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Circassia

Circassia (/sɜːrˈkæʃə/; also spelled as Cherkessia[8][9] in some sources; Adyghe: Адыгэ Хэку/Хэкужъ, romanized: Adıgə Xəku, Xəkujz, lit.'Circassian Homeland/Ancient Homeland') or Zichia[10][8][9] was a country and a historical region in the North Caucasus along the northeast shore of the Black Sea.[11][12] It was conquered and occupied by Russia during the Russian-Circassian War (1763–1864), after which 90% of the Circassian people were either exiled from the region or massacred in the Circassian genocide.[13][14][15][16][17]

Circassia
Адыгэ Хэку/Хэкужъ (Adyghe & Kabardian)
???–1864
Coat of arms
Motto: 
"Псэм ипэ напэ"
Psəm yipə napə
("Honour before life")
Area marked Circassia
Revised administrative divisions of Circassia in 1860 according to a decree issued by the Circassian Parliament
Residence of leader (Capital)

43°35′07″N 39°43′13″E / 43.58528°N 39.72028°E / 43.58528; 39.72028
Largest townShache (Sochi)
Official languagesCircassian languages
Other languages
Religion
Demonym(s)Circassian (English)
Çerkes (Turkish)
Cherkess (Russian)
GovernmentUnion of Regional Councils[1][2]
• Leader of Western Circassia
c. 100s
c. 400s
c. 500s

668–960
c. 700s–800s
c. 800s–900s


c. 960s–1000s
c. 1000s–1022
c. 1200s
c. 1200s–1237
1237–1239
c. 1330s
c. late 1300s
c. 1427–1453
c. 1453-c. 1470s
c. 1470s-?
c. 1530s–1542
1807–1827
1827–1839
1839–1846
1849–1859
1859–1860
1861–1864

List:
Stakhemfaqu (Stachemfak)
Dawiy
Bakhsan Dawiqo

Khazar rule
Lawristan (Khazar vassal)
Weche (Khazar vassal)


Hapach
Rededya
Abdunkhan
Tukar
Tukbash
Verzacht
Berezok
Inal the Great
Belzebuk
Petrezok
Kansavuk
Shuwpagwe Qalawebateqo
Ismail Berzeg
Hawduqo Mansur
Muhammad Amin
Sefer Bey Zanuqo
Qerandiqo Berzeg
• Prince of Eastern Circassia
c. 1427–1453
1453–c. 1490
c. 1490c. 1500
c. 1500c. 1525
c. 1525c. 1540
c. 1540–1554
1554–1571
1571–1578
1578–1589
1589–1609
1609–1616
1616–1624
1624–1654
1654–1672
1672–1695
1695–1710
1710–1721
1721–1732
1732–1737
1737–1746
1746–1749
1749–1762
1762–1773
1773–1785
1785–1788
1788–1809
1809
1810–1822

List:
Inal the Great
Tabulda
Inarmas
Beslan
Idar
Kaytuk I
Temruk
Shiapshuk
Kambulat
Kaytuk II
Sholokh
Kudenet
Aleguko
Atajuq I
Misost
Atajuq II Kurgoqo
Atajuq III Misewestiqo
Islambek
Tatarkhan
Qeytuqo Aslanbech
Batoko
Bamat Muhammad
Qasey Atajuq
Jankhot
Misost II Bematiqwa
Atajuq III
Atajuq IV
Jankhot II Qushuq
Confederation Leaders 
LegislatureLepq Zefes
Parliament of Independence (1860-1864)
History 
• Established
???
1763–1864
• Disestablished
1864
Area
• Total
82,000 km2 (32,000 sq mi)
Population
• Estimate
1,625,000 (pre-Circassian genocide)
86,655 (post-Circassian genocide)[3][4][5][6][7]
CurrencyNo official currency. Ottoman coins served as de facto currency
Circassia in 1450 during the reign of Inal the Great
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofRussia
Georgia
Abkhazia
Princes of East Circassia
Presidents of the Circassian Confederation

In the Medieval Era, Circassia was nominally ruled by the elected Grand Prince, however, individual principalities and tribes were highly autonomous. In the 18th-19th centuries, a central government began to form. The Circassians also dominated the north of the Kuban river in the early medieval and ancient times, but with the raids of the Mongol Empire, Golden Horde and the Crimean Khanate, they were withdrawn south of the Kuban, and their reduced borders stretched from the Taman Peninsula to North Ossetia. During the Medieval Era, Circassian lords subjugated and vassalized the neighboring Karachay-Balkars and Ossetians.[18] The term Circassia is also used as the collective name of Circassian states established on Circassian territory, such as Zichia.

Legally and internationally, the Treaty of Belgrade of 1739 between Austria and Turkey provided for the recognition of the independence of Eastern Circassia (Kabarda). Both the Russian Empire and the Ottoman Empire recognized it, and the great powers at the time witnessed the treaty. The Congress of Vienna held in the period between 1814-1815 also stipulated the recognition of the independence of Circassia. In 1837, Circassian leaders sent letters to European countries requesting legal recognition. Following this, the United Kingdom recognized Circassia.[19][20] However, during the Russian-Circassian War, the Russian Empire did not recognize Circassia as an independent region, and treated it as Russian land under rebel occupation, despite having no control or ownership over the region.[21] Russian generals referred to the Circassians not by their ethnic name, but as "mountaineers", “bandits", and "mountain scum".[21][22]

Although Circassia is the original homeland of the Circassian people, today most Circassians live in exile, following the Circassian genocide.[23][24][25][26]

Etymology

The words Circassia and Circassian (/sərˈkæsiənz/ sər-KASS-ee-ənz) are exonyms, Latinized from the word Cherkess, which is of debated origin.[27][28] One view is that its root stems from Turkic languages, and that the term means “head choppers” or “warrior killers” accounting for the successful battle practices of the Circassians.[29] There are those who argue that the term comes from Mongolian Jerkes, meaning “one who blocks a path”.[30][31] Some believe it comes from the ancient Greek name of the region, Siraces. According to another view, its origin is Persian.

In languages spoken geographically close to the Caucasus, the native people originally had other names for the Circassia, but with Russian influence, the name has been settled as Cherkessia/Circassia. It is the same or similar in many world languages that cite these languages.

