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From Kazakhstan Encyclopedia

  • {{Infobox military person ...еде́лин}}) (November 9, 1902 — October 24, 1960) was a [[Soviet]] military commander who served as [[Chief marshal of the branch|Chief Marshal of the
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  • ...action and Confidence Building Measures in Asia (CICA) and the Congress of Leaders of World and Traditional Religions, integration in the post-Soviet space an ...ction consists of various jewelry and adornments, belts for men and women, military equipment and armour, woman’s headdresses and musical instruments. Each e
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  • ...h and breath of warrior's life, could see directly [[Military Frontier|the military frontier]]. "Kurland" afterwards was complemented and reduced, published ag ...Russians had supported embassies and completed agreements with the Kazakh leaders. But according to your words it turns out that, from 1795 up to 1846 [[Russ
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  • ...over the country's [[Politics of Kazakhstan|politics]]. Several opposition leaders and journalists have been killed in recent years, and Western observers gen === Military of Kazakhstan ===
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  • * [[Military of Kazakhstan]] {{main|List of leaders of Kazakhstan|Prime Minister of Kazakhstan}}
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  • ...s [[Freedom of religion in Kazakhstan|freedom of religion]], but religious leaders who oppose the government are suppressed.{{citation needed lead|date=August The Russian Empire introduced a system of administration and built military garrisons and barracks in its effort to establish a presence in [[Central A
    135 KB (18,214 words) - 17:43, 26 April 2017
  • ...m|accessdate=28 July 2007}}</ref> While fulfilling his compulsory two-year military service requirement, Vino also trained as part of the Soviet national team. ...e, calling back seven of his eight teammates to help his bid to regain the leaders.<ref name="farrand2007"/> The Astana train pursued the favorites, until Vin
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  • {{infobox military award |publisher=Official blog-platform leaders of public agency RK
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  • |<center>Awarded for extraordinary service, or civil or military exploits in the name of the Republic of Kazakhstan.<ref name=egov/> ...omy, social sphere, science and culture; in the state, law enforcement and military service, the development of democracy and social progress.<ref name=egov/>
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  • ...ular Blacklist, which will continue until the U.S. recalls [[United States military deployments|its troops deployed abroad]]. ...Engineers, and says that Sadiq knows the identities of the Fourth Echelon leaders. Escaping from the prison, Briggs and Fisher reach the ''Paladin'' in [[Yuc
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  • ...military institutions.<ref name=Hunter14 /> In response, Kazakh religious leaders attempted to bring religious fervor by espousing [[pan-Turkism]], though ma
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  • ...medal. General Samsonov([[Alexander Samsonov]] (1859–1914), a [[Russian military]] commander during [[World War I]]) was against of Mustafa’s [[gold]] and ...sians. All of the professors and Russian [[intellectuals]] were ready to [[Military strike|strike]]. That strike was provoked by the administration, showing th
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  • ...talin era extended to Kazakhstan, where numerous intellectuals, activists, leaders, teachers and others were killed. The Soviet government dominated the popul ...granted the title of ''Hero of The Soviet Union''. Three rifle [[Division (military)|divisions]] were raised in Alma-Ata, including the well-known [[8th Guards
    51 KB (7,152 words) - 20:00, 27 April 2017
  • ...html Tashkent blasts are blamed on Islamic radicals] Pravda</ref><ref name=MILITARY>[http://www.payvand.com/news/04/apr/1182.html Central Asia: Is Uzbekistan T The [[Union of Muslims of Kazakhstan]] invited Hamas leaders to Kazakhstan in 2006.<ref name=RELTHRET>[http://www.jamestown.org/publicat
    65 KB (9,264 words) - 20:02, 27 April 2017
  • ...ary law or code of honor) among prison inmates, with Vory being respectful leaders and judges according to these rules. * Not serve in the military or accept any weapons from the government or prison authority (police baton
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  • ...a]] out of office in January 1992. He was one of the three leaders of the "Military Council" that ruled Georgia from January–March 1992. He subsequently beca [[Category:Military personnel from Georgia (country)]]
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  • * Military training department ...mmunications]], a Deputy of the Prime Minister, Assistant to the [[List of leaders of Kazakhstan|President of the Republic of Kazakhstan]], Acting Secretary o
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  • ...l Russians who opposed the land transfers were criticized by the Bolshevik leaders in Moscow as "[[chauvinism|chauvinists]]". ...f> At the beginning of his presidency in 2000, [[Vladimir Putin]] met with leaders of the Russian community in Kazakhstan who explained to him the situation t
