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From Kazakhstan Encyclopedia

  • ...d our Manager of the trust Ya.M.Gimmel'fard about a month and four were in Moscow and Alma-ATA for construction of the plant and the city. For them there wer ...th a light hand Полынина and flew to the construction site letters from all over the Soviet Union, on which stood address - the city of Rudny! When
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  • ...r]] factories in [[Kazakh SSR]]. The case ended in prosecution of some 500 people, with 3 top ''[[tsekhovik]]s'' (owners of illegal factories) receiving deat ...tarted in 1972 by an accident when during an investigation of a robbery in Moscow when several [[fur coat]]s were uncovered without proper manufacturer's tag
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  • | years3 = 1976–1984 | clubs3 = [[PFC CSKA Moscow|CSKA Moscow]] | caps3 = 249 | goals3 = 61 | manageryears5 = 1992–1994 | managerclubs5 = [[FC Spartak Moscow|Spartak Moscow]] (assistant)
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  • ...50 Mosow.png|30px|link=Medal "In Commemoration of the 850th Anniversary of Moscow"]] [[File:Ribbon Medal 300 years Saint-Petersburg.png|30px|link=Medal "In C *[[Medal "In Commemoration of the 850th Anniversary of Moscow"]]
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  • ...y in the 100 metres. He trained at [[Dynamo (sports society)|Dynamo]] in [[Moscow]]. [[Category:People from Jambyl Region]]
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  • ...0.html “OTR” They handed the International "Philanthropist" premium in Moscow]</ref> ...iasystem.kz/news-kaz/336391?category=39 Media-System The poet and novelist from Taraz became the winner of International Award "Philanthropist"]</ref><ref>
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  • ...1968 to 1972 she was a soloist with the Mosconcert concert organization (a Moscow association that organized regular concerts for its artists). One of her mo ...Records|Polydor]]. In 1982, upon the birth of her son, Loren, she retired from the music industry and has recently became a grandmother to twins, a boy an
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  • ...3 to 2013, and held the [[World Boxing Council|WBC]] [[heavyweight]] title from 2006 to 2008. |style="text-align:left;"|{{flagicon|RUS}} {{small|Sports Palace Quant, Moscow, Russia}}
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  • | years1 = 2014–2015 | clubs1 = [[PFC CSKA Moscow]] | caps1 = 0 | goals1 = 0 [[Category:People from Temirtau]]
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  • ...Shkadov|first = I.N.|publisher = Voenizdat|year = 1987|isbn = |location = Moscow|pages = |language = Russian|trans-title = Heroes of the Soviet Union: A Bri ...akhstan's Kyzylorda Region). His family were peasants. Komekbaev graduated from the village school. After graduation, he worked in a coal warehouse.<ref na
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  • ...Council on Foreign Affairs | accessdate=24 June 2016}}</ref> with a grant from the Kazakh government.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.independent.co.uk/ne [[Category:21st-century Kazakhstani people]]
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  • {{MedalGold|[[2003 European Team Gymnastics Championships|2003 Moscow]]|Team}} ...n August 23, 1978) is a [[gymnastics|gymnast]] who competed for [[Russia]] from 1996 to 2004. He won two medals at the [[2000 Summer Olympics]] – silver
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  • ...Samara|Krylia Sovetov Samara]] <br> (loan from [[FC Spartak Moscow|Spartak Moscow]]) | years1 = 2013– | clubs1 = [[FC Spartak Moscow|Spartak Moscow]] | caps1 = 22 | goals1 = 0
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  • '''Nurserik Kadyrsizovich Kudereev''' is a Director of the [[Moscow]] Office of JSOC [[KazMunayGaz]]. He is currently married with two children Born February 14, 1969 to a family of [[Kazakh people|Kazakh]] civil servants in [[South Kazakhstan Province|South Kazakhstan Reg
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  • | death_place = [[Moscow]], [[Soviet Union]] ...t the Kazakh Institute of Education in [[Semey|Semipalatinsk]] (now Semey) from 1931 to 1933.
