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From Kazakhstan Encyclopedia

  • ...Road]] in [[Kazakhstan]]. Otrar was an important town in the history of [[Central Asia]], situated on the borders of settled and agricultural civilizations. ...ainly in the Syr Darya valley and its tributuaries of Keles and Atysi. Its people appear to have [[Turkified]], becoming known as the [[Kankalis|Kangars]].
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  • | name = Central Asia–China gas pipeline | finish = Horgos, [[Xinjiang]], [[China|People's Republic of China]]<br>(connected to [[West–East Gas Pipeline]])
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  • ...is [[China]]'s first direct oil import pipeline allowing oil import from Central Asia. It runs from [[Kazakhstan]]'s Caspian shore to [[Xinjiang]] in China. |publisher=People's Daily Online
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  • |[[1993 Asian Athletics Championships|Asian Championships]] |[[Athletics at the 1994 Asian Games|Asian Games]]
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  • | 1. || 20 September 1997 || [[Almaty Central Stadium|Central Stadium]], [[Almaty]], [[Kazakhstan]] || {{fb|UZB}} || 1–1 || Draw || [[1 | 6. || 21 April 2001 || [[Almaty Central Stadium|Central Stadium]], [[Almaty]], [[Kazakhstan]] || {{fb|NEP}} || 4–0 || Win || [[20
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  • ...in, Nikolai Il'minskii and the Kazakh National Awakening | journal=Central Asian Survey | year=1983 | volume=2 | pages=3 | doi=10.1080/02634938308400440}} [[Category:Ethnic Kazakh people]]
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  • [[People's Hero of Kazakhstan]]<br/>{{nobr|[[Order of the Red Banner of Labour]]}}<b ...r, posthumously awarded with the titles [[Hero of the Soviet Union]] and [[People's Hero of Kazakhstan]].
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  • ...l relations. The President is the symbol and guarantor of the unity of the people and the state power, inviolability of the Constitution, rights and freedoms ...mocratic Party, “Ak zhol” Democratic Party of Kazakhstan and Communist People’s Party of Kazakhstan.
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  • ...different philosophies, whether Russian, [[Western countries|Western]] or Asian. Abay Qunanbayuli steeped himself in the cultural and philosophical history ...e of the first folk heroes to enter into the national consciousness of his people. Almaty State University is named after Abay, so is one of the main avenues
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  • ...In that year he wrote the poem ''Volnenie'' (Unrest), dedicated to Central Asian unrest in 1916. From September 1 of 1916 he taught in Bugula school, which [[Category:People from Karaganda Region]]
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  • ...the [[Kazakh steppe]].<ref>{{cite web|publisher=The School of Russian and Asian Studies|title=The rise of Alash Orda and Kazakh nationalism|author=David Ga ...("Sheep-Breeding in the Steppe Land"), which analyzed animal husbandry in Central Asia. Bukeikhanov was the first biographer of [[Abay Kunanbayev]], publishi
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  • | ethnicity = [[Kazakh people|Kazakh]] ...и Әлібекұлы}}) (1663-1756) was the head [[biy]] of the [[Kazakh people|Kazakh]] [[Zhuz|senior zhüz]], as well as an author, orator, and poet. He
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  • |[[Mazandaranis]]<ref>[[Nowruz Eve among Mazandarani people]]</ref> |[[Persian people|Persians]]
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  • ...puz''', is an ancient [[fret]]less [[string instrument]] used in [[Central Asian music]], related to certain other [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] [[string instru ...d ''komuz'' is cognate to the names of other instruments in the [[Music of Central Asia]], including the [[Kazakhs|Kazakh]] ''[[kobyz]]'' ([[Uzbeks|Uzbek]] ''
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  • ...China and strummed and plucked by the [[Tājik people|Tajiks]], [[Turkmen people|Turkmen]], [[Uzbeks]]. Related instruments include the [[Kazakhstan|Kazakh] *Aliia Gholi Yeganeh ([[Turkmen people|Turkmen]])
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  • ...ered by [[Russia]], [[Kyrgyzstan]], [[Turkmenistan]], [[Uzbekistan]] and [[People's Republic of China|China]]. The country also borders on a significant part ...f countries by population density|population density]] of less than 6&nbsp;people per square kilometre (15&nbsp;per sq. mi.).
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  • ...tat.kz|accessdate=1 June 2010}}</ref> Kazakhstan is the dominant nation of Central Asia economically, generating 60% of the region's GDP, primarily through it ...sity]] is among the lowest, at less than 6 people per square kilometre (15 people per sq. mi.). The capital is [[Astana]], where it was moved in 1997 from [[
    135 KB (18,214 words) - 17:43, 26 April 2017
  • ...agle huntresses, but the eagle hunters certainly don't|website=The Central Asian Falconry Project|date=2014-04-19|url=http://centralasianfalconry.org/the-in ...uthor=Stacey Reiss|title=13-Year-Old Eagle Huntress Gives Great Advice for People Too Scared to Follow Their Dreams|website=Harper's Bazaar|date=2016-10-08|u
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  • ...r art's main themes usually revolve around social and ecological issues in Central Asia.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://v13.videonale.org/en/artist/463-m ...rounding the lives of the Araikum generation – the term used to call the people living in the vast region of the rapidly receding [[Aral Sea]] coastline.<r
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  • ...of [[Order of the Red Banner of Labour]] ([[Moscow]]) to the course of the People's Artist of [[USSR]] [[Boris Babochkin]] and in 1974 he successfully gradua |''East Corridor or Central Asian Racket''
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  • {{Medal|Competition|[[Asian Games]]}} {{Medal|Gold|[[1994 Asian Games|1994 Hiroshima]]|[[Cycling at the 1994 Asian Games|Team Time Trial]]}}
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  • |[[1993 Asian Athletics Championships|Asian Championships]] |[[Athletics at the 1994 Asian Games|Asian Games]]
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  • |[[1997 Central Asian Games|Central Asian Games]] |[[1998 Asian Championships in Athletics|Asian Championships]]
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  • |[[Athletics at the 1997 East Asian Games|East Asian Games]] |[[Athletics at the 2001 East Asian Games|East Asian Games]]
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  • ...n Games]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/asg.htm|title=Asian Games|work=GBR Athletics|publisher=Athletics Weekly|accessdate=14 March 201 [[Category:Living people]]
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  • ...] for Kazakhstan on 31 March 2000 in an [[2000 AFC Asian Cup qualification|Asian Cup qualifier]] against [[Jordan national football team|Jordan]] at the age | 1. || 12 September 2007 || [[Central Stadium (Almaty)|Almaty Central Stadium]], [[Almaty]] || {{fb|BEL}} || '''2'''–2 || 2–2 || [[UEFA Euro
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  • ...{{fb|QAT}} || 1–0 || Won || [[1996 AFC Asian Cup qualification|1996 AFC Asian Cup Qual.]] [[Category:Living people]]
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  • ...ces for the [[Kazakhstan national football team]], all at the 1992 Central Asian Cup.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://rdfc.com.ne.kr/int/kaz-intres-1992.html |tit [[Category:Living people]]
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  • ...hstan eventually lost 1-3, but it marked for the first time ever a Central Asian side had taken the lead over the world's strongest teams. | 1. || 1 April 2009 || [[Almaty Central Stadium]], [[Almaty]], [[Kazakhstan]] || {{fb|BLR}} || '''1'''–0 || 1–5
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  • ...{{fb|JOR}} || 0–1 || Win || [[2000 AFC Asian Cup qualification|2000 AFC Asian Cup qual.]] ...{{fb|QAT}} || 3–1 || Loss || [[2000 AFC Asian Cup qualification|2000 AFC Asian Cup qual.]]