Circassians themselves don't use the term "Circassia", and refer to their country as Адыгэ Хэку (Adıgə Xəku) or Адыгей (Adıgey).

Another historical name for the country was Zichia (Zyx or the Zygii), who were described by the ancient Greek intellectual Strabo as a nation to the north of Colchis.[32]

Geography

 
Circassia in 1856

Circassia was located in Eastern Europe, north of Western Asia, near the northeastern Black Sea coast. Before the Russian conquest of the Caucasus (1763–1864), it covered the entire fertile plateau and the steppe of the northwestern region of the Caucasus, with an estimated population of 1 million.[citation needed]

Circassia's historical great range extended from the Taman Peninsula in the west, to the town of Mozdok in today's North Ossetia–Alania in the east. Historically, Circassia covered the southern half of today's Krasnodar Krai, the Republic of Adygea, Karachay-Cherkessia, Kabardino-Balkaria, and parts of North Ossetia–Alania and Stavropol Krai, bounded by the Kuban River on the north which separated it from the Russian Empire.

On the Black Sea coast, the climate is warm and humid, while being moderate in the lowlands and cooler in the highlands. Most of Circassia is frost free for more than half the year. There are steppe meadows in the plains, beech and oak forests in the foothills, and pine forests and alpine meadows in the mountains.[33]

Sochi is considered by many Circassians as their traditional capital city.[34] According to Circassians, the 2014 Winter Olympic village is built in an area of mass graves of Circassians after their defeat by the Russians in 1864.[35]

Statehood and politics

Institute of the Grand Prince of Circassia

Between 1427 and 1453, Inal the Great conquered all Circassian principalities and declared himself the Grand Prince of Circassia. Following his death, Circassia was divided again.[36]

The influential principalities of Circassia regularly met to elect a Grand Prince (Пщышхо) among them, with the only condition being that the prince can trace descent from Inal the Great. The existence of such an institute is confirmed by foreign sources. In the eyes of foreign observers, the Grand Prince was considered the king of the Circassians.[37] However, the individual tribes were greatly autonomous and the title was mostly symbolic. In 1237, the Dominican monks Richard and Julian, as part of the Hungarian embassy, visited Circassia and the main city of this country Matrega, located on the Taman Peninsula. In Matrega, the embassy received a good reception from the Grand Prince.[38]

In the 14th and 15th centuries Italian documents concerning the relationship between the consul of Kafa and Circassia clearly indicate the absolutely special status of the ruler of Circassia. This status allowed the senior prince of Circassia to correspond with the Pope. The letter of Pope John XXII , addressed to the Grand Prince of Zichia (Circassia) Verzacht, dates back to 1333, in which the Roman pontiff thanked the ruler for his diligence in introducing the Catholic faith among his subjects. Verzacht's power status was so high that following his example some other Circassian princes adopted Catholicism.[39]

Confederation

Circassia traditionally consisted of more than a dozen principalities. Some of these principalities were divided into large feudal estates, characterized by the stability of political status. Within these territories there were numerous feudal possessions of princes (pshi). The Circassian state was a federal state consisting of four levels of government: Village council (чылэ хасэ, made up of village elders and nobles), district council (made up of representatives from 7 neighboring village councils), regional council (шъолъыр хасэ, made up from neighboring district councils), people's council (лъэпкъ зэфэс, where every council had a representative). A central government emerged during the mid to late 1800s. Prior to that, the institute of grand prince was mostly symbolic.

In 1807, Shuwpagwe Qalawebateqo self-proclaimed himself as the leader of the Circassian confederation, and divided Circassia into 12 major regions.[40][41][42][43] In 1827, Ismail Berzeg officially declared the military confederation of the Circassian tribes and by 1839 united a significant part of Circassia under his control.[44][45] In 1839, the Circassians declared Bighuqal (Anapa) as their new capital and Hawduqo Mansur was declared the new leader of the Circassian Confederation. He kept this title until his death.[46][47][45] In 1848, Muhammad Amin was the leader of Circassia.[48][49][50] After learning that a warriorly scholar has arrived, thousands of families moved to the Abdzakh region to accept his rule.[51] Seferbiy Zaneqo assumed power after Amin's departure, but died the next year.

In June 1860, at a congress of representatives of Circassians, a parliament was formed as the highest legislative body of Circassia. Being a political resistance council and the legislature of Circassia,[52][53][54] the parliament was established in the capital of Sochi (Adyghe: Шъачэ, romanized: Ş̂açə) on June 13, 1860 and Qerandiqo Berzeg was elected as the head of the parliament and the nation.[55][56]

External relations

Legally and internationally, the Treaty of Belgrade 1739 provided for the recognition of the independence of Eastern Circassia (Kabarda), where both the Russian Empire and the Ottoman Empire recognized it, and the great powers at the time witnessed the treaty. The Congress of Vienna held in the period between 1814-1815 also stipulated the recognition of the independence of Circassia. In 1837, Circassian leaders sent letters to European countries requesting legal recognition. Following this, the United Kingdom recognized Circassia.[19][20] However, during the Russian-Circassian War, the Russian Empire did not recognize Circassia as an independent region, and treated it as Russian land under rebel occupation, despite having no control or ownership over the region.[21] Russian generals referred to the Circassians not by their ethnic name, but as "mountaineers", “bandits", and "mountain scum".[21][22]

The Circassian Parliament launched large-scale foreign policy activities. First of all, an official memorandum was drafted addressed to Tsar Alexander II. The text of the memorandum was presented to the tsar by the leaders of the Parliament during the latter's visit to Circassia in September 1861. The Parliament also accepted an appeal to the Ottoman and European governments. Special envoys were sent to Istanbul and London to seek diplomatic and military support. The activities of the Circassian government received the full support of public organizations, so the Circassian Committee of Istanbul and London supported Circassia. Thus, if not de jure, then de facto Circassia acquired the features of a subject of international law.[57]

Relations with the Ottoman Empire

In the 16th century, the English traveler Edmund Spencer, who traveled to the shores of the Caucasus, quotes a Circassian saying about the Ottoman sultan:

Circassian blood flows in the veins of the Sultan. His mother, his harem are Circassian; his slaves are Circassians, his ministers and generals are Circassians. He is the head of our faith and also of our race.

Army

Circassia for centuries lived under the threat of external invasions, so the whole way of life of the Circassians was militarized. The governor of Astrakhan wrote to Peter I:[58]

One thing I can praise about the Circassians is that they are all warriors.

