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From Kazakhstan Encyclopedia

  • ...In the early years of staged performances, reflecting the establishment of Soviet power, multiple plays were created which these were "Red Falcons" by Seiful ...he basis of the acts of performances devoted to the heroic struggle of the Soviet people: "In the hour of trial" by Auezov, "Guards of honor" by Auezov and A
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  • ...st]], a Doctor of [[Philology]], a professor and honored academic of the [[Soviet Union]] (1946). He was born on September 28, 1897 in the old town of [[Seme In 1960, together with a group of [[Soviet writers]], he visited the United States. In the summer of 1960 he started work on t
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  • ...is a famous Kazakh writer and scriptwriter. He serves as a Secretary of [[Writers' Union of Kazakhstan]]. [[Category:Kazakh-language writers]]
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  • | death_place = [[Almaty|Alma-Ata]], [[Soviet Union]] ...s and thinkers who have perished due to the [[Soviet political repressions|Soviet repressions]]. A museum in honour of Baitursynov was established in one of
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  • ...ак мушелерi &#124; Member of Union: Galymbek Zhumatov |publisher=writers.kz|accessdate=2015-11-25}}</ref> The founder of the newspaper [[Shahar (new ...rad]] and was seriously injured. After high school, he was served in the [[Soviet Army]]. Service was held in [[Lviv]]. After serving in the Army Zhumatov ar
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  • ...1934 to 1936. He wrote the novel ''Comrades'' (1933), targeted against the Soviet power, but also wrote loving poems such as ''The Steppe'' (1930) and ''Kula [[Category:Soviet poets]]
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  • ...March 27, 1976) — [[Kazakhs|Kazakh]] [[Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic|Soviet]] poet, writer and translator. ...}}) and "Star" ({{lang-kk|Жұлдыз}}) magazine. In 1970 he joined the Writers' Union of Kazakhstan. In 1973—1974 he studied in the Moscow Institute of
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  • ...1993) was a [[Kazakhstan]] poet.<ref>Borys Lewytzkyj - Who's who in the Soviet Union 1984 - Page 210 Maulenov, Syrbai Poet; b. 1922, Kustanai Oblast; s. ...in hospital is invalided out. He was a member of [[Communist Party of the Soviet Union]].
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  • ...2g00m0in016000c.html Kazakhstan cautiously marks 20th anniversary of anti-Soviet protests.] MSN Japan THE MAINICHI NEWSPAPERS</ref> [[Category:Kazakhstani writers]]
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  • ...тынсарин'', 1841–1889) was a major figure in pre-[[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[Kazakhstan|Kazakh]] history. He was the most prominent Kazakh educator [[Category:Kazakhstani writers]]
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  • ...d in the main and regional theaters of Kazakhstan and some of the former [[Soviet Union]] republics. * [http://library.vkgu.kz/writers/oral.shtm Oralkhan Bokeev] {{ref-ru}}
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  • | birth_place = [[Korkino, Chelyabinsk Oblast|Korkino]], [[Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic|Russian SFSR]] ...within the [[Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic|Russian SFSR]] [[Soviet Union]] (in the present [[Chelyabinsk Oblast]]). He came from the ''narod''
    21 KB (3,126 words) - 17:42, 26 April 2017
  • |death_place=[[Alma-Ata]], [[Kazakh SSR]], [[Soviet Union]] |battles = [[German-Soviet War]]
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  • ...eak the [[taboo]] against talking about [[drug addiction]] in the [[former Soviet Union]].<ref name="drieu">{{cite journal |last=Drieu |first=Cloe |date=Octo ...don]]-based [[think tank]] created to foster [[democracy]] in the [[former Soviet Union]].<ref>[http://ifn.org.uk/sections.php?op=viewarticle&artid=1 IFN - O
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  • ...e front. His father Karim was engaged in hunting and worked in the village Soviet. Just before the war he worked at a fishery collective farm. In 1944, on Ap ...], besides of that he was a delegate of the Supreme Soviet of the [[Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic|Kazakh SSR]].