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  • | 3. || 29 June 1997 || [[Almaty Central Stadium|Central Stadium]], [[Almaty]], [[Kazakhstan]] || {{fb|IRQ|1991}} || 3–1 || Won || [[Category:Living people]]
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  • | 1. || 11 October 1997 || [[Almaty Central Stadium|Central Stadium]], [[Almaty]], [[Kazakhstan]] || {{fb|KOR}} || 1–1 || Draw || [[1 | 2. || 18 October 1997 || [[Almaty Central Stadium|Central Stadium]], [[Almaty]], [[Kazakhstan]] || {{fb|UAE}} || 3–0 || Win || [[19
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  • ...Thailand]] || {{fb|IRN}} || 0-2 || [[Football at the 1998 Asian Games|1998 Asian Games]] ...Thailand]] || {{fb|QAT}} || 2-0 || [[Football at the 1998 Asian Games|1998 Asian Games]]
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  • ...- Details 1992-1999] Retrieved 4 November 2011</ref> He would also play in Asian Games matches against [[Thailand national football team|Thailand]] and [[Le ...tralia-2000.php Footballinternational.co.uk - Olympic Games Australia 2000 Asian Zone Qualifying] Retrieved 5 November 2011</ref> and as Urazbakhtin was on
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  • !colspan="2"|[[Asian Football Confederation|Asia]] |align=center| 1 || 16 July1992 || [[Almaty Central Stadium|Central Stadium]], [[Almaty]], [[Kazakhstan]] || {{fb|UZB}} || '''1'''–0 || 1–0
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  • ...national team]] manager from 1992-1993, he clinched the initiatory Central Asian Cup in 1992. [[Category:Living people]]
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  • {{MedalCompetition|[[Asian Games]]}} {{MedalSilver|[[2006 Asian Games|2006 Doha]]|55 kg}}
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  • {{MedalCompetition|Asian Games}} ...dalSilver|[[2010 Asian Games|2010 Guangzhou]]| [[Weightlifting at the 2010 Asian Games – Women's 53 kg|-53&nbsp;kg]]}}
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  • {{MedalCompetition|[[Asian Weightlifting Championships|Asian Championships]]}} {{MedalGold|[[2009 Asian Weightlifting Championships|2009 Taldykorgan]] | &ndash;94 kg}}
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  • | image = <!-- Only free-content images are allowed for depicting living people -- see [[WP:NONFREE]]. --> {{MedalCompetition|[[Asian Games]]}}
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  • ...rkic]] and Mongol origin: [[Kazakhs]], [[Bashkirs]], [[Kalmyks]], [[Kyrgyz people|Kyrgyz]], [[Mongol]]s, and [[Yakuts]].<ref name=" Zeder">{{cite book | aut ...oghurt]] or ''kumis', both of which are relatively easily digested even by people who produce little [[lactase]]."</ref>
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  • ...[[Tatars]], [[Kyrgyz people|Kyrgyz]], and other ethnic groups mainly of [[Central Asia]], particularly those of [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] origin. Kazy is a c [[Category:Central Asian cuisine]]
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  • ...y had difficulty moving.<ref>"National Dishes and Meals," Oriental Express Central Asia, accessed May 3, 2011, http://www.kazakhstan.orexca.com/kazakhstan_cul ...the summer, ''[[chal]]'' is one of the staple drinks of the Adai [[Kazakh people|Kazakhs]].<ref>Ishchenko et al., Osobennosti selskogo khoziaistva Adaevskog
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  • ...tional steamed pie made in [[Central Asia]], especially among the [[Kyrgyz people|Kyrgyz]] and the [[Kazakhs]]. The name comes from a [[nominalisation]] of t [[Category:Central Asian cuisine]]
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  • ...>) is a traditional [[Central Asia]]n [[noodle]] dish made by the [[Kyrgyz people|Kyrgyz]] and the [[Kazakhs]]. The word itself is a [[nominalisation]] of th * [[Lamian|Lagman]] - A similar Central Asia noodle dish, made by stretching the dough instead of cutting it, assoc
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  • ...rmented]] [[camel milk]], sparkling white with a sour flavor, popular in [[Central Asia]] — particularly in [[Kazakhstan]] and [[Turkmenistan]].<ref>{{cite [[Category:Central Asian cuisine]]
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  • | region = [[Indian Subcontinent]], [[Southeast Asia]], [[Central Asia]], [[Middle East]], [[Horn of Africa]], [[North Africa]], ...n the local cuisines of the [[Indian subcontinent]], [[Southeast Asia]], [[Central Asia]], [[Southwest Asia]], the [[Arabian Peninsula]], the [[Mediterranean]
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  • ...|first=Dru C.|last=Gladney|title=Muslim Chinese: Ethnic Nationalism in the People's Republic|year=1996|edition=2|pages=171–173 ===Central Asia===
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  • ...ion = [[Bashkir cuisine|Bashkortostan]], [[Central Asian cuisine|Central Asia]], [[Kurdish cuisine|Kurdistan]], [[Middle Eastern cuisine|Middle East ...urkish]], [[Mongolian cuisine|Mongolian]], [[Central Asian cuisine|Central Asian]], [[Caucasian cuisine|Transcaucasian]], and the [[Levantine cuisine|Levan
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  • | region = Central Asia ...ditional meat dish made in [[Central Asia]], especially among the [[Kyrgyz people|Kyrgyz]]. The name comes from a [[nominalisation]] of the word "roast", "fr
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  • ...me=autogenerated1>Gulnar Kendirbaeva, We Are Children Of Alash..., Central Asian Survey, 1991, 18(1) pg. 6)</ref> ...orms to the Kazakh lands as a first step in the gradual progress of Kazakh people towards autonomy and independence.
