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From Kazakhstan Encyclopedia

  • ...nguage|Kazakh]]: ''Ыбырай Алтынсарин''; [[Russian language|Russian]]: ''Ибрай Алтынсарин'', 1841–1889) was a major figure in ...Russian and Western influences. As an educator, he opened numerous Kazakh-Russian boarding schools, technical schools and schools for girls.
    3 KB (342 words) - 17:42, 26 April 2017
  • ...uyama.pdf]</ref> A common English transliteration of his name (through the Russian) is ''Mir Yakub Dulatov''. ...Kazakh reformist nationalist movement, he developed an anti-colonial, anti-Russian worldview.
    6 KB (825 words) - 17:42, 26 April 2017
  • Omirshan Abdihalykuly (2009, in Russian). ''[http://rus.azattyq.org/content/Kazhygumar_Shabdanuly/1886686.html Knig ...ll term in Ürümqi jail.<ref name=MAR2010>Omirshan Abdihalykuly (2010, in Russian). ''[http://rus.azattyq.org/content/kyzhygumar_shabdanuly_writer/1987918.ht
    5 KB (667 words) - 17:42, 26 April 2017
  • ...uage Could Be Ticket in for Migrants] A large portion of Ukrainians speak Russian</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=Khmelko, V.|format=PDF|url=http://www.kiis.com. ...the words "Rusyns" and "Ruthenian(s)". In areas outside the control of the Russian/Soviet state until the mid-20th century ([[Western Ukraine]]), Ukrainians w
    72 KB (9,631 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...s?id=NKCU3BdeBbEC&pg=PA34&dq=Turkestan'+and+'East+Turkestan'.+In+1829,+the+Russian+sinologist+N.+Bichurin+stated:+'it+would+be+better+here+to+call+Bukhara's+T ...Jonathan Karem|last=Skaff|editor=Nicola Di Cosmo|title=Military Culture in Imperial China|year=2009|publisher=Harvard University Press|isbn=978-0-674-03109-8|p
    347 KB (52,725 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...ssian and Soviet Censuses", in Ralph S. Clem, ed., ''Research Guide to the Russian and Soviet Censuses'' (Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press, 1986): 70-97.</ref><ref {{quote|The Uighurs are the people whom old Russian travellers called [[Sart]] (a name which they used for sedentary, Turkish-s
    118 KB (17,648 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • | birth_place = [[Akmolinsk]], [[Russian Empire]] | death_place = [[Peredelkino]], [[Russian Federation]]
    5 KB (650 words) - 20:11, 27 April 2017
  • ...to accompany "Survey of the Sea of Aral by Commander A. Butakoff, Imperial Russian Navy, 1848 & 1849")]] ...ies of elaborate [[hoax]]es perpetrated by successive generations of local writers and journalists, which central publications in the [[USSR]] had believed an
    5 KB (718 words) - 20:53, 27 April 2017
  • ...s around 114 BCE, largely through missions and explorations of the Chinese imperial envoy, [[Zhang Qian]].<ref name="boulnois">{{Cite book|first= Luce |last= B ...on|Even the rest of the nations of the world which were not subject to the imperial sway were sensible of its grandeur, and looked with reverence to the Roman
    111 KB (16,649 words) - 20:57, 27 April 2017
  • ...titles, gave its emperors reign names, used Chinese-styled coins, and sent imperial seals to its vassals.{{sfn|Biran|2005|p=93-131}} Although most of its admin ...the rulers of the Turks, Arabs, India and Byzantium, were known to Islamic writers as the world's "five great kings".{{sfn|Biran|2005|p=97}} The Khitan Qara-K
    19 KB (2,720 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...ofmeister (eds.),''An Empire of Others: Creating Ethnographic Knowledge in Imperial Russia and the USSR,'' Central European University Press, 2014 pp.369-393 p ...ws were no exception, and one could assume, he added, that many German and Russian Jews descended from the Khazars.<ref>[[Isidore Loeb]] ‘Reflections on the
    84 KB (11,940 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...ction appears to have survived the collapse of the Khazarian empire. Later Russian chronicles, commenting on the role of the Khazars in the magyarisation of H ...rgana|Farghânian (Φάργανοι)]] mercenaries constituted part of the imperial Byzantine ''[[Hetaireia]]'' bodyguard after its formation in 840, a positio
    176 KB (25,696 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017

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