    38 KB (6,355 words) - 16:00, 3 May 2017
  • ...university on the Architecture and building construction course, [[Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic|the Kazakh SSR]] chess champion. [[Category:Kazakhstani writers]]
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  • [[File:USSR stamp A.Qunanbayuli 1965 4k.jpg|thumb|right|Post mark of [[Soviet Union]] honoring Abay]] [[Category:Kazakh-language writers]]
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  • ...He was born in Sergievka, [[Tulkibas District]], Chimkent Oblast, [[Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic]] (today [[South Kazakhstan Province]], [[Kazakhstan]]) ...Mukhtar Auezov]]'s ''Path of Abay'' (a re-translation, to replace an older Soviet-era version perceived as insufficient).<ref>{{citation|url=http://www.elmed
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  • | birth_place = [[Karatau]], [[Kazakhstan]], [[Soviet Union|USSR]] ...contemporary [[Russian science fiction and fantasy|Russian science fiction writers]]. His works often feature intense [[Action genre|action]]-packed plots, in
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  • [[Category:Kazakh-language writers]] [[Category:Kazakhstani people executed by the Soviet Union]]
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  • | death_place = [[Almaty]], [[Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic]] [[Category:Kazakh-language writers]]
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  • ...[[Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic]], President of the Kazakhstan Union of Writers and member of the [[Kazakhstan Academy of Sciences]]. ...Soviet of the Soviet Union]], deputy to the Supreme Soviet of the [[Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic]]. He died on 31 December 1985.
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  • ..., at the age of only 26, and therefore couldn't witness the birth of the [[Soviet Union]]. [[Category:Kazakh-language writers]]
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  • ...was executed in 1939. The Soviet government posthumously [[Rehabilitation (Soviet)|rehabilitated]] him during [[de-Stalinization]]. ...to be the first work of Kazakh Soviet literature. On 27 December 1917, the Soviet regime was established in Akmolinsk. Seyfullin was elected a member of the
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  • ...born in 1925 in the village of Tansyq in Eastern Kazakhstan, then in the [[Soviet Union]].<ref name=NOV2009> Soon, the family fled from the [[Soviet famine of 1932–1933|famine of 1932-1933]] to [[Xinjiang]].<ref name=NOV20
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  • |death_place = [[Moscow]], [[Soviet Union]] In 1920, after the establishment of [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] hegemony, Bukeikhanov joined the [[Bolshevik]] party and returned to scie
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  • ...s renowned uncensored novels were published only after the collapse of the Soviet Union. ...er of the International Prize for the [[Turkic languages|Turkic]] speaking writers and culture workers and he received the prize from Suleiman [[Demirel]], th
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  • ...Сулейме́нов'''}}) is a Soviet poet, Kazakhstani politician, and Soviet [[anti-nuclear movement|anti-nuclear activist]]. ...IFF}}</ref> He became First Secretary of the Committee of the Kazakhstan's Writers Union in 1983. He is a [[Russophone]] writer.
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  • After finishing high school in 1973, he served in the Soviet army, in the North Caucasus region (1975–1977). He studied at the Kazakh
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  • ...blished in the 1930s. Since its inception at least 750 of Kazakhstan's top writers have been affiliated with the union. [[Category:1930s establishments in the Kazakh Autonomous Socialist Soviet Republic]]
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  • ...Kazakhs.[[Image:USSR stamp A.Qunanbayuli 1965 4k.jpg|thumb|Post mark of [[Soviet Union]] honoring Abay Kunanbayev]] *[[Writers' Union of Kazakhstan]]
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  • ...the first Kazakh opera, co-wrote the music for the [[Anthem of the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic]], and was a People's Artist of the Kazakh SSR. In 1933 he was sent to [[Almaty|Alma-Ata]], [[Kazakhstan]] (then the [[Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic]]) to study the folk music of the region, and stayed the
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  • |established_event3 = [[Kirghiz Autonomous Socialist Soviet Republic (1920–25)|Kirghiz ASSR]] |established_event4 = [[Kazakh Autonomous Socialist Soviet Republic|Kazak ASSR]]
    135 KB (18,214 words) - 17:43, 26 April 2017
  • |birth_place = [[Karaganda]], [[Soviet Union]] ...еонидович Аврух}}; born 10 February 1978 in [[Karaganda]], [[Soviet Union]]) is an Israeli chess [[Grandmaster (chess)|grandmaster]]. He was th