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  • * The [[Arabic script]] is officially used in [[People's Republic of China]] in the [[Altay Prefecture]] and the [[Ili Kazakh Auto ...[[United States|US]] and in other Western countries. As with other Central Asian [[Turkic languages]], a [[latinisation (USSR)|Latin alphabet was introduced
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  • ...ant of [[Abdulayev]].<ref name="Ganzhina" /> It is shared by the following people:
    2 KB (164 words) - 17:54, 26 April 2017
  • ...ant of [[Abdulayev]].<ref name="Ganzhina" /> It is shared by the following people:
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  • ...April 2015}} Russian,<ref name="Ganzhina">Ganzhina, p.&nbsp;10</ref> and [[Central Asia]]n surname.{{citation needed|date=April 2015}} Variants of this surnam ;People with the surname
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  • ...ant of [[Abdulayev]].<ref name="Ganzhina" /> It is shared by the following people:
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  • ...nguage|Azerbaijani]], [[Russians|Russian]], [[Tatar language|Tatar]] and [[Central Asia]]n [[surname]]. The spelling reflects the [[Cyrillic alphabets|Cyrill ...t does not help to add disambig or hndis tags where the page only contains people who share a surname -->
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  • ...own, [[Scouting]] was not introduced to the region during the [[History of Central Asia#Return of indigenous rule|khanate period of the pre-Soviet era]]. In 1990 a conference (or Congress) of people interested in Scouting was held in [[Moscow]]. [[Viktor Deimund]] (now the
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  • * Central Asian newspaper microforms up to 1860’s *About 6158 people
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  • ...of Kazakhstan as an [[army general]] in 1995. Nurmagambetov was named a [[People's Hero of Kazakhstan]] in 1994, becoming the first Kazakhstani to receive t ...[Kazakh SSR]] chief of staff, a deputy commanding officer of the [[Central Asian Military District]], and first deputy commander of the Soviet Union's [[Sou
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  • ...rder of the October Revolution]], [[Order of the Red Banner of Labour]], [[People's Hero of Kazakhstan]], [[Hero of Kazakhstan]] ...[[Soviet of the Union]] chamber. From 1966 to 1971 Chokin was a member of Central Committee of [[Communist Party of Kazakhstan]].
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  • ...ly [[paganism|Zoroastrian]] most of his life, sometimes remarking that his people "follow the [[Flag of Kazakhstan|hawk]]", the hawk and man on chariot or Fa ...edy. Most of those appearing in the film are not paid performers, but real people whom Borat met on his journey.<ref name=Salon>{{cite web|url=http://www.sal
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  • ...rt of Rollerball becomes hugely popular in [[Central Asia]], [[Russia]], [[People's Republic of China|China]], [[Mongolia]], and [[Turkey]]. ...ere was jeering in the theater," Knowles said. Knowles was also one of the people who read the original first draft of the script (one that McTiernan rejecte
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  • ...rica have brought to his village, including the apparent conversion of the people to [[Christianity]] (the Kazakh version of which includes [[crucifixion]] a * [[Pamela Anderson]] as herself; she plays a central role in the film as the reason for the journalist's cross country journey.
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  • |align=left|[[AFC Asian Cup|AFC Asian Cup Qualification]] | align=left|[[1996 AFC Asian Cup qualification|1996 AFC ACQ]]
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  • ...ndependence-day-ulak-tyrtysh/</ref> in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan) is the [[Central Asia]]n sport in which horse-mounted players attempt to place a [[goat]] or ...ayed by [[Afghan people|Afghan]] [[Turkish people|Turks]] (ethnic [[Kyrgyz people|Kyrgyz]]) who migrated to [[Ulupamir]] village in the [[Van, Turkey|Van]] d
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  • ...[Kazakhstan]], adopted on January 7, 2006.<ref>The CIA World Factbook 2012 Central Intelligence Agency - 2011 "National anthem: name: “Menin Qazaqstanim” My Kazakh people are strong!
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  • ...ation of the USSR, has launched a great deal of changes in every aspect of people's lives. Religiosity of the population, as an essential part of any cultura ...ore independence made their way into the country, appealing to hundreds of people. The government supported this activity, and has done its best to provide e
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  • The '''history of the Jews in Central Asia''' dates back centuries, where [[Jews]] <nowiki/>have lived in countri ...ad]], though none of them have ever been inhabited by a majority of Kyrgyz people nor included in a Kyrgyz territory.
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  • ...) - died 27 December 1941, [[Berlin]], [[The Third Reich]]) - was [[Kazakh people|Kazakh]] social and political activist, publicist, thinker, scholar, states In 1912 Mustafa’s father died and the local village people asked him to return home for a time at the request of fellow to replace the
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  • | name = Evangelical Lutheran Church in Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Central Asia The '''Evangelical Lutheran Church in Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Central Asia''' ({{lang-ru|Евангелическо-лютеранская цер
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  • ...nion|Soviet]] times, akyns played an important role in terms of expressing people's thoughts and feelings, exposing social vices, and glorifying heroes. *[http://vlib.iue.it/carrie/texts/carrie_books/paksoy-1/ Central Asian Identity Under Russian Rule]
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  • ...the greedy rich, evil [[Khan (title)|Khans]] and helping the poor and weak people.<ref>Қазақ әдебиеті. Энциклопедиялық анықт ...cite book|last=Abazov|first=Rafis|title=Culture and Customs of the Central Asian Republics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y3Sk7GeUe5oC&pg=PA124|year=
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  • ...88612</ref> Contemporary Kazakhs usually wear modern western clothing, but people are seen wearing traditional clothing for holidays and special occasions.<r ...&hl=en&sa=X&ei=fMnZUcDiEYLJywGV8oGADQ&ved=0CEIQ6AEwAjgo] Hanks, Reuel R., "Central Asia: a global studies handbook," ABC-CLIO, 2005, page 232. ISBN 978-18510
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  • ...centralasianfalconry.org/kyrgyz-falconers-use-falcons/|website=The Central Asian Falconry Project|accessdate=30 September 2014}}</ref> In 936-45 AD the [[Khitans]], a nomadic people from Manchuria, conquered part of north [[China]].<ref>The Art of War by Su
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  • ...}}), is the largest city in [[Kazakhstan]], with a population of 1,703,481 people, containing 9% of the country's total population. Almaty is considered a [[ In 1997 the capital was moved to [[Astana]] in the north-central part of the country. Since then Almaty has been referred to as the 'souther
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  • ...bes.kz/leader/50_bogateyshih_biznesmenov_kazahstana_-_2016 "The 50 richest people in Kazakhstan"]. Kenges is one of the founders of the global venture fund ...ttp://www.centralasiametals.com/company-information/significant-investors/ Central Asia Metals PLC] (LSE: CAML.L) mining company, holding 19,01% shares.
