Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Arts and Humanities Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Asian History

PDF

Eastern Illinois University

Selected Works

Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

간토대학살에 비쳐본 일본 제국의 어제와 오늘: 92년 만에 확인된 한인 희생자의 두 개의 묘 (The Past And Present Of The Japanese Empire: Thinking Through The Recent Discovery Of Two Coexisting Tombs Of A Kanto Massacre Victim), Jinhee Lee May 2015

간토대학살에 비쳐본 일본 제국의 어제와 오늘: 92년 만에 확인된 한인 희생자의 두 개의 묘 (The Past And Present Of The Japanese Empire: Thinking Through The Recent Discovery Of Two Coexisting Tombs Of A Kanto Massacre Victim), Jinhee Lee

Jinhee Lee

No abstract provided.


Book Review: The Oxford Handbook Of Ancient Iran, Edited By D. T. Potts, Lee E. Patterson Oct 2014

Book Review: The Oxford Handbook Of Ancient Iran, Edited By D. T. Potts, Lee E. Patterson

Lee E. Patterson

No abstract provided.


Japan's Inclination Towards The Right-Wing, Anti-Korean Ideology Must Not Be Neglected: Korea-Japan Relations Through The Lens Of The Great Kanto Earthquake, Jinhee Lee Jul 2014

Japan's Inclination Towards The Right-Wing, Anti-Korean Ideology Must Not Be Neglected: Korea-Japan Relations Through The Lens Of The Great Kanto Earthquake, Jinhee Lee

Jinhee Lee

No abstract provided.


Blood-Filled Street: Devastation Of The Kanto Massacre Captured In Documentary Films, Jinhee Lee Jul 2014

Blood-Filled Street: Devastation Of The Kanto Massacre Captured In Documentary Films, Jinhee Lee

Jinhee Lee

No abstract provided.


Colloquium Focusing On The Massacre Of Koreans During The Great Kanto Earthquake Hosted By Kunkuk University, Jinhee Lee Jul 2014

Colloquium Focusing On The Massacre Of Koreans During The Great Kanto Earthquake Hosted By Kunkuk University, Jinhee Lee

Jinhee Lee

No abstract provided.


Caracalla's Armenia, Lee E. Patterson Jan 2013

Caracalla's Armenia, Lee E. Patterson

Lee E. Patterson

We are hard pressed to understand the events of Caracalla's Parthian war, including the role Armenia played in the conflict, because of gross inadequacies in our sources. A careful analysis suggests that Caracalla intended to annex Armenia but never saw the project through. His intentions can be gauged by his treatment of Edessa, for whose annexation the evidence is more solid. Caracalla was trying to secure his rear, from Osrhoene to Armenia, in preparation for a full-scale Parthian war. Because the goal of stabilizing Armenia proved elusive, given local hostilities, Caracalla had to scale back his plans.