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From Kazakhstan Encyclopedia

  • The teacher, author of the Kazakh gymnastics and Turkic teachings "Aikune", hereditary healer and military chiropractor, founder of ...nd in groups. Classes are held by instructor Aikune. You can find physical culture centers in Aikune by walking at your place of residence, work or study.
    3 KB (574 words) - 09:38, 29 April 2019
  • The teacher, author of the Kazakh gymnastics and Turkic teachings "Aikune", hereditary healer and military chiropractor, founder of ...nd in groups. Classes are held by instructor Aikune. You can find physical culture centers in Aikune by walking at your place of residence, work or study.
    3 KB (574 words) - 09:48, 29 April 2019
  • ...tury, Turkistan lay on the frontier of the settled Perso-Islamic [[oasis]] culture of [[Transoxiana]] to the south, and the world of the Kazakh [[steppe]] to {{Turkic Capital of Culture}}
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  • ...'Djanikand''', '''Yenikent''', '''Yanikand''', all meaning ''New Town'' in Turkic; '''al-Karyat al-hadith''', '''Dihi Naw''', '''Shehrkent''') is a deserted ...om three different cultural components: Oghuz nomads, sedentary Dzhetyasar culture, and Khorezmian civilization. In the 10th and 11th centuries, the town was
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  • ...suggestion that the coins of the second type were minted by rulers of the Turkic state of Kangu Tarban, the population of which were the Kangars. According ...Farabi]] was born, and Aristan-Bab, an important representative of Islamic culture and teacher of [[Ahmed Yesevi|Khoja Ahmed Yasawi]], preached here.
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  • ...to replace a smaller 12th-century mausoleum of the famous [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] poet and [[Sufi]] mystic,<ref name=roi>{{cite book ...roi /> He is widely revered in [[Central Asia]] and the [[Turkic languages|Turkic-speaking]] world for popularizing Sufism,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bri
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  • ...eraction and cooperation between state bodies, institutions of science and culture, civil society, and the media on the popularization of the country’s hist ...ment of the statehood connected with creation of the first Eurasian Empire Turkic Kaganate including territory of our country.
    20 KB (2,948 words) - 17:30, 26 April 2017
  • ...in the Kazakh political scene who were promoting the idea of the [[Western culture]] into the [[Kazakh steppe]].<ref>{{cite web|publisher=The School of Russia ...l Asia]] from the [[Natural environment|environment]] and resources to the culture and traditions of its inhabitants. This was the first of a few similar miss
    10 KB (1,324 words) - 17:42, 26 April 2017
  • ...ternational Prize for the [[Turkic languages|Turkic]] speaking writers and culture workers and he received the prize from Suleiman [[Demirel]], the [[Turkey|T
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  • ...ome overlap with several complementary themes, including the literature of Turkic tribes that inhabited Kazakhstan over the course of the history and literat ...th-7th centuries C.E. that describes rule of Kultegin and Bilge, two early Turkic rulers ("kagans").<!-- We need a source to reference this information. -->
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  • ...lag|Azerbaijan}}<br>{{flag|China}} (by [[Tajiks of Xinjiang|Tajiks]] and [[Turkic peoples]])<ref name="xinhuanet.com">{{cite web|url=http://news.xinhuanet.co ...>{{cite web|title=Dagestan marks Nowruz|url=http://vestnikkavkaza.net/news/culture/52840.html|accessdate=21 March 2015}}</ref>
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  • ...', '''tumra'''}}; {{lang-tr|'dombıra'}}) is a long-necked [[Turkic people|Turkic]] [[lute]] and a musical [[string instrument]]. ...rmangazy]], who had a great influence on the development of Kazakh musical culture, including music for the dombra; his musical composition "Adai" is popular
    6 KB (891 words) - 17:42, 26 April 2017
  • ...ncient Turkic, Kazakh string instrument or Mongolian instrument Morin huur:Turkic and Mongolian horsemen from Inner Asia were probably the world’s earliest [[Category:Kazakhstani culture]]
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  • ...when performance which strengthen the feeling of ancient [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]]. As artists-in-residence at the Museum of Kazakh Folk Musical Instruments Under the auspices of the Kazakh Ministry of Culture, the Turan ensemble has toured Central Asia, Europe and the United States.<