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  • ...vich]] and [[Alijan Ibragimov]], is part of the "Trio," a group of Central Asian businessmen who made their fortune through deals in minerals, oil, gas, and ...rbes.com/lists/2006/10/E0O5.html|title=Patokh Chodiev, The World's Richest People - Forbes.com|website=www.forbes.com|access-date=2017-03-27}}</ref> Based i
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  • ...on to the country's Prime-Minister (1997-1998). Then in 1998, at a time of Asian and Russian financial crisis, returned to the banking regulation activity i [[Category:Kazakhstani people]]
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  • ...urope, and even the eastern coast of America, as envisioned in the [[Trans-Asian Railway]] proposal, has not yet been fulfilled. Current rail transport betw * [[Rail transport in the People's Republic of China|China]] - [[break of gauge]] {{Track gauge|1520mm}}/{{T
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  • ...ervices, Air Astana has rapidly become a key provider for air transport to Central Asia and Far Eastern destinations from Ukraine and v.v. While many people are aware that Kazakhstan is located in the territory of the ex-USSR, it is
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  • ...has a strategic geographical location to control oil and gas flows from [[Central Asia]] to East ([[China]]) and West ([[Russia]], global market). On January 1, 2013, Kazakhstan became the first country in Central Asia to launch an economy-wide carbon [[Emissions trading|emissions system]
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  • ...-4ee5-b694-bcfb2772a5e9.html Five Years After 9/11: Crackdowns loom behind Central Asia's War On Terror] RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty</ref><ref name=RUSSIALIK ...ovement of Uzbekistan]], [[Hizb ut-Tahrir al-Islami]], [[Jamaat of Central Asian Mujahedins]], [[Islamic Party of Eastern Turkestan]], [[Kurdistan Workers P
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  • ...itle=Thinking Strategically: The major Powers, Kazakhstan, and the Central Asian Nexus|editor=Robert H. Legvold|publisher=The MIT Press|date=2003|isbn=02626 ...'s introduction, but in 2006, their count more than doubled; the number of people taking the introductory 4th-level examination nearly quadrupled. However, [
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  • *Central Asian University *[[University of Central Asia in Tekeli]]
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  • ...es of Russia, such as Lomonosov Moscow State University, the University of People’s Friendship, as well as academic, scientific and cultural exchange progr ...ns in commercial banks and been a director of Soros Foundation programs in Central and Eastern Europe.
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  • ...aryn, and Tekeli|the American university in Bishkek|American University of Central Asia}} |name = University of Central Asia
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  • ...the Almaty School of Management was highly appreciated by the [[People to People International]], which awarded the “Torch of Birmingham” for successful
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  • ...Unreliable People]]''.<ref>{{cite web|title=''Koryo-saram: The Unreliable People'' |url=http://www.koryosaram.net/ |year=2006 |accessdate=2006-11-20 |archiv ...96 he is the Chief-editor of the journal ''Newsletter of Korean Studies in Central Asia'' and is a member of the editorial board of the journals ''Acta Korean
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  • ...Press), won the 2006 [[PEN/Open Book|PEN/Open Book Award]], and the 2006 [[Asian American Literary Award]] (Members' Choice Award). ...st=Gioia|publisher=Longman|year=2012}}</ref> He studied Slavic and Central Asian Studies at the [[University of Minnesota]]; Kazakh State [[Al-Farabi Univer
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  • |awards = * «Asian Film Maker of the Year 2008 » [[Pusan International Film Festival]] In 2008 Gulnara Sarsenova has received the international Asian Film Maker of the Year award at [[Pusan International Film Festival]] and t
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  • ...zakhstan province. In 1926 he moved to [[Tashkent]] to work at the Central Asian State University in the department of Kazakh language and literature. [[Category:People from Ulan District]]
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  • ...=2015 |title=Explaining recent fertility increase in Central Asia |journal=Asian Population Studies |publisher=Routledge |url=http://www.tandfonline.com/doi ...Soviet deportees. In 1930, as part of the first Five Year Plan, the Kazakh Central Committee decreed the sedentarization of nomads and their incorporation int
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  • [[File:Kazakhstan European 2016 Rus.png|thumb|European people in Kazakhstan, 2016.]] ...Uzbeks]], [[German people|Germans]], [[Koryosaram|Koreans]], and [[Uyghur people|Uyghurs]].
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  • ...(Къарачайлыла, Qaraçaylıla) are a [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] people descended from the [[Kipchaks]], and share their language with the [[Kumyks
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  • |group=Chinese people in Kazakhstan ...]]; however, their descendants do not consider themselves to be "[[Chinese people]]".<ref>{{harvnb|Laruelle|Peyrouse|2009|p=104}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Parham|2
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  • [[Image:Prokudin-Gorskii Russians in Central Asia.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Russian settlers in Kazakhstan, 1911. [[Sergei M ...] created two administrative districts, the [[Governor-Generalship]]s in [[Central Asia]] of [[Russian Turkestan]] (the oasis region to the south of the Kazak
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  • ...the former [[Soviet Union]], primarily in the now-independent states of [[Central Asia]]. There are also large Korean communities in southern [[Russia]] (aro ...ver, the first Koreans in the Russian Empire, 761 families totalling 5,310 people, had actually migrated to Qing territory; the land they had settled on was
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  • ...}} <ref>{{cite web|url=https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/15696|title=People groups: Ukrainian|work=Joshua Project|date=|accessdate=15 March 2016}}</ref ...S_10_1YR_B04003&prodType=table|title=Total ancestry categories tallied for people with one or more ancestry categories reported: 2010 American Community Surv
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  • ...re sometimes still referred to by this name in Central Asian languages|Hui people}} |group = Dungan people 東干族
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  • '''Armenians in Central Asian states''': [[Uzbekistan]], [[Kazakhstan]], [[Kyrgyzstan]], [[Tajikistan]] a ...ding privileges.<ref>{{cite web|last=Zenian|first=David|title=Armenians in Central Asia|url=http://www.agbu.org/publications/article.asp?A_ID=52|accessdate=22
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  • ...[https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/uz.html#People CIA estimates] this share declined to 3% in 1996. Official Uzbekistan estim | related =[[Kyrgyz people|Kyrgyz]], [[Karakalpaks]], [[Nogais]], [[Turkic peoples]] and [[Naimans]] o
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  • ...n as [[Tartary]]. More recently, however, the term refers more narrowly to people who speak one of the [[Turkic languages|Turkic]]<ref name="global.britannic ...tive term for the [[Shiwei]], a nomadic confederation to which these Tatar people belonged.