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  • A 1982 source reported 230,000 horses were kept in the [[Soviet Union]] specifically for producing milk to make into ''kumis''.<ref>{{cite ...esorts.<ref>Gilman p. 81 and 84.</ref> Among notables to try the cure were writers [[Leo Tolstoy]] and [[Anton Chekhov]]. Chekhov, long-suffering from tubercu
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  • ...stitutes as being the second cleanest in the region. The visual melange of Soviet-era photos are mixed with the real flag of Kazakhstan and, incongruously, t ...]''|accessdate=12 February 2014}}</ref> In an interview, one of the film's writers, [[Dan Mazer]], confirmed that there was a scene filmed but cut in which Bo
    68 KB (9,991 words) - 19:25, 27 April 2017
  • ...Islam: Beliefs and Observances'', pg. 304</ref> During the [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] era, [[Muslim]] institutions survived only in areas where Kazakhs signifi ...ort in revitalizing Islamic religious institutions after the fall of the [[Soviet Union]]. While not strongly fundamentalist, Kazakhs continue to identify w
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  • ...s "Rusyns" and "Ruthenian(s)". In areas outside the control of the Russian/Soviet state until the mid-20th century ([[Western Ukraine]]), Ukrainians were kno ...an, Russian (an identity supported by the [[Government of the Soviet Union|Soviet regime]]), and "[[Cossack]]".<ref name="Ukrainians_IEU"/> Approximately 800
    72 KB (9,631 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...n Census (2010)|2010 census]]), about 16 million [[ethnic Russians in post-Soviet states]] (8 M in Ukraine, 4.5 M in Kazakhstan, 1 M in Belarus, 0.6 M Latvia ...otable minorities exist in [[Ukraine]], [[Kazakhstan]], and other former [[Soviet]] states such as [[Belarus]]. A large [[Russian diaspora]] exists all over
    48 KB (6,446 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...completely disappeared by the 15th century, until it was revived by the [[Soviet Union]] in the 20th century.<ref>{{harvnb|Bovingdon|2010|p=28}}</ref> Persian, Arab and other western Asian writers called China by the name "Tamghaj".<ref name="Yule1915">{{cite book|author=
    347 KB (52,725 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...ndence with the Russian consul in [[Kashgar]], [[Nikolai Petrovsky]]. The Soviet researcher K.A. Usmanov thus suggested that Petrovsky, known as an avid col [[Category:Uyghur writers]]
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  • ...viet Censuses", in Ralph S. Clem, ed., ''Research Guide to the Russian and Soviet Censuses'' (Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press, 1986): 70-97.</ref><ref>Ramsey, S. ...David|date= 2005 |title=Taranchis, Kashgaris, and the 'uyghur Question' in Soviet Central Asia|journal= Inner Asia |volume=7 |issue=2 |publisher=BRILL |page
    118 KB (17,648 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...iet Federative Socialist Republic|Russian SFSR]], [[Soviet Union]] <small>(Soviet records)</small><br>{{birth date|1942|2|16|df=y}}<br>[[Baekdu Mountain]], [ ...where his father, [[Kim Il-sung]], commanded the 1st [[Battalion]] of the Soviet 88th Brigade,{{sfn|Lankov|2014|p=4}} made up of Chinese and Korean [[exile]
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  • ...ather of North Korean poetry"{{sfn|Gabroussenko|2005|p=56}} whose distinct Soviet-influenced style of [[lyrical poetry|lyrical]] [[epic poetry]] in the [[soc ...at Cho would shape the cultural institutions of the new state based on the Soviet model. For the Soviets, the move was successful and Cho did not only that b
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  • | birth_place = [[Almaty]], [[Soviet Union]] [[Category:Writers from Moscow]]
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  • ...аза́нцев}}; 2 September 1906 – 13 September 2002) was a popular Soviet [[science fiction]] writer and [[ufologist]]. ...ino]] and concentrated on his writings. He survived the dissolution of the Soviet Union and died in 2002.{{citation needed|date=August 2015}}
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  • ...-ro|valeˈri o.iʃˈte̯anu}}; born September 3, 1943) is a [[Soviet Union|Soviet]]-born [[Romania]]n and [[United States|American]] poet, art critic, essayi Oisteanu was born in [[Karaganda]], [[Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic|Kazakhstan]], raised and educated in Romania, where he w
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  • ...[Kazakhstan]] – 15 August 1963, [[Moscow]]) was a notable [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] writer praised for the colourful adventure tales set in the [[Asia]]tic p ...ure. His novella ''Baby'' was acclaimed by [[Edmund Wilson]] as the finest Soviet short story ever.
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  • ...Empire]]|death_place = [[Orenburg]], [[Soviet Union]]|allegiance = {{flag|Soviet Union}}|branch = [[Red Army]]|serviceyears = 1931–1954|rank = [[Colonel]] *[[Berlin Offensive]]|awards = {{Hero of the Soviet Union}}
    11 KB (1,511 words) - 20:16, 27 April 2017
  • |country = Soviet Union ...ов}}; December 15, 1912 – June 3, 1974) was an eminent [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[chess]] player, chess writer, and [[checkers]] player.
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