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{{Short description|Latvian military historian (1925–2016)}}
{{family name hatnote|Enohovich|Bregel|lang=Eastern Slavic}}
{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = Yuri Enohovich Bregel
| image = Yuri Bregel - May 5, 2010.jpg
| image = Yuri Bregel - May 5, 2010.jpg
| caption = Yuri Bregel in SRIFIAS library in Goodbody Hall at Indiana University, Bloomington in May 2010.
| caption = Bregel in SRIFIAS library in Goodbody Hall at Indiana University, Bloomington in May 2010.
|birth_name = Yuri Enohovich Bregel
| birth_date = November 13 , 1925
| birth_date = {{birth date|1925|11|13|df=yes}}
| birth_place = [[Soviet Union]]
| education = [[Ph.D.]], [[Moscow State University]]
| birth_place = [[Moscow]], [[Russia]]
| death_date = {{death date and age|2016|8|7|1925|11|13|df=yes}}
| occupation = [[Professor]]
| death_place = [[Belmont, Massachusetts]], U.S.
| current_position = [[Indiana University]]
| education = Ph.D., Institute of Oriental Studies, Moscow
| spouse = Liliya (Liusia) Bregel
| occupation = Professor
| spouse = {{marriage|Liliya "Liusia" Bregel<br>|1924|2009}}
}}
}}


'''Yuri Enohovich Bregel''' ({{lang-ru|Юрий Энохович Брегель}}, born November 13, 1925) is a prominent academic in the field of [[Central Asian studies]]. He is one of the world's leading historians of Islamic [[Central Asia]], and has published a number of important works on the subject.<ref>DeWeese, 1.</ref>
'''Yuri Enohovich Bregel''' ({{lang-ru|Юрий Энохович Брегель}}; 13 November 1925 7 August 2016) was one of the world's leading historians of Islamic [[Central Asia]]. He published extensively on Persian- and Turkic-language history and historiography, and on political, economic and ethnic history in Central Asia and the Muslim world.<ref>DeWeese, 1.</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=YURI BREGEL|url=http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/bostonglobe/obituary.aspx?n=yuri-bregel&pid=181014124&fhid=8784|publisher=The Boston Globe|access-date=11 August 2016}}</ref> He lived in the [[Soviet Union]] (1925–1974), [[Israel]] (1974–1981), and the [[United States]] (1981–2016).


==Biography==
==Biography==
===Soviet Union===
Yuri Bregel was born in the Soviet Union as a son of [[Enoch Bregel]] (1903–1993), a noted Soviet economist. He studied in the Oriental Faculty of Moscow State University. Coming out of the same tradition which produced the great [[Vasily Bartold]], Bregel proved a more than worthy successor to this tradition of rigorous scholarship in the Islamic History of Central Asia.
Yuri Bregel was born in Moscow, the son of [[Enoch Bregel]] (1903–1993), a noted Soviet political economist. When he was sixteen years old, his family relocated to the town of [[Fergana]] and in 1943 he joined the Soviet army where he was to serve in an anti-tank artillery unit. He fought in the [[Crimea]], [[Belorussia]], [[Occupation of Poland (1939–1945)|Poland]], and [[Nazi Germany|Germany]]; he was injured twice and decorated.


After the war, he enrolled at the History department at [[Moscow University]], where he studied Middle Eastern, Central Asian and Islamic history. In the fall of 1949, Bregel was arrested and imprisoned on charges of "anti-Soviet activity." He spent the next five years in a hard labor camp in the northern [[Urals]]. Upon his release, he resumed his studies and earned a doctorate at the [[Moscow Institute of Oriental Studies|Institute of Oriental Studies in Moscow]] in 1961.
In 1974 he emigrated to Israel, where he was on the faculty of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In 1981 he moved to the United States, where he joined what was then Bloomington's [[Centre for Uralic and Altaic Studies]] owing to his excellent knowledge of Central Asian Turki and [[Chagatai language|Chagatai]]. However, what Bregel brought to an already world renowned Department (under the able stewardship of [[Denis Sinor]]) was not so much an addition to the ranks of turcologists, as a far greater understanding of the region's Islamic and Persian heritage.


