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ID184154
Title ProperSecular empire? Estates, nom, and religions in the Mongol empire
LanguageENG
AuthorAtwood, Christopher P
Summary / Abstract (Note)Recent work in religious studies has emphasized how European colonial empires used the defining and constructing of religions and secularism as tools of rule. This article explores parallel processes in the Mongol empire (1206–1368) where ‘religion-making’ occurred in three areas: 1) a precise and legal definition of professional service estates among the conquered peoples that included the clergies of designated religions; 2) a broad and imprecise classification of nom or ‘way of life’ that partially overlapped with the clergies defined in the first category; and 3) a realm above all such sectarian distinctions destined for the Mongol ruling elite who alone were capable of living in free obedience to Heaven. The parallels and differences with classifications of the religious and the secular in European colonial empires shed light on how power interacts with cultural classification and practices.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 56, No.3; May 2022: p.796 - 814
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies 2022-06 56, 3
Key WordsEthics ;  Secularism ;  Ritual ;  Clergy ;  Mongol Empire ;  Nom