enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Laz people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laz_people

    The Laz people, or Lazi (Laz: ლაზი Lazi; Georgian: ლაზი, lazi; or ჭანი, ch'ani; Turkish: Laz), are a Kartvelian ethnic group native to the South Caucasus, who mainly live in Black Sea coastal regions of Turkey and Georgia.

  3. Karachays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karachays

    According to Balkar historian, ethnographer and archaeologist Ismail Miziev who was a specialist in the field of North Caucasian studies, the theories on the origins of the Karachays and the neighboring Balkars is among "one of the most difficult problems in Caucasian studies," [6] due to the fact that they are "a Turk-speaking people occupying the most Alpine regions of Central Caucasus ...

  4. Dagestani Azerbaijanis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dagestani_Azerbaijanis

    Archival materials indicate that these people came from the opposite side of the Sulak River, as well as from Quba, Shamakhi, Lankaran, and other parts of the South Caucasus. [59] However, some 19th-century authors provide entirely different information. [ 59 ]

  5. Turkic Christians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkic_Christians

    Caucasus Greeks also often maintained some command of Turkish as more or less a third language, thanks to their own roots in north-eastern Anatolia, where they had after all lived (usually very uneasily and in a state of intermittent warfare) alongside Turkish-speaking Muslims since the Seljuk-backed Turkish migrations into 'the lands of Rum ...

  6. Kumyks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kumyks

    Kumyk is the "international" language of almost the entire North Caucasus (from the Caspian Sea to Kabarda inclusive), Azerbaijani dominates in most of the Transcaucasia (except the Black Sea coast) and, in addition, in Turkish Armenia, Kurdistan and Northern Persia. Both of these languages are Turkic.

  7. Turkic peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkic_peoples

    In the modern Turkish language as used in the Republic of Turkey, a distinction is made between "Turks" and the "Turkic peoples" in loosely speaking: the term Türk corresponds specifically to the "Turkish-speaking" people (in this context, "Turkish-speaking" is considered the same as "Turkic-speaking"), while the term Türki refers generally ...

  8. Abazins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abazins

    Now, they live mostly in Turkey, Syria, Jordan, Egypt and in Karachay-Cherkessia and Stavropol Krai in the North Caucasus region of Russia. The Tapanta ( ru:Тапанта ), a branch of the Abaza, lived between the Besleney and Kabardian princedoms on the upper Kuban.

  9. Ethnic groups in the Caucasus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnic_groups_in_the_Caucasus

    Caucasus Jews of two sub-ethnic groups Mountain Jews and Georgian Jews. There are about 15,000–30,000 Caucasus Jews (as 140,000 immigrated to Israel, and 40,000 to the US). Arabs in the Caucasus: a population of nomadic Arabs was reported in 1728 as having rented winter pastures near the Caspian shores of the Mugan plain (in present-day ...