In 1955, Bregel married Liliya (Liusia) Davydovna Rozenberg, then a doctoral student (and later faculty) at Moscow State University and a specialist on the social and administrative history of [[Portuguese India]] in the 16th and 17th centuries.
At a time when the medieval and early-modern history of Central Asia was hardly studied in the West, save through outdated translations of works such as the ''[[Ta'rikh-e Rashidi]]'', and one or two of Barthold's monographs, Bregel pioneered serious research into and the textual study of the documents and manuscripts in Persian and Chagatai from the region which were held in Western libraries, in addition to copies of rare works which he had been able to bring with him from Russia. He insisted his students learn [[Russian language|Russian]], [[Persian language|Persian]] and [[Turki]] in order to be able both to pursue their work with original sources, and read the best-researched secondary literature on the subject, most of which is in Russian.


In the 1960s and early 1970s, Yuri Bregel's scholarship had already gained considerable reputation, having worked on the 10-volume collection and republication of [[Vasily Bartold]]'s works; on the production of the famed ''Monuments of the Literature of the East'' (''Pamiatniki pis'mennosti Vostoka'') series and the Russian translation and significant expansion of Charles Storey's essential, multi-volume ''Persian Literature''. To these endeavors, Bregel added original scholarship on political, economic and ethnic history of 19th-century Khiva and its Turkmen peoples.
With works such as his ''Bibliography'' and ''Atlas of Central Asian History'' (see below) he has laid a firm foundation for others to build on, as well as producing numerous scholarly editions and translations of his own, along with his famously searing attack on the "Sovietological" approach to Central Asian History, ''Notes on the Study of Central Asia''.<ref>Yuri Bregel, Notes on the Study of Central Asia, Papers on Inner Asia, Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies, Indiana University: Uralic & Altaic Series, No.28, 1996</ref> Bregel is now retired, and his tradition is continued by students of his such as [[Devin Deweese]].

===Israel and United States===
In 1974, after some effort in his behalf by international colleagues, Bregel and his family were finally allowed to emigrate to Israel. Bregel joined the [[Hebrew University of Jerusalem]], where he became an endowed Chair and Professor of the History of the Muslim Peoples.

In 1981 Bregel moved to the United States, to [[Bloomington, Indiana]], where he joined what was then Indiana University's Department of Uralic and Altaic Studies (later renamed [[Department of Central Eurasian Studies]]), augmenting the department's research profile and course offerings in Central Asian history and historiography and in the study of Turkic ([[Chagatai language]]) and Persian manuscripts, while also enhancing the Library's holdings of rare primary and secondary sources.

==Positions==
Bregel served as Director of Indiana University's Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies from 1986 to 1997, and as Director of Indiana University's Inner Asian and Uralic National Resource Center from 1989 to 1997. He served as consulting editor for the [[Encyclopaedia Iranica]] Foundation, senior editor for the Oriental Literature Public House in Moscow, a research fellow at the Institute for Oriental Studies of the [[Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union]], a member of the [[Institute for Advanced Study]] in [[Princeton, New Jersey|Princeton]], and a member of the Association for the Advancement of Central Asian Research and the Association for Central Asian Studies.


==Selected publications==
==Selected publications==
Bregel authored numerous publications on the medieval and early modern history of Central Asia, including the 3-volume ''Bibliography of Islamic Central Asia'' (1995), the edition and translation of the important Khivan chronicle ''Firdaws al-iqbal'' (1988 and 1999) and ''An Historical Atlas of Central Asia'' (2003), in addition to serving as editor-in-chief of ''Papers on Inner Asia'' and many other publications.