Circassia developed the so-called "Culture of War". Honorable combat was a big part of this culture, during hostilities, it was considered strictly unacceptable to set fire to homes or crops, especially bread, even from enemies. It was considered inadmissible to leave the bodies of dead comrades on the battlefield. It was considered a great disgrace in Circassia to fall alive into the hands of the enemy, so Russian officers who later fought in Circassia noted that it was very rare to succeed in capturing Circassians, as they would go as far as suicide. Johann von Blaramberg noted:

When they see that they are surrounded, they give their lives dearly, never surrendering.

The Russian army, after invading Circassia and ethnically cleansing the Circassians in the Circassian genocide, adopted some parts of Circassian military uniforms - from weapons (Shashka and Circassian sabers, daggers, Circassian saddles, Circassian horses) to uniforms (Cherkeska, burqa, papaha).[58]

Known ancient and medieval rulers

Known rulers of the region include:

History

Pseudoscientific origin

Turkish nationalist groups and proponents of modern day Pan-Turkism have claimed that the Circassians are of Turkic origin, but no scientific evidence has been published to support this claim and it has been strongly denied by ethnic Circassians,[78] impartial research,[79][80][81][82][83][84] linguists[85] and historians[86] around the world. The Circassian language does not share notable similarities to the Turkish language except for borrowed words. According to various historians, the Circassian origin of the Sind-Meot tribes refutes the claim that the Circassians are of Turkic ethnic origin. [79]

Ancient Era

Maikop Civilization

Miyequap (Maikop) civilization was established in 3000 BC. Circassians were known by many different names in ancient times. "Kerket" and "Sucha" are examples.[87] In 1200 BC, Circassians fought alongside the Hittites against the Egyptians.[87]

Sindica

 
A reconstructed image of a Sindian silver coin[88] discovered in Circassia,[89] with the word "Sindon" written in Greek alphabet and a horse, estimated to be from the late 5th century,[90] discovered in 1959.[91][92]

The Sindica state was founded in 500 BC. During this period, Greeks (Greeks) and Sind-Meot tribes lived in Circassia. Under the roof of this state, Sind-Meots in the region became the ancestors of the Circassian people.[93] The Greek poet Hipponaks, who lived in the 5th century BC, and Herodotus later mentioned the Sinds. Strabo also mentions the city of Sindica, located near the Black Sea coast. Information on Sindica has been learned from Greek documents and archaeological finds,[89] and there is not much detail. It is not known exactly when the Sindica State was established, but it is known that the Sindians had a state and trade relations with the Greeks before the establishment of the Greek colonies on the Black Sea coast. It is also known that the kingdom of Sindica was a busy trading state where artists and merchants were accommodated.[89][94][95][96][97][98] Circassians could not establish a union for a long time after this state.

Medieval Era

The most detailed description of medieval Circassia was made by Johannes de Galonifontibus in 1404.[99] From his writing it follows that at the turn of the XIV and XV centuries, Circassia expanded its borders to the north to the mouth of the Don, and he notes that “the city and port of Tana is located in the same country in Upper Circassia, on the Don River, which separates Europe from Asia".[100]  

Feudalism began to emerge in Circassians by the 4th century. As a result of Armenian, Greek and Byzantine influence, Christianity spread throughout the Caucasus between the 3rd and 5th centuries AD.[101][102] During that period the Circassians (referred to at the time as Kassogs)[103] began to accept Christianity as a national religion, but did not abandon all elements of their indigenous religious beliefs. Circassians established many states, but could not achieve political unity. From around 400 AD wave after wave of invaders began to invade the lands of the Adyghe people, who were also known as the Kasogi (or Kassogs) at the time. They were conquered first by the Bulgars (who originated on the Central Asian steppes). Outsiders sometimes confused the Adyghe people with the similarly named Utigurs (a branch of the Bulgars), and both peoples were sometimes conflated under misnomers such as "Utige". Following the dissolution of the Khazar state, the Adyghe people were integrated around the end of the 1st millennium AD into the Kingdom of Alania. Between the 10th and 13th centuries Georgia had influence on the Adyghe Circassian peoples.

In 1382, Circassian mamluks took the Mamluk throne, the Burji dynasty took over and the Mamluks became a Circassian state. The Mongols, who started invading the Caucasus in 1223, destroyed some of the Circassians and most of the Alans. The Circassians, who lost most of their lands during the ensuing Golden Horde attacks, had to retreat to the back of the Kuban River. In 1395 Circassians fought violent wars against Tamerlane, and although the Circassians won the wars,[104] Tamerlane plundered Circassia.[105]

King Inal the Great

Inal is called the "Prince of Princes" by Circassians and Abkhazians, because he united all Circassian tribes and established the Circassian state. According to popular belief, Inal is the ancestor of Kabardian, Besleney, Chemguy and Hatuqwai princes.

Inal, who during the 1400s[106] owned land in the Taman peninsula, established an army consisting mostly of the Khegayk tribe and declared that his goal was to unite the Circassians,[107] which were divided into many states at that time, under a single state, and after declaring his own princedom, conquered all of Circassia one by one.[108]

Circassian nobles and princes tried to prevent Inal's rise, but in a battle near the Msimta River, 30 Circassian lords were defeated by Inal and his supporters. Ten of them were executed, while the remaining twenty lords took an oath of allegiance and joined the forces of Inal's new state.[109] Inal, who ruled Western Circassia, established the Kabarda region in Eastern Circassia in 1434 and drove the Crimean Tatar tribes in the Circassian lands to the north of the Kuban River in 1438,[104] and as a result of his effective expansions, he was ruling all[109][104] of the Circassian land.

The capital of this new Circassian state founded by Inal became the city of Shanjir, built in the Taman region where he was born and raised.[110][111][112][113] Although the exact location of the city of Shanjir is unknown, the most supported theory is that it is the Krasnaya Batareya district, which fits the descriptions of the city made by Klarapoth and Pallas.[110][114][115]

Although he united the Circassians, Inal still wanted to include the cousin people, the Abkhaz, in his state. Abkhaz dynasties Chachba and Achba announced that they would side with Inal in a possible war. Inal, who won the war in Abkhazia, officially conquered Northern Abkhazia and the Abkhaz people recognized the rule of Inal, and Inal finalized his rule in Abkhazia.[104][116][109][117][118] One of the stars on the flag of Abkhazia represents Inal.

