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They collected the revenue of the region for several years. The emir of Kars asked the rulers of Khlat for help, but its rulers did not provide any assistance. After the long siege, the emir of Kars, seeing that no assistance was coming, decided to hand over his domain to Georgians in exchange for a large amount of money and a fiefdom for him. [6]
The Provisional National Government of the Southwestern Caucasus, [1] Provisional National Government of South West Caucasia (Modern Turkish: Güneybatı Kafkas Geçici Milli Hükûmeti; Ottoman Turkish: Cenub-ı Garbi Kafkas Hükûmet-i Muvakkate-i Milliyesi [2] Azerbaijani: Cənub-Qərbi Qafqaz Cümhuriyyəti [3]) or Kars Republic was a short-lived nominally-independent provisional ...
Armenian church in Kars. Kars is a city in northeastern Turkey that was historically home to a significant Armenian population. [1] Before the Armenian Genocide, which took place during World War I, Kars was a thriving center of Armenian culture, with a large Armenian community living alongside Turks, Kurds, and other ethnic groups.
1.1 The image is credited with “Nicola, Wikimedia Commons, CC-by-sa 4.0” If this is not possible due to shortage of space, please contact me first . 1.2 If possible, weblinks to the original image and to the licence would be great: “Nicola Wikimedia Commons , CC-by-sa 4.0 ”
Kars (Armenian: Կարս or Ղարս; [2] Azerbaijani: Qars; Kurdish: Qers [3]) is a city in northeast Turkey.It is the seat of Kars Province and Kars District. [4] As of 2022, its population was 91,450. [1]
She has studied at the Conservatory of Toronto and graduated with honors from the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest. [1] She married the Hungarian violinist Barnabás Kelemen, and now has four children: Hanna Kelemen(19), Gáspár Kelemen(14), Olga Kelemen(5), Zsigmond Kelemen(1)
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'Monument of Humanity') was a nearly completed statue in Kars, Turkey. Created by Turkish artist Mehmet Aksoy, the 30-metre-tall (98 ft) monument stood atop Kazıktepe, across from the ancient Castle of Kars. Visible from neighboring Armenia, the statue depicted two halves of a man, each reaching to hold the other's hand.