Research Interest
Languages, history, and cultures of the Turkic-speaking peoples.
Uli Schamiloglu received his B.A. in Middle East Languages and Cultures from Columbia College in 1979 and his Ph.D. in Middle Eastern and Central Asian History from Columbia University in 1986.
Uli Schamiloglu has taught at Indiana University (1983-1989) and at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (1989-2017), where he was Professor of Turkic and Central Eurasian Studies. He also served as chair of the Central Asian Studies Program and the Middle East Studies Program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he also directed the Central Eurasian Studies Summer Institute (2011-2017). He has also served as president of the American Association of Teachers of Turkic Languages (2003-2017).
Since 2017 Uli Schamiloglu has been Professor and chair of the Department of Kazakh Language and Turkic Studies at Nazarbayev University in Astana, Kazakhstan.
His main research interests include the history of the Turkic languages and cultures of the Middle East and Central Eurasia, the socio-economic history of the Middle East and Central Eurasia in the medieval period, the history of Turko-Islamic civilization, and modern intellectual movements among the Muslim Turkic peoples of the Ottoman and Russian Empires.
Since the late 1980s Professor Schamiloglu has also been interested in the role of the Black Death (14th century on) in the history of medieval Central Eurasia, especially its role in the history of the Golden Horde and the other states of the Mongol World Empire, including the impact of plague on the history of literary languages, religiosity, and written monuments. More recently he has also begun to work on the Plague in the Time of Justinian (6th-8th centuries) in Central Eurasian history as well.
EAS 701, Critical Issues in Eurasian Studies
EAS 708, Proseminar in Eurasian Humanities
EAS 710, Independent Studies in Eurasian Studies
EAS 711-712, Doctoral Seminar in Eurasian Studies I-II
HST-TUR 552, Proseminar in Eurasian History, 552-1917
LING-TUR 280, Introduction to Turkic Historical and Comparative Linguistics
TUR 230, Literatures of Central Asia in Translation
TUR 301, Introduction to Old Turkic
TUR 305, Introduction to Chagatay and Ottoman Turkish