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Pages in category "Magazines published in Azerbaijan" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
The recent triple edition of the 2011 edition of the magazine (Vol. 15:2-4, 364 pages available in English and in Azerbaijani) deals with the mystery surrounding the identity of the author of the novel Ali and Nino: A Love Story which appeared under the pseudonym Kurban Said, first published in 1937 in German by the Austrian publishing house E ...
The mass media in Azerbaijan refers to mass media outlets based in the Republic of Azerbaijan. Television, magazines, and newspapers are all operated by both state-owned and for-profit corporations which depend on advertising , subscription , and other sales-related revenues.
He was also the one proposing the name for the newspaper that in his opinion would convince the authorities that Akinchi was a non-political magazine that dealt with spreading agricultural technique. In addition to agriculture-oriented articles, Zardabi published materials related to medicine and biology as well as editorials dealing with the ...
There are 3500 newspapers being published in Azerbaijan.With the vast majority of them are published in Azerbaijani.The remaining 130 are published in Russian (70), English (50) and various other languages (Turkish, French, German, Arabic, Persian, Armenian, etc.).
Pages in category "Rural Districts of East Azerbaijan province" The following 150 pages are in this category, out of 150 total.
At the time of the 2006 National Census, the rural district's population was 6,264 in 1,553 households. [6] There were 6,567 inhabitants in 1,890 households at the following census of 2011. [7] The 2016 census measured the population of the rural district as 6,785 in 2,058 households. The most populous of its 10 villages was Khanamir, with ...
Azerbaijan entered independence in 1991 with the traditional Soviet farm structure characterized by state ownership of all agricultural land and by extreme duality: some 3,000 large “socialized” or corporate farm enterprises (collective and state farms) controlled more than 95% of agricultural land while 800,000 rural households with individual plots farmed less than 5% of land.