    8 KB (931 words) - 17:43, 26 April 2017
  • ...ic in notation until 1931. Later, as part of the Soviet Union, Kazakh folk culture was encouraged in a sanitized manner designed to avoid political and social ...i.ac.jp/publictn/46/touda/touda-eng.html From Folklore to Soviet National Culture - The Process of Formation of "Kazak National Music" (1920-1942)] (Slavic R
    7 KB (1,070 words) - 17:43, 26 April 2017
  • ==Kui in Kazakh culture performed with dombyra== ...s of many famous Kazakh Kuis lived in [[Middle Ages]]. But the pick of the culture comes to the 19th and 20th centuries. Kui tradition included also verbal pa
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  • ...ting the [[Culture and Arts Capital of the Turkic World|Turkish Capital of Culture]].<ref>{{cite web|last1=Granger|first1=Anthony|title=Bala Turkvizyon: Child ...gions which are of [[Turkic languages|Turkic-speaking]] or [[Turkic people|Turkic ethnicity]].
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  • ...''qaz'', "to wander", reflecting the Kazakhs' [[Eurasian nomads|nomadic]] culture.<ref name=etym>{{cite web|title=Cossack (n.)|url=http://etymonline.com/inde ...ed by the mid-16th century with the appearance of the [[Kazakh language]], culture, and economy.
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  • ...27}}</ref> and his wife, [[Umai]], the all-nurturing mother goddess of the Turkic Siberians.<ref name=":1" /> The film follows the former nomads<ref>{{Cite w ...IDEONALE 13: Festival for Contemporary Art, Kunstmuseum Bonn, Bonn Art and Culture Network Program Grant, OpenSociety Institute, Budapest
    11 KB (1,582 words) - 17:44, 26 April 2017
  • ...les of the [[Central Asia]]n [[steppe]]s, of Huno-Bulgar, [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] and Mongol origin: [[Kazakhs]], [[Bashkirs]], [[Kalmyks]], [[Kyrgyz peopl ...roduct]] similar to ''[[kefir]]'', but is produced from a liquid [[starter culture]], in contrast to the solid ''kefir'' "grains". Because mare's milk contain
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  • ...groups mainly of [[Central Asia]], particularly those of [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] origin. Kazy is a common element on a [[dastarkhan]], a table set for a f [[Category:Bashkir culture]]
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  • ...ountries and ethnic groups have had a large influence on the food and food culture of Kazakhstan. These ethnic groups included Russians, Tatars, Ukrainians, U ...food culture in Kazakhstan.<ref>Glenn Randall Mack and Asele Surina, Food culture in Russia and Central Asia (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2005), 112-13.</
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  • ...t''' ({{lang-kk|шұбат}} {{IPA-kk|ʃʊbɑ́t|}}), is a [[Turkic people|Turkic]] (especially [[Turkmen people|Turkmen]] and [[Kazakhs|Kazakh]]) beverage o ...amp=yes |title=Content of trace elements, copper, manganese, molybdenum in culture of chal and camel's milk and their clinical significance |journal=Dairy Sci
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  • ...red through a drying [خشکیدن] process. Qurut or kurut means dried in Turkic languages.<ref name=review_kes /> ...g H P. ''A survey of the bacterial composition of kurut from Tibet using a culture-independent approach.'' J Dairy Sci. 2012 Mar, 95(3), 1064-72. {{doi|10.316
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  • ...978-0313327735 p 39</ref> The term was introduced in [[South Asia]] by the Turkic invaders and conquerors from the Central Asia. ...hMI7vG8tNePyQIVhi4PCh2d4w_U#v=onepage&q=Dastarkhan%20turkic&f=false ''Food Culture in Russia and Central Asia''] Greenwood Publishing Group, 1 jan. 2005 ISBN
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  • All media must to register with the Ministry of Culture, Information and Sports, with the exception{{Citation needed|date=April 201 ...papers and the only regular national Russian(the international language of Turkic peoples) language newspaper. There were{{Citation needed|date=April 2013}}
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  • | fam1=[[Turkic languages|Turkic]] | fam2=[[Common Turkic languages|Common Turkic]]
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  • ...media Foundation has given the organisation a $16,600 grant for conducting Turkic Wikimedia Conference in Almaty. Contributors to Wikipedia in the West have ...h language, [[Education in Kazakhstan|education]], [[Culture of Kazakhstan|culture]] and innovative technologies.