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  • | death_place = [[Moscow]], [[USSR]] He died in [[Moscow]] in 1964, and is buried in [[Almaty]].
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  • | death_place = [[Moscow]], [[USSR]] ...Oblast]], now in [[Pavlodar Region]], [[Kazakhstan]] – 15 August 1963, [[Moscow]]) was a notable [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] writer praised for the colourful a
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  • ...khstan|Volodarskoye]], [[Kazakhstan]]) was the president of [[Ingushetia]] from March 1993 to December 2001. He was reportedly the youngest officer in the ...[Ingush people|Ingush]] family living in [[Kazakhstan]], who were deported from the [[Soviet Union]] in 1944. Very little is known about Aushev's early lif
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  • ...in more than sixty films since 1969. [[State Prize of the USSR]] (1981), [[People's Artist of Russia]] (2005).<ref>[http://document.kremlin.ru/doc.asp?ID=261 |''[[Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears]]''
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  • ...t is located 45&nbsp;km from Chimkent, the regional center, and 18&nbsp;km from Aksukent village, the district center. There are 11 schools, 1 college and ...gned the area that more or less corresponds to present-day [[Uzbekistan]]. From 1809 until 1876, Karabulak was part of the [[Uzbeks|Uzbek]] [[Khanate of Ko
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  • ...+ ''tuz'' 'salt').<ref>E.M. Pospelov, ''Geograficheskie nazvaniya mira'' (Moscow, 1998), p. 479.</ref> ...The village was totally deserted. However, in 1948 the first team (only 50 people) started construction of the future town. The borders of the future open-ca
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  • ...was substantial risk of Zakayev being [[torture]]d if he was returned to [[Moscow]].<ref>[http://www.watchdog.cz/?show=000000-000004-000003-000095&lang=1 The ...[[Grozny]], specializing in a [[William Shakespeare|Shakespearean]] roles. From 1991, he was the chairman of the Chechen Union of the Theatrical Actors. In
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  • ...roorganism]]s and their toxins.<ref>Anderson, D. (2006), ''Lessons Learned from the Former Soviet Biological Warfare Program''; UMI Dissertation Services, ...nd biotechnology led to more promotions, which resulted in a transfer to [[Moscow]].<ref name="Anderson">Anderson (2006), ''Op. cit.''</ref>
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  • |death_place = [[Moscow]] [[Category:People from Almaty Region]]
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  • ...ov Art-Industrial Institute (the Kharkov State Academy of Design and Arts) from which in 1979 he graduated with the degree with distinction. Victor Sydorenko is one of leaders of Modern Ukrainian Art. Victor's pathway from realism to neoavant-gardism is first of all a tribute to the full freedom o
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  • ...ebut on 21 March 2015 for [[FC Arsenal Tula]] in a game against [[PFC CSKA Moscow]].<ref>{{cite web|publisher=[[Russian Football Premier League]]|url=http:// [[Category:People from Taldykorgan]]
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  • *[[Battle of Moscow]] ...t in the [[Battle of Smolensk (1941)|Battle of Smolensk]], the [[Battle of Moscow]], the [[Battle of Kursk]],<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|title = Kursk 1943: T
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  • ...d in the [[Kremlin Wall Necropolis|Kremlin Wall]] on the [[Red Square]] in Moscow.<ref>{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EbDGMiXvdG0C&lpg=P [[Category:People from Aktobe]]
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  • Tolkachev claimed his distrust of the Soviet government arose from the persecution his wife's parents had suffered under [[Joseph Stalin]]. He ...Schudel | accessdate=2010-04-23}}</ref> coincidentally approaching the CIA Moscow bureau chief [[Gardner Hathaway]] at a gas station, but the CIA was wary of