===Books===
===Books===
* Khorezmskie turkmeny v XIX veke, Moscow, 1961.
* ''Khorezmskie turkmeny v XIX veke'', Moscow, 1961.
* ''Dokumenty arkhiva khivinskikh khanov po istorii i etnografii karakalpakov'', Moscow, 1967.
* Ch. A. Stori, Persidskaia literatura: Bio-bibliograficheskii obzor [translated and emended edition of C. A. Storey, Persian Literature], vols. I-III, Moscow, 1972.
* Ch. A. Stori, ''Persidskaia literatura: Bio-bibliograficheskii obzor'' [Russian translation and expansion of C. A. Storey, ''Persian Literature''], vols. I-III, Moscow, 1972.
* Shir Muhammad Mirab Munis and Muhammad Reza Mirab Agahi ''Firdaws al-Iqbal: History of Khorezm'' Text Edition. Leiden: Brill, 1988; English translation, 1999.
* Shir Muhammad Mirab Munis and Muhammad Riza Mirab Agahi ''Firdaws al-Iqbal: History of Khorezm'' Text Edition. Leiden: Brill, 1988; English translation, 1999.
* ''Bibliography of Islamic Central Asia'' (Indiana University Uralic and Altaic Series) 1995 3 Vols.
* ''Bibliography of Islamic Central Asia'' (Indiana University Uralic and Altaic Series) 1995 3 Vols.
* Shir Muhammad Mirab Muni's and Muhammad Reza Mirab Agahi, ''Firdaws al-Iqbal: History of Khorezm'' translated from the Chaghatay and annotated (Leiden: Brill) 1999
* Shir Muhammad Mirab Muni's and Muhammad Reza Mirab Agahi, ''Firdaws al-Iqbal: History of Khorezm'' translated from the Chaghatay and annotated (Leiden: Brill) 1999.
* ''An Historical Atlas of Central Asia'' Handbook of Oriental Studies: Part 8 Uralic & Central Asian Studies (Leiden: Brill) 2003
* ''An Historical Atlas of Central Asia'' (Leiden: Brill) 2003.

===Edited works===
* Muhammad ibn Nadzhib Bakran, ''Djhakhan-name (Kniga o mire)'', ed. Iu. E. Borschevskii (Moscow, 1960).
* ''Poslovitsy i pogovorki narodov Vostoka'', Moscow, 1961.
* V. V. Bartol'd, ''Sochineniia'', vols. I, II/1, II/2, III, V, VII, VIII.


===Articles, chapters, and papers===
===Articles, chapters, and papers===
* “Barthold and Modern Oriental Studies” ''International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies'' Vol.12 (1980) pp385–403
* “Barthold and Modern Oriental Studies,” ''International Journal of Middle East Studies'' 12 (1980), 385–403.
* "The Role of Central Asia in the History of the Muslim East" ''Asia Society Occasional Papers'' (Afghanistan Council) 1980
* "The Role of Central Asia in the History of the Muslim East," ''Asia Society Occasional Papers'' (Afghanistan Council, 1980)
* “The Sarts in the Khanate of Khiva” ''Journal of Asian History'' Vol.12, 1978, pp.&nbsp;121–151
* “The Sarts in the Khanate of Khiva,” ''Journal of Asian History'' 12 (1978), 121–151
* "Nomadic and Sedentary Elements among the Turkmens," ''Central Asiatic Journal'' 25/1-2 (1981), 5-37
* "Tribal Tradition and Dynastic History: The Early Rulers of the Qongrats According to Munis" ''Asian and African Studies'' Vol. 16, No.3, 1982
* "Tribal Tradition and Dynastic History: The Early Rulers of the Qongrats According to Munis" ''Asian and African Studies'' 16/3 (1982)
* '"Turko-Mongol Influences in Central Asia" in ''Turco-Persia in Historical Perspective'' Ed. R. Canfield (Cambridge University Press) 1991
* '"Turko-Mongol Influences in Central Asia" in ''Turco-Persia in Historical Perspective'' Ed. R. Canfield (Cambridge University Press) 1991
* ''Notes on the Study of Central Asia'' Papers on Inner Asia, №.28 (Bloomington) 1996
* ''Notes on the Study of Central Asia'' (''Papers on Inner Asia'' 28, 1996)
* ''The Administration of Bukhara under the Manghits and Some Tashkent Manuscripts'' (''Papers on Inner Asia'' 34, 2000)