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  • ...f the 9th century, [[Varangians]] used the waterways of Eastern Europe for military raids and trade, particularly the [[trade route from the Varangians to the ...Bank Ukraine]], and the two halves became hostile to each other. Ukrainian leaders during the period are considered to have been largely opportunists and men
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  • ...ppes from the [[Cossacks]] of the [[Imperial Russian Army|Russian Imperial military]] transforms the ending of the word to "kh" instead of "q" or "k". ...military institutions.<ref name=Hunter14 /> In response, Kazakh religious leaders attempted to bring religious fervor by espousing [[pan-Turkism]], though ma
    49 KB (6,714 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...nese [[Tang Dynasty]], and Chinese armies commanded by [[Turks in the Tang military|Turkic generals]] stationed in large parts of central Asia. But Chinese in ...0s, the Russian [[Ministry of War (Russia)|Ministry of War]] began to send military forces against the Central Asian khanates. Three major population centers o
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  • Some researchers argued that the ''jüz'' in origin corresponded to tribal, military alliances of steppe nomads that emerged around mid-16th century after the d Historical leaders of Kazakh resistance against the Russian Empire associated with the Junior
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  • ...eed]], Orthodox [[Fasting#Eastern Orthodoxy and Greek-Catholicism|fasts]], military service, and practices including [[Baptism|water baptism]]. ...y of Allied casualties.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4530565.stm Leaders mourn Soviet wartime dead], BBC News</ref> According to the [[United Kingdo
    48 KB (6,446 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...Party (East Turkistan Islamic Movement) released an image showing Al Qaeda leaders [[Ayman al Zawahiri]] and Osama Bin Laden meeting with Hasan Mahsum.<ref>{{ ...eneral Shaukat Sultan, a spokesman for the Pakistani military, denied U.S. military involvement. Sultan said "DNA tests were conducted to determine it was him.
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  • ...China to [[Jerusalem]] with one of his students, [[Rabban Markos]]. Due to military unrest along the way, they never reached their destination, but instead spe ...atriarch then attempted to send the monks as messengers back to China, but military conflict along the route delayed their departure, and they remained in Bagh
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  • ...0–31}}</ref> However, the [[Han Dynasty]] (206 BCE–220 CE) established military colonies ([[tuntian]]) and commanderies ([[duhufu]]) to control Xinjiang fr ...izong's campaign against Xiyu states.svg|thumb|right|260px|Map of the Tang military expeditions against the oasis states of southern Xinjiang]]
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  • ...ria, they never arrived at their destination, but did meet with the church leaders in the Mongol [[Ilkhanate]], in [[Baghdad]]. There, the Patriarch [[Mar De
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  • ...slims]], [[Sheng Shicai]] had appointed a number of their non-secessionist leaders, including [[Hoja-Niyaz|Khoja Niyaz Hajji]] and [[Yulbars Khan]], another l ...Mahmud Sijang ([[Mahmut Muhiti]] - commander of the 6th Uyghur [[Division (military)|Division]], stationed in Kashgar as part of the [[Xinjiang|Sinkiang]] prov
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  • ...ainted with future prominent [[Uyghur people|Uyghur]] Turpan revolutionary leaders, brothers Maksut and Mahmut Muhiti. After one year of studying, he left Tur ...jiang onto two parts ). However, offensive of Tungan forces, direct Soviet military intervention into Xinjiang and Soviet ultimate support of Sheng Shicai led
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  • In 679, [[Ashide]] Wenfu and [[Ashide Fengzhi]], who were Turkic leaders of the Chanyu Protectorate ([[:zh:单于大都护府|單于大都護府]]), *{{cite book|first=Jonathan Karem|last=Skaff|editor=Nicola Di Cosmo|title=Military Culture in Imperial China|year=2009|publisher=Harvard University Press|isbn
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  • ...were the [[Khoja (Turkestan)|Khojas]] who seized control of political and military affairs in the Tarim Basin and Turfan in the 17th century. The Khojas howe ...ournal/2002/sept02/eastAsia.pdf}}</ref> Mindful not to take sides, Uyghur "leaders" such as [[Rebiya Kadeer]] mainly try to garner international support for t
    118 KB (17,648 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...f the [[Central Military Commission of the Workers' Party of Korea|Central Military Commission]] of the [[Workers' Party of Korea]] ...sʌŋ.il|}}; 16 February 1941/1942 – 17 December 2011) was the [[List of leaders of North Korea|supreme leader]] of the [[North Korea|Democratic People's Re
    89 KB (12,836 words) - 20:05, 27 April 2017
  • ...zing in construction equipment, tractors, agricultural machinery, and some military items. The breakup of the USSR and the collapse of demand for Kazakhstan's ...lobal Innovation Index 2015: Switzerland, UK, Sweden, Netherlands, USA are Leaders|url = http://www.wipo.int/pressroom/en/articles/2015/article_0010.html#regi
