Results 51 to 60 of about 412 (95)

ETHNOGRAPHISMS IN THE LEXICON OF UZBEK DIALECTS IN REPUBLIC OF KARAKALPAKSTAN [PDF]

open access: yes, 2021
This article deals with the ethnography of words in the lexicon of the population of Karakalpakstan formed in ethnolinguistic conditions. In particular, in the ethnolinguistic context of the language of the peoples of the Aral Sea, the main source of ...
Erkin ogli, Nurjanov Oybek
core   +1 more source

Lithuanian Metrics as a Source on the History of the Turkic States of Eastern Europe » [PDF]

open access: yesЗолотоордынское обозрение, 2015
Lithuanian Metrica contains a lot of information on the Turkic khanates of Eastern Europe of the 15th–16th centuries. It consists mainly of documents related to foreign relations of the Polish-Lithuanian State and covers its contacts primarily with the ...
V.V. Trepavlov
doaj  

Specific Character of Modern Interethnic Relations in Krasnoyarsk Territory as Per Associative Experiment [PDF]

open access: yes, 2011
Ethnocultural space of Krasnoyarsk territory is an urgent subject for research nowadays. According to the criteria of conflict, ethnology and sociology theory Krasnoyarsk territory has been both a centre of strained interethnic relations and a specific ...
Kivkutsan, Galina V   +1 more
core  

The Tatar Literature of the Late Middle Ages » [PDF]

open access: yesЗолотоордынское обозрение, 2015
The Tatar verbal art of the 15th–18th centuries developed over more than three centuries and reflected, reflects very complicated, contradictory, and tragic periods in the history of the Tatar people. This is a time of the Golden Horde disintegration and
Kh.Yu. Minnegulov
doaj  

Europe: So Many Languages, So Many Cultures [PDF]

open access: yes, 2011
The number of different languages in Europe by far exceeds the number of countries. All European countries have national languages, and in nearly all of them there are minority languages as well, whereas all major languages have dialects.
Steinhauer, H. (Hein)
core   +3 more sources

Young People’s Perspectives on How ‘Zhuz’ and ‘Ru’ Clans Affect Them: Evidence from Three Cities in Post-Soviet Qazaqstan [PDF]

open access: yes, 2019
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, elites seeking political power in the newly independent Qazaqstan fostered the use of clan affiliations, such as ‘Zhuz’ and ‘Ru’, in order to develop a Qazaq identity. However, this change resulted in clan politics
Sairambay, Yerkebulan
core   +3 more sources

Revitalising the musical past of the Nogai through song: a contemporary interpretation of the Epic of Edige through Nine Rhapsodies [PDF]

open access: yes
The Nogai people are an indigenous Muslim Turkic-speaking ethnic group in Russia, descended from the nomadic horsemen of Central Asia, with a culture that boasts a proud and resilient history. The Nogais – ‘moribund tribelets’ (Shelemay, 1990, p.
Yakubov, D
core   +1 more source

Imagining Crimean Tatar History since 2014: Indigenous Rights, Russian Recolonisation and the New Ukrainian Narrative of Cooperation [PDF]

open access: yes, 2021
This article examines competing Crimean Tatar, Russian and Ukrainian views of Crimean Tatar history as they have developed since the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014, via an examination of popular history and publistika. Crimean Tatar writing insists
Wilson, Andrew
core  

Echoes of the Conflict between Tokhta and Nogai in the Christian World.

open access: yesЗолотоордынское обозрение, 2017
Research objectives: The article is dedicated to the analysis of the echoes and reflections of the war (1297–1300) between khan Tokhta and his older cousin Nogai in the Christian West. Besides providing the general overview of the conflict, its political
Aleksandar Uzelac
doaj   +1 more source

THE PHENOMENON OF THE HISTORICAL-GEOGRAPHICAL CONTINUITY OF NOMADIC EMPIRES IN EURASIAN STEPPES [PDF]

open access: yes, 2011
The article summarizes large volume of historical and geographical data on the influence of nomadic peoples on the landscapes of northern Eurasian steppe during the pre-agricultural phase, i.e. prior to the 18–19th centuries.
Alexander Chibilev   +2 more
core   +2 more sources

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