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  • | birth_name = <!-- only use if different from name above --> ...m [[Tbilisi State University]] in 1999 with a degree in international law. From 1996 to 2000, he worked with the [[Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia]]
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  • ...ame a member of the Russian national aerobatic team. In 1995 she graduated from [[Kaluga]] aeronautical technical school.<ref name="FAI-awards 1">{{cite we She is now living in [[Moscow]] with her husband and two children.<ref name="haute voltige"/>
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  • | death_place =[[Moscow]], [[Soviet Union]] ...the outbreak of World War I in 1914, Kuibyshev was prematurely discharged from the school and joined the Russian Imperial Army with the rank of [[Podporuc
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  • ...Petersburg]]<br>[[Metallurg Novokuznetsk]]<br>[[HC Spartak Moscow|Spartak Moscow]]<br>[[HC Ugra]]<br>[[Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg]] '''Alexander Golovin''' (born 26 March 1983) is a [[Russian people|Russian]] professional [[ice hockey]] [[Winger (ice hockey)|winger]], born
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  • |formertraininglocations= [[Moscow]] * Heart of Courage <br>{{small| by Two Steps From Hell }}
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  • ...SKA Moscow]]<br>[[SKA Saint Petersburg|SKA Leningrad]]<br>[[Krylya Sovetov Moscow]]<br>[[Lausitzer Füchse|PEV Weißwasser]] ...ow|CSKA Moscow]], [[SKA Saint Petersburg|SKA Leningrad]], [[Krylya Sovetov Moscow]] and [[Lausitzer Füchse|PEV Weißwasser]]. He also was a member of the [[
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  • |team = [[Tornado Moscow Region]] [[Category:Living people]]
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  • | residence = [[Moscow]], Russia [[Category:Living people]]
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  • | location_city = [[Moscow]] ...eclectic collection of antique and vintage clothes and accessories ranging from the rare ancient jewelry to Soviet school uniform. Hunting for the new rari
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  • ...]] that runs approximately from north to south through [[western Russia]], from the coast of the [[Arctic Ocean]] to the [[Ural River]] and northwestern [[ ...ooks?id=vAEzBgAAQBAJ Paul Dukes. A History of the Urals: Russia's Crucible from Early Empire to the Post-Soviet Era. Bloomsbury Publishing 2015, p 5.]</ref
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  • ...ian: Производственное объединение «Маяк», from Маяк 'lighthouse') is one of the biggest nuclear facilities in the Russ ...290 sq mi) in the eastern Urals with the consequence of sickness and death from [[radiation poisoning]].[[File:Mayak-FMSF-Cetac-25.jpg|thumb|250px|Fissile
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  • ...ded in 1598 by Vasily Golovin and Ivan Voyeykov on the site of the [[Mansi people|Vogul]] settlement of Neromkar. There were major fires in 1674 and 1738. Th ...revent contraband. Guard posts were set up in the region to prevent people from slipping around the custom house.
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  • ...lain|West Siberian]] plains. It extends approximately from north to south, from the [[Arctic Ocean]] to the bend of [[Ural River]] near [[Orsk]] city. The ...legend about a hero named Ural. He sacrificed his life for the sake of his people, and they poured a stone pile over his grave, which later turned into the U
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  • ....rinet.ru/maps/maps23.php?lan=en |title=Interactive Maps The Altaic Family from The Tower of Babel |publisher=Starling.rinet.ru |date= |accessdate=18 June ...t the same level they were related to each other; (3) Korean had split off from the other three before they underwent a series of characteristic changes.
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  • |ethnicity=[[Altai people|Altai]], [[Tubalar]], etc. The sounds of the Altai language vary from dialect to dialect.