Inal divided his lands between his sons and grandchildren in 1453 and died in 1458. Following this, Circassian tribal principalities were established. Some of these are Chemguy founded by Temruk, Besleney founded by Beslan, Kabardia founded by Qabard, and Shapsug founded by Zanoko.

According to the Abkhaz claim, Inal died in North Abkhazia.[119] Although most sources cite this theory, researches and searches in the region have shown that Inal's tomb is not here.[120] According to Russian explorer and archaeologist Evgeniy Dimitrievich Felitsin, Inal's tomb is not in Abkhazia. In a map published in 1882, Felitsin has shown great importance to Inal, and placed his grave in the Ispravnaya region in Karachay-Cherkessia, not in Abkhazia. He added that there are ancient sculptures, mounds, tombs, churches, castles and ramparts in this area, which would be an ideal tomb for someone like Inal.[120][121]

At the end of the 15th century, a detailed description of Circassia and of its inhabitants was made by Genovese traveller and ethnographer Giorgio Interiano.[122]

Modern Era

Kanzhal

In 1708, Circassians paid a great tribute to the Ottoman sultan in order to prevent Tatar raids, but the sultan did not fulfill the obligation and the Tatars raided all the way to the center of Circassia, robbing everything they could.[123] For this reason, Kabardian Circassians announced that they would never pay tribute to the Crimean Khan and the Ottoman Sultan again. The Ottomans sent their army of at least 20,000 men[124] to Kabardia under the leadership of the Crimean khan Kaplan-Girey to conquer the Circassians and ordered him collect the tribute.[125][126] The Ottomans expected an easy victory against the Kabardinians, but the Circassians won because of the strategy set up by the Kazaniko Jabagh.[123][127][128][129][130][131]

The Turkish-Crimean army was completely destroyed overnight. The Crimean Khan Kaplan-Giray barely managed to save his life, and was humiliated, all the way to his shoes taken, leaving his brother, son, field tools, tents and personal belongings.[123]

Russo-Circassian War

 
Kabarda (east Circassia) supreme princes

In 1714, Peter I established a plan to occupy the Caucasus. Although he was unable to implement this plan, he laid the political and ideological foundation for the occupation to take place. Catherine II started putting this plan into action. The Russian army was deployed on the banks of the Terek River.[132]

The Russian military tried to impose authority by building a series of forts, but these forts in turn became the new targets of raids and indeed sometimes the highlanders actually captured and held the forts.[133] Under Yermolov, the Russian military began using a strategy of disproportionate retribution for raids. Russian troops retaliated by destroying villages where resistance fighters were thought to hide, as well as employing assassinations, kidnappings and the execution of whole families.[7] Because the resistance was relying on sympathetic villages for food, the Russian military also systematically destroyed crops and livestock and killed Circassian civilians.[134][135] Circassians responded by creating a tribal federation encompassing all tribes of the area.[135] In 1840 Karl Friedrich Neumann estimated the Circassian casualties at around one and a half million.[136] Some sources state that hundreds of thousands of others died during the exodus.[137] Several historians use the phrase "Circassian massacres"[138] for the consequences of Russian actions in the region.[139]

In a series of sweeping military campaigns lasting from 1860 to 1864... the northwest Caucasus and the Black Sea coast were virtually emptied of Muslim villagers. Columns of the displaced were marched either to the Kuban [River] plains or toward the coast for transport to the Ottoman Empire... One after another, entire Circassian tribal groups were dispersed, resettled, or killed en masse[140]

Circassians established an assembly called "Great Freedom Assembly" in the capital city of Shashe (Sochi) on June 25, 1861. Haji Qerandiqo Berzedj was appointed as the head of the assembly. This assembly asked for help from Europe,[141] arguing that they would be forced into exile soon. However, before the result was achieved, Russian General Kolyobakin invaded Sochi and destroyed the parliament[142] and no country opposed this.[141]

In May 1864, a final battle took place between the Circassian army of 20,000 Circassian horsemen and a fully equipped Russian army of 100,000 men.[citation needed] Circassian warriors attacked the Russian army and tried to break through the line, but most were shot down by Russian artillery and infantry.[84] The remaining fighters continued to fight as militants and were soon defeated. All 20,000 Circassian horsemen died in the war. The Russian army began celebrating victory on the corpses of Circassian soldiers, and so May 21, 1864, was officially the end of the war.[143]

Circassian Genocide

 
A map of the expulsion of Circassians to the Ottoman Empire. The light-green area denotes the final borders of Circassians who had already been pushed southwards prior to their expulsion to the Ottoman Empire. In the late 18th century, Circassians lost their northern territories, which do not appear in green on this map.

The proposal to deport the Circassians was ratified by the Russian government, and a flood of refugee movements began as Russian troops advanced in their final campaign.[144] Circassians prepared to resist and hold their last stand against Russian military advances and troops.[145] With the refusal to surrender, Circassian civilians were targeted one by one by the Russian military with thousands massacred and the Russians started to raid and burn Circassian villages,[135] destroy the fields to make it impossible to return, cut trees down and drive the people towards the Black Sea coast. [146]

Although the main target of the genocide was the Circassians, some Abkhaz, Abazin, Chechen, Ossetian and other Muslim Caucasian[147] communities were also affected. Although it is not known exactly how many people are affected, researchers have suggested that at least 75%, 90%,[148][149] 94%,[150] or 95% -97%[151] (not including the other ethniticies such as Abkhaz) of the ethnic Circassian population are affected. Considering these rates, calculations including those taking into account the Russian government's own archival figures, have estimated a loss 600,000–1,500,000. It is estimated that the population of Kabardins in Circassia was reduced from 500,000 to 35,000; the Abzakhs from 260,000 to 14,600; and the Natukhajs from 240,000 to merely 175 persons.[152] The Shapsugh tribe which numbered some 300,000 were reduced to 3,000 people. Ivan Drozdov, a Russian officer who witnessed the scene at Qbaada in May 1864 as the other Russians were celebrating their victory remarked:

On the road, our eyes were met with a staggering image: corpses of women, children, elderly persons, torn to pieces and half-eaten by dogs; deportees emaciated by hunger and disease, almost too weak to move their legs, collapsing from exhaustion and becoming prey to dogs while still alive.

