Cover
Imprint
Contents
Foreword
List of Contributors
Explanatory Notes
Introduction. World History and Suzerainty
Chapter 1. The Appearance of Vassal States and “Suzerainty” in the Ottoman Empire: The Case of Wallachia and Moldavia
Chapter 2. Between Sovereignty and Suzerainty: History of the Ottoman Privileged Provinces
Chapter 3. Suzerainty, International Law, and Translation: From the Eastern Question to the Korean Question
Chapter 4. Russia’s Eastward Approach to East Asia: The Qing, Japan, and Boundary Issues with Russia
Chapter 5. From Diplomacy to Gaikō: Meiji Japan and Its Perceptions of “Diplomacy”
Chapter 6. Japanese Diplomacy and the Sino-Korean Suzerain-Vassal Relationship before and after the First Sino-Japanese War
Chapter 7. Somewhere between “Independence” and “Autonomy”: Translating Concepts in Modern Mongolian
Chapter 8. The Political Status of Tibet and the Simla Conference (1913–14): Translated Concepts in Modern Tibet
Chapter 9. Internalizing “Territory”: How the “Territory” Concept Became Part of China’s Contemporary Conceptual Apparatus
Chapter 10. The Ecumenical Patriarchate in the Age of Ottoman Suzerainty
Bibliography
Index