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  • ...ics|political]] debate between Russian scientists and the indigenous Altay people. ...lture]]; a group that closely resembled that of the legendary [[Scythia]]n people to the west.<ref name="atlas">{{cite book
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  • ...zyryk culture]] which closely resembled that of the legendary [[Scythia]]n people to the west.<ref name="atlas">{{cite book </ref> At least six tattooed mummies dating from the period ca. (c. 2600 BC - AD 402) have been recovered preserved by the p
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  • ....png|thumb|350px|Map of [[Russia]] showing rivers that could be redirected from the [[Arctic]]]] ...>Douglas R. Weiner, "A Little Corner of Freedom: Russian Nature Protection from Stalin to Gorbachev". University of California Press, 1999. ISBN 0-520-2321
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  • |image = Caspian Sea from orbit.jpg ...ar=2009 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title =ESA: Observing the Earth – Earth from Space: The southern Caspian Sea |publisher = ESA.int|url = http://www.esa.i
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  • ...(BW) facility on an island in the [[Aral Sea]]. The incident sickened ten people, of whom 3 died, and came to widespread public notice only in 2002.<ref>Bro ...ox – not a bad weapon |work=Interview with General Burgasov |publisher=[[Moscow News]] |language=Russian |url=http://mn.ru/issue.php?2001-46-48 |accessdate
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  • ...k]]<br />[[HC Sibir Novosibirsk]]<br />[[PHC Krylya Sovetov|Krylya Sovetov Moscow]]<br />[[Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod]]<br />Khimvolokno Mogilev<br />[[Junost M | birth_place = [[Moscow]], [[Soviet Union]]
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  • ...1929 and the First Secretary of the Communist Party of the [[Kazakh SSR]] from December 5, 1936 to May 3, 1938. He was executed during the [[Great Purge]] ...1.html|work=news.am|date=8 January 2011}}</ref> He also added that "Kazakh people call him Mirza-jan, and so far all remember him with gratitude."<ref>{{cite
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  • ...akhs|Kazakh]] [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[Communist]] [[political figure]]. From 1946 through 1954, he was First Secretary of the [[Communist Party]] of the ...oltava Raion, graduating in 1917. He attended the Narimanov Institute in [[Moscow]], but did not complete his first year. In 1919, he got a job as a school
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  • | alma mater= [[Moscow State University]] [[Category:Living people]]
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  • ...till November 2 of 2015. He served as a Vice-Prime Minister of Kazakhstan from January 20 of 2012 till October 1 of 2013. He also served as the CEO of [[S ...n|Kazakh State Academy of Economics]] (management, 1996), and [[Lomonosov Moscow State University]] (Mathematics, 1993).<ref>[http://www.minexasia.com/2011/
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  • ...a]]|accessdate=25 February 2010|location=[[Moscow Kremlin|The Kremlin]], [[Moscow]]}} {{Dead link|date=October 2010|bot=H3llBot}}</ref> [[Category:Living people]]
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  • *He was born in 1960, in [[Almaty]]. In 1982, he graduated from [[Lomonosov Moscow State University]] with a degree in law. After graduating, he worked as inv ...lice Board – Deputy Head of Tax Committee of the Republic of Kazakhstan. From May 1997 to April 1998 he ran a private legal company.
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  • In 1979 he graduated from physical and mathematical school and entered the [[Saint Petersburg State P ...e studied in St. Petersburg Conservatory under [[Stanislav Igolinsky]] and Moscow Conservatory under [[Lev Vlasenko]].
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  • ...the [[Central Committee]] of the [[Communist Party]] of the [[Kazakh SSR]] from December 16, 1986 to June 22, 1989. ...h [[Nursultan Nazarbayev]]. Kolbin was then transferred to a position in [[Moscow]].
