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Chechens

The Chechens (/ˈɛɛnz, əˈɛnz/;[18] Chechen: Нохчий, Noxçiy, Old Chechen: Нахчой, Naxçoy), historically also known as Kisti and Durdzuks,[19] are a Northeast Caucasian ethnic group of the Nakh peoples native to the North Caucasus in Eastern Europe.[20] They are the largest ethnic group of the North Caucasus[21] and refer to themselves as Nokhchiy (pronounced [no̞xtʃʼiː]; singular Nokhchi, Nokhcho, Nakhchuo or Nakhtche).[22][23][24] The vast majority of Chechens today are Muslims[25] and live in Chechnya, a republic of Russia.

Chechens
Нохчий
Noxçiy
Total population
c. 2 million[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Russia1,674,854[2]
     Chechnya1,456,792[3]
     Dagestan99,320[3]
     Rostov Oblast14,316[3]
     Stavropol Krai13,779[3]
     Ingushetia12,240[3]
     Moscow Oblast11,491[3]
     Volgograd Oblast8,038[3]
     Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug7,085[3]
     Astrakhan Oblast6,873[3]
     Saratov Oblast5,748[3]
 European Union
      France
      Austria
      Belgium
      Germany
      Sweden
      Denmark
130,000 (2009)[4]
 Turkey100,000[5][6]
 Kazakhstan32,894[7]
 Jordan12,000–30,000[8]
 Iraq11,000[9]
 Georgia10,100 (including Kist people)
 Syria6,000–35,000[10][11]
 Egypt5,000[5]
 Ukraine2,877[12]
 United Arab Emirates2,000–3,000[13]
 Finland636[14]
 United States250–1,000[15][16]
 Latvia192[17]
Data figures from 2001 to 2021;
see also Chechen diaspora.
Languages
Chechen
Religion
Sunni Islam
Related ethnic groups
Other Nakh peoples (Ingush, Bats)

The North Caucasus has been invaded numerous times throughout history. Its isolated terrain and the strategic value outsiders have placed on the areas settled by Chechens has contributed much to the Chechen community ethos and helped shape its national character.

Chechen society has traditionally been egalitarian and organized around many autonomous local clans, called teips.

Etymology

Chechen

 
The Chechen boys (1927/28)[26]

According to popular tradition, the Russian term Chechency (Чеченцы) comes from central Chechnya, which had several important villages and towns named after the word Chechen. These places include Chechan, Nana-Checha ("Mother Checha") and Yokkh Chechen ("Greater Chechena").[27] The name Chechen occurs in Russian sources in the late 16th century as "Chachana", which is mentioned as a land owned by the Chechen Prince Shikh Murza.[28] The etymology is of Nakh origin and originates from the word Che ("inside") attached to the suffix -cha/chan, which altogether can be translated as "inside territory". The villages and towns named Chechan were always situated in the Chechan-are ("Chechen flatlands or plains") located in today's central Chechnya.[29][30]

Nokhchiy

Although Chechan (Chechen) was a term used by Chechens to denote a certain geographic area (central Chechnya), Chechens called themselves Nakhchiy (highland dialects) or Nokhchiy (lowland dialects). The oldest mention of Nakhchiy occurred in 1310 by the Georgian Patriarch Cyril Donauri, who mentions the 'People of Nakhche' among Tushetians, Avars and many other Northeast Caucasian nations. The term Nakhchiy has also been connected to the city Nakhchivan and the nation of Nakhchamatyan (mentioned as one of the peoples of Sarmatia in the 7th-century Armenian work Ashkharhatsuyts) by many Soviet and modern historians, although the historian N. Volkova considers the latter connection unlikely and states that the term Nakhchmatyan could have been mistaken for the Iaxamatae, a tribe of Sarmatia mentioned in Ptolemy's Geography, who have no connection to the Chechen people.[31][32] Chechen manuscripts in Arabic from the early 1820s do mention a certain Nakhchuvan (near modern-day Kağızman, Turkey) as the homeland of all Nakhchiy. The etymology of the term Nakhchiy can also be understood as a compound formed with Nakh ('people') attached to Chuo ('territory').[30][33]

Geography and diaspora

The Chechens are mainly inhabitants of Chechnya.[26] There are also significant Chechen populations in other subdivisions of Russia, especially in Aukh (part of modern-day Dagestan), Ingushetia and Moscow.

 
Ushcaloy, Chechnya

Outside Russia, countries with significant diaspora populations are Kazakhstan, Turkey and Arab states (especially Jordan and Iraq): those in Iraq and Jordan are mainly descendants of families who had to leave Chechnya during the Caucasian War, which led to the annexation of Chechnya by the Russian Empire in 1859, while those in Kazakhstan originate from the ethnic cleansing of the entire population carried out by Joseph Stalin and Lavrentiy Beria in 1944. Tens of thousands of Chechen refugees settled in the European Union and elsewhere as the result of the recent Chechen Wars, especially in the wave of emigration to the West after 2002.[34]

History

Prehistory and origin

The Chechens are one of the Nakh peoples, who have lived in the highlands of the North Caucasus region since prehistory.[35] There is archeological evidence of historical continuity dating back to 3000 B.C.[36][35] as well as evidence pointing to their ancestors' migration from the Fertile Crescent c. 10,000–8,000 B.C.[36]

The discussion of their origins is intertwined with the discussion of the mysterious origins of Nakh peoples as a whole. The only three surviving Nakh peoples are Chechens, Ingush and Bats, but they are thought by some scholars to be the remnants of what was once a larger family of peoples.[citation needed]

They are thought to either be descended from original settlers of the Caucasus (North and/or South)[37][38] or supposedly Nakh-speaking ethnic minorities in the north-eastern regions of the ancient state of Urartu (whose people also spoke a language that was possibly related to the Nakh languages).[39] The two theories are not mutually incompatible, and there has been much evidence that seems to link the two (either by dual origins or the "return" theory, in which the Nakh peoples originally lived in the Caucasus, migrated down to the south, lived there for a long period of time, and then returned to the Caucasus).

According to the opinion of Caucasus folklorist Amjad Jaimoukha, "It is certain that the Nakh constituted an important component of the Hurrian-Urartian tribes in the Trans-Caucasus and played a role in the development of their influential cultures."[19]

Amjad Jaimoukha notes in his book The Chechens: "Some authorities believe that the Nakh nation was an offspring of the Hurrians and Urartians, builders of the magnificent civilizations of the Near East, that had profound influences upon other cultures of the region."[40] According to some data, Chechens are genetically, linguistically and anthropologically considered the descendants of the Hurrians and Urartians.[41][42][40][43][44][45][46][47][48][49][50][51]

Other scholars, however, doubt that the language families are related,[52][53][54] or believe that, while a connection is possible, the evidence is far from conclusive.[55][56][57] Uralicist and Indo-Europeanist Petri Kallio argues that the matter is hindered by the lack of consensus about how to reconstruct Proto-Northeast-Caucasian, but that Alarodian is the most promising proposal for relations with Northeast Caucasian, greater than rival proposals to link it with Northwest Caucasian or other families.[58] However, nothing is known about Alarodians except that they "were armed like the Colchians and Saspeires," according to Herodotus.[59] Colchians and Saspeires are generally associated with Kartvelians or Scythians. Additionally, leading Urartologist Paul Zimansky rejected a connection between Urartians and Alarodians.[60]

Antiquity

Ancestors of the modern Chechens and Ingush were known as Durdzuks. According to The Georgian Chronicles, before his death, Targamos [Togarmah] divided the country amongst his sons, with Kavkasos [Caucas], the eldest and most noble, receiving the Central Caucasus. Kavkasos engendered the Chechen tribes, and his descendant, Durdzuk, who took residence in a mountainous region, later called "Dzurdzuketia" after him, established a strong state in the fourth and third centuries BC.[61] Among the Chechen teips, the teip Zurzakoy, consonant with the ethnonym Dzurdzuk, live in the Itum-Kale region of Chechnya.

Georgian historian Giorgi Melikishvili posited that although there was evidence of Nakh settlement in Southern Caucasus areas, this did not rule out the possibility that they also lived in the North Caucasus. Prior to the invasion of the Cimmerians and Scythians, the Nakh had inhabited the Central Caucasus and the steppe lands all the way to the Volga river in the northeast and the Caspian Sea to the east.[62]

The mighty state of Durdzuketi has been known since the 4th century BC.[19] The Armenian Chronicles mention that the Durdzuks defeated Scythians and became a significant power in the region in the first millennium BC.[19]

The Vainakh in the east had an affinity to Georgia, while the Malkh Kingdom of the west looked to the new Greek kingdom of Bosporus on the Black Sea coast (though it may have also had relations with Georgia as well).[19] Adermalkh, king of the Malkh state, married the daughter of the Bosporan king in 480 BCE.[19] Malkhi is one of the Chechen tukkhums.[63][64][65][66][67][68][69]

Medieval

During the Middle Ages, the lowland of Chechnya was dominated by the Khazars and then the Alans. Local culture was also subject to Georgian influence and some Chechens converted to Eastern Orthodox Christianity. With a presence dating back to the 14th century, Islam gradually spread among the Chechens,[70][71] although the Chechens' own pagan religion was still strong until the 19th century. Society was organised along feudal lines. Chechnya was devastated by the Mongol invasions of the 13th century and those of Tamerlane in the 14th.[72][73] The Mongol invasions are well known in Chechen folktales which are often connected with military reports of Alan-Dzurdzuk wars against the Mongols.