* ''The Administration of Bukhara under the Manghits and Some Tashkent Manuscripts'' Papers on Inner Asia, №.34 (Bloomington) 2000


==See also==
==See also==
Line 49: Line 68:


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
* {{Cite book|last=DeWeese|first=Devin, ed.|authorlink=Devin DeWeese|title=Studies on Central Asian History in honor of Yuri Bregel|publisher=Indiana University|year=2001|location=Bloomington, Indiana|isbn=0-933070-48-9}}
* {{Cite book|editor-last=DeWeese|editor-first=Devin|editor-link=Devin DeWeese|title=Studies on Central Asian History in honor of Yuri Bregel|publisher=Indiana University|year=2001|location=Bloomington, Indiana|isbn=0-933070-48-9}}



{{IU-CEUS}}
{{IU-CEUS}}


{{Authority control|VIAF=92093615}}
{{Authority control}}

{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Bregel, Yuri
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Russian orientalist
| DATE OF BIRTH = November 13, 1925
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Soviet Union]]
| DATE OF DEATH =
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bregel, Yuri}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bregel, Yuri}}
[[Category:Indiana University faculty]]
[[Category:Russian orientalists]]
[[Category:Russian historians]]
[[Category:Islamic politics and Islamic world studies]]
[[Category:Central Asian studies]]
[[Category:Soviet emigrants to Israel]]
[[Category:Soviet historians]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:1925 births]]
[[Category:1925 births]]
[[Category:2016 deaths]]
[[Category:Indiana University Bloomington faculty]]
[[Category:Soviet orientalists]]
[[Category:Soviet historians]]
[[Category:Historians of Central Asia]]
[[Category:Soviet emigrants to Israel]]
[[Category:Israeli expatriates in the United States]]

Latest revision as of 15:21, 29 May 2023

Yuri Bregel
Bregel in SRIFIAS library in Goodbody Hall at Indiana University, Bloomington in May 2010.
Born
Yuri Enohovich Bregel

(1925-11-13)13 November 1925
Died7 August 2016(2016-08-07) (aged 90)
EducationPh.D., Institute of Oriental Studies, Moscow
OccupationProfessor
Spouse
Liliya "Liusia" Bregel
(m. 1924⁠–⁠2009)

Yuri Enohovich Bregel (Russian: Юрий Энохович Брегель; 13 November 1925 – 7 August 2016) was one of the world's leading historians of Islamic Central Asia. He published extensively on Persian- and Turkic-language history and historiography, and on political, economic and ethnic history in Central Asia and the Muslim world.[1][2] He lived in the Soviet Union (1925–1974), Israel (1974–1981), and the United States (1981–2016).

Biography[edit]

Soviet Union[edit]

Yuri Bregel was born in Moscow, the son of Enoch Bregel (1903–1993), a noted Soviet political economist. When he was sixteen years old, his family relocated to the town of Fergana and in 1943 he joined the Soviet army where he was to serve in an anti-tank artillery unit. He fought in the Crimea, Belorussia, Poland, and Germany; he was injured twice and decorated.

After the war, he enrolled at the History department at Moscow University, where he studied Middle Eastern, Central Asian and Islamic history. In the fall of 1949, Bregel was arrested and imprisoned on charges of "anti-Soviet activity." He spent the next five years in a hard labor camp in the northern Urals. Upon his release, he resumed his studies and earned a doctorate at the Institute of Oriental Studies in Moscow in 1961.

In 1955, Bregel married Liliya (Liusia) Davydovna Rozenberg, then a doctoral student (and later faculty) at Moscow State University and a specialist on the social and administrative history of Portuguese India in the 16th and 17th centuries.

In the 1960s and early 1970s, Yuri Bregel's scholarship had already gained considerable reputation, having worked on the 10-volume collection and republication of Vasily Bartold's works; on the production of the famed Monuments of the Literature of the East (Pamiatniki pis'mennosti Vostoka) series and the Russian translation and significant expansion of Charles Storey's essential, multi-volume Persian Literature. To these endeavors, Bregel added original scholarship on political, economic and ethnic history of 19th-century Khiva and its Turkmen peoples.

