanding of Russia's engagement with Islam. As her clearly clearly shows, Ross engages not only with topics related to the study of Islam but also with some of the key themes of Russian history: Empire and Nation, Islam and Modernity, and the way empire worked by mutual relations and not by a unidirectional vector of power and control. Her study of the Machkaran network of scholars provides an important corrective to an image of Islamic reform dominated by Central Asian and Crimean Jadidism; it is bound tostimulate further research.

      -- Orel Beilinson * Euraian Geography and Economics *

      Danielle Ross' monograph, Tatar Empire: Kazan's Muslims and the Making of Imperial Russia, offers a substantive and thought-provoking addition to the historiography of both the Russian Empire in general and its relationship with its subject Muslim peoples in particular. . . . Tatar Empire is a fascinating and well-written contribution to the field. It is recommended not only to scholars interested in the history of Russian-Muslim relations, but also to a wider audience of experts interested in questions of empire, religion, and the emergence of nationalism.

      -- John M. Romero * Canadian-American Slavic Studies *

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments


      Introduction: The Empire that Tatars Built


      1. The Age of the Settler Ulamā


      2. The Art of Accruing Scholarly Prestige


      3. Colonial Trade and Religious Revival


      4. A Shaykhly Rural Gentry


      5. Knowledge, History-Writing, and Becoming Colonial


      6. Muslim Cultural Reform and Kazan Tatar Cultural Imperialism


      7. Fundamentalism, Nationalism, and Social Conflict


      8. At War with the Tatar Kingdom


      9. An Empire without Russians


      Conclusion


      Glossary


      Bibliography


      Index

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