According to the missionary Pian de Carpine, a part of the Alans had successfully resisted a Mongol siege on a mountain for 12 years:[74]

When they (the Mongols) begin to besiege a fortress, they besiege it for many years, as it happens today with one mountain in the land of the Alans. We believe they have been besieging it for twelve years and they (the Alans) put up courageous resistance and killed many Tatars, including many noble ones.

— Giovanni da Pian del Carpine, report from 1250

This twelve-year-old siege is not found in any other report, however the Russian historian A. I. Krasnov connected this battle with two Chechen folktales he recorded in 1967 that spoke of an old hunter named Idig who with his companions defended the Dakuoh mountain for 12 years against Tatar-Mongols. He also reported to have found several arrowheads and spears from the 13th century near the very mountain the battle took place at:[75]

The next year, with the onset of summer, the enemy hordes came again to destroy the highlanders. But even this year they failed to capture the mountain, on which the brave Chechens settled down. The battle lasted twelve years. The main wealth of the Chechens – livestock – was stolen by the enemies. Tired of the long years of hard struggle, the Chechens, believing the assurances of mercy by the enemy, descended from the mountain, but the Mongol-Tatars treacherously killed the majority, and the rest were taken into slavery. This fate was escaped only by Idig and a few of his companions who did not trust the nomads and remained on the mountain. They managed to escape and leave Mount Dakuoh after 12 years of siege.

— Amin Tesaev, The Legend and struggle of the Chechen hero Idig (1238–1250)
 
Chechen warrior

Tamerlane's late 14th-century invasions of the Caucasus were especially costly to the Chechen kingdom of Simsir which was an ally of the Golden Horde and anti-Timurid. Its leader Khour Ela supported Khan Tokhtamysh during the Battle of the Terek River.[76] The Chechens bear the distinction of being one of the few peoples to successfully resist the Mongols and defend themselves against their invasions; not once, but twice, though this came at great cost to them, as their states were utterly destroyed. These events were key in the shaping of the Chechen nationhood and their martial-oriented and clan-based society.[77]

Early modern period

The Caucasus was a major competing area for two neighboring rival empires: the Ottoman and Turco-Persian empires (Safavids, Afsharids, Qajars). Starting from 1555 and decisively from 1639 through the first half of the 19th century, the Caucasus was divided by these two powers, with the Ottomans prevailing in Western Georgia, while Persia kept the bulk of the Caucasus, namely Eastern Georgia, Southern Dagestan, Azerbaijan, and Armenia.[78] The Chechens, however, never really fell under the rule of either empire. As Russia expanded slowly southwards as early as the 16th century, clashes between Chechens and Russians became more frequent, and it became three empires competing for the region. During these turbulent times, the Chechens were organized into semi-independent clans that were loyal to the Mehk-Khel (National Council). The Mehk-Khel was in charge of appointing the Mehk-Da (ruler of the nation). Several of these appeared during the Late Middle Ages such as Aldaman Gheza, Tinavin-Visa, Zok-K'ant and others. The administration and military expeditions commanded by Aldaman Gheza during the 1650-1670s led to Chechnya being largely untouched by the major empires of the time. Alliances were concluded with local lords against Persian encroachment and battles were fought to stop Russian influence. One such battle was the Battle of Khachara between Gheza and the rival Avar Khanate that tried to exert influence on Chechnya.[79] As Russia set off to increase its political influence in the Caucasus and the Caspian Sea at the expense of Safavid Persia, Peter I launched the Russo-Persian War, in which Russia succeeded in taking much of the Caucasian territories for several years. The conflict notably marked the first military encounter between Imperial Russia and the Chechens.[80] Sheikh Mansur led a major Chechen resistance movement in the late 18th century.

 
Tomb of a Chechen warrior of the 19th century

In the late 18th and 19th centuries, Russia embarked on full-scale conquest of the North Caucasus in the Caucasian War. Much of the campaign was led by General Yermolov who particularly disliked the Chechens, describing them as "a bold and dangerous people".[81] Angered by Chechen raids, Yermolov resorted to a brutal policy of "scorched earth" and deportations; he also founded the fort of Grozny (now the capital of Chechnya) in 1818. Chechen resistance to Russian rule reached its peak under the leadership of the Dagestani leader Imam Shamil. The Chechens were finally defeated in 1861 after a bloody war that lasted for decades, during which they lost most of their entire population.[82] In the aftermath, large numbers of refugees also emigrated or were forcibly deported to the Ottoman Empire.[83][84][85]

Nineteenth and twentieth centuries

 
Chechen veterans of the Great Patriotic War

Since then, there have been various Chechen rebellions against Russian/Soviet power in 1865–66, 1877, during the Russian Civil War and World War II, as well as nonviolent resistance to Russification and the Soviet Union's collectivization and anti-religion campaigns. In 1944, all Chechens, together with several other peoples of the Caucasus, were ordered by the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin to be deported en masse to the Kazakh and Kirghiz SSRs; and their republic and nation were abolished. At least one-quarter—and perhaps half—of the entire Chechen population perished in the process, and a severe blow was made to their culture and historical records.[83][86][87] Though "rehabilitated" in 1956 and allowed to return the next year, the survivors lost economic resources and civil rights and, under both Soviet and post-Soviet governments, they have been the objects of both official and unofficial discrimination and discriminatory public discourse.[83][88] Chechen attempts to regain independence in the 1990s after the fall of the Soviet Union led to the first and the second war with the new Russian state, starting in 1994.

Language

 
Chechen-Soviet newspaper, Serlo (light), written in the Chechen Latin script during Korenizatsiya.

The main language of the Chechen people is Chechen. Chechen belongs to the family of Nakh languages (Northeast Caucasian languages). Literary Chechen is based on the central lowland dialect. Other related languages include Ingush, which has speakers in the neighbouring Ingushetia, and Batsbi, which is the language of the people in the adjoining part of Georgia. At various times in their history, Chechens used Georgian, Arabic and Latin alphabets; as of 2008, the official script is Russian Cyrillic. Traditionally, linguists attributed both Ingush and Batsbi to the Chechen language (as its dialects) before the endoethnonym Vainakh appeared at the beginning of the 20th century.[89][90][91][92][93]

Most Chechens living in their homeland can understand Ingush with ease. The two languages are not truly mutually intelligible, but it is easy for Chechens to learn how to understand the Ingush language and vice versa over time after hearing it for a while.[citation needed]

In 1989, 73.4% spoke Russian,[94] though this figure has declined due to the wars for a large number of reasons (including the lack of proper education, the refusal to learn the language, and the mass dispersal of the Chechen diaspora due to the war). Chechens in the diaspora often speak the language of the country they live in (English, French, German, Arabic, Polish, Georgian, Turkish, etc.).

The Nakh languages are a subgroup of Northeast Caucasian, and as such are related to Nakho-Dagestanian family, including the languages of the Avars, Dargins, Lezghins, Laks, etc. However, this relationship is not a close one: the Nakho-Dagestani family is of comparable or greater time-depth than Indo-European, meaning Chechens are only as linguistically related to Avars or Dargins as the French are to the Russians or Iranians.[citation needed]

Genetics

Genetic tests on Chechens have shown roots mostly in the Caucasus and Europe, as well as slight connections to and influences from the Middle East. Overall, Chechens showed greater similarity with West Asian than with European groups for both genetic systems, although this similarity was much more pronounced for the Y chromosome than for mtDNA, suggesting that male-mediated migrations from West Asia have influenced the genetic structure of Caucasus populations.[95] Previous studies on North Caucasian mtDNA indicated a closer relationship of the Caucasus with Europe (Nasidze et al. 2001), while the Y chromosome indicated a closer relationship with West Asia (Nasidze et al. 2003).

A 2004 study of the mtDNA showed Chechens to be diverse in the mitochondrial genome, with 18 different haplogroups out of only 23 samples. This correlates with all other North Caucasian peoples such as the Ingush, Avars, and Circassians where the mitochondrial DNA is very diverse.[95][96]

The most recent study on Chechens, by Balanovsky et al. in 2011,[97] sampled a total of 330 Chechens from three sample locations (one in Malgobek, one in Achkhoy-Martan, and one from two sites in Dagestan) and found the following frequencies: A weak majority of Chechens belong to Haplogroup J2 (56.7%[97]), which is associated with Mediterranean, Caucasian and Fertile Crescent populations. Other notable values were found among North Caucasian Turkic peoples (Kumyks (25%)[98] and Balkars (24%)[99]). It is notable that J2 suddenly collapses as one enters the territory of non-Nakh Northeast Caucasian peoples, dropping to very low values among Dagestani peoples.[95][97][100][101] The overwhelming bulk of Chechen J2 is of the subclade J2a4b* (J2-M67), of which the highest frequencies by far are found among Nakh peoples: Chechens were 55.2% according to the Balanovsky study, while Ingush were 87.4%. Other notable haplogroups that consistently appeared at high frequencies included J1 (20.9%), L (7.0%), G2 (5.5%), R1a (3.9%), Q-M242 (3%) and R1b-M269 (1.8%, but much higher in Chechnya itself as opposed to Dagestani or Ingushetian Chechens). Overall, tests have shown consistently that Chechens are most closely related to Ingush, Circassians and other North Caucasians, occasionally showing a kinship to other peoples in some tests. Balanovsky's study showed the Ingush to be the Chechens' closest relatives by far.[97][101][102]

Russian military historian and Lieutenant General Vasily Potto describes the appearance of the Chechens as follows: "The Chechen is handsome and strong. Tall, brunette, slender, with sharp features and a quick, determined look, he amazes with his mobility, agility, dexterity."[103]

According to a 2021 Rosstat study Chechnya ranked as the tallest region in Russia for men (179.1 cm) and second tallest for women (168.2).[104]

Culture

 
Istang, a type of woven Chechen carpet

Prior to the adoption of Islam, the Chechens practiced a unique blend of religious traditions and beliefs. They partook in numerous rites and rituals, many of them pertaining to farming; these included rain rites, a celebration that occurred on the first day of plowing, as well as the Day of the Thunderer Sela and the Day of the Goddess Tusholi. In addition to sparse written record from the Middle Ages, Chechens traditionally remember history through the illesh, a collection of epic poems and stories.