Israel and United States[edit]

In 1974, after some effort in his behalf by international colleagues, Bregel and his family were finally allowed to emigrate to Israel. Bregel joined the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where he became an endowed Chair and Professor of the History of the Muslim Peoples.

In 1981 Bregel moved to the United States, to Bloomington, Indiana, where he joined what was then Indiana University's Department of Uralic and Altaic Studies (later renamed Department of Central Eurasian Studies), augmenting the department's research profile and course offerings in Central Asian history and historiography and in the study of Turkic (Chagatai language) and Persian manuscripts, while also enhancing the Library's holdings of rare primary and secondary sources.

Positions[edit]

Bregel served as Director of Indiana University's Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies from 1986 to 1997, and as Director of Indiana University's Inner Asian and Uralic National Resource Center from 1989 to 1997. He served as consulting editor for the Encyclopaedia Iranica Foundation, senior editor for the Oriental Literature Public House in Moscow, a research fellow at the Institute for Oriental Studies of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union, a member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, and a member of the Association for the Advancement of Central Asian Research and the Association for Central Asian Studies.

Selected publications[edit]

Bregel authored numerous publications on the medieval and early modern history of Central Asia, including the 3-volume Bibliography of Islamic Central Asia (1995), the edition and translation of the important Khivan chronicle Firdaws al-iqbal (1988 and 1999) and An Historical Atlas of Central Asia (2003), in addition to serving as editor-in-chief of Papers on Inner Asia and many other publications.

Books[edit]

  • Khorezmskie turkmeny v XIX veke, Moscow, 1961.
  • Dokumenty arkhiva khivinskikh khanov po istorii i etnografii karakalpakov, Moscow, 1967.
  • Ch. A. Stori, Persidskaia literatura: Bio-bibliograficheskii obzor [Russian translation and expansion of C. A. Storey, Persian Literature], vols. I-III, Moscow, 1972.
  • Shir Muhammad Mirab Munis and Muhammad Riza Mirab Agahi Firdaws al-Iqbal: History of Khorezm Text Edition. Leiden: Brill, 1988; English translation, 1999.
  • Bibliography of Islamic Central Asia (Indiana University Uralic and Altaic Series) 1995 3 Vols.
  • Shir Muhammad Mirab Muni's and Muhammad Reza Mirab Agahi, Firdaws al-Iqbal: History of Khorezm translated from the Chaghatay and annotated (Leiden: Brill) 1999.
  • An Historical Atlas of Central Asia (Leiden: Brill) 2003.

Edited works[edit]

  • Muhammad ibn Nadzhib Bakran, Djhakhan-name (Kniga o mire), ed. Iu. E. Borschevskii (Moscow, 1960).
  • Poslovitsy i pogovorki narodov Vostoka, Moscow, 1961.
  • V. V. Bartol'd, Sochineniia, vols. I, II/1, II/2, III, V, VII, VIII.

Articles, chapters, and papers[edit]

  • “Barthold and Modern Oriental Studies,” International Journal of Middle East Studies 12 (1980), 385–403.
  • "The Role of Central Asia in the History of the Muslim East," Asia Society Occasional Papers (Afghanistan Council, 1980)
  • “The Sarts in the Khanate of Khiva,” Journal of Asian History 12 (1978), 121–151
  • "Nomadic and Sedentary Elements among the Turkmens," Central Asiatic Journal 25/1-2 (1981), 5-37
  • "Tribal Tradition and Dynastic History: The Early Rulers of the Qongrats According to Munis" Asian and African Studies 16/3 (1982)
  • '"Turko-Mongol Influences in Central Asia" in Turco-Persia in Historical Perspective Ed. R. Canfield (Cambridge University Press) 1991
  • Notes on the Study of Central Asia (Papers on Inner Asia 28, 1996)
  • The Administration of Bukhara under the Manghits and Some Tashkent Manuscripts (Papers on Inner Asia 34, 2000)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ DeWeese, 1.
  2. ^ "YURI BREGEL". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 11 August 2016.

Bibliography[edit]