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  • ...ut citizens of [[Uzbekistan]]|Demographics of Uzbekistan|a list of notable people from Uzbekistan|List of Uzbeks}} | image = File:Uzbek man from central Uzbekistan.jpg
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  • |related = [[Chinese people in Kazakhstan]] ...ng of [[Uyghurs]], [[Kazakhs]], [[Mongols in China|Mongols]], and [[Kyrgyz people|Kyrgyz]].<ref>{{harvnb|Parham|2004|p=39}}</ref> Following the [[Sino-Soviet
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  • ...term used by [[Kazakhstan|Kazakh]] authorities to describe ethnic [[Kazakh people|Kazakhs]] who have immigrated to Kazakhstan since its independence in 1991. ...th the Oralman people from the 2000s.<ref name="LSAR"/> Within the Oralman people, there are also internal differences among them, depending on where they ca
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  • ...rom Russia, or from the former Soviet Union. The latter word refers to all people holding citizenship of Russia, regardless of their ethnicity, and does not The name of the Russians derives from the [[Rus' people]] (supposedly [[Varangians]]). According to the most prevalent theory, the
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  • ...of Michigan Center for Chinese Studies |author2=Ohio State University East Asian Studies Center|publisher=Twentieth-Century China, New York|year=1997|page=1
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  • ...of Uyghur overseas activists to raise the public awareness of the [[Uyghur people]], such as in [[Xinjiang]], [[China]]. ...anistic, and diverse Uyghur culture and to support the right of the Uyghur people to use peaceful, democratic means to determine their territory's political
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  • ...r. The imperial powers of the time sponsored archaeological expeditions to Central Asia, including Britain, Russia, Germany, France and Japan.<ref>{{cite book ...first=A. F. R.|title=Three further collections of ancient manuscripts from Central Asia|journal=Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal|year=1887|volume=66|p
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  • [[File:China-Xinjiang.png|thumb|200px|Xinjiang's location in the [[People's Republic of China]]]] ...y the Manchu-led [[Qing dynasty]] in 1759. Xinjiang is now a part of the [[People's Republic of China]], having been so since its founding year of 1949.
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  • '''Kahar Barat''' ({{zh|卡哈尔·巴拉提}}; born 1950) is an [[Uyghur people|Uyghur]]-American historian, known for his work on Buddhism and Islam in [[ He earned his M.A. degree in [[Turkology]] from the Central University for Ethnic Minorities ([[Minzu University of China]]) in Beijing
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  • '''Ahmad Tourson''' or '''Ahmad Abdulahad''' is an [[Uyghur people|Uyghur]] refugee unlawfully detained for more than seven years in the [[Uni ...IMU is a coalition of Islamic militants from Uzbekistan and other Central Asian states opposed to Uzbekistani {{Sic}} President Islom Karimov's secular reg
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  • ...id tribute to the Ming. The Kumul Khanate under Sa'id Baba supported [[Hui people|Chinese Muslim]] Ming loyalists during the 1646 [[Manchu conquest of China# ...n Society, Central Asian Society, London|year=1934|publisher=Royal Central Asian Society.|location=|isbn=|page=82|pages=|accessdate=2010-06-28}}</ref>
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  • ...s the first chairman of the [[Xinjiang]] Uyghur Autonomous Region of the [[People's Republic of China]]. ...<ref name="McMillen"/> In September 1949, Saifuddin attended the [[Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference]] endorsed by the [[Communist Party of
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  • | nationality=[[Uighur people|Uighur]] ...ational%20revolution%20sabit&f=false|title=Warlords and Muslims in Chinese Central Asia: a political history of Republican Sinkiang 1911-1949|author=Andrew D.
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  • |subdivision_name = People's Republic of China |blank5_name = [[License plates of the People's Republic of China|License plate]] prefix
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  • |regions = [[Central Asia]] ...-7, p. 5401. {{Zh icon}}</ref> Indeed, Chinese sources linked the [[Donghu people|Hu]] on their northern borders to the Xiongnu just as Graeco-Roman historio
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  • ...拉|t=艾爾肯•阿布都拉|p=Àiěrkěn Ābùdùlā}}) is an [[Uyghur people|Uyhghur]] musician<ref name="arkenmusic">{{cite web |url=http://arkenmusic. ...to learn from, he would listen to a wide variety of music from around the Asian continent, and then learn to play the guitar by ear.<ref name="tosinghearti
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  • |region1={{flagcountry|People's Republic of China}}<br/> <small>([[Xinjiang|Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Re ...arily in the [[Xinjiang|Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region]] in [[China|the People's Republic of China]], where they are one of 55 [[Ethnic minorities in Chin
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  • {{Infobox East Asian ...d his family were [[Deportation of Koreans in the Soviet Union|deported to Central Asia]] along with all other [[Koryo-saram|ethnic Koreans in the Russian Far
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  • ...airman of the [[Central Military Commission of the Workers' Party of Korea|Central Military Commission]] of the [[Workers' Party of Korea]] ...ice7 = Deputy to the<br> 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th [[Supreme People's Assembly]]
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  • ...ind himself arrested on the spot for breaking the law confining Koreans to Central Asia. He then returned to the Institute in Kzyl-Orda and worked there until ...e="Activity"/> Cho wrote lyrics for "Mungyong Pass", a song about [[Korean People's Army]] soldiers fighting their way through [[Kyonggi]] to [[Ryongnam]].<r
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  • ...[genealogy|genealogical]] legends as a source on early history of [[Turkic people]]" published a number of new discoveries about socio-political history of T ...t". The mass of Zuev's work included analysis of the [[Kazakhstan]] and [[Central Asia]]n political history from the 3rd century BC to the 3rd century AD, hi
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  • |motto = "Sustainable socioeconomic development for the people of the region" ...edominantly Muslim-majority states as it is a trading bloc for the Central Asian states connected to the Mediterranean through Turkey, to the Persian Gulf v