 
An example of Chechen tower architecture, ruins of the medieval settlement of Nikaroy

Chechens are accustomed to democratic ways, their social structure being firmly based on equality, pluralism and deference to individuality. Chechen society is structured around tukkhums (unions of clans) and about 130 teips, or clans. The teips are based more on land and one-side lineage than on blood (as exogamy is prevalent and encouraged), and are bonded together to form the Chechen nation. Teips are further subdivided into gar (branches), and gars into nekye (patronymic families). The Chechen social code is called nokhchallah (where Nokhchuo stands for "Chechen") and may be loosely translated as "Chechen character". The Chechen code of honor and customary law (adat) implies moral and ethical behaviour, generosity and the will to safeguard the honor of women. The traditional Chechen saying goes that the members of Chechen society, like its teips, are (ideally) "free and equal like wolves".[105][106]

 
A phandar, a traditional Chechen musical instrument

Chechens today have a strong sense of nation, which is enforced by the old clan network and nokhchalla – the obligation to clan, tukkhum, etc. This is often combined with old values transmuted into a modern sense. They are mythically descended from the epic hero, Turpalo-Nokhchuo ("Chechen Hero"). There is a strong theme of representing the nation with its national animal, the wolf. Due to their strong dependence on the land, its farms and its forests (and indeed, the national equation with the wolf), Chechens have a strong affection for nature. According to Chechen philosopher Apty Bisultanov, ruining an ant-hill or hunting Caucasian goats during their mating season was considered extremely sinful.[107] It is notable that the glasnost era Chechen independence movement Bart (unity), in fact, originated as a simple environmentalist organization in the republic's capital of Grozny.[108]

 
Chechen kids by Theodor Horschelt, 1858

Chechen culture puts a strong value on the concept of freedom. This asserts itself in a number of ways. A large majority of the nation's national heroes fought for independence (or otherwise, like the legendary Zelimkhan, robbed from the Russian oppressors in order to feed Chechen children in a Robin Hood-like fashion). A common greeting in the Chechen language, marsha oylla, is literally translated as "enter in freedom". The word for freedom also encompasses notions of peace and prosperity.

 
Chechens at a wedding, circa 1870–1886

Chechens are sometimes referred to as the "French of the Caucasus", for a number of reasons (it is notable that the Circassians are the "English of the Caucasus", and the Georgians are the "Italians of the Caucasus"). This comparison may refer to either political/historical traits, or to personality characteristics. Like the French, who overthrew their age-old monarchy in the French Revolution, the Chechens had a similar revolution a century or two earlier,[109] and like the French, they bore the distinction (for a period) of being the only egalitarian society in an area full of monarchic states. Like the French, the Chechens preferred swift, revolutionary (and often violent) methods to realize the change they wished to see – unlike the Circassians (called the "English of the Caucasus" both for their political and personality characteristics) who preferred more gradualist methods.[110] Chechens were also called "French" by early Russian military officers and the French anthropologist Ernest Chantre who noted their "happy and witty" nature.[111]

Religion

 
Chechen Mosque Architecture

Chechnya is predominantly Muslim.[25] Most of the population follows either the Shafi'i or the Hanafi,[112] schools of jurisprudence, fiqh. The Shafi'i school of jurisprudence has a long tradition among the Chechens,[113] and thus it remains the most practiced.[114] Some adhere to the mystical Sufi tradition of muridism, while about half of Chechens belong to Sufi brotherhoods, or tariqah. The two Sufi tariqas that spread in the North Caucasus were the Naqshbandiyya and the Qadiriyya (the Naqshbandiyya is particularly strong in Dagestan and eastern Chechnya, whereas the Qadiriyya has most of its adherents in the rest of Chechnya and Ingushetia). There are also small Christian and atheist minorities, although their numbers are unknown in Chechnya; in Kazakhstan, they are roughly 3% and 2% of the Chechen population respectively.[115]

 
A Chechen man prays during the Battle of Grozny. The flame in the background is from a gas line hit by shrapnel. (January 1995)

A stereotype of an average Chechen being a fundamentalist Muslim is incorrect and misleading.[116][117] By the late 2000s, however, two new trends have emerged in Chechnya. A radicalized remnant of the armed Chechen separatist movement has become dominated by Salafis (popularly known in Russia as Wahhabis and present in Chechnya in small numbers since the 1990s), mostly abandoning nationalism in favor of Pan-Islamism and merging with several other regional Islamic insurgencies to form the Caucasus Emirate. At the same time, Chechnya under Moscow-backed authoritarian rule of Ramzan Kadyrov has undergone its own controversial counter-campaign of Islamization of the republic, with the local government actively promoting and enforcing their own version of a so-called "traditional Islam", including introducing elements of Sharia that replaced Russian official laws.[118][119][120][121]

See also

References

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  41. ^ "The Urartian language itself took several generations to decipher and is now believed to be a distant ancestor of existing Caucasian languages such as Chechen".
  42. ^ "Chechnya i Rossiya: obshchestva i gosudarstva: Sb. materialov konferentsii. Pod red. D.Furmana. M .: Polinform-Talburi." English translation: "This sounds extremely unexpected, but it is. The Chechen nation is the ethnic root part of the Caucasian race, one of the oldest sources of human civilization, the fundamental principle of spirituality, passed through the Hurrian, Mittani, Urartian cultures.". 1999. ISBN 978-5-93516-004-3.
  43. ^ Ortaylı, Ilber. "English translation: "Most of the historical facts indicate that the language of the ancient state of Urartu is closer to the modern Chechen one. It is highly probable that the ancestors of modern Chechens moved to the territory of the North Caucasus from Anatolia, from Urartu".
  44. ^ "English translation: "Today, urartologists do not deny the kinship of the Chechens with the Urartians. The kinship of the Hurrians-Urartians-Chechens is confirmed by those who studied it. Hence the following conclusion follows. Chechens are Urartians. Urartians is the remaining branch of the Chechens in Asia Minor. Actually its structure, grammatical features, completeness and grammar of classes, etc. Urartian and Chechen are similar to each other". ATLAS monthly geography and exploration magazine. March 2003. Issue 120.2. from the original on 2021-01-18.
  45. ^ «Chechens are not actually Caucasians, but ethnically and linguistically sharply separated from other mountain peoples of the Caucasus. They are the offspring of the great Hyperborean-Paleo-Asian tribe, displaced to the Caucasus, which extended from Turan through northern Mesopotamia and into Canaan.» «With its vocalism, its structure, the Chechen language as a member of the family, which once geographically and genetically stood closer to the Proto-Hamitic-Iberian, or Proto-Phrygian, than to the Caucasian languages proper.» «The Chechen is a leaping northern offspring of the proto-language, which once occupied a more southern territory, namely, in the pre-Armenian-Alarodian [Urartian] Western Asia. Traces of Nachtšuoi's [Chechens] stay in the country of Ararat [Urartu] are found in toponymy as Nachtševan, Nakhtshuan (Nachidschevan). This alone explains the strongly Alarodian [Urartian]-Armenoid character of the Chechen language, which deviates from the normal Caucasian sound system.» _______________________________________ Joseph Karst, Ph. D, 1. «Origines mediterraneae. Die vorgeschichtlichen Mittelmeervölker nach Ursprung, Schichtung und Verwandtschaft. Ethnologisch-Linguistische Forschungen». Heidelberg, 1931, p. 85.; 2. «Grundzüge einer Vergleichenden Grammatik des Ibero-kaukasischen», Band I, Strassburg, 1932, p. 29.
  46. ^ The anthropology of Chechens and Ingush is somewhat different. The Ingush belong to the central cluster of the Caucasian [Mtebid] anthropotype, with pronounced brachycephalization, which indicates a strong mixing with the Koban culture. Whereas the Chechens, although they belong mainly to the Caucasians [Mtebids], combine many elements of the Caspian and even the Pontid. In addition, the Chechens have the highest percentage of the dolichocephalic index among the characteristic brachycephalic Caucasions [Mtebids]. All this testifies that the Chechens, to a greater extent, have preserved the Hurrian substratum. J. Taisayev. «Etnogenez narodov Kavkaza.». 5 September 2017. p. 131. ISBN 978-5-04-005867-9.
  47. ^ ""The Urartians themselves, or Alarodians, called their country and state Biainili, from which comes the modern name of Lake Van, in the basin of which the center of this state was located. Since ancient times, Urartian (Alarodian) tribes, akin to the Hurrian population of the countries to the southwest of Lake Van, lived around Lake Van and in adjacent areas. The Urartian (as well as the Hurrian) language belonged to a special linguistic family, among the modern languages the closest to them are some languages of the North Caucasus – Chechen and Ingush."". «Materialy po istorii SSSR. Dlya seminarskikh i prakticheskikh zanyatiy. Vyp. 1. Drevneyshiye narody i gosudarstva na territorii SSSR.». 1985. p. 7.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
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  49. ^ "The most ancient state on the territory of our country was the Urartian kingdom in the Transcaucasus. The word "Urartu" (the memory of it is preserved in the name of Mount Ararat) is Assyrian, but the inhabitants themselves called their country Biainili (hence – Lake Van). The Alarodian (or Urartian) tribes living around this lake, who spoke a language that has not survived to this day (of the modern ones, Chechen and Ingush are the closest to it), back in the 13th century. BC e. created their own tribal union. ". «Pavlenko N.I., Kobrin V.B., Fedorov V.A. Istoriya SSSR s drevneyshikh vremen do 1861 goda. (Uchebnik dlya pedagogicheskikh institutov), M., 1989 g.». 1989. ISBN 5-09-000551-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  50. ^ "Of the peoples existing in our time, the Chechens and Ingush are the closest to the Hurrian-Urartian in terms of language ". «Aleksandrova N.V., Ladynin I.A., Nemirovskiy A.A., Yakovlev V.M. Drevniy Vostok. Uchebnoye posobiye dlya vuzov.». 2008. p. 371. ISBN 978-5-17-045827-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
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  82. ^ Jaimoukha (p.50): "The Chechens suffered horrific losses in human life during the long war. From an estimated population of over a million in the 1840s, there were only 140,000 Chechens left in the Caucasus in 1861..."
  83. ^ a b c (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-09-15. by Johanna Nichols, University of California, Berkeley.
  84. ^ Dunlop p.29ff. Dunlop writes (p.30): "In 1860, according to Soviet-era figures, 81,360 Chechens left for Turkey; a second emigration took place in 1865, when an additional 22,500 Chechens left. More than 100,000 Chechens were thus ethnically 'cleansed' during this process. This was perhaps a majority of their total population..."
  85. ^ Jaimoukha p.50
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  89. ^ "But after their unification in 1934 into a single Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Region (Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic since 1936), the authorities did their best to ensure the merger of the Chechens and Ingush into a single people, for which a new name was created "Veinakhs / Vainakhs". In the 1960s–1980s. this identity was actively introduced into the consciousness of the Chechens and Ingush and gradually gained more and more popularity". V. A. Shnirel'man. Byt' alanami. Intellektualy i politika na Severnom Kavkaze v XX veke. p. 279. from the original on 2021-01-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
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Sources