— Drozdov, Ivan. "Posledniaia Bor’ba s Gortsami na Zapadnom Kavkaze". pp. 456–457.

The Ottoman Empire regarded the Adyghe warriors as courageous and experienced. It encouraged them to settle in various near-border settlements of the Ottoman Empire in order to strengthen the empire's borders.

According to Walter Richmond

Circassia was a small independent nation on the northeastern shore of the Black Sea. For no reason other than ethnic hatred, over the course of hundreds of raids the Russians drove the Circassians from their homeland and deported them to the Ottoman Empire. At least 600,000 people lost their lives to massacre, starvation, and the elements while hundreds of thousands more were forced to leave their homeland. By 1864, three-fourths of the population was annihilated, and the Circassians had become one of the first stateless peoples in modern history.[153]

As of 2020, Georgia was the only country to classify the events as genocide, while Russia actively denies the Circassian genocide, and classifies the events as a simple migration of "undeveloped barbaric peoples".[attribution needed] Russian nationalists continue to celebrate the day on May 21 each year as a "holy conquest day", when the Russian Empire's occupation of the Caucasus ended. Circassians commemorate May 21 every year as the Circassian Day of Mourning.

Population

There are twelve historic Adyghe (Circassian: Адыгэ, Adyge) princedoms or tribes of Circassia (three democratic and nine aristocratic); Abdzakh, Besleney, Bzhedug, Hatuqwai, Kabardian, Mamkhegh, Natukhai, Shapsug, Temirgoy, Ubykh, Yegeruqwai and Zhaney.[154]

Today, about 700,000 Circassians remain in historical Circassia in today's Russia. The 2010 Russian Census recorded 718,727 Circassians, of which 516,826 are Kabardians, 124,835 are Adyghe proper, 73,184 are Cherkess and 3,882 Shapsugs.[155] The largest Circassian population resides in Turkey (pop. 1,400,000–6,000,000).[156][157] A Circassian population also exists in other countries, including Jordan, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Serbia, Egypt and Israel, but is considerably smaller.[158][159][citation needed]

National religion

Circassia gradually went through the following various religions: Paganism, Christianity, and then Islam.[160]

Paganism

The ancient beliefs of the Circassians were based on animism and magic, within the framework of the customary rules of Xabze. Although the main belief was Monistic-Monotheistic, they prayed using water, fire, plants, forests, rocks, thunder and lightning. They performed their acts of worship accompanied by dance and music in the sacred groves used as temples. An old priest led the ceremony, accompanied by songs of prayer, and supplications. Thus, it was aimed to protect the newborn babies from diseases and the evil eye.[161] Another important aspect was ancestors and honor. Therefore, the goal of man's earthly existence is the perfection of the soul, which corresponds to the maintenance of honour, manifestation of compassion, gratuitous help, which, along with valour, and bravery of a warrior, enables the human soul to join the soul of the ancestors with a clear conscience.[162]

Judaism

Some Circassian tribes converted to Judaism in the past as a result of the settlement of approximately 20 thousand Jews in 8th-century Circassia, along with the relations established with the Turkic-Jewish Khazar Khaganate.[161] Although Judaism in Circassia eventually assimilated into Christianity and Islam.

Christianity

It is the tradition of the early church that Christianity made its first appearance in Circassia in the 1st century AD via the travels and preaching of the Apostle Andrew,[163] but recorded history suggests that, as a result of Greek and Byzantine influence, Christianity first spread throughout Circassia between the 3rd and 5th centuries AD.[164][165][166] The spread of the Catholic faith was only possible with the Latin Conquest of Constantinople by the crusaders and the establishment of the Latin state. The Catholic religion was adopted by the Circassians following Farzakht, a distinguished figure who greatly contributed to the spread of this religion in his country. The pope sent him a letter in 1333 thanking him for his effort, as an indication of his gratitude. For Circassians, the most important and attractive personality in all Christian teachings was the personality of St. George. They saw in him the embodiment of all the virtues respected in the Caucasus. His name in Circassian is "Aushe-Gerge".

Christianity in Circassia experienced its final collapse in the 18th century when all Circassians accepted Islam. The ex-priests joined the Circassian nobility and were given the name "shogene" (teacher) and over time this name became a surname.

Islam

A small Muslim community in Circassia has always existed since the Middle Ages, but the widespread of Islam occurred after 1717.[167] Travelling Sufi preachers and the increasing threat of an invasion from Russia helped expedite the spread of Islam in Circassia.[167][168][169] Circassian scholars educated in the Ottoman Empire boosted the spread of Islam.[170]

Circassian nationalism

Under Russian and Soviet rule, ethnic and tribal divisions between Circassians were promoted, resulting in several different statistical names being used for various parts of the Circassian people (Adyghes, Cherkess, Kabardins, Shapsugs). Consequently, Circassian nationalism has developed. Circassian nationalism is the desire among Circassians all over the world to preserve their culture and save their language from extinction,[171][172] achieve full international recognition of the Circassian genocide,[173][174][175] globally revive Adyghe Xabze among Circassians,[176][177][178] return to their homeland Circassia,[179][180][181][182] and ultimately reestablish an independent Circassian state.[181][182][183] There is also an effort among Circassians to unite under the name Circassian (Adyghe) in Russian Censuses to reflect and revive the concept of the Circassian nation. The overwhelming majority of the diaspora already tends to call itself "only Circassian".

See also

References

Citations

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Cited works

  • Ahmed, Akbar (2013). The Thistle and the Drone: How America's War on Terror Became a Global War on Tribal Islam. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press. ISBN 978-0-8157-2379-0.
  • Shenfield, Stephen D. (1999). "The Circassians: A Forgotten Genocide?". In Levene, Mark; Roberts, Penny (eds.). The Massacre in History. New York: Berghahn Books. pp. 149–162. ISBN 978-1-57181-935-2.
  • "Иоанн де Галонифонтибус". Сведения о народах Кавказа (1404 г.). Baku: Элм. 1979.
  • * "Хотко С. К. Садзы-джигеты. Происхождение и историко-культурный портрет абазинского субэтноса // Сайт «АПСУАРА» История и культура Абхазии (www.apsuara.ru) 25 April 2014 ; а также, первоначально — на Сайте «Авдыгэ макъ» (www.adygvoice.ru)". 12 апреля 2011. — Часть 1.; 29 апреля 2011. — Часть 2.; 29 апреля 2011. — Часть 3.; 29 апреля 2011. — Часть 4..