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  • ...ref> The EAEU introduces the free movement of goods, capital, services and people and provides for common policies in macroeconomic sphere, transport, indust ...War]] and the [[Dissolution of the Soviet Union]], Russia and the Central Asian republics were weakened economically and faced declines in [[GDP]]. [[Post-
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  • ...s in the air, environmental imbalance and negative health implications for people living in areas adjoining the [[Semipalatinsk Test Site|SNTP]] site. ...n area: Azgir nuclear testing site, a state test-flight center and a state central testing ground, the last two belong to the Russian complex [[Kapustin Yar]]
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  • ...ween [[China]] and [[Central Asia]].<ref>''Cambridge History of China: The People's Republic, Part 2 : Revolutions Within the Chinese Revolution, 1966–1982 ...and not in the Urals or Tibet." Ildikó Lehtinen, ''Traces of the Central Asian culture in the North: Finnish-Soviet Joint Scientific Symposium held in Han
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  • ...ist">[http://www.peaklist.org/WWlists/ultras/StansP1500m.html "The Central Asian Republics: Ultra-Prominence Page"]. Peaklist.org. Retrieved 2014-05-26.</re | location = [[People's Republic of China|China]]–[[Kazakhstan]] border
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  • |region = Central Asia ...шская автономия ''Alashskaya avtonomiya''}}) was a [[Kazakh people|Kazakh]] [[Sovereign state|state]] that existed between December 13, 1917 a
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  • ...State of Environment of the Aral Sea Basin. Regional report of the Central Asian States. (2000) {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/2008042404543 ..., the most recent level drop since the 1960s<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.people-travels.com/trip-to-aral-sea.html|title=Aral Sea Tours from 450 USD: your T
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  • ...Kazakhstan is more than twice the combined size of the other four Central Asian states, or about twice the size of [[Alaska]]. The country borders [[Turkme [[Image:Astana-steppe-7748.jpg|thumb|left|In the [[steppe]]s of Central Asia ([[Aqmola Province]])]]
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  • ...from top:''' Astana Downtown skyline and [[Bayterek Tower]], [[Kazakhstan Central Concert Hall]], [[Khazret Sultan Mosque]], [[L.N.Gumilyov Eurasian National ...its existence, the population of Akmola numbered a trifle more than 2,000 people. However, over the next 30 years the city's population increased by three t
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  • ...language|Cyrillic Dungan]]: Магәзы Масанчын) was a [[Dungan people|Dungan]] Communist revolutionary commander and Statesman in the [[Soviet Un ...). Soviet Affairs Study Group|year=1968|publisher=Published by the Central Asian Research Centre in association with the Soviet Affairs Study Group, St. Ant
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  • ...ative center of [[Aktobe Region]]. In 2013, it had a population of 371,546 people. {{citation needed|date=April 2013}} ...ory of modern-day Aktobe Region has seen the rise and fall of many Central Asian cultures and empires. The region figured prominently in the history of the
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  • ...ort-Perovsky''' (Russian: Форт-Перовский), is a city in south central [[Kazakhstan]], capital of [[Kyzylorda Region]] and former capital of the [ ...The city had its beginnings in 1820<Ref>Valikhanof et al, The Russians in Central Asia, 1865, page 315, says " according to Kirgiz accounts, about the year 1
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  • The population of between five and ten thousand people<ref name="Collins"/> are predominantly Muslim Kazakhs. ...1930, was located near modern day Yegindybulak on the caravan route from [[Central Asia]] to [[Siberia]].<ref name="CAR"/>
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  • ...(1985). ''Journey to the West in the Great Tang Dynasty''. Xi'an: Shaanxi People's Press. p. 27</ref> The [[Talas alphabet]], a variant of the Turkic "runif ...uded Taraz. The [[Sogdiana|Sogdian]] merchants, who controlled the Central Asian section of the caravan route, were interested in easier access to [[Byzanti
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  • ...zakhstan]]. The [[administrative center]] of the district is the [[Village#Central and Eastern Europe|selo]] of [[Aksuat]]. Population: {{Kz-population2013|44 ...HB Paksoy, "Z.V. Togan: The Origins of the Kazaks and the Ozbeks," Central Asian Survey 11 (3), 1992]
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  • ...of Kazakh traditional medicine in post-Soviet Kazakhstan |journal=Central Asian Survey |volume=32 |pages=37 |year=2013 |last1=Penkala-Gawęcka |first1=Danu She is said to have restored health to tens of thousands of people between 1991 and 2005. Her commune came to be known as a holy land, and att
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  • [[Archaeology]] in Central Asia was active following its conquest by the [[Russian Empire]], but remai ...place of shallow water.'<ref>Devin DeWeese, "Sacred History for a Central Asian Town: Saints, Shrines, and Legends of Origin in Histories of Sayrām, 18th-
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  • ...}}</ref> Shortly afterwards, Onoprienko was admitted to the United Central Asian Red Banner Military School, from which he graduated in 1934. In May, he bec ...der of the Red Banner for his leadership at Kursk.<ref>Order No. 80 of the Central Front, 13 Jul 1943, available online at [https://pamyat-naroda.ru/heroes/po
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  • One story relates how Kornilov was originally born as a Don Cossack [[Kalmyk people|Kalmyk]] named Lorya Dildinov and adopted in [[Ust-Kamenogorsk]], [[Russian ...Though their language was not a Kalmyk/Mongolian one, but because of their Asian race and their history in the Jungar Oirot (Kalmyk) state, Altai Oirots wer
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  • ...east as necessary to ensure the survival of European culture against this "Asian menace".<ref name="hitler3"/><ref name="himmler">[http://germanhistorydocs. ...German Foreign Minister [[Ribbentrop]] stated that the Germans expected [[Asian Russia]] to eventually split up into several harmless "peasant republics" a
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  • |region = [[North Asia|North]], [[Central Asia|Central]], and [[West Asia]], and [[Eastern Europe]] ...' ({{IPAc-en|æ|l|ˈ|t|eɪ|.|ᵻ|k}}) is a proposed [[language family]] of central Eurasia and Siberia, now widely seen as discredited.<ref>"While 'Altaic' is
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  • |11=[[Dzungar people|Zunghar]] ...languages|Turkic speaking]] [[Muslim]] farmers, now known as the [[Uyghur people]].