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  • ...States|US]] and in other Western countries. As with other Central Asian [[Turkic languages]], a [[latinisation (USSR)|Latin alphabet was introduced by the S The [[Uniform Turkic Alphabet]] was used in the USSR from 1927 to 1940, when it was replaced by
    19 KB (2,277 words) - 17:54, 26 April 2017
  • Buzkashi may have begun with the nomadic Turkic-Mongol peoples who came from farther north and east spreading westward from ==In popular culture==
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  • '''Aqsaqal''' (also [[transliteration|transliterated]] ''aksakal'', in [[Turkic languages]], literally meaning "white beard") metaphorically refers to the [[Category:Turkish culture]]
    2 KB (304 words) - 20:00, 27 April 2017
  • ...ainly [[Tatars]]). The tubeteika is worn typically by the [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] ethnic groups of the region. It bears some superficial resemblance to the ...t2=Shamukhitdinova|first2=Lola|title=Modernity of Tradition: Uzbek Textile Culture Today|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aUy-AAAAQBAJ&pg=PA115|year=2013
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  • ...tors buried underneath.<ref>[http://whc.unesco.org/en/tentativelists/1131/ Turkic sanctuary of Merke - UNESCO World Heritage Centre]</ref> ...al & Natural) category.<ref>[http://whc.unesco.org/en/tentativelists/1131/ Turkic sanctuary of Merke - UNESCO World Heritage Centre]</ref>
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  • {{Culture of Kazakhstan}} ...bolic value in Kazakh culture. Kazakh culture is largely influenced by the Turkic [[Nomad|nomadic]] lifestyle.
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  • ..., [[Mongolia]], and [[Xinjiang]], [[China]]. Though these [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] people are most famous for hunting with [[golden eagles]], they have been ...'' ("falconry") and the suffix ''-shy'', used for professional titles in [[Turkic languages]]. The Kazakh word for falconers that hunt with eagles is ''bürt
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  • ...d for money {{lang-ru|деньги / ''den'gi''}}, which was borrowed from Turkic. ...#x20B8;. <!--It is the character for "[[Tengri]]" from [[Orkhon script|Old turkic script]] similar to Latin "T" with bar above.--> <!-- It resembles the [[Ja
    35 KB (4,517 words) - 20:02, 27 April 2017
  • '''Tengiz field''' (Tengiz is Turkic for "sea") is an [[oil field]] located in northwestern [[Kazakhstan]]'s low ==In pop culture==
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  • | immigrant = [[Turkic languages]] | source = Languages committee of the Ministry of culture and sports
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  • #Alash Institute of Culture and Spiritual Heritage ===Museum of Turkic Script===
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  • ...|Mongol]] tribes united to establish the [[Kazakh Khanate]]. With cohesive culture and national identity, they constituted absolute majority on the land until
    44 KB (4,671 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...ongol]] tribes united to establish the [[Kazakh Khanate]]. With a cohesive culture and a national identity, they constituted absolute majority on the land unt ..., [[Koryosaram|Koreans]], [[Chechen people|Chechen]], and [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] groups live together in a rural setting and not as a result of modern imm
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  • | related = [[Turkic peoples]] The '''Karachays''' are a [[Turkic people]] of the [[North Caucasus]], mostly situated in the [[Russia]]n [[Ka
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  • *[[Turkic Council]] ...=Steve|year=2006|title=Meskhetian Turks: An Introduction to their History, Culture, and Resettelment Experiences|url=http://www.cal.org/CO/pdffiles/mturks.pdf