General references

  • Bell, James Stanislaus. Journal of a residence in Circassia during the years 1837, 1838, and 1839 (in English).
  • Bullough, Oliver. Let Our Fame Be Great: Journeys Among the Defiant People of the Caucasus. Allen Lane, 2010. ISBN 978-1846141416.
  • Jaimoukha, Amjad. The Circassians: A Handbook, London: Routledge, New York: Routledge & Palgrave, 2001. ISBN 978-0700706440.
  • Jaimoukha, Amjad. Circassian Culture and Folklore: Hospitality, Traditions, Cuisine, Festivals and Music. Bennett & Bloom, 2010. ISBN 978-1898948407.
  • Kaziev, Shapi, and Igor Karpeev (Повседневная жизнь горцев Северного Кавказа в XIX в.). Everyday Life of the Caucasian Highlanders: The 19th Century. Moscow: Molodaya Gvardiy, 2003. ISBN 5-235-02585-7
  • King, Charles. The Ghost of Freedom: A History of the Caucasus. Oxford University Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0195392395.
  • Levene, Mark. Genocide in the Age of the Nation-State. Volume II: The Rise of the West and the Coming of Genocide. London: I. B. Tauris, 2005. ISBN 978-1845110574.
  • Richmond, Walter. The Circassian Genocide, Rutgers University Press, 2013. ISBN 9780813560694.