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  • ...f the Irtysh's (and possibly Ob's) water to the water-deficient regions of central Kazakhstan and [[Uzbekistan]]. Some versions of this project would have see A number of [[Mongols|Mongol]] and [[Turkic people|Turkic]] peoples occupied the river banks for many centuries. In 657, [[Tan
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  • ...rts/Visual-arts">{{cite web |url=https://global.britannica.com/art/Central-Asian-arts/Visual-arts |title=Altaic Tribes|last1= |first1= |last2= |first2= |dat ...checked/topic/102325/Central-Asian-arts/13969/Altaic-tribes |title=Central Asian Arts: Altaic tribes |last1= |first1= |last2= |first2= |date= |website=[[Enc
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  • ...the industrially developed city of [[Ekibastuz]], on the outskirts of the Central Kazakh Uplands. It is included on the [[list of protected areas of Kazakhst The Bayanaul mountains are situated at the center of the Asian mainland and therefore have a [[continental climate]]. The average annual t
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  • ...[[Arctic Ocean]], southwards towards the populated agricultural areas of [[Central Asia]], which lack water.<ref name=time75/><ref name=time82/> ...uk and another engineer, G. Russo, about the river rerouting plan to the [[Central Committee of the CPSU]].<ref name=weiner/> Despite the ousting of Khrushche
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  • ...nd [[List of lakes by area|15th largest in the world]]. It is located in [[Central Asia]] in southeastern [[Kazakhstan]] and belongs to an [[endorheic]] (clos ...Yoshiko Kawabata|year=1997|title=The phytoplankton of some saline lakes in Central Asia|journal=International Journal of Salt Lake Research|volume=6|issue=1|p
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  • ...east of the [[Caucasus Mountains]] and to the west of the vast steppe of [[Central Asia]]. The sea bed in the southern part reaches as low as 1023 m below sea ...ord Caspian is derived from the name of the [[Caspians|Caspi]], an ancient people who lived to the southwest of the sea in [[Transcaucasia]].<ref>[http://www
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  • |location = [[Kazakhstan]] - [[Uzbekistan]],<br>[[Central Asia]] ...e=DRAINAGE BASIN OF THE ARAL SEA AND OTHER TRANSBOUNDARY SURFACE WATERS IN CENTRAL ASIA|website=United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE)|date= 20
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  • ...mographic change: imperial legacy and the Kazakh way of nation building" ''Asian Ethnicity'' 5(1): pp. 61–79, p. 65</ref> In March 1954, Shayakhmetov was [[Category:People from Sherbakulsky District]]
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  • ...[Junior Juz]]. In a middle of 19th century population grew to 200 thousand people.<ref>[http://lib.kaznu.kz/Books/bk051/Pages/33.gif Зиманов С.З. Р ...as of Central Asia'' Handbook of Oriental Studies: Part 8 Uralic & Central Asian Studies. (Leiden: Brill) 2003, p.62</ref>
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  • [[Image:Kyrgyz Manaschi, Karakol.jpg|thumb|A [[Kyrgyz people|Kyrgyz]] [[Manaschi]] wears a white kalpaks for the special occasion]] ...or sheepskin) worn by men in [[Turkey]], the [[Balkans]] and throughout [[Central Asia]] and the [[Caucasus]].
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  • ...ject the New Eurasian Land Bridge now theoretically connects to Europe via Central and [[South Asia]]. ...posed further expansion of the Eurasian Land Bridge, including the [[Trans-Asian Railway]] project.
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  • ...were for centuries central to cultural interaction through regions of the Asian continent connecting the [[Eastern world|East]] and [[Western culture|West] ...uring the [[Han dynasty]] (207 BCE – 220 CE). The Han dynasty expanded [[Central Asia]]n sections of the trade routes around 114 BCE, largely through missio
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  • ...insk from 1949 until 1989 with little regard for their effect on the local people or environment. The full impact of radiation exposure was hidden for many y ...]]. It was led by author [[Olzhas Suleimenov]] and attracted thousands of people to its protests and campaigns which eventually led to the closure of the [[
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  • |citizenship=[[Soviet people|Soviet]] ...ry]] of the [[Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union|Central Committee]] of the [[Communist Party of the Soviet Union]]
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  • ...he anthropological development from the ancient to the modern times in the Central Asia. ...of Kazakhstan local ancient populations and newcoming ethnic groups from [[Central Asia]]. Ismagulov is a frequent lecturer about [[anthropology]] in [[Delhi]
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  • ...on and reproductive health programs in several countries in [[Central asia|Central Asia]], [[Egypt]], and India.<ref name="rchiips">[http://www.rchiips.org/nf ...SAID|US Agency for International Development (USAID)]] Regional Office for Central Asia. He provided technical advice and helped to develop and implement infe
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  • ...] through to the [[Indian Subcontinent]], from [[Sri Lanka]], [[Nepal]] to central [[India]].<ref name= Arkive/> The pelicans who breed in [[Mongolia]] winter ...dalmatianpelican.pdf |title=Conservation of the critically endangered east Asian population of Dalmatian Pelican Pelecanus crispus in western Mongolia |jour
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  • ...one]], which increased air humidity, and the intensification of the [[East Asian monsoon]], respectively. Both weather patterns emerged due to greater verti ...]'', which is native to northern China ([[Amur River]]), was introduced to central Asia ([[Kazakhstan]], [[Turkmenistan]], [[Uzbekistan]]). It was introduced
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  • ...bekistan]] and occasionally [[Turkmenistan]] in winter. It is extinct in [[People's Republic of China]] and southwestern Mongolia. It was hunted extensively ...small>(Linnaeus, 1766)</small>: Also known as the Russian saiga. Occurs in central Asia.
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  • ...on levels and restore the population status of these nomads of the Central Asian steppes. ...onsumer and range States and provide a platform for discussion between the Asian traditional medicine industry and those managing conservation activities fo
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  • ...āb'' in [[Persian language|Persian]]) is a historical name of a part of [[Central Asia]], corresponding to the South-Eastern part of modern [[Kazakhstan]]. I ...the mid 6th century, the Turkic nomads subordinated Zhetysu (Semirechie), Central Kazakhstan, and [[Khorezm]].<ref>[http://www.scientificfund.kz/index.php%3F
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  • ...hographic projection).svg|thumb|300px|Middle Asia|alt=Middle Asia is not a Central Asia]] [[File:Central Asia borders4.png|thumb|250px|Map of '''Central Asia''' showing three sets of possible [[Eurasia]]n boundaries for the regi
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  • ...and [[Lev Tolstoi]]. He was the first American diplomat to visit Russian [[Central Asia]], and as American [[Consul General]] in [[Constantinople]] he played In the spring of 1868 he made his first trip to the edge of Central Asia, traveling with a Russian merchant, [[Vasilii Alekseich]], by steamboa
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  • |region = Central Asia ...ck March [https://books.google.com/books?id=Nq18znjAE5YC&pg=PA139]</ref> [[Central Asia]], and Western Siberia ([[Bashkortostan]]) during the Kazakh Khanate.<
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  • ...egindybulak|Egindybulak]], near a large freshwater lake.<ref name="Central Asian review" /> ...n people from [[Kazakhstan]], [[Siberia]], the [[Ural Mountains|Urals]], [[Central Asia]] and [[western China]] were visiting the fair.
