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From Kazakhstan Encyclopedia

  • [[File:Ancient Taraz Kazakhstan.jpg|thumb|right|Artistic depiction of medieval [[Taraz]] situated along the [[Silk Road]]]] ...ssians [[immigrated]] to Kazakhstan, and about one million Slavs, Germans, Jews, and others immigrated to the region during the first third of the 20th cen
    135 KB (18,214 words) - 17:43, 26 April 2017
  • ...t ''sambusaj''.<ref>Rodinson, Maxime, Arthur Arberry, and Charles Perry. ''Medieval Arab cookery''. Prospect Books (UK), 2001. p. 72.</ref> ...t cheese]] and [[za'atar]]. It is associated with [[Cuisine of the Mizrahi Jews|Mizrahi Jewish cuisine]]. An Israeli ''sambusak'' is not as spicy as the In
    24 KB (3,375 words) - 17:54, 26 April 2017
  • The '''history of the Jews in Central Asia''' dates back centuries, where [[Jews]] <nowiki/>have lived in countries including [[Kyrgyzstan]], [[Kazakhstan]] ...ish community. However, during the 20th century, large numbers of European Jews began to emigrate to Kyrgyzstan which was then part of the [[Soviet Union]]
    26 KB (3,693 words) - 19:59, 27 April 2017
  • ...Varangians also served as key mercenary troops for a number of princes in medieval [[Kiev]], as well as for some of the [[Byzantine emperor]]s, while others o ...entiation between separate East Slavic groups began to emerge in the later medieval period, and an East Slavic [[dialect continuum]] developed within the [[Pol
    72 KB (9,631 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...hor=Sir Henry Yule|title=Cathay and the Way Thither, Being a Collection of Medieval Notices of China|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SAqgAb41ifIC&pg=PA33 ...f name="Azad2013">{{cite book|author=Arezou Azad|title=Sacred Landscape in Medieval Afghanistan: Revisiting the Faḍāʾil-i Balkh|url=https://books.google.co
    347 KB (52,725 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...t recorded under the name "Talas" in 568 CE by [[Menander Protector]]. The medieval city of Talas was a major trade centre along the [[Silk Road]]. Talas was l ===Medieval Taraz===
    28 KB (4,216 words) - 20:13, 27 April 2017
  • ...|2005}}</ref><ref name="Norman A. Stillman pp 22">Norman A. Stillman ''The Jews of Arab Lands'' pp 22 Jewish Publication Society, 1979 ISBN 0827611552</ref ...ion of both [[Medieval art|European]] and [[History of Eastern art|Asian]] medieval art.<ref name="Iransaga: The art of Sassanians">{{cite web|url=http://www.a
    153 KB (23,195 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • {{for2|socialist ("red") Jews|[[Jewish socialism]]|[[Jewish Bolshevism]]}} ...] era, from the 5th to the 15th century. According to these texts, the Red Jews were an [[Epoch (reference date)|epoch]]al threat to [[Christendom]], and w
    3 KB (492 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...זרי}}) is one of the most famous works of the medieval [[History of the Jews in Spain|Spanish Jewish]] philosopher and poet [[Judah Halevi]], completed Halevi writes that as the Jews are the only depositaries of a written history of the development of the hu
    16 KB (2,599 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...n Europe]] to [[Central Asia]]. The hypothesis draws on some [[Middle Ages|medieval]] sources such as the [[Khazar Correspondence]], according to which at some ...century, [[Ernest Renan]] and other scholars speculated that the Ashkenazi Jews of Europe [[ethnogenesis|originated]] among Turkic refugees who had migrate
    84 KB (11,940 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...may have gone to [[Hungary]], [[Poland]] and the [[Crimea]], mingling with Jews in those areas and with later waves of Jewish immigrants from the west. *[[Kevin Alan Brook|Brook, K.A.]]. ''The Jews of Khazaria.'' 2nd ed. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc, 2006.
    11 KB (1,560 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...western Asia]], Khazaria became one of the foremost trading emporia of the medieval world, commanding the western marches of the [[Silk Road]] and playing a ke ...hat Khazars became a major component in the ethnogenesis of the Ashkenazic Jews'.</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Rubin|2013}}.</ref> The theory is sometimes associated
    176 KB (25,696 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...he [[Tel Aviv University]] since its inception, Professor of [[Middle Ages|Medieval]] History and founder of the department of [[History of the Middle East|Mid ...ure subject of the Khazars' Kingdom and is important to the history of the Jews and the country".<ref name=":1">Program for the ceremony of the Bialik Awar
    18 KB (2,813 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017

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