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  • | birth_name = <!-- only use if different from name --> ...s Swartz did, this hacker is freeing tens of millions of research articles from paywalls, metaphorically hoisting a middle finger to the academic publishin
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  • ...a conference (or Congress) of people interested in Scouting was held in [[Moscow]]. Deimund represented [[Kazakhstan]] at the Congress. The Congress establi ...cout troops. Shortly thereafter, hundreds of letters came to Pavlodar from people asking for help to create Scout units. Pavlodar Scout leaders published and
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  • ...stan]]. As of November 2007, about 1% of the $600 billion in goods shipped from Asia to Europe each year were delivered by inland transport routes.<ref>Ber ...ian connects Moscow with Russian Pacific seaports such as [[Vladivostok]]. From the 1960s until the early 1990s the railway served as the primary land brid
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  • ...ing the [[Eastern world|East]] and [[Western culture|West]] and stretching from the Korean peninsula<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.miho.or.jp/english/membe While the term is of modern coinage, the Silk Road derives its name from the lucrative trade in [[silk]] (and horses) carried out along its length,
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  • Aimbetov graduated from [[Kutakhov Armavir Higher Military Aviation School]] and became a military ...002, along with [[Mukhtar Aimakhanov]], out of a pool of 2,000 candidates. From 2003 to 2009, he trained in Russia as a cosmonaut at [[Yuri Gagarin Cosmona
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  • ...ry. After finishing school and thanks to a strong letter of recommendation from his school principal, he left for [[St. Petersburg, Russia|St. Petersburg]] ...yshpaev was appointed the head of the Department of Water Resources of the People’s Commissariat of Turkestan, and moved to Tashkent. The following year he
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  • {{For|other people name named Panteley or Panteleimon|Panteley (disambiguation)}} | nationality = [[Soviet people|Soviet]]
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  • | publisher = [[Embassy of Kazakhstan in Moscow]] In August 1999 Abykayev was dismissed from his post as Chairman of the National Security Committee for his role in a s
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  • | nationality = [[Soviet people|Soviet]] | death_place = [[Moscow]], [[Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic|Russian SFSR]] [[Soviet U
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  • | nationality = [[Soviet people|Soviet]] | death_place = [[Moscow]], [[Soviet Union]]
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  • |citizenship=[[Soviet people|Soviet]] |death_place = Zarechye, near [[Moscow]], [[Russian SFSR]], [[Soviet Union]]
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  • ...dStyleDate|20 November|1892|8 November}}, [[Yukhnov]] - 24 October 1963, [[Moscow]]) was a [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[geologist]], academician of the [[Kazakh ...tment of [[Saint Petersburg Mining Institute|Petrograd Mining Institute]], from which he graduated in 1921.<ref name="GSE"/>
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  • ...c and pedagogical activity as [[Uigurologist]] in 1950 after graduaqting [[Moscow Institute of Oriental Studies]], where he completed a postgraduate study in ...rical and philological points the richest manuscript heritage of the Uigur people. V.P.Yudin authored over 80 scientific publications in Russian, Uigur and K
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  • ...the seals are descended from Arctic [[ringed seal]]s that reached the area from the north during an earlier part of the [[Quaternary]] period and became is ...species suggest they are descended from the [[ringed seal]] which migrated from larger bodies of water around two million years ago.<ref>{{cite journal|las
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  • ...pe]] that originally inhabited a vast area of the [[Eurasian steppe]] zone from the foothills of the [[Carpathian Mountains]] and [[Caucasus]] into [[Dzung ...bekistan]] and occasionally [[Turkmenistan]] in winter. It is extinct in [[People's Republic of China]] and southwestern Mongolia. It was hunted extensively
