[346]. Marshall G. S. Hodgson, The Order of Assassins: The Struggle of the Early Nizari Isma’ilis Against the Islamic World (The Hague: Mouton, 1955), 87-88.
[347]. Juvaini, 725.
[348]. Juvaini, 703.
[349]. Timothy May, “A Mongol-Isma’?l? Alliance?: Thoughts on the Mongols and Assassins,” Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 3rd series, vol. 14 (2004): 231-39.
[350]. Ibid., 235.
[351]. Ibid., 239.
[352]. Devin DeWeese, “Stuck in the Throat of Chingīz Khān: Envisioning the Mongol Conquests in Some Sufi Accounts from the 14th to the 17th Centuries,” History and Historiography of Post-Mongol Central Asia and the Middle East, ed. Judith Pfeiffer and Sholeh Alysia Quinn (Wiesbaden, Germany: Harrassowitz, 2006), 39.
[353]. Ibid., 43.
[354]. Rashid al-Din, Jami’ al’Tavarikh, ed. Mohammad Roushan and Mustafah Musavi (Tehran: Nashr Albaraz, 1994), 516. Cited in George Lane, Daily Life in the Mongol Empire (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2006), 182.
[355]. DeWeese, “Stuck in the Throat of Chingīz Khān,” 36.
[356]. Juvaini, 105.
[357]. Ibid., 104.
[358]. C. ?. ?amcarano, Mongol Chronicles of the Seventeenth Century, trans. Rudolf Loewenthal (Wiesbaden, Germany: Otto Harrassowitz, 1955), 84.
[359]. Pétis de la Croix, 341-43.
[360]. L. N. Gumilev, Searches for an Imaginary Kingdom, trans. R. E. F. Smith (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1987), 40.
[361]. DeWeese, “Stuck in the Throat of Chingīz Khān,” 29.
[362]. Lyall Armstrong, “The Making of a Sufi: Al-?Nuwayrī’s Account of the Origin of Genghis Khan,” Mamluk Studies Review X-2 (2006): 154; Reuven Amitai, “Did Chinggis Khan Have a Jewish Teacher? An Examination of an Early Fourteenth-Century Arabic Text,” Journal of the American Oriental Society, vol. 124, 693.
[363]. The Travels of Ibn Battuta A.D. 1325–1354, vol. 3, trans. H. A. R. Gibb (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1971), 583. Quoted in DeWeese, “Stuck in the Throat of Chingīz Khān,” 31.