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  • ..., which J. Otto Pohl described as "emasculat[ing] the expression of Korean culture in the Soviet Union.<ref>{{harvnb|Pohl|1999|p=15}}</ref> Up until the era o ...re: Deportation and it's effect on Koryo-saram's attitudes towards Korean culture. Koryo-saram became highly assimilationist, achieved high education levels
    38 KB (5,232 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...20, 2010<!-- - 1:18pm-->|url=http://www.eurasianet.org/node/60892}}</ref> Turkic-speaking peoples in [[Xinjiang]] Province in China also refer to members of ...ges=|accessdate=31 October 2010}}</ref> During the [[Afaqi Khoja revolts]] Turkic Muslim [[Khoja (Turkestan)|Khoja]] [[Jahangir Khoja]] led an invasion of [[
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  • ...he first, acting as interpreters for the Russians (as many already spoke [[Turkic language]]s), consuls and businessmen for the emerging oil industry.<ref na ...van association, which runs a Sunday school teaching Armenian language and culture to the community's children.<ref>{{citation|url=http://www.publish.diaspora
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  • | related = [[Turkic peoples]], [[Gajal]] ...last=Menz |first=Astrid |editor-first=Doğan |editor-last=Kuban |title=The Turkic speaking peoples |publisher=Prestel |year=2006 |pages= |chapter=The Gagauz
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  • ...ng-kaa|Qaraqalpaqlar, Қарақалпақлар}}) are a [[Turkic peoples|Turkic people]] who primarily live in [[Uzbekistan]]. During the 18th century, the ...pak language|Karakalpak]] language belongs to the Kipchak-Nogai group of [[Turkic languages]], which also includes [[Kazakh language|Kazakh]] and [[Nogai lan
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  • ...azakhs-Religion-and-Expressive-Culture.html |title=Religion and expressive culture&nbsp;– Kazakhs |publisher=Everyculture.com |date= |accessdate=5 February | related =[[Kyrgyz people|Kyrgyz]], [[Karakalpaks]], [[Nogais]], [[Turkic peoples]] and [[Naimans]] of Mongol banner.
    49 KB (6,714 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • | related = [[Turkic peoples]] ...erm refers more narrowly to people who speak one of the [[Turkic languages|Turkic]]<ref name="global.britannica.com"/> languages.
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  • ...of Chechnya was dominated by the [[Khazars]] and then the [[Alans]]. Local culture was also subject to [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine]] and [[Kingdom of Georgia ...en population perished in the process, and a severe blow was made to their culture and historical records.<ref name="nichols" /><ref>Jaimoukha p.58</ref><ref>
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  • The '''Volga Tatars''' are a [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] ethnic group, native to the [[Volga-Ural region]], [[Russia]]. ...ced back to the Chinese "Ta-Tan" or "Da-Dan", is more widely accepted than Turkic one.<ref name="rorlich"/> Ethnonym "Tatar" first emerged in the fifth centu
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  • ...клар'') are a [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] [[ethnic group]]; the largest Turkic ethnic group in [[Central Asia]]. They comprise the majority population of ...means ''independent'' or the ''lord itself'', from ''Oʻz'' (self) and the Turkic title ''[[Beg (title)|Bek/Bey/Beg]]''. There is another theory which holds
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  • ...the preservation and flourishing of a rich, humanistic, and diverse Uyghur culture and to support the right of the Uyghur people to use peaceful, democratic m [[Category:Asian-American culture in Washington, D.C.]]