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  • |partof=the [[Mongol invasion of Central Asia]] |place=[[Central Asia]], [[Iran]], [[Afghanistan]]
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  • ...', meaning '''Oguz Land''', '''Oguz Country''', 750–1055) was a [[Turkic people|Turkic]] state, founded by [[Oghuz Turks|Oguz Turks]] in 766, located geogr ...e ethnic name. The original Oguz areas were the south-eastern regions of [[Central Asia]]. The beginning of the early Oguz group formation is linked to the We
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  • ...|300px|alt=World map, with Kazakhstan in green|Location of Kazakhstan in [[Central Asia]]]] ...''[[Homo sapiens]]'' appeared from 40,000 to 12,000 years ago in southern, central, and eastern Kazakhstan. After the end of the [[last glacial period]] (12,5
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  • ...ndo-European]] semi-[[Eurasian nomads|nomadic]] [[Eurasian Steppe|steppe]] people mentioned in [[China|Chinese]] records from the 2nd century BC to the 5th c ...estigations). In: 烏孫研究 (Wusun research), 1, 新疆人民出版社 (People's publisher Xinjiang), Ürümqi 1983, S. pp. 1–42.</ref>
    47 KB (6,641 words) - 22:29, 27 April 2017
  • ...v. Islamic History to 1941]</ref> The Sajids originated from the [[Central Asian]] province of [[Ushrusana]] and were of Iranian ([[Sogdians]])<ref>Clifford ...BRILL, 1992, ISBN 90-04-09367-2, ISBN 978-90-04-09367-6, pg. 27.</ref> in Central Asia and [[Greater Khorasan]], named after its founder [[Saman Khuda]] who
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  • |place=Central Asia ...sions. The Tang troops were reinforced by cavalry supplied by the [[Uyghur people|Uyghurs]], a tribe that had been allied with the Tang since their support f
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  • |region = Central Asia ...= [[Sinicization|Sinicized]] [[Khitan people|Khitan]] empire<br />in [[Central Asia]]
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  • ...akastan]]. Not to be confused with the [[Sakha]], the endonym of the Yakut people of Siberia. For other uses, see [[Saka (disambiguation)]].}} ...|pages=29–31}}</ref> They migrated into [[Sogdiana]] and [[Bactria]] in Central Asia and then to the northwest of the Indian subcontinent where they were k
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  • ...Ossetia]], [[Abkhazia]]), [[Egypt]], large parts of [[Turkey]], much of [[Central Asia]] ([[Afghanistan]], [[Turkmenistan]], [[Uzbekistan]], [[Tajikistan]]), ...e formation of both [[Medieval art|European]] and [[History of Eastern art|Asian]] medieval art.<ref name="Iransaga: The art of Sassanians">{{cite web|url=h
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  • ...a '''List of wars and conflicts involving [[Kazakhstan]] and the [[Kazakh people]]'''. ....com |date= |accessdate=2016-02-02}}</ref><ref>A History of the Moghuls of Central Asi: The Tarikh-i-Rashidi
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  • |conflict = Russian conquest of Central Asia |place = [[Central Asia]]
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  • ...emi-nomadic [[Khanate]] in the area extending from [[Eastern Europe]] to [[Central Asia]]. The hypothesis draws on some [[Middle Ages|medieval]] sources such ...Others: Creating Ethnographic Knowledge in Imperial Russia and the USSR,'' Central European University Press, 2014 pp.369-393 p.399, citing [[Karl Friedrich N
    84 KB (11,940 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • The Khagans were supreme chiefs of the people, holding positions of much influence and spiritual authority, but with litt ...spurious historical documents on several occasions. The historicity of the people that it refers to is therefore questionable, so until additional documentat
    11 KB (1,560 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...ef>{{harvnb|Petrukhin|2007|p=255}}</ref>) were a semi-[[nomad]]ic [[Turkic people]], who created what for its duration was the most powerful [[polity]] to em ...]], ''Gazari'', presumably Khazars, are referred to as the [[Huns|Hunnic]] people living in the lands of [[Gog and Magog]] and said to be circumcised and ''o
    176 KB (25,696 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...]], a group of semi-[[nomadic]] [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] originating from Central Asia. There are few written records of the language, and it is regarded as ...lden|2011|p=151}} According to anthropological data, it was ruled by Inner Asian Mongoloid (with some Europoid somatic elements) core tribes that accompanie
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  • ...for a four-year term, 98 seats are from party lists, 9 - from Assembly of People. All MPs are elected for 5 years.<ref>[http://www.parlam.kz/ Parliament of ...sed by the government. Several deputies are elected from the [[Assembly of People of Kazakhstan]].
    10 KB (1,344 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...he Constitutional Council; appoint two members for a five-year term to the Central Election Commission and three members of the Accounts Committee for control ...om the moment of his/her registration as a member of the Parliament by the Central Election Commission of the Republic.
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  • ...ter, Idrissov has sought to improve relations with states in the South and Central Asia region. During a March 2013 visit to Tajikistan, Idrissov met with Pre ...jects aimed at developing the transport, logistics and energy potential of Central Asia, as well as improving border infrastructure and strengthening regional
    16 KB (2,094 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...inistry was positive about Kazakhstan's prospects of becoming the second [[Central Asia]]n state with membership in the WTO.<ref name=WTO>[http://www.rferl.or [[Category:Living people]]
    12 KB (1,532 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • ...d=132061</ref> Kazakhstan has called for “intra-regional integration in Central Asia” and international integration of the region.<ref name=TW1>{{cite we ...ime/FactSheet/2004/Kazakhstan.pdf Kazakhstan Narcotics Factsheet 2004] The Central Asia-Caucasus Institute & Silk Road Studies Program</ref>
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  • ...ipal Deputy Assistant Secretary in State’s [[Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs]], 2013-2015. <ref name="State Department Bio of Hoagland">[http: ...ernments work together to increase their collaboration and transparency in Central Asia and the Caucasus. In July 2002, this consultative group became part of
    9 KB (1,260 words) - 22:37, 27 April 2017
  • ....archive.org/web/20110712083721/http://history.state.gov/departmenthistory/people/principalofficers/career-ambassador| archivedate= 12 July 2011 <!--DASHBot- ==Terrorism in Central Asia==
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  • ...s include Deputy Assistant Secretary for the [[Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs]], Director of the Office of Russian Affairs (1997–1999) and Spe [[Category:Living people]]
    4 KB (557 words) - 22:37, 27 April 2017
  • ...her=}}</ref> The largest of such exercises was held in Southern Russia and central Asia in 2011, consisting of more than 10,000 troops and 70 combat aircraft. ...s-its-membership-in-csto/|accessdate=29 June 2012|newspaper=The Gazette of Central Asia|date=29 June 2012}}</ref>
    23 KB (3,058 words) - 22:37, 27 April 2017

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