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From Kazakhstan Encyclopedia

  • |langs = [[Altay language|Altay]] ...[[Telengit]], [[Mountain Kalmuck]], [[White Kalmuck]], [[Qarai Turks|Black Tatar]], Oirot.
    7 KB (1,079 words) - 20:51, 27 April 2017
  • ...ртиш; {{lang-tt|Иртеш|İrteş|ﻴﺋرتئش}}, [[Siberian Tatar language|Siber:]] Эйәртеш/Eyärtesh) is a [[river]] in [[Russia]], [[China]], ...d 16th centuries the lower and middle courses of the Irtysh lay within the Tatar [[Khanate of Sibir]]; its capital, [[Qashliq]] (also known as [[Qashliq|Sib
    16 KB (2,330 words) - 20:51, 27 April 2017
  • ...[[Tatar language|Tatar]], [[Kazakh language|Kazakh]] and [[Southern Altai language]]s which means "tussocks in a swamp".<ref>[http://www.slovopedia.com/22/193 ...ges|Turkic]] as ''Jetisu'' "Seven Rivers" (''[[Semirechye]]'' in [[Russian language|Russian]]). It was a land where the nomadic [[Turkic peoples|Turks]] and [[
    36 KB (5,232 words) - 20:53, 27 April 2017
  • |align=left|{{Flagicon image|Flag of Tatar ASSR.svg}} [[Tatar Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic|Tatarstan]]||1,708,193||style="backgro ....riigikogu.ee/index.php?id=34582 |title=Chronology |date=6 September 2012 |language= }}</ref> Latvia also held an official referendum on 3 March 1991, when the
    27 KB (3,234 words) - 21:01, 27 April 2017
  • ...group]]s in a 2003 census were: Kazakh 43.6%, Russian 40.2%, Uyghur 5.7%, Tatar 2.1%, Korean 1.8%, Ukrainian 1.7%, German 0.7%. ...ontends that Kalmyk-Oirat is related to Khalkha Mongolian – the national language of Mongolia. The descent of the [[Kyrgyz people|Kyrgyz]] from the [[autocht
    47 KB (6,893 words) - 22:29, 27 April 2017
  • ...|accessdate=2013-03-07 }}.</ref> The same year Schuyler studied [[Finnish language|Finnish]], and edited the first American translation of the Finnish nationa ...it, by orders of the Mutessarif, the [[Kaymakam|Kaimakam]] of [[Pazardzhik|Tatar Bazardjik]] was sent to Batak, with some lime to aid in the decomposition o
    32 KB (4,536 words) - 22:29, 27 April 2017
  • |common_languages = [[Kazakh language]] ...and the [[Kazakhs|Kazakh]]s, like the [[Kyrgyz people|Kirghiz]] and the [[Tatar]]s, had almost entirely converted to [[Islam]] under the authority of [[Emi
    28 KB (4,170 words) - 22:29, 27 April 2017
  • |common_languages = [[Old Turkic language|Old Turkic]] ...on was Kangar.<ref>P.Golubovsky, ''Pechenegs, Torks, and Polovetses before Tatar invasion'', SPb, 1884. p.55, in L.Gumilev, ''Ancient Türks'', [http://gumi
    8 KB (1,137 words) - 22:29, 27 April 2017
  • ...stward into Europe, and [[language shift|exchanged]] their native [[Khazar language]] for [[Yiddish]] while continuing to practice [[Judaism]]. Though intermit ...rity of "Russian, Polish and [[Galician Jews]] descend from the Khazars, a Tatar people from the south of Russia who converted to Judaism in mass at the tim
    84 KB (11,940 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017
  • |common_languages = [[Khazar language|Khazar]] ...a matter of intricate difficulty since no indigenous records in the Khazar language survive, and the state itself was [[polyglot]] and [[Polyethnicity|polyethn
    176 KB (25,696 words) - 22:30, 27 April 2017

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