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  • ...antran, p. 298</ref> ({{zh|c=拉賓掃務瑪|p=lābīnsǎowùmǎ}}), was a Turkic/Chinese monk turned diplomat of the "[[Nestorian]]" [[Church of the East in ...scribe his heritage as ''Wanggu'' ([[Ongud]]), a tribe of [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] origin classified as part of the [[Mongol]] Caste of the [[Yuan Dynasty]]
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  • ...|Later Liang]], and [[Western Liang (Sixteen Kingdoms)|Western Liang]]), [[Turkic Khaganate]], [[Tang dynasty]], [[Tibetan Empire]], [[Uyghur Khaganate]], [[ ...eople]], while the Tarim Basin was inhabited by sedentary, oasis dwelling, Turkic speaking Muslim farmers, now known as the [[Uyghur people]]. They were gove
    347 KB (52,725 words) - 20:04, 27 April 2017
  • ...ed an annotated English edition of parts of "The [[Chagatai language|Uygur-Turkic]] biography of the seventh-century Chinese Buddhist Pilgrim [[Xuanzang]]".< |title=The Uygur-Turkic biography of the seventh-century Chinese Buddhist Pilgrim Xuanzang, ninth a
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  • |rels=[[Tibetan Buddhism]], [[Tengrism]] (Turkic [[Shamanism]]) |related=[[Old Uyghurs]], other [[Turkic peoples|Turks]] and [[Mongols]]
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  • ...s, but technologies, philosophies, and religions were transmitted from one culture to another. ...t Buddhist states in the world and a cultural bridge across which Buddhist culture and learning were transmitted from India to China.<ref>{{cite web|url=http:
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  • {{for|empires established by the Göktürks|Turkic Khaganate}} |pop = Ancestral to Uyghurs, Yugurs, and other Turkic population
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  • |related= [[Karluks]], other [[Turkic peoples]] ....edu/nll/?p=1576}}</ref> {{IPA-ug|ʔʊjˈʁʊː|}}) are a [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] [[ethnic group]] living in Eastern and [[Central Asia]]. Today, Uyghurs l
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  • ...<br/>Han Chinese and Chinese Hui Muslim militia<br/>Qara taghlik Ishaqiyya Turkic Muslim followers |strength2=Aq taghlik Afaqiyya Turkic Muslim followers<br/>[[Dolan people]]{{sfn|Bellér-Hann|2008|pages=21 ff.}}
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  • ...ology]] of the name of the [[Ashina]] tribe, traced historical past of the Turkic tribes in the Chinese genealogical legends, suggested a hypothesis about an ...dieval periods, ethnical composition and movement of tribes in the Western Turkic [[Kaganate]], pre-[[Mongols|Mongolian]] period (10th–12th centuries) hist
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  • ...0&nbsp;km to the east. Shymkent grew as a market center for trade between Turkic nomads and the settled [[Sogdian people|Sogdians]]. It was destroyed severa ==In popular culture==
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  • ...m.kz/eng/article/2655204 |title=Saint Petersburg to welcome Days of Astana Culture |publisher=Kazinform |accessdate=9 October 2014}}</ref> ...AEwBg#v=onepage&q=tselinograd&f=false | title=The Thaw: Soviet Society and Culture during the 1950s and 1960s | publisher=[[University of Toronto Press]] | ye
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  • ...(''red''; used here in the common Soviet ideological connotation) and the Turkic Mongolian "орда" (''city'').<ref name="Pospelov" /> In 1929 the capital ...rkyt.kz korkyt.kz]</ref> is the leading center of education, a science and culture center in the Aral region of the Republic Kazakhstan. Established in 1950,
    13 KB (1,707 words) - 20:13, 27 April 2017
  • ...aanxi People's Press. p. 27</ref> The [[Talas alphabet]], a variant of the Turkic "runiform" [[Orkhon script]], is named for the town. Talas secured a place ...man's stay." {{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} Remnants of material culture that were found during excavation of Taraz speak about the lifestyle in thi
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  • ...w'' ~ ''tay'' may be misinterpreted as meaning "mountain" by speakers of [[Turkic languages]], such as the Kazakh language.) Read more: Culture of Uzbekistan - history, people, clothing, traditions, women, beliefs, food
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  • ...y of habitation to a mixing of Persian culture and science with the native Turkic/Mongol tribal clans. South Kazakhstan Region was part of the [[Satrapy|Satr
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  • |child1 = [[Turkic languages|Turkic]] {{Legend|#00008B|Turkic languages}}
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  • ...ies ultimately suppressed it for fear of its potential to unify Siberian [[Turkic peoples]] under a common nationalism. ...rs to its emphasis on the upper world (in the three-world cosmology of the Turkic and Mongolian [[Tengriism]]). Alternatively, the name may also allude to Ak
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  • ...hically, historically, and ethnically distinct from the [[Turkic languages|Turkic]]-speaking [[Tarim Basin]] area, the [[Qing dynasty]] and subsequent Chines ...Tarim Basin was inhabited by sedentary, oasis dwelling, [[Turkic languages|Turkic speaking]] [[Muslim]] farmers, now known as the [[Uyghur people]].
