- 13th century, Ü and
Tsang were
divided in
thirteen myriarchies (trikor). The
exact list of
myriarchies varies somewhat from
source to source. According...
-
supposedly given "temporal
authority over the 13
myriarchies [Trikor Chuksum] of
Central Tibet."
Since the
myriarchies had not yet
emerged as a
territorial unit...
-
forming one of the
thirteen myriarchies (divisions) of
Central Tibet.
Towards the end of the 13th
century the
myriarchy fell on hard
times and lost territory...
-
control of the Yuan.
Goryeo became a
Mongol military base, and
several myriarchy commands were
established there. The
court of the
Goryeo supplied Korean...
- head of the
Sakya Government, to
appoint a tripön for each of the 13
myriarchies, and to act as
liaison between the Yuan
government and Tibet. Nevertheless...
- A
census was
conducted in 1268 and
Tibet was
divided into
thirteen myriarchies.
While maintaining administrative control through the dpon-chen, Kublai's...
- A
census was
conducted in 1268 and
Tibet was
divided into
thirteen myriarchies (administrative districts,
nominally containing 10,000 households). By...
-
Herodotus may have
confused the
Persian terms for
chiliarchy (1,000) and
myriarchy (10,000),
leading to an
exaggeration by a
factor of ten.
Other early modern...
-
allegedly given "temporal
authority over the 13
myriarchies [Trikor Chuksum] of
Central Tibet."
Since the
myriarchies were not yet
constituted by this time the...
-
given Mongol titles. The
Mongol military system known as the tumen, or
myriarchy,
based on
units of 10,000 was
introduced to Goryeo. The
numerical strength...