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  • ...aiming for the establishment of the EAEU was signed on 29 May 2014 by the leaders of [[Belarus]], [[Kazakhstan]] and [[Russia]], and came into force on 1 Jan ...s have since called for further integration towards a monetary, political, military and cultural union.<ref>{{cite web|title=Article by Prime Minister Vladimir
    141 KB (18,985 words) - 20:07, 27 April 2017
  • ...opelled artillery]] regiment until 1986 and then from 1986 in the [[Baltic Military District]]. He served from 1990 as the [[chief of staff]] of Soviet missile In December 1994, when the [[First Chechen War]] broke out, he was the senior military figure on the Chechen side during the war and was widely seen as being inst
    25 KB (3,518 words) - 20:11, 27 April 2017
  • ...social activist, teacher, journalist, and ethnographer. He was one of the leaders of the "Alash" party and was Commissioner of the Provisional Government of ...in Orenburg, Russian. He was accelerated through the learning program for military attack pilots and spent training time in Tashkent and Siberia. After gradua
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  • ...by valleys. As a result of an internecine struggle amongst Turkish tribal leaders at the beginning of the 8th century the Turkish tribe in the Ili River Vall This is the site of the "[[Battle of Talas]]"—first and the last military face-off between the Muslim Arab forces and the Chinese imperial troops in
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  • ...ording to the order of the Russian Emperor [[Peter the Great]], who sent a military expedition headed by major Ivan Vasilievich Likharev in the search of Yarke ...cs, metallurgical and other spheres of operation. The company is among the leaders in production of their specific goods.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ulba.k
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  • ...#769;ндр Ильи&#769;ч Ду&#769;тов}}) (1879—1921), one of the leaders of the [[Cossack]] [[counterrevolution]] in the [[Urals]], [[Lieutenant Gen ...from Nikolayev cavalry School, and Nikolayev Engineering Institute, now [[Military engineering-technical university]] (Russian [[:ru:Военный инжен
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  • ...st Chechen war]] Zakayev took part in the battles for [[Grozny]] and other military operations, as well as in high-level negotiations with the [[Russia]]n side {{Leaders of Chechnya}}
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  • After completing his secondary education and doing his military service Sydorenko entered Kharkov Art-Industrial Institute (the Kharkov Sta Victor Sydorenko is one of leaders of Modern Ukrainian Art. Victor's pathway from realism to neoavant-gardism
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  • ...Soviet Union the following spring, ordering the [[Wehrmacht]] to draw up a military plan which would later become [[Operation Barbarossa]].<ref>[[Horst Boog|Bo ...that the primary goal was to "eradicate [[Bolshevism]]", and that further military campaigns to ensure this would be carried out if necessary.<ref name="hitle
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  • {{Infobox Military Structure |type=Underground military facility
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  • ...ological Warfare''], (Series: [[Textbook of Military Medicine|Textbooks of Military Medicine]]), [[Washington, DC]]: The [[Borden Institute]], pp 51-52.</ref> ...and cheaply kill large numbers of people was considered beneficial to the leaders' goal of expanding a proletarian revolution across the world.<ref name=":0"
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  • ...ssion that targeted peasants, early Bolsheviks, nationalists, and military leaders. Tynyshpaev was denounced as a "bourgeois nationalist" in August 1931, but
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  • | 1964–1966: [[List of leaders of the Russian SFSR#Heads of party|Chairman]], [[Bureau of the Central Comm |title=Military offices held
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  • {{infobox military conflict ...jailed, and an unknown number of casualties.<ref name="MARKED"/> Jeltoqsan leaders say over 60,000 [[Kazakhs]] participated in the protests nationwide.<ref na
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  • ||<!--- Titles and names of the first and last leaders and their deputies ---> ...ost of [[Uzbekistan]], [[Karakalpakstan]] and the [[Syr Darya]] river with military confrontation as far as [[Astrakhan]] and [[Khorasan Province]], which is n
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  • {{Infobox military conflict ...alliance.<ref name=Hildinger>Hildinger, Eric. ''Warriors of the Steppe: A Military History of Central Asia, 500 B.C. to A.D. 1700''</ref>
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  • ...isings on behalf of China, and for that the Chinese emperors granted their leaders various titles and rewards. After a defeat of Chuy by Tibetians in 808, Chu ...their northern borders." <ref>Zuev (2004), p. 1-19</ref> Seyanto provided military service by assisting the Tang Empire against the [[Tatars]] in the 630s. Th
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