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  • ...ite book|author=Jonathan Karem Skaff|editor=Nicola Di Cosmo|title=Military Culture in Imperial China|year=2009|publisher=Harvard University Press|isbn=978-0-6
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  • ...the Pazyryk kurgans is considered the [[type site]] of the wider [[Pazyryk culture]]. The site is included in the [[Golden Mountains of Altai]] [[UNESCO World The bearers of the Pazyryk culture were horse-riding pastoral [[nomad]]s of the [[steppe]], and some may have
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  • '''Alakol Lake''' ({{lang-kz| Алакөл}}, ''Turkic'' "motley lake") is a [[lake]] located in the [[Almaty Province|Almaty]] an The Bronze Age [[Alakul culture]] is situated in the general region of the lake. In the middle of the 1st c
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  • ...ns. Those intended for everyday use may have a black velvet lining. In the Turkic cultures of central Asia, they have a sharp tapering to resemble a mountain The word ''kalpak'' is also a component of the [[ethnonym]] of a Turkic group of uncertain relatedness: the "[[Karakalpaks|Karakalpak]]" (literally
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  • ...]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://whc.unesco.org/en/tentativelists/1131/ |title=Turkic Sanctuary of Merke |publisher=[[UNESCO]] |accessdate=8 August 2016}}</ref> .../en/tentativelists/1132/ |title=Megalithic Mausolea of the Begazy-Dandybai Culture |publisher=[[UNESCO]] |accessdate=8 August 2016}}</ref>
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  • ...ite book| last= Elisseeff|first= Vadime|title= The Silk Roads: Highways of Culture and Commerce|publisher= UNESCO Publishing / Berghahn Books|year=2001|isbn=
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  • ...in the South [[Siberia]] and Northern [[Kazakhstan]]. In accordance with a Turkic tradition, he was brought up by his grandfather Aujan Chormanov in the [[Ke ...city civilizations. His 1967 contribution to the collective work "Ancient culture of Central Kazakhstan" was awarded a Kazakh SSR Academy of Sciences [[Shoka
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  • * [[Linear Pottery culture]] 5500–4500 BC * [[Cucuteni-Trypillian culture]] 5300–2600 BC
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  • ...Celtic mythology|Celtic]], [[Slavic mythology|Slavic]], [[Turkic mythology|Turkic]], [[Greek mythology|ancient Greek]], [[Roman mythology|Roman]], and [[Thra ...<ref>Mallory, J. P. & Adams, D. Q. (1997), ''Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture'', Taylor & Francis, pp. 647-648, ISBN 1884964982</ref> The wolf was held i
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  • ...of life. Industry, and especially mining, developed. Russian and European culture began to influence Kazakh society.<ref>{{cite web|title=Central Asia|url=ht ==Culture, religion and ethnicity==
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  • ...', ''Qazaq handyġy'', قازاق حاندىعى}}) was a [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] [[Kazakhs|Kazakh]] [[Sovereign state|state]], the successor of the [[Gold ...on 96 [[Cossack]]s were captured by Kazakhs.<ref>Formation of a Borderland Culture: Myths and Realities of Cossack-Kazakh By Yuriy Anatolyevich Malikov [https
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  • ...tai,<ref name=":0" /> and Ust-Narym cultures.<ref name=":0" /> The [[Botai culture]] (3600–3100 BCE) is credited with the first domestication of horses, and ...uns migrated west and south. The future Kazakhstan was absorbed into the [[Turkic Kaganate]] and successor states
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  • ...sed on the similarities between the ancestor myth of the Wusun and later [[Turkic peoples]], [[Denis Sinor]] has suggested that the Wusun and/or [[Sogdians]] ...art of Türk statecraft. Important terms, for example, often came from non-Turkic languages, as in the cases of ''khatun'' for the ruler's wife and ''beg'' f