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  • ...t|Tyumen]]. It was unclear what caused the orange snow. Speculation ranged from pollutants to a storm in neighboring Kazakhstan.<ref name="The Guardian: Or ...ar accident. It was later determined that the snow was non-toxic; however, people in the region were advised not to use the snow or allow animals to feed upo
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  • In 1892 he was married for the first time. In 1894 Vasile graduated from Moscow University and returned to the Family estate in [[Bakhmut]]. He was noted ...the vastness and available land for the poor Russian peasants. He went to Moscow with his idea and came back with the backing of the government. After a slo
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  • ...urces cite Kolbin's ethnicity as [[Russians|Russian]], others as [[Chuvash people|Chuvash]]. .../inform.kz/showarticle.php?lang=eng&id=147080 1986 "December events showed people’s striving for independence"] KAZINFORM</ref> In the following days, prot
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  • ...of [[Abul Khair Khan]] the Kazakhs won major victories over the [[Dzungar people|Dzungar]] at the [[Bulanty River]] (1726) and at the [[Battle of Anrakay]] ...Federative Republic) (April 30, 1918 &ndash; October 27, 1924) was created from the [[Turkestan Krai]] of [[Imperial Russia]]. Its capital was [[Tashkent]]
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  • ...iplomat. Schuyler was one of the first three Americans to earn a [[Ph.D.]] from an American university;<ref>See, for instance, {{Cite journal | last1 = Ros ...n to study law at [[Yale Law School]], and received his law degree in 1863 from [[Columbia Law School]]. He began practicing law in New York, but did not
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  • ...to 1930 in the [[Karkaraly]] region of [[Kazakhstan]] on the caravan route from [[Central Asia]] to [[Siberia]], located near modern-day [[Yegindybulak|Egi ...<ref name=museum /> The following year, new buyers arrived and soon people from [[Kazakhstan]], [[Siberia]], the [[Ural Mountains|Urals]], [[Central Asia]]
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  • ...tau Mountains and central Kazakhstan. Modern ''[[Homo sapiens]]'' appeared from 40,000 to 12,000 years ago in southern, central, and eastern Kazakhstan. Af ...populations in and out of the [[steppe belt]]. The dry period which lasted from the end of the second millennium to the beginning of the 1st millennium BCE
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  • ...2th century CE. The [[Pechenegs|Western Branch of Kangars]] after a defeat from [[Kypchaks]] of the [[Kimek Khanate|Kimek Kaganate]] attacked and defeated ..., men",'''Kanger'''.<ref>M.Zakiev, ''Origin of Türks and Tatars'', p.361, Moscow, "Insan", 2002, ISBN 5-85840-317-4</ref> An alternate etymology is that the
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  • ...] [[Eurasian Steppe|steppe]] people mentioned in [[China|Chinese]] records from the 2nd century BC to the 5th century AD. ...Gansu as vassals of the Xiongnu. In 133-132 BC, the Wusun drove the Yuezhi from the Ili Valley and settled the area. They subsequently became close allies
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  • ...ocated some 50&nbsp;km east from [[Bishkek]], and 8&nbsp;km west southwest from [[Tokmok]], in the [[Chui River]] valley, present-day [[Kyrgyzstan]]. ...he [[Silk Road]] in the 5th or 6th centuries. The name of the city derives from that of the [[Chui River|Suyab River]],<ref name=Suyab>Xue (1998), p. 136-1
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  • ...c peoples|Turkic]] tribe that heavily influenced northern Chinese politics from the late ninth century through the tenth century. They are noted for foundi The Shato tribes descended from the [[Chigils|Chigil]] <ref name="Zuev_127"/> tribes, belonging to a group
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  • ...eban]]) - [[Chumuhun]] and Chuban.<ref>Gumilev L.N., ''"Ancient Türks"'', Moscow, 'Science', 1967, Ch.16, http://gumilevica.kulichki.net/OT/ot16.htm (In Rus Etymology of the term ''Nushibi'' comes from the Turkic name for the "right wing" ''on shadapyt'', "nushibi" is a colloq
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  • This article discusses the '''[[fiction]] relating to the [[Khazars|Khazar]] people'''. Historians have only been able to piece together an incomplete picture ..., Emanuel Lindner, discovers a lost African Jewish community that descends from Khazars. The book blends fiction with real historical events. Many of the c