External links

  •   Media related to Circassia at Wikimedia Commons

circassia, municipality, colombia, circasia, quindío, ɜːr, also, spelled, cherkessia, some, sources, adyghe, Адыгэ, Хэку, Хэкужъ, romanized, adıgə, xəku, xəkujz, homeland, ancient, homeland, zichia, country, historical, region, north, caucasus, along, northeas. For the municipality of Colombia see Circasia Quindio Circassia s ɜːr ˈ k ae ʃ e also spelled as Cherkessia 8 9 in some sources Adyghe Adyge Heku Hekuzh romanized Adige Xeku Xekujz lit Circassian Homeland Ancient Homeland or Zichia 10 8 9 was a country and a historical region in the North Caucasus along the northeast shore of the Black Sea 11 12 It was conquered and occupied by Russia during the Russian Circassian War 1763 1864 after which 90 of the Circassian people were either exiled from the region or massacred in the Circassian genocide 13 14 15 16 17 CircassiaAdyge Heku Hekuzh Adyghe amp Kabardian 1864Flag Coat of armsMotto Psem ipe nape Psem yipe nape Honour before life Area marked CircassiaRevised administrative divisions of Circassia in 1860 according to a decree issued by the Circassian ParliamentResidence of leader Capital Zikhopol ru 1427 Shanjir 1427 1458 Various 1458 1807 Bighurqale Anapa 1807 1829 Shache Sochi 1829 1839 Bighurqale Anapa 1839 1848 Khadzhokh Kamennomostsky 1848 1859 Shache Sochi 1860 1864 43 35 07 N 39 43 13 E 43 58528 N 39 72028 E 43 58528 39 72028Largest townShache Sochi Official languagesCircassian languagesOther languagesUbykhAbazinKarachay BalkarReligionCircassian paganismEastern Orthodoxy c 700s c 1300s Roman Catholicism c 1300s Eastern Orthodoxy c 1300s c 1600s Sunni Islam c 1600s 1864 Demonym s Circassian English Cerkes Turkish Cherkess Russian GovernmentUnion of Regional Councils 1 2 Leader of Western Circassiac 100s c 400s c 500s 668 960c 700s 800s c 800s 900s c 960s 1000s c 1000s 1022c 1200s c 1200s 12371237 1239c 1330s c late 1300s c 1427 1453c 1453 c 1470s c 1470s c 1530s 15421807 18271827 18391839 18461849 18591859 18601861 1864List Stakhemfaqu Stachemfak DawiyBakhsan Dawiqo Khazar rule Lawristan Khazar vassal Weche Khazar vassal HapachRededyaAbdunkhanTukarTukbashVerzachtBerezokInal the GreatBelzebukPetrezokKansavukShuwpagwe QalawebateqoIsmail BerzegHawduqo MansurMuhammad AminSefer Bey ZanuqoQerandiqo Berzeg Prince of Eastern Circassiac 1427 14531453 c 1490 c 1490 c 1500 c 1500 c 1525 c 1525 c 1540 c 1540 15541554 15711571 15781578 15891589 16091609 16161616 16241624 16541654 16721672 16951695 17101710 17211721 17321732 17371737 17461746 17491749 17621762 17731773 17851785 17881788 180918091810 1822List Inal the GreatTabuldaInarmasBeslanIdarKaytuk ITemrukShiapshukKambulatKaytuk IISholokhKudenetAlegukoAtajuq IMisostAtajuq II KurgoqoAtajuq III MisewestiqoIslambekTatarkhanQeytuqo AslanbechBatokoBamat MuhammadQasey AtajuqJankhotMisost II BematiqwaAtajuq IIIAtajuq IVJankhot II QushuqConfederation Leaders LegislatureLepq ZefesParliament of Independence 1860 1864 History Established Russian Circassian War1763 1864 Disestablished1864Area Total82 000 km2 32 000 sq mi Population Estimate1 625 000 pre Circassian genocide 86 655 post Circassian genocide 3 4 5 6 7 CurrencyNo official currency Ottoman coins served as de facto currencyCircassia in 1450 during the reign of Inal the GreatPreceded by Succeeded byZichia Russian EmpireToday part ofRussiaGeorgiaAbkhaziaPrinces of East Circassia Presidents of the Circassian Confederation In the Medieval Era Circassia was nominally ruled by the elected Grand Prince however individual principalities and tribes were highly autonomous In the 18th 19th centuries a central government began to form The Circassians also dominated the north of the Kuban river in the early medieval and ancient times but with the raids of the Mongol Empire Golden Horde and the Crimean Khanate they were withdrawn south of the Kuban and their reduced borders stretched from the Taman Peninsula to North Ossetia During the Medieval Era Circassian lords subjugated and vassalized the neighboring Karachay Balkars and Ossetians 18 The term Circassia is also used as the collective name of Circassian states established on Circassian territory such as Zichia Legally and internationally the Treaty of Belgrade of 1739 between Austria and Turkey provided for the recognition of the independence of Eastern Circassia Kabarda Both the Russian Empire and the Ottoman Empire recognized it and the great powers at the time witnessed the treaty The Congress of Vienna held in the period between 1814 1815 also stipulated the recognition of the independence of Circassia In 1837 Circassian leaders sent letters to European countries requesting legal recognition Following this the United Kingdom recognized Circassia 19 20 However during the Russian Circassian War the Russian Empire did not recognize Circassia as an independent region and treated it as Russian land under rebel occupation despite having no control or ownership over the region 21 Russian generals referred to the Circassians not by their ethnic name but as mountaineers bandits and mountain scum 21 22 Although Circassia is the original homeland of the Circassian people today most Circassians live in exile following the Circassian genocide 23 24 25 26 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 Statehood and politics 3 1 Institute of the Grand Prince of Circassia 3 2 Confederation 3 3 External relations 3 3 1 Relations with the Ottoman Empire 4 Army 5 Known ancient and medieval rulers 6 History 6 1 Pseudoscientific origin 6 2 Ancient Era 6 2 1 Maikop Civilization 6 2 2 Sindica 6 3 Medieval Era 6 4 King Inal the Great 6 5 Modern Era 6 5 1 Kanzhal 6 5 2 Russo Circassian War 6 5 3 Circassian Genocide 7 Population 8 National religion 8 1 Paganism 8 2 Judaism 8 3 Christianity 8 4 Islam 9 Circassian nationalism 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Cited works 12 General references 13 External linksEtymology EditThe words Circassia and Circassian s er ˈ k ae s i e n z ser KASS ee enz are exonyms Latinized from the word Cherkess which is of debated origin 27 28 One view is that its root stems from Turkic languages and that the term means head choppers or warrior killers accounting for the successful battle practices of the Circassians 29 There are those who argue that the term comes from Mongolian Jerkes meaning one who blocks a path 30 31 Some believe it comes from the ancient Greek name of the region Siraces According to another view its origin is Persian In languages spoken geographically close to the Caucasus the native people originally had other names for the Circassia but with Russian influence the name has been settled as Cherkessia Circassia It is the same or similar in many world languages that cite these languages Circassians themselves don t use the term Circassia and refer to their country as Adyge Heku Adige Xeku or Adygej Adigey Another historical name for the country was Zichia Zyx or the Zygii who were described by the ancient Greek intellectual Strabo as a nation to the north of Colchis 32 Geography Edit Circassia in 1856 Circassia was located in Eastern Europe north of Western Asia near the northeastern Black Sea coast Before the Russian conquest of the Caucasus 1763 1864 it covered the entire fertile plateau and the steppe of the northwestern region of the Caucasus with an estimated population of 1 million citation needed Circassia s historical great range extended from the Taman Peninsula in the west to the town of Mozdok in today s North Ossetia Alania in the east Historically Circassia covered the southern half of today s Krasnodar Krai the Republic of Adygea Karachay Cherkessia Kabardino Balkaria and parts of North Ossetia Alania and Stavropol Krai bounded by the Kuban River on the north which separated it from the Russian Empire On the Black Sea coast the climate is warm and humid while being moderate in the lowlands and cooler in the highlands Most of Circassia is frost free for more than half the year There are steppe meadows in the plains beech and oak forests in the foothills and pine forests and alpine meadows in the mountains 33 Sochi is considered by many Circassians as their traditional capital city 34 According to Circassians the 2014 Winter Olympic village is built in an area of mass graves of Circassians after their defeat by the Russians in 1864 35 Statehood and politics EditInstitute of the Grand Prince of Circassia Edit Between 1427 and 1453 Inal the Great conquered all Circassian principalities and declared himself the Grand Prince of Circassia Following his death Circassia was divided again 36 The influential principalities of Circassia regularly met to elect a Grand Prince Pshyshho among them with the only condition being that the prince can trace descent from Inal the Great The existence of such an institute is confirmed by foreign sources In the eyes of foreign observers the Grand Prince was considered the king of the Circassians 37 However the individual tribes were greatly autonomous and the title was mostly symbolic In 1237 the Dominican monks Richard and Julian as part of the Hungarian embassy visited Circassia and the main city of this country Matrega located on the Taman Peninsula In Matrega the embassy received a good reception from the Grand Prince 38 In the 14th and 15th centuries Italian documents concerning the relationship between the consul of Kafa and Circassia clearly indicate the absolutely special status of