  • Dunlop, John B. (1998). Russia Confronts Chechnya: Roots of a Separatist Conflict. Cambridge University Press.
  • Ilyasov, Lechi (2009). . Moskow (in Russian).
  • Jaimoukha, Amjad (2005). The Chechens: A Handbook. London; New York: Routledge.
  • Plaetschke, Bruno (1929). Die Tschetschenen: Forschungen zur Völkerkunde des nordöstlichen Kaukasus auf Grund von Reisen in den Jahren 1918—20 und 1927/28 [The Chechens]. Veröffentlichungen des Geographischen Instituts der Universität Königsberg Pr., 11 (in German). Hamburg: Friedrichsen, de Gruyter & Co m. b. H.

Further reading

  • Traditional Social Organisation of Chechen people 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine

chechens, chechen, Нохчий, noxçiy, chechen, Нахчой, naxçoy, historically, also, known, kisti, durdzuks, northeast, caucasian, ethnic, group, nakh, peoples, native, north, caucasus, eastern, europe, they, largest, ethnic, group, north, caucasus, refer, themselv. The Chechens ˈ tʃ ɛ tʃ ɛ n z tʃ e ˈ tʃ ɛ n z 18 Chechen Nohchij Noxciy Old Chechen Nahchoj Naxcoy historically also known as Kisti and Durdzuks 19 are a Northeast Caucasian ethnic group of the Nakh peoples native to the North Caucasus in Eastern Europe 20 They are the largest ethnic group of the North Caucasus 21 and refer to themselves as Nokhchiy pronounced no xtʃʼiː singular Nokhchi Nokhcho Nakhchuo or Nakhtche 22 23 24 The vast majority of Chechens today are Muslims 25 and live in Chechnya a republic of Russia ChechensNohchij NoxciyTotal populationc 2 million 1 Regions with significant populations Russia1 674 854 2 Chechnya1 456 792 3 Dagestan99 320 3 Rostov Oblast14 316 3 Stavropol Krai13 779 3 Ingushetia12 240 3 Moscow Oblast11 491 3 Volgograd Oblast8 038 3 Khanty Mansi Autonomous Okrug7 085 3 Astrakhan Oblast6 873 3 Saratov Oblast5 748 3 European Union France Austria Belgium Germany Sweden Denmark130 000 2009 4 Turkey100 000 5 6 Kazakhstan32 894 7 Jordan12 000 30 000 8 Iraq11 000 9 Georgia10 100 including Kist people Syria6 000 35 000 10 11 Egypt5 000 5 Ukraine2 877 12 United Arab Emirates2 000 3 000 13 Finland636 14 United States250 1 000 15 16 Latvia192 17 Data figures from 2001 to 2021 see also Chechen diaspora LanguagesChechenReligionSunni IslamRelated ethnic groupsOther Nakh peoples Ingush Bats The North Caucasus has been invaded numerous times throughout history Its isolated terrain and the strategic value outsiders have placed on the areas settled by Chechens has contributed much to the Chechen community ethos and helped shape its national character Chechen society has traditionally been egalitarian and organized around many autonomous local clans called teips Contents 1 Etymology 1 1 Chechen 1 2 Nokhchiy 2 Geography and diaspora 3 History 3 1 Prehistory and origin 3 2 Antiquity 3 3 Medieval 3 4 Early modern period 3 5 Nineteenth and twentieth centuries 4 Language 5 Genetics 6 Culture 7 Religion 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further readingEtymology EditChechen Edit The Chechen boys 1927 28 26 According to popular tradition the Russian term Chechency Chechency comes from central Chechnya which had several important villages and towns named after the word Chechen These places include Chechan Nana Checha Mother Checha and Yokkh Chechen Greater Chechena 27 The name Chechen occurs in Russian sources in the late 16th century as Chachana which is mentioned as a land owned by the Chechen Prince Shikh Murza 28 The etymology is of Nakh origin and originates from the word Che inside attached to the suffix cha chan which altogether can be translated as inside territory The villages and towns named Chechan were always situated in the Chechan are Chechen flatlands or plains located in today s central Chechnya 29 30 Nokhchiy Edit Although Chechan Chechen was a term used by Chechens to denote a certain geographic area central Chechnya Chechens called themselves Nakhchiy highland dialects or Nokhchiy lowland dialects The oldest mention of Nakhchiy occurred in 1310 by the Georgian Patriarch Cyril Donauri who mentions the People of Nakhche among Tushetians Avars and many other Northeast Caucasian nations The term Nakhchiy has also been connected to the city Nakhchivan and the nation of Nakhchamatyan mentioned as one of the peoples of Sarmatia in the 7th century Armenian work Ashkharhatsuyts by many Soviet and modern historians although the historian N Volkova considers the latter connection unlikely and states that the term Nakhchmatyan could have been mistaken for the Iaxamatae a tribe of Sarmatia mentioned in Ptolemy s Geography who have no connection to the Chechen people 31 32 Chechen manuscripts in Arabic from the early 1820s do mention a certain Nakhchuvan near modern day Kagizman Turkey as the homeland of all Nakhchiy The etymology of the term Nakhchiy can also be understood as a compound formed with Nakh people attached to Chuo territory 30 33 Geography and diaspora EditMain article Chechen diaspora The Chechens are mainly inhabitants of Chechnya 26 There are also significant Chechen populations in other subdivisions of Russia especially in Aukh part of modern day Dagestan Ingushetia and Moscow Ushcaloy Chechnya Sharoy villageOutside Russia countries with significant diaspora populations are Kazakhstan Turkey and Arab states especially Jordan and Iraq those in Iraq and Jordan are mainly descendants of families who had to leave Chechnya during the Caucasian War which led to the annexation of Chechnya by the Russian Empire in 1859 while those in Kazakhstan originate from the ethnic cleansing of the entire population carried out by Joseph Stalin and Lavrentiy Beria in 1944 Tens of thousands of Chechen refugees settled in the European Union and elsewhere as the result of the recent Chechen Wars especially in the wave of emigration to the West after 2002 34 History EditMain article History of Chechnya Prehistory and origin Edit Main article Nakh peoples Hypotheses of origins The Chechens are one of the Nakh peoples who have lived in the highlands of the North Caucasus region since prehistory 35 There is archeological evidence of historical continuity dating back to 3000 B C 36 35 as well as evidence pointing to their ancestors migration from the Fertile Crescent c 10 000 8 000 B C 36 The discussion of their origins is intertwined with the discussion of the mysterious origins of Nakh peoples as a whole The only three surviving Nakh peoples are Chechens Ingush and Bats but they are thought by some scholars to be the remnants of what was once a larger family of peoples citation needed They are thought to either be descended from original settlers of the Caucasus North and or South 37 38 or supposedly Nakh speaking ethnic minorities in the north eastern regions of the ancient state of Urartu whose people also spoke a language that was possibly related to the Nakh languages 39 The two theories are not mutually incompatible and there has been much evidence that seems to link the two either by dual origins or the return theory in which the Nakh peoples originally lived in the Caucasus migrated down to the south lived there for a long period of time and then returned to the Caucasus According to the opinion of Caucasus folklorist Amjad Jaimoukha It is certain that the Nakh constituted an important component of the Hurrian Urartian tribes in the Trans Caucasus and played a role in the development of their influential cultures 19 Amjad Jaimoukha notes in his book The Chechens Some authorities believe that the Nakh nation was an offspring of the Hurrians and Urartians builders of the magnificent civilizations of the Near East that had profound influences upon other cultures of the region 40 According to some data Chechens are genetically linguistically and anthropologically considered the descendants of the Hurrians and Urartians 41 42 40 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 Other scholars however doubt that the language families are related 52 53 54 or believe that while a connection is possible the evidence is far from conclusive 55 56 57 Uralicist and Indo Europeanist Petri Kallio argues that the matter is hindered by the lack of consensus about how to reconstruct Proto Northeast Caucasian but that Alarodian is the most promising proposal for relations with Northeast Caucasian greater than rival proposals to link it with Northwest Caucasian or other families 58 However nothing is known about Alarodians except that they were armed like the Colchians and Saspeires according to Herodotus 59 Colchians and Saspeires are generally associated with Kartvelians or Scythians Additionally leading Urartologist Paul Zimansky rejected a connection between Urartians and Alarodians 60 Antiquity Edit Main article Durdzuks Ancestors of the modern Chechens and Ingush were known as Durdzuks According to The Georgian Chronicles before his death Targamos Togarmah divided the country amongst his sons with Kavkasos Caucas the eldest and most noble receiving the Central Caucasus Kavkasos engendered the Chechen tribes and his descendant Durdzuk who took residence in a mountainous region later called Dzurdzuketia after him established a strong state in the fourth and third centuries BC 61 Among the Chechen teips the teip Zurzakoy consonant with the ethnonym Dzurdzuk live in the Itum Kale region of Chechnya Georgian historian Giorgi Melikishvili posited that although there was evidence of Nakh settlement in Southern Caucasus areas this did not rule out the possibility that they also lived in the North Caucasus Prior to the invasion of the Cimmerians and Scythians the Nakh had inhabited the Central Caucasus and the steppe lands all the way to the Volga river in the northeast and the Caspian Sea to the east 62 