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The Lyuli, Jughi or Jugi (self-names: Mugat and Ghorbati) are a branch of the Ghorbati people living in Central Asia, primarily Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, and southern Kyrgyzstan; also, related groups can be found in Turkey, and the Balkans, [6] Crimea, Southern Russia and Afghanistan. [7]
The Ghorbati (also known as Mugat or Hadurgar) are an ethnic group and originally a nomadic community in Iran, [1] Afghanistan and Central Asia, where they are part of the various communities termed Lyuli. [2] They are mostly situated in Iran, where others have migrated from. They trace their ancestry to Sassanid Persia. [1]
The name of Magati, another secret language, is cognate with “Mogadi/Magadi”, the alternate name for Ghorbati, and is also related to the ethnonym of the Mugat people, known as Lyuli in Central Asia and Jogi in Afghanistan. This language from Qaisar, near Faryab, Afghanistan, bears some similarities with Adurgari, the argot of the Sheikh ...
Ay-lyuli, lyuli, ay-lyuli, lyuli, Spat' polozhite vy menya. Kalinka, kalinka, kalinka moya! V sadu yagoda malinka, malinka moya! Akh, sosyonushka, ty zelyenaya, Ne shumi ty nado mnoy; Ay-lyuli, lyuli, ay-lyuli, lyuli, Ne shumi ty nado mnoy! Kalinka, kalinka, kalinka moya! V sadu yagoda malinka, malinka moya! Akh, krasavitsa, dusha-devitsa,
Lyuli is part of WikiProject Central Asia, a project to improve all Central Asia-related articles. This includes but is not limited to Afghanistan , Kazakhstan , Kyrgyzstan , Mongolia , Tajikistan , Tibet , Turkmenistan , Uzbekistan , Xinjiang and Central Asian portions of Iran , Pakistan and Russia , region-specific topics, and anything else ...
1 Proposed merge of Lyuli with Jugi people. 5 comments. Toggle the table of contents. Talk: Jugi people. Add languages. Page contents not supported in other languages.
Before 1792, Vasily Pashkevich created for his third opera a theme based on the song. [9] [10] In the following two centuries, many composers (such as P. I. Tchaikovsky, [11] Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, [12] Anatoly Lyadov, [13] Alexander Ivanov-Kramskoi [12]) arranged "Utushka lugovaya".
Afrikaans; العربية; Aragonés; Azərbaycanca; تۆرکجه; Башҡортса; Беларуская; Беларуская (тарашкевіца ...