@article{oai:toyo-bunko.repo.nii.ac.jp:00004715, author = {松村, 潤 and MATSUMURA, Jun}, issue = {4}, journal = {東洋学報, The Toyo Gakuho}, month = {Mar}, note = {In the Ming-shih-hsi-yü-chuan 明史西域傳 the accounts of Ha-mei-li 哈梅里 and Ha-mi-wei 哈密衞 are recorded as historical descriptions of two different countries. The fact is this, however, that both Ha-mei-li 哈梅里 and Ha-mi 哈密 are the transcriptions of the name of one and the same country ‘Qomul’, and as the Ha-mei-li-chuan records the history of the country during the Hung-wu 洪武 period according to the Ming-shih-lu 明實錄, it should better be placed before Ha-mi-wei-chuan which treats of that after the Yung-lo 永樂 period.Now, Na-hu-li 納忽里 in the Ha-mi-wei-chuan, the name of the emperor of Qomul who might be called the forefather of the Imperial family of Ha-mi in the Ming dynasty, is nothing other than a miscopy of Wu-na-shih-li 兀納失里 that is found in various parts of the Ming-shih-lu, the name of a powerful chief under the reign of Tokus-Temür 脱古思帖木兒, the emperor of Northorn Yüan empire. It has been pointed out by Dr. Paul PELLIOT that there must have been some relation between this Wu-na-shih-li and the princes of Wei-wu-hsi-ning 威武西寧, Pin 豳 and Su 肅 all recorded in the list of princes of the Yüan-shih 元史. The present writer investigates the annual records of Yüan-shih and describes the status of Qomul at the end of Yüan dynasty through the beginning of Ming dynasty by tracing the descent of the Mongolian feudal princes in the Tangut District during the Great Mongolian reign.}, pages = {368--384}, title = {明代哈密王家の起原}, volume = {39}, year = {1957}, yomi = {マツムラ, ジュン} }