The mighty state of Durdzuketi has been known since the 4th century BC 19 The Armenian Chronicles mention that the Durdzuks defeated Scythians and became a significant power in the region in the first millennium BC 19 The Vainakh in the east had an affinity to Georgia while the Malkh Kingdom of the west looked to the new Greek kingdom of Bosporus on the Black Sea coast though it may have also had relations with Georgia as well 19 Adermalkh king of the Malkh state married the daughter of the Bosporan king in 480 BCE 19 Malkhi is one of the Chechen tukkhums 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 Medieval Edit Main article Mongol invasions of Durdzuketia During the Middle Ages the lowland of Chechnya was dominated by the Khazars and then the Alans Local culture was also subject to Georgian influence and some Chechens converted to Eastern Orthodox Christianity With a presence dating back to the 14th century Islam gradually spread among the Chechens 70 71 although the Chechens own pagan religion was still strong until the 19th century Society was organised along feudal lines Chechnya was devastated by the Mongol invasions of the 13th century and those of Tamerlane in the 14th 72 73 The Mongol invasions are well known in Chechen folktales which are often connected with military reports of Alan Dzurdzuk wars against the Mongols According to the missionary Pian de Carpine a part of the Alans had successfully resisted a Mongol siege on a mountain for 12 years 74 When they the Mongols begin to besiege a fortress they besiege it for many years as it happens today with one mountain in the land of the Alans We believe they have been besieging it for twelve years and they the Alans put up courageous resistance and killed many Tatars including many noble ones Giovanni da Pian del Carpine report from 1250 This twelve year old siege is not found in any other report however the Russian historian A I Krasnov connected this battle with two Chechen folktales he recorded in 1967 that spoke of an old hunter named Idig who with his companions defended the Dakuoh mountain for 12 years against Tatar Mongols He also reported to have found several arrowheads and spears from the 13th century near the very mountain the battle took place at 75 The next year with the onset of summer the enemy hordes came again to destroy the highlanders But even this year they failed to capture the mountain on which the brave Chechens settled down The battle lasted twelve years The main wealth of the Chechens livestock was stolen by the enemies Tired of the long years of hard struggle the Chechens believing the assurances of mercy by the enemy descended from the mountain but the Mongol Tatars treacherously killed the majority and the rest were taken into slavery This fate was escaped only by Idig and a few of his companions who did not trust the nomads and remained on the mountain They managed to escape and leave Mount Dakuoh after 12 years of siege Amin Tesaev The Legend and struggle of the Chechen hero Idig 1238 1250 Chechen warrior Tamerlane s late 14th century invasions of the Caucasus were especially costly to the Chechen kingdom of Simsir which was an ally of the Golden Horde and anti Timurid Its leader Khour Ela supported Khan Tokhtamysh during the Battle of the Terek River 76 The Chechens bear the distinction of being one of the few peoples to successfully resist the Mongols and defend themselves against their invasions not once but twice though this came at great cost to them as their states were utterly destroyed These events were key in the shaping of the Chechen nationhood and their martial oriented and clan based society 77 Early modern period Edit Main articles Circassian genocide and Caucasian War The Caucasus was a major competing area for two neighboring rival empires the Ottoman and Turco Persian empires Safavids Afsharids Qajars Starting from 1555 and decisively from 1639 through the first half of the 19th century the Caucasus was divided by these two powers with the Ottomans prevailing in Western Georgia while Persia kept the bulk of the Caucasus namely Eastern Georgia Southern Dagestan Azerbaijan and Armenia 78 The Chechens however never really fell under the rule of either empire As Russia expanded slowly southwards as early as the 16th century clashes between Chechens and Russians became more frequent and it became three empires competing for the region During these turbulent times the Chechens were organized into semi independent clans that were loyal to the Mehk Khel National Council The Mehk Khel was in charge of appointing the Mehk Da ruler of the nation Several of these appeared during the Late Middle Ages such as Aldaman Gheza Tinavin Visa Zok K ant and others The administration and military expeditions commanded by Aldaman Gheza during the 1650 1670s led to Chechnya being largely untouched by the major empires of the time Alliances were concluded with local lords against Persian encroachment and battles were fought to stop Russian influence One such battle was the Battle of Khachara between Gheza and the rival Avar Khanate that tried to exert influence on Chechnya 79 As Russia set off to increase its political influence in the Caucasus and the Caspian Sea at the expense of Safavid Persia Peter I launched the Russo Persian War in which Russia succeeded in taking much of the Caucasian territories for several years The conflict notably marked the first military encounter between Imperial Russia and the Chechens 80 Sheikh Mansur led a major Chechen resistance movement in the late 18th century Tomb of a Chechen warrior of the 19th century In the late 18th and 19th centuries Russia embarked on full scale conquest of the North Caucasus in the Caucasian War Much of the campaign was led by General Yermolov who particularly disliked the Chechens describing them as a bold and dangerous people 81 Angered by Chechen raids Yermolov resorted to a brutal policy of scorched earth and deportations he also founded the fort of Grozny now the capital of Chechnya in 1818 Chechen resistance to Russian rule reached its peak under the leadership of the Dagestani leader Imam Shamil The Chechens were finally defeated in 1861 after a bloody war that lasted for decades during which they lost most of their entire population 82 In the aftermath large numbers of refugees also emigrated or were forcibly deported to the Ottoman Empire 83 84 85 Nineteenth and twentieth centuries Edit Main articles Deportation of the Chechens and Ingush and First Chechen War Chechen veterans of the Great Patriotic War Since then there have been various Chechen rebellions against Russian Soviet power in 1865 66 1877 during the Russian Civil War and World War II as well as nonviolent resistance to Russification and the Soviet Union s collectivization and anti religion campaigns In 1944 all Chechens together with several other peoples of the Caucasus were ordered by the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin to be deported en masse to the Kazakh and Kirghiz SSRs and their republic and nation were abolished At least one quarter and perhaps half of the entire Chechen population perished in the process and a severe blow was made to their culture and historical records 83 86 87 Though rehabilitated in 1956 and allowed to return the next year the survivors lost economic resources and civil rights and under both Soviet and post Soviet governments they have been the objects of both official and unofficial discrimination and discriminatory public discourse 83 88 Chechen attempts to regain independence in the 1990s after the fall of the Soviet Union led to the first and the second war with the new Russian state starting in 1994 Language EditMain article Chechen language Chechen Soviet newspaper Serlo light written in the Chechen Latin script during Korenizatsiya The main language of the Chechen people is Chechen Chechen belongs to the family of Nakh languages Northeast Caucasian languages Literary Chechen is based on the central lowland dialect Other related languages include Ingush which has speakers in the neighbouring Ingushetia and Batsbi which is the language of the people in the adjoining part of Georgia At various times in their history Chechens used Georgian Arabic and Latin alphabets as of 2008 the official script is Russian Cyrillic Traditionally linguists attributed both Ingush and Batsbi to the Chechen language as its dialects before the endoethnonym Vainakh appeared at the beginning of the 20th century 89 90 91 92 93 Most Chechens living in their homeland can understand Ingush with ease The two languages are not truly mutually intelligible but it is easy for Chechens to learn how to understand the Ingush language and vice versa over time after hearing it for a while citation needed In 1989 73 4 spoke Russian 94 though this figure has declined due to the wars for a large number of reasons including the lack of proper education the refusal to learn the language and the mass dispersal of the Chechen diaspora due to the war Chechens in the diaspora often speak the language of the country they live in English French German Arabic Polish Georgian Turkish etc The Nakh languages are a subgroup of Northeast Caucasian and as such are related to Nakho Dagestanian family including the languages of the Avars Dargins Lezghins Laks etc However this relationship is not a close one the Nakho Dagestani family is of comparable or greater time depth than Indo European meaning Chechens are only as linguistically related to Avars or Dargins as the French are to the Russians or Iranians citation needed Genetics EditFurther information Genetic history of the Caucasus Genetic tests on Chechens have shown roots mostly