Results 181 to 190 of about 11,001 (225)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Motives Common to Turkic People in Kazakh Toponymic Legends
Milli Folklor, 2023Toponymic legends, a subcategory of the legend genre in field of folklore, are valuable cultural heritage that reflect the cultural and historical significance of a place and are associated with the beliefs and stories of local people. Toponymic legends are stories hidden in the depths of place names.
Gabit TUYAKBAYEV +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
THE DIDACTIC ESSENCE OF TURKIC PEOPLES’ POETRY
Bulletin of the Eurasian Humanities Institute, Philology Series, 2022The article considers didactic motives in the works of the great thinkers of Turkic folk literature N.Ganzhaui, A. Navoi, A. Kunanbayuly. The problems of teaching poets, comprehensive education and development of intelligence, instilling moral qualities are compared and analyzed.
openaire +1 more source
Shamanism among the Turkic Peoples of Siberia
Soviet Anthropology and Archeology, 1989Shamans of the Turkic peoples of Siberia performed rituals associated with many aspects of human life and activity. Analysis of the materials shows that the most important rituals were conducted in the form of seances [kamlanie], which usually followed a general pattern.
openaire +1 more source
CLASSIFICATION OF CUSTOMS OF TURKIC PEOPLES IN CHINESE SOURCES
CURRENT RESEARCH JOURNAL OF HISTORY, 2022This article is devoted to the customs of the Turkic peoples and includes “Shiji” [《史记》], “Han shu” [《汉书》] Hou Han shu [《后汉书》] “Tan shu” [唐书] “Jutanshu”《旧唐书》 focuses on some aspects of the traditions of the Turkic peoples. These include tribal names, exact locations, daily lifestyles, and occupations. The article also provides information on the basics
openaire +1 more source
Dermatoglyphics of Turkic Peoples of the U.S.S.R.
1990The Turks constitute one of the largest language families of the world. The Turkic branch of the Altaic family totals approximately 105 million people of which 43.5 million (41 percent) are in the USSR (Brook 1986). The Turkic peoples inhabit vast regions of the world — from the Balkans to the Sea of Okhotsk and from the Volga-Kama river basin and the ...
openaire +1 more source
Stone People, Tree People and Animal People in Turkic Asia and Eastern Europe
Diogenes, 2005In the 17th century the Ottoman traveller Evliya Çelebi, who was visiting the Turkmen nomads from the Karakoyunlu tribe in the north-west of Iran, was extremely surprised by one of the key elements of the faith of the people, who were nonetheless Muslim: worshipping trees, beside which they lit candles and to whose bark they attached pieces of iron ...
openaire +1 more source
NEVRUZ FESTİVAL İN TURKİC PEOPLES AND TURKEY
«Вестник Атырауского университета имени Халела Досмухамедова»Although mythology, that is, shorthand for unknown times, unusually conveys everyday life with the help of symbols, it cyclically tells about the creation of the world and the apocalypse. The mythology of the steppe peoples also transmits their early times from generation to generation in the form of oral culture.
openaire +1 more source
Some Passages on Turkic Peoples in Zoroastrian Pahlavi Literature
Journal of Persianate Studies, 2013Abstract Following on similar contributions focusing on geographical chapters and subjects in Pahlavi literature, in this article the author briefly presents the main evidence on the presence of Turkic people and on place names relative to the vast area of Turkestân, as found in Middle Persian Zoroastrian texts.
openaire +1 more source
ANTHROPONOMY OF TURKIC PEOPLES OF RUSSIA
2017This article discusses anthroponomy of Turkic peoples of Russian Federation. Within the topic of the article they have such questions as national names, motivation and semantics of personal names, traditions of assigning personal names.
openaire +1 more source