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  • ...lley]], the capitals are being noted as the westernmost capital of Western Turkic Khaganate.<ref name=Tong>Xue (1992), p. 284-285</ref> There was a sort of [ ...fortifications, Christian churches, Zoroastrian [[ossuary|ossuaries]], and Turkic [[bal-bal]]s. The site is particularly rich in finds of [[Gautama Buddha|Bu
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  • |combatant2=[[Western Turkic Khaganate]] ...ite book|author=Jonathan Karem Skaff|editor=Nicola Di Cosmo|title=Military Culture in Imperial China|year=2009|publisher=Harvard University Press|isbn=978-0-6
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  • *Dissolution of the Western Turkic Khaganate ...book|author=Kenneth Scott Latourette|title=The Chinese, their history and culture|url=https://books.google.com/books?ei=ubYwT_60HMSa0QGKz_jYBw&id=MkBwAAAAMAA
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  • ...ary campaigns conducted during the [[Tang dynasty]] against the [[Western Turkic Khaganate]] in the 7th century AD. Early military conflicts were a result o ...d 677, but were repelled by the Tang. The [[Second Turkic Khaganate|Second Turkic Empire]] defeated the fragmented Western Turks in 712, and absorbed the tri
    15 KB (2,160 words) - 22:29, 27 April 2017
  • ...''Mohe dagan quelü chuo'') of Chinese sources, was the leader of a small Turkic tribe, known in the Chinese sources as Chu Muguen, living south of [[Lake B * {{cite book | title = Sui-Tang China and Its Turko-Mongol Neighbors: Culture, Power, and Connections, 580–800 | first = Jonathan Karam | last = Skaff
    9 KB (1,349 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...s.google.com/books?id=g7N74BFaC90C&pg=PA334#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=The Culture and Social Institutions of Ancient Iran |authors= Muhammad A. Dandamaev, Vl ...ans and Aseni are the Sacarauls and [[Asioi]] of Strabo.<ref>''History and Culture of Indian People, Age of Imperial Unity'', p 111; ''Political History of An
    49 KB (7,443 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...r|editor3-first=A. H. Mathias|editor1-link=Asma Afsaruddin|title=Humanism, Culture, and Language in the Near East: Studies in Honor of Georg Krotkoff|year=199 ...an.com:80/b_history.php |dead-url=yes |archive-date=21 November 2001 |work=Culture of Iran |publisher= |accessdate=11 September 2009 }}</ref> The Sasanian Emp
    153 KB (23,195 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...ews]] are descended from the [[Khazars]], a multi-ethnic conglomerate of [[Turkic peoples]] who formed a semi-nomadic [[Khanate]] in the area extending from ...Wexler]].<ref>Batya Ungar-Sargon [http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-arts-and-culture/books/176580/yiddishland 'The Mystery of the Origins of Yiddish Will Never
    84 KB (11,940 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • |p1 = Turkic Khaganate ...the most powerful [[polity]] to emerge from the break-up of the [[Western Turkic Kaganate]].<ref>{{harvnb|Sneath|2007|p=25}}.</ref> Astride a major artery o
    176 KB (25,696 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • * Committee on Social and Culture Development and Science * Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-Speaking Countries (TurkPA)
    14 KB (2,137 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...are very strong and Kyrgyz and Kazakh are very close in terms of language, culture and religion. Kyrgyz-Kazakh relationships have always been at a very high l ...tions, are founding members of the Joint Administration of Turkic Arts and Culture [[TURKSOY]] on July 12, 1993.
    65 KB (9,013 words) - 22:37, 27 April 2017
  • |name = International Turkic Academy |established_event1 = IX summit of the Heads of Turkic-speaking states
    7 KB (1,008 words) - 22:38, 27 April 2017

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