in the Caucasus and Europe as well as slight connections to and influences from the Middle East Overall Chechens showed greater similarity with West Asian than with European groups for both genetic systems although this similarity was much more pronounced for the Y chromosome than for mtDNA suggesting that male mediated migrations from West Asia have influenced the genetic structure of Caucasus populations 95 Previous studies on North Caucasian mtDNA indicated a closer relationship of the Caucasus with Europe Nasidze et al 2001 while the Y chromosome indicated a closer relationship with West Asia Nasidze et al 2003 A 2004 study of the mtDNA showed Chechens to be diverse in the mitochondrial genome with 18 different haplogroups out of only 23 samples This correlates with all other North Caucasian peoples such as the Ingush Avars and Circassians where the mitochondrial DNA is very diverse 95 96 The most recent study on Chechens by Balanovsky et al in 2011 97 sampled a total of 330 Chechens from three sample locations one in Malgobek one in Achkhoy Martan and one from two sites in Dagestan and found the following frequencies A weak majority of Chechens belong to Haplogroup J2 56 7 97 which is associated with Mediterranean Caucasian and Fertile Crescent populations Other notable values were found among North Caucasian Turkic peoples Kumyks 25 98 and Balkars 24 99 It is notable that J2 suddenly collapses as one enters the territory of non Nakh Northeast Caucasian peoples dropping to very low values among Dagestani peoples 95 97 100 101 The overwhelming bulk of Chechen J2 is of the subclade J2a4b J2 M67 of which the highest frequencies by far are found among Nakh peoples Chechens were 55 2 according to the Balanovsky study while Ingush were 87 4 Other notable haplogroups that consistently appeared at high frequencies included J1 20 9 L 7 0 G2 5 5 R1a 3 9 Q M242 3 and R1b M269 1 8 but much higher in Chechnya itself as opposed to Dagestani or Ingushetian Chechens Overall tests have shown consistently that Chechens are most closely related to Ingush Circassians and other North Caucasians occasionally showing a kinship to other peoples in some tests Balanovsky s study showed the Ingush to be the Chechens closest relatives by far 97 101 102 Russian military historian and Lieutenant General Vasily Potto describes the appearance of the Chechens as follows The Chechen is handsome and strong Tall brunette slender with sharp features and a quick determined look he amazes with his mobility agility dexterity 103 According to a 2021 Rosstat study Chechnya ranked as the tallest region in Russia for men 179 1 cm and second tallest for women 168 2 104 Culture EditSee also Vainakh tower architecture Vainakh mythology Chechen cuisine and Chechen art Istang a type of woven Chechen carpet Prior to the adoption of Islam the Chechens practiced a unique blend of religious traditions and beliefs They partook in numerous rites and rituals many of them pertaining to farming these included rain rites a celebration that occurred on the first day of plowing as well as the Day of the Thunderer Sela and the Day of the Goddess Tusholi In addition to sparse written record from the Middle Ages Chechens traditionally remember history through the illesh a collection of epic poems and stories An example of Chechen tower architecture ruins of the medieval settlement of NikaroyChechens are accustomed to democratic ways their social structure being firmly based on equality pluralism and deference to individuality Chechen society is structured around tukkhums unions of clans and about 130 teips or clans The teips are based more on land and one side lineage than on blood as exogamy is prevalent and encouraged and are bonded together to form the Chechen nation Teips are further subdivided into gar branches and gars into nekye patronymic families The Chechen social code is called nokhchallah where Nokhchuo stands for Chechen and may be loosely translated as Chechen character The Chechen code of honor and customary law adat implies moral and ethical behaviour generosity and the will to safeguard the honor of women The traditional Chechen saying goes that the members of Chechen society like its teips are ideally free and equal like wolves 105 106 A phandar a traditional Chechen musical instrument Chechens today have a strong sense of nation which is enforced by the old clan network and nokhchalla the obligation to clan tukkhum etc This is often combined with old values transmuted into a modern sense They are mythically descended from the epic hero Turpalo Nokhchuo Chechen Hero There is a strong theme of representing the nation with its national animal the wolf Due to their strong dependence on the land its farms and its forests and indeed the national equation with the wolf Chechens have a strong affection for nature According to Chechen philosopher Apty Bisultanov ruining an ant hill or hunting Caucasian goats during their mating season was considered extremely sinful 107 It is notable that the glasnost era Chechen independence movement Bart unity in fact originated as a simple environmentalist organization in the republic s capital of Grozny 108 Chechen kids by Theodor Horschelt 1858 Chechen culture puts a strong value on the concept of freedom This asserts itself in a number of ways A large majority of the nation s national heroes fought for independence or otherwise like the legendary Zelimkhan robbed from the Russian oppressors in order to feed Chechen children in a Robin Hood like fashion A common greeting in the Chechen language marsha oylla is literally translated as enter in freedom The word for freedom also encompasses notions of peace and prosperity Chechens at a wedding circa 1870 1886 Chechens are sometimes referred to as the French of the Caucasus for a number of reasons it is notable that the Circassians are the English of the Caucasus and the Georgians are the Italians of the Caucasus This comparison may refer to either political historical traits or to personality characteristics Like the French who overthrew their age old monarchy in the French Revolution the Chechens had a similar revolution a century or two earlier 109 and like the French they bore the distinction for a period of being the only egalitarian society in an area full of monarchic states Like the French the Chechens preferred swift revolutionary and often violent methods to realize the change they wished to see unlike the Circassians called the English of the Caucasus both for their political and personality characteristics who preferred more gradualist methods 110 Chechens were also called French by early Russian military officers and the French anthropologist Ernest Chantre who noted their happy and witty nature 111 Religion Edit Chechen Mosque Architecture Chechnya is predominantly Muslim 25 Most of the population follows either the Shafi i or the Hanafi 112 schools of jurisprudence fiqh The Shafi i school of jurisprudence has a long tradition among the Chechens 113 and thus it remains the most practiced 114 Some adhere to the mystical Sufi tradition of muridism while about half of Chechens belong to Sufi brotherhoods or tariqah The two Sufi tariqas that spread in the North Caucasus were the Naqshbandiyya and the Qadiriyya the Naqshbandiyya is particularly strong in Dagestan and eastern Chechnya whereas the Qadiriyya has most of its adherents in the rest of Chechnya and Ingushetia There are also small Christian and atheist minorities although their numbers are unknown in Chechnya in Kazakhstan they are roughly 3 and 2 of the Chechen population respectively 115 A Chechen man prays during the Battle of Grozny The flame in the background is from a gas line hit by shrapnel January 1995 A stereotype of an average Chechen being a fundamentalist Muslim is incorrect and misleading 116 117 By the late 2000s however two new trends have emerged in Chechnya A radicalized remnant of the armed Chechen separatist movement has become dominated by Salafis popularly known in Russia as Wahhabis and present in Chechnya in small numbers since the 1990s mostly abandoning nationalism in favor of Pan Islamism and merging with several other regional Islamic insurgencies to form the Caucasus Emirate At the same time Chechnya under Moscow backed authoritarian rule of Ramzan Kadyrov has undergone its own controversial counter campaign of Islamization of the republic with the local government actively promoting and enforcing their own version of a so called traditional Islam including introducing elements of Sharia that replaced Russian official laws 118 119 120 121 See also EditList of Chechen people Nakh peoples Ingush people North Caucasian peoples Islam in Russia Chechens in Syria Timurid invasions of SimsimReferences Edit Chechnya has no troops in Ukraine Bbc com 28 May 2014 Retrieved 17 October 2018 Russian Census of 2021 in Russian a b c d e f g h i j Russian Census of 2021 in Russian As Hit Men Strike Concern Grows Among Chechen Exiles RFE RL March 12 2009 a b Chechens in the Middle East Between Original and Host Cultures Archived 2011 07 22 at the Wayback Machine Event Report Caspian Studies Program Kristiina Markkanen Chechen refugee came to Finland via Baku and Istanbul Archived 2011 11 21 at the Wayback Machine Englisch Kazakhstan population stats 2017 01 01 Retrieved 2018 03 03 Jordan willing to assist Chechnya King Reliefweb int 2007 08 28 Retrieved 2013 04 20 Ahmet Katav Bilgay Duman November 2012 Iraqi Circassians Chechens Dagestanis Adyghes PDF ORSAM Reports 134 Archived from the original PDF on 3 April 2013 Retrieved 15 April 2013 Jaimoukha Amjad M 2008 Syria The Chechens A Handbook Routledge p 232 ISBN 978 0 415 32328 4 Circassian