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  • ...ree centuries (c. 650–965) the Khazars dominated the vast area extending from the Volga-Don steppes to the eastern [[Crimea]] and the northern [[Caucasus ...ed from a hypothetical Khazarian Jewish diaspora who had migrated westward from modern Russia and Ukraine into modern France and Germany. This theory still
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  • ....</ref><ref>''[[Maariv (newspaper)|Maariv]]'' daily newspaper - "A Scholar from Tel Aviv Gave a Lecture in Calcutta" - 1964-01-23.</ref> Polak was also a m ...red by Polak through his work which was based on [[Arabs|Arab]], [[Persian people|Persian]] and [[Kurds|Kurd]] authors.<ref name=":1" />
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  • |alma_mater = [[Moscow State Institute of International Relations]]<br>[[Diplomatic Academy of the ...viously served as [[Foreign Minister]] in the [[Government of Kazakhstan]] from 1999−2002.<ref name=EXTREMISM>[http://newsfromrussia.com/cis/2001/09/18/1
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  • ...et Opens in Almaty] Arab News</ref> and the Minister of Industry and Trade from 2003 to 2004.<ref name=MIT>[http://www.kazakhembus.com/markyourcalendars.ht ...sculpture entitled "A Symbol of Friendship of Moscow and Astana."<ref name=MOSCOW/>
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  • ...manent Representative (Ambassador) of Kazakhstan to the [[United Nations]] from 1992-1999.<ref name=Permanent>{{Cite web|url=http://www.un.int/permreps/kaz ...her professional career as a faculty member at the Kazakh State University from 1975-1978.
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  • ...into Kazakhstan's foreign policy.<ref name="ed">{{cite web|title=New tasks from the President on facilitating economic diplomacy|url=http://www.kazakhembus ...major transit country for narcotics produced in Southwest Asia, primarily from Afghanistan.<ref name=narco/> In 2001, Kazakh authorities reported 1,320 ca
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  • !| [[Premier of the People's Republic of China]] [[Premier of the People's Republic of China]]
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  • ...n international affairs fellow at the [[Council of Foreign Relations]] and from 1972 to 1999 was a career Foreign Service Officer. He is a member of the Co Dr. Courtney graduated from [[West Virginia University]] (B.A., 1966) and [[Brown University]] (Ph.D.,
    2 KB (335 words) - 22:37, 27 April 2017
  • ....archive.org/web/20110712083721/http://history.state.gov/departmenthistory/people/principalofficers/career-ambassador| archivedate= 12 July 2011 <!--DASHBot- ...orn in Munich to parents in the [[U.S. Foreign Service]], and grew up in [[Moscow]] and [[Berlin]], where she attended local schools.<ref>[http://globetrotte
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  • ...and bachelor's and master's degrees in philosophy, politics and economics from [[Oxford University]], England. ...s Minister-Counselor for Political Affairs at the United States Embassy in Moscow (1999–2002) and
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  • ...[[Latvia]] from 1995 to 1998 and as the U.S. Ambassador to [[Kazakhstan]] from 2001 to 2004.<ref name=SERVICE>[http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/courtney. ...rmy at the rank of Captain, Napper attended the [[University of Virginia]] from 1972–74, earning a master's degree in Government and Foreign Affairs. Nap
    4 KB (615 words) - 22:37, 27 April 2017
  • ...aphy John M. Ordway]</ref><ref>[http://history.state.gov/departmenthistory/people/ordway-john-malcolm John Malcolm Ordway (1950-)]</ref> ...Kazakhstan|Astana]], [[Kazakhstan]] (January 2011 – July 2011, and again from October 2013 - December 2014).
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  • |headquarters = [[Moscow]], [[Russia]] ...zh 2008" was hosted in [[Armenia]], where a combined total of 4,000 troops from all seven constituent CSTO member countries conducted operative, strategic
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  • ...px|Repatriated Japanese soldiers returning from Siberia wait to disembark from a ship at Maizuru, Kyoto Prefecture, Japan, in 1946]] ...071102082712/http://www.auditorium.ru/books/407/ |date= 2 November 2007 }} Moscow ''[[Logos Publishers]] (2000)'' (Военнопленные в СССР. 19
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