Ossetian Chechen Minorities Solicit Russian Help To Leave Syria Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 12 August 2012 Retrieved 2013 04 20 About number and composition population of Ukraine by data All Ukrainian census of the population 2001 Ukraine Census 2001 State Statistics Committee of Ukraine Retrieved 17 January 2012 Chechnya s Exodus to Europe North Caucasus Weekly Volume 9 Issue 3 The Jamestown Foundation January 24 2008 031 Language by sex by region and municipality in 1990 to 2017 Statistics Finland Archived from the original on 26 June 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2018 Andrew Meier April 19 2013 The Chechens in America Why They re Here and Who They Are The Daily Beast Retrieved April 30 2013 Note that the actual amount of Chechens living in the United States is higher as they are categorized as Russians in censuses Latvijas iedzivotaju sadalijums pec nacionala sastava un valstiskas piederibas PDF pmlp gov lv in Latvian 1 January 2021 Retrieved 25 November 2022 Chechen The Chambers Dictionary 9th ed Chambers 2003 ISBN 0 550 10105 5 a b c d e f Jaimoukha Amjad The Chechens National Geographic Atlas of the World 7th ed Washington DC National Geographic 1999 ISBN 978 0 7922 7528 2 Europe pp 68 69 Asia pp 90 91 A commonly accepted division between Asia and Europe is formed by the Ural Mountains Ural River Caspian Sea Caucasus Mountains and the Black Sea with its outlets the Bosporus and Dardanelles Russian Census of 2021 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Chechenzes Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 21 Berge Adolf 1859 Chechnya i Chechency Tiflis pp 65 66 Vot ischislenie vseh plemen na kotorye prinyato delit Chechencev V strogom zhe smysle delenie eto ne imeet osnovaniya Samim Chechencam ono sovershenno neizvestno Oni sami sebya nazyvayut Nahche t e narod i eto otnositsya do vsego naroda govoryashego na Chechenskom yazyke i ego narechiyah Upomyanutye zhe nazvaniya im byli dany ili ot aulov kak Cori Galgaj Shatoj i dr ili ot rek i gor kak Michikovcy i Kachkalyki Vesma veroyatno chto rano ili pozdno vse ili bolshaya chast privedennyh nami imen ischeznut i Chechency uderzhat za soboyu odno obshee naimenovanie Vajnahi i alany Ruslan Arsanukaev o proishozhdenii nazvanij i samonazvanij Chechencev i Ingushej a b The George Washington University Washington D C PDF Gwu edu Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2017 Retrieved 17 October 2018 a b Plaetschke 1929 Migracionnye i urbanizacionnye processy v hode sta Amin Tesaev Proza ru proza ru deklaraciya PDF orsthoy ru in Russian February 1951 Retrieved 25 November 2022 RUSSKO ChEChENSKIE OTNOShENIYa VTORAYa POLOVINA XVI XVII v DrevLit Ru biblioteka drevnih rukopisej drevlit ru a b Vajnahi i alany Ruslan Arsanukaev o proishozhdenii nazvanij i samonazvanij Chechencev i Ingushej ignorik ru Vajnahi i alany Ruslan Arsanukaev o proishozhdenii nazvanij i samonazvanij Chechencev i Ingushej Volkova N G 1973 Etnonimy i plemennye nazvaniya Severnogo Kavkaza Ethnonyms and tribal names of the North Caucasus in Russian Moscow Nauka pp 134 135 Predanie o proishozhdenii chechencev Chechnya s Exodus to Europe North Caucasus Weekly Volume 9 Issue 3 The Jamestown Foundation January 24 2008 a b ETHNICITY AND CONFLICT IN THE CAUCASUS 5 Src h slav hokudai ac jp Retrieved 17 October 2018 a b Wuethrich Bernice 19 May 2000 Peering Into the Past With Words Science 288 5469 1158 doi 10 1126 science 288 5469 1158 S2CID 82205296 Bernice Wuethrich 19 May 2000 Peering Into the Past With Words Science 288 5469 1158 doi 10 1126 science 288 5469 1158 S2CID 82205296 Johanna Nichols February 1997 The Ingush with notes on the Chechen Background information University of California Berkeley Archived from the original on March 11 2008 Retrieved 2007 02 10 Jaimoukha Chechens Page 29 a b Jaimoukha Amjad 2004 11 10 The Chechens p 28 doi 10 4324 9780203356432 ISBN 978 0 203 35643 2 The Urartian language itself took several generations to decipher and is now believed to be a distant ancestor of existing Caucasian languages such as Chechen Chechnya i Rossiya obshchestva i gosudarstva Sb materialov konferentsii Pod red D Furmana M Polinform Talburi English translation This sounds extremely unexpected but it is The Chechen nation is the ethnic root part of the Caucasian race one of the oldest sources of human civilization the fundamental principle of spirituality passed through the Hurrian Mittani Urartian cultures 1999 ISBN 978 5 93516 004 3 Ortayli Ilber English translation Most of the historical facts indicate that the language of the ancient state of Urartu is closer to the modern Chechen one It is highly probable that the ancestors of modern Chechens moved to the territory of the North Caucasus from Anatolia from Urartu English translation Today urartologists do not deny the kinship of the Chechens with the Urartians The kinship of the Hurrians Urartians Chechens is confirmed by those who studied it Hence the following conclusion follows Chechens are Urartians Urartians is the remaining branch of the Chechens in Asia Minor Actually its structure grammatical features completeness and grammar of classes etc Urartian and Chechen are similar to each other ATLAS monthly geography and exploration magazine March 2003 Issue 120 2 Archived from the original on 2021 01 18 Chechens are not actually Caucasians but ethnically and linguistically sharply separated from other mountain peoples of the Caucasus They are the offspring of the great Hyperborean Paleo Asian tribe displaced to the Caucasus which extended from Turan through northern Mesopotamia and into Canaan With its vocalism its structure the Chechen language as a member of the family which once geographically and genetically stood closer to the Proto Hamitic Iberian or Proto Phrygian than to the Caucasian languages proper The Chechen is a leaping northern offspring of the proto language which once occupied a more southern territory namely in the pre Armenian Alarodian Urartian Western Asia Traces of Nachtsuoi s Chechens stay in the country of Ararat Urartu are found in toponymy as Nachtsevan Nakhtshuan Nachidschevan This alone explains the strongly Alarodian Urartian Armenoid character of the Chechen language which deviates from the normal Caucasian sound system Joseph Karst Ph D 1 Origines mediterraneae Die vorgeschichtlichen Mittelmeervolker nach Ursprung Schichtung und Verwandtschaft Ethnologisch Linguistische Forschungen Heidelberg 1931 p 85 2 Grundzuge einer Vergleichenden Grammatik des Ibero kaukasischen Band I Strassburg 1932 p 29 The anthropology of Chechens and Ingush is somewhat different The Ingush belong to the central cluster of the Caucasian Mtebid anthropotype with pronounced brachycephalization which indicates a strong mixing with the Koban culture Whereas the Chechens although they belong mainly to the Caucasians Mtebids combine many elements of the Caspian and even the Pontid In addition the Chechens have the highest percentage of the dolichocephalic index among the characteristic brachycephalic Caucasions Mtebids All this testifies that the Chechens to a greater extent have preserved the Hurrian substratum J Taisayev Etnogenez narodov Kavkaza 5 September 2017 p 131 ISBN 978 5 04 005867 9 The Urartians themselves or Alarodians called their country and state Biainili from which comes the modern name of Lake Van in the basin of which the center of this state was located Since ancient times Urartian Alarodian tribes akin to the Hurrian population of the countries to the southwest of Lake Van lived around Lake Van and in adjacent areas The Urartian as well as the Hurrian language belonged to a special linguistic family among the modern languages the closest to them are some languages of the North Caucasus Chechen and Ingush Materialy po istorii SSSR Dlya seminarskikh i prakticheskikh zanyatiy Vyp 1 Drevneyshiye narody i gosudarstva na territorii SSSR 1985 p 7 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint others link Wilhelm Gernot 1982 The long standing assumptions about the connections of Hurrian and Urartian with the Caucasian languages have received serious confirmation thanks to the collected correspondences identified in the North East Caucasian languages and especially in Vainakh Darmstadt ISBN 3 534 08151 X The most ancient state on the territory of our country was the Urartian kingdom in the Transcaucasus The word Urartu the memory of it is preserved in the name of Mount Ararat is Assyrian but the inhabitants themselves called their country Biainili hence Lake Van The Alarodian or Urartian tribes living around this lake who spoke a language that has not survived to this day of the modern ones Chechen and Ingush are the closest to it back in the 13th century BC e created their own tribal union Pavlenko N I Kobrin V B Fedorov V A Istoriya SSSR s drevneyshikh vremen do 1861 goda Uchebnik dlya pedagogicheskikh institutov M 1989 g 1989 ISBN 5 09 000551 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Of the peoples existing in our time the Chechens and Ingush are the closest to the Hurrian Urartian in terms of language Aleksandrova N V Ladynin I A Nemirovskiy A A Yakovlev V M Drevniy Vostok Uchebnoye posobiye dlya vuzov 2008 p 371 ISBN 978 5 17 045827 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Kul tura suvaro bulgar istoriya vooruzheniya Voyennaya istoriya suvaro bulgar V N Almantay Archived from the original on 2016 07 13 Smeets Rieks 1989 On Hurro Urartian as an Eastern Caucasian language Bibliotheca Orientalis XLVI 260 280 Fournet Arnaud 2013 About the vocalic system of Armenian words of substratic origins Archiv Orientalni 1 Johanna Nichols January 2003 The Nakh Dagestanian consonant correspondences In Dee Ann Holisky Kevin Tuite eds Current Trends in Caucasian East European and Inner Asian Linguistics Papers in Honor of Howard I Aronson John Benjamins Publishing p 208 ISBN 9027247587 Zimansky Paul 2011 Urartian and Urartians The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Anatolia Oxford Handbooks Online p 556 Gamkrelidze Thomas V Gudava T E 1998 Caucasian Languages Encyclopaedia Britannica Kallio Petri XXI Beyond Indo European In Klein Jared Joseph Brian Fritz Matthew eds Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics De Gruyter Mouton pp 2285 2286 Kallio Petri XXI Beyond Indo European In Klein Jared Joseph Brian Fritz Matthew eds Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics De Gruyter Mouton pp 2285 2286 Herodotus Book VII chapters 57 137 Zimansky Paul Urartian and Urartians The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Anatolia 2011 556 1 Jaimoukha Amjad 2004 11 10 The Chechens Routledge p 31 doi 10 4324 9780203356432 ISBN 978 0 203 35643 2 Jaimoukha Amjad The Chechens A Handbook Page 24 Also the Georgian historian G A Melikishvili maintained that the formation of the Vainakh took place much earlier than the first century BC Though evidence of Nakh settlement was found on the southern slopes of the Caucasus in the second and first millennia BC he did not rule out the possibility of their residence in the northern and eastern regions of the Caucasus It is traditionally accepted that the Vainakh have existed in the Caucasus with their present territory as a nucleus of a larger domicile for thousands of years and that it was the birthplace of their ethnos to which the peoples who inhabited the Central Caucasus and the steppe lands all the way to the Volga in the northeast and the Caspian Sea to the east contributed Krupnov E I Drevnosti Checheno Ingushetii Izd vo Akademii nauk SSSR 1963 s 256 Nataev Sajpudi Alvievich PROBLEMA ETNOTERRITORIALNOJ STRUKTURY ChEChNI V XVIII XIX VV V ISTORIChESKOJ LITERATURE Markovin V I V ushelyah Arguna i Fortangi Moskva 1965 s 71 Mamakaev M Chechenskij tajp v period ego razlozheniya Groznyj 1973 Shavhelishvili A I Gruzino checheno ingushskie vzaimootnosheniya Tbilisi 1992 s 65 72 Piotrovskij B B Istoriya narodov Severnogo Kavkaza s drevnejshih vremen do konca XVIII v Nauka 1988 s 239 N G Volkova Etnicheskij sostav naseleniya Severnogo Kavkaza v XVIII nachale XX veka Moskva Nauka 1974 s 169 Islam Islam in the Caucasus and the Middle Volga Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 2022 03 10 Skutsch Carl ed 2005 Encyclopedia of the World s Minorities New York Routledge p 280 ISBN 1 57958 468 3 Jaimoukha pp 33 34 Dunlop p 3 Tesaev Amin 2020 K lichnosti i borbe chechenskogo geroya idiga 1238 1250 gg a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Krasnov A I Kope Tebulos Mta Vokrug sveta 9 29 Tesaev Amin 2018 Simsim REFLEKSIYa 2 61 67 Minahan James 2000 One Europe Many Nations A Historical Dictionary of European National Groups Greenwood Publishing Group p 168 ISBN 978 0 313 30984 7 Peimani Hooman 17 October 2018 Conflict and Security in Central Asia and the Caucasus ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 054 4 Retrieved 17 October 2018 via Google Books Gazi Aldamov ili Aldaman GIeza voevoda i predvod Amin Tesaev Proza ru proza ru Schaefer Robert W 2010 The Insurgency in Chechnya and the North Caucasus From Gazavat to Jihad ISBN 978 0 313 38634 3 Retrieved 25 December 2014 Dunlop p 14 Jaimoukha p 50 The Chechens suffered horrific losses in human life during the long war From an estimated population of over a million in the 1840s there were only 140 000 Chechens left in the Caucasus in 1861 a b c Who are the Chechens PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2006 09 15 by Johanna Nichols University of California Berkeley Dunlop p 29ff Dunlop writes p 30 In 1860 according to Soviet era figures 81 360 Chechens left for Turkey a second emigration took place in 1865 when an additional 22 500 Chechens left More than 100 000 Chechens were thus ethnically cleansed during this process This was perhaps a majority of their total population Jaimoukha p 50 Jaimoukha p 58 Dunlop Chapter 2 Soviet Genocide particularly pp 70 71 How many died Jaimoukha p 60 But after their unification in 1934 into a single Chechen Ingush Autonomous Region Chechen Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic since 1936 the authorities did their best to ensure the merger of the Chechens and Ingush into a single people for which a new name was created Veinakhs Vainakhs In the 1960s 1980s this identity was actively introduced into the consciousness of the Chechens and Ingush and gradually gained more and more popularity V A Shnirel man Byt alanami Intellektualy i politika na Severnom Kavkaze v XX veke p 279 Archived from the original on 2021 01 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint others link Yazyki i narechiya Rossiyskoy Imperii Statisticheskiy atlas Rossii A F Marksa prilozheniye 14 Sankt Peterburg 1907 god Archived from the original on 2017 12 10 Kavkazskiy tolmach perevodchik s russkogo na glavnѣyshiye kavkazskiye yazyki 1891 p 681 Archived from the original on 2021 04 28 N YA Marr Izbrannyye raboty Archived from the original on 2014 12 11 InfoRost N P GPIB Vyp 1 Terskaya oblast arheologicheskie ekskursii Vsev Millera 1888 elib shpl ru Retrieved 2022 04 23 Mikhailov Valentin Chechnya and Tatarstan a b c I Nasidze E Y S Ling D Quinque et al Mitochondrial DNA and Y Chromosome Variation in the Caucasus Archived 2011 06 08 at the Wayback Machine Annals of Human Genetics 2004 68 205 221 Nasidze I Ling E Y S Quinque D Dupanloup I Cordaux R Rychkov S Naumova O Zhukova O Sarraf Zadegan N Naderi G A Asgary S Sardas S Farhud D D Sarkisian T Asadov C Kerimov A Stoneking M 2004 Mitochondrial DNA and Y Chromosome Variation in the Caucasus Annals of Human Genetics 68 3 205 221 doi 10 1046 j 1529 8817 2004 00092 x PMID 15180701 S2CID 27204150 Retrieved 2022 02 28 a b c d Oleg Balanovsky et al Parallel Evolution of Genes and Languages in the Caucasus Region Molecular Biology and Evolution 2011 Yunusbaev 2006 Battaglia Vincenza Fornarino Simona Al Zahery Nadia Olivieri Anna Pala Maria Myres Natalie M King Roy J Rootsi Siiri Marjanovic Damir 24 December 2008 Y chromosomal evidence of the cultural diffusion of agriculture in southeast Europe PDF European Journal of Human Genetics 17 6 820 830 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2008 249 PMC 2947100 PMID 19107149 Yunusbaev 2006 a b Caciagli et al 2009 The key role of patrilineal inheritance in the genetic variation of Dagestani highlanders Nasidze et al Mitochondrial DNA and Y Chromosome Variation in the Caucasus Annals of Human Genetics 2004 V A Potto Kavkazskaya voyna v otdel nykh ocherkakh epizodakh legendakh i biografiyakh Archived from the original on 2011 11 13 https absatz media obshestvo 29452 v rosstate rasskazali ob uvelichenii srednego rosta rossiyan Jaimoukha Chechens Page 83 Gammer Moshe The Lone Wolf and the Bear Three Centuries of Chechen Defiance of Russian Rule London 2006 Page 4 Chechen Republic History Born to be free Chechen 8m com Archived from the original on 2013 05 18 Retrieved 2013 04 20 Wood Tony Chechnya The Case for Independence Page 46 Jaimoukha Amjad The Chechens A Handbook Page 14 Manning Paul Just Like England On the Liberal Institutions of the Circassians Circassianworld com Carlotta Gall and Thomas de Wall Chechnya Calamity in the Caucasus Page 22 McDermott Roger Shafi i and Hanafi schools of jurisprudence in Chechnya Jamestown org Retrieved 2013 04 19 Balzer Marjorie Mandelstam 2009 11 09 Religion and Politics in Russia A Reader ISBN 978 0 7656 2931 9 Mairbek Vatchagaev September 8 2006 The Kremlin s War on Islamic Education in the North Caucasus Archived from the original on 2007 10 11 Chechnya Weekly Volume 7 Issue 34 September 8 2006 Archived copy Archived from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved July 24 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Shattering the Al Qaeda Chechen Myth Part 1 Archived from the original on 2004 01 29 by Brian Glyn Williams The Jamestown Foundation October 2 2003 Wood Tony Chechnya the Case for Independence pp 127 145 United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Kadyrov Exploits Ties with Moscow to Build Islamic State Refworld org UNHCR Retrieved 2013 04 22 Virtue Campaign on Women in Chechnya under Ramzan Kadyrov Human Rights Watch Hrw org 2012 10 29 Retrieved 2013 04 22 Chechen Leader s Islamic Policies Stir Unease Npr org Retrieved 2013 04 22 Tom Parfitt Grozny Russia 16 March 2011 The Islamic Republic of Chechnya Pulitzer Center Archived from the original on 2013 06 07 Retrieved 2013 04 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Sources EditDunlop John B 1998 Russia Confronts Chechnya Roots of a Separatist Conflict Cambridge University Press Ilyasov Lechi 2009 The Diversity of the Chechen Culture From Historical Roots to the Present Moskow in Russian Jaimoukha Amjad 2005 The Chechens A Handbook London New York Routledge Plaetschke Bruno 1929 Die Tschetschenen Forschungen zur Volkerkunde des nordostlichen Kaukasus auf Grund von Reisen in den Jahren 1918 20 und 1927 28 The Chechens Veroffentlichungen des Geographischen Instituts der Universitat Konigsberg Pr 11 in German Hamburg Friedrichsen de Gruyter amp Co m b H Further reading Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chechen people Traditional Social Organisation of Chechen peopleArchived 2011 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chechens amp oldid 1152658326, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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