the ruler of Circassia This status allowed the senior prince of Circassia to correspond with the Pope The letter of Pope John XXII addressed to the Grand Prince of Zichia Circassia Verzacht dates back to 1333 in which the Roman pontiff thanked the ruler for his diligence in introducing the Catholic faith among his subjects Verzacht s power status was so high that following his example some other Circassian princes adopted Catholicism 39 Confederation Edit Circassia traditionally consisted of more than a dozen principalities Some of these principalities were divided into large feudal estates characterized by the stability of political status Within these territories there were numerous feudal possessions of princes pshi The Circassian state was a federal state consisting of four levels of government Village council chyle hase made up of village elders and nobles district council made up of representatives from 7 neighboring village councils regional council sholyr hase made up from neighboring district councils people s council lepk zefes where every council had a representative A central government emerged during the mid to late 1800s Prior to that the institute of grand prince was mostly symbolic In 1807 Shuwpagwe Qalawebateqo self proclaimed himself as the leader of the Circassian confederation and divided Circassia into 12 major regions 40 41 42 43 In 1827 Ismail Berzeg officially declared the military confederation of the Circassian tribes and by 1839 united a significant part of Circassia under his control 44 45 In 1839 the Circassians declared Bighuqal Anapa as their new capital and Hawduqo Mansur was declared the new leader of the Circassian Confederation He kept this title until his death 46 47 45 In 1848 Muhammad Amin was the leader of Circassia 48 49 50 After learning that a warriorly scholar has arrived thousands of families moved to the Abdzakh region to accept his rule 51 Seferbiy Zaneqo assumed power after Amin s departure but died the next year In June 1860 at a congress of representatives of Circassians a parliament was formed as the highest legislative body of Circassia Being a political resistance council and the legislature of Circassia 52 53 54 the parliament was established in the capital of Sochi Adyghe Shache romanized S ace on June 13 1860 and Qerandiqo Berzeg was elected as the head of the parliament and the nation 55 56 External relations Edit Legally and internationally the Treaty of Belgrade 1739 provided for the recognition of the independence of Eastern Circassia Kabarda where both the Russian Empire and the Ottoman Empire recognized it and the great powers at the time witnessed the treaty The Congress of Vienna held in the period between 1814 1815 also stipulated the recognition of the independence of Circassia In 1837 Circassian leaders sent letters to European countries requesting legal recognition Following this the United Kingdom recognized Circassia 19 20 However during the Russian Circassian War the Russian Empire did not recognize Circassia as an independent region and treated it as Russian land under rebel occupation despite having no control or ownership over the region 21 Russian generals referred to the Circassians not by their ethnic name but as mountaineers bandits and mountain scum 21 22 The Circassian Parliament launched large scale foreign policy activities First of all an official memorandum was drafted addressed to Tsar Alexander II The text of the memorandum was presented to the tsar by the leaders of the Parliament during the latter s visit to Circassia in September 1861 The Parliament also accepted an appeal to the Ottoman and European governments Special envoys were sent to Istanbul and London to seek diplomatic and military support The activities of the Circassian government received the full support of public organizations so the Circassian Committee of Istanbul and London supported Circassia Thus if not de jure then de facto Circassia acquired the features of a subject of international law 57 Relations with the Ottoman Empire EditIn the 16th century the English traveler Edmund Spencer who traveled to the shores of the Caucasus quotes a Circassian saying about the Ottoman sultan Circassian blood flows in the veins of the Sultan His mother his harem are Circassian his slaves are Circassians his ministers and generals are Circassians He is the head of our faith and also of our race Army EditCircassia for centuries lived under the threat of external invasions so the whole way of life of the Circassians was militarized The governor of Astrakhan wrote to Peter I 58 One thing I can praise about the Circassians is that they are all warriors Circassia developed the so called Culture of War Honorable combat was a big part of this culture during hostilities it was considered strictly unacceptable to set fire to homes or crops especially bread even from enemies It was considered inadmissible to leave the bodies of dead comrades on the battlefield It was considered a great disgrace in Circassia to fall alive into the hands of the enemy so Russian officers who later fought in Circassia noted that it was very rare to succeed in capturing Circassians as they would go as far as suicide Johann von Blaramberg noted When they see that they are surrounded they give their lives dearly never surrendering The Russian army after invading Circassia and ethnically cleansing the Circassians in the Circassian genocide adopted some parts of Circassian military uniforms from weapons Shashka and Circassian sabers daggers Circassian saddles Circassian horses to uniforms Cherkeska burqa papaha 58 Known ancient and medieval rulers EditKnown rulers of the region include 400 383 BC Hekaktaios 59 383 355 BC Oktamasades 100s Stachemfak 60 400s Dawiy 61 500s Bakhsan Dawiqo 61 700s 800s Lawristan 62 63 800s 900s Weche 64 900s Hapach 65 66 900s 1022 Rededya 67 68 69 1200s Abdunkhan 1200s 1237 Tuqar 70 71 72 1237 1239 Tuqbash 73 1300s Verzacht 74 1427 1453 Inal the Great 1470s Petrezok 75 76 1530s 1542 Kansavuk 77 History EditPseudoscientific origin Edit Turkish nationalist groups and proponents of modern day Pan Turkism have claimed that the Circassians are of Turkic origin but no scientific evidence has been published to support this claim and it has been strongly denied by ethnic Circassians 78 impartial research 79 80 81 82 83 84 linguists 85 and historians 86 around the world The Circassian language does not share notable similarities to the Turkish language except for borrowed words According to various historians the Circassian origin of the Sind Meot tribes refutes the claim that the Circassians are of Turkic ethnic origin 79 Ancient Era Edit Maikop Civilization Edit Miyequap Maikop civilization was established in 3000 BC Circassians were known by many different names in ancient times Kerket and Sucha are examples 87 In 1200 BC Circassians fought alongside the Hittites against the Egyptians 87 Sindica Edit A reconstructed image of a Sindian silver coin 88 discovered in Circassia 89 with the word Sindon written in Greek alphabet and a horse estimated to be from the late 5th century 90 discovered in 1959 91 92 The Sindica state was founded in 500 BC During this period Greeks Greeks and Sind Meot tribes lived in Circassia Under the roof of this state Sind Meots in the region became the ancestors of the Circassian people 93 The Greek poet Hipponaks who lived in the 5th century BC and Herodotus later mentioned the Sinds Strabo also mentions the city of Sindica located near the Black Sea coast Information on Sindica has been learned from Greek documents and archaeological finds 89 and there is not much detail It is not known exactly when the Sindica State was established but it is known that the Sindians had a state and trade relations with the Greeks before the establishment of the Greek colonies on the Black Sea coast It is also known that the kingdom of Sindica was a busy trading state where artists and merchants were accommodated 89 94 95 96 97 98 Circassians could not establish a union for a long time after this state Medieval Era Edit The most detailed description of medieval Circassia was made by Johannes de Galonifontibus in 1404 99 From his writing it follows that at the turn of the XIV and XV centuries Circassia expanded its borders to the north to the mouth of the Don and he notes that the city and port of Tana is located in the same country in Upper Circassia on the Don River which separates Europe from Asia 100 Feudalism began to emerge in Circassians by the 4th century As a result of Armenian Greek and Byzantine influence Christianity spread throughout the Caucasus between the 3rd and 5th centuries AD 101 102 During that period the Circassians referred to at the time as Kassogs 103 began to accept Christianity as a national religion but did not abandon all elements of their indigenous religious beliefs Circassians established many states but could not achieve political unity From around 400 AD wave after wave of invaders began to invade the lands of the Adyghe people who were also known as the Kasogi or Kassogs at the time They were conquered first by the Bulgars who originated on the Central Asian steppes Outsiders sometimes confused the Adyghe people with the similarly named Utigurs a branch of the Bulgars and both peoples were sometimes conflated under misnomers such as Utige Following the dissolution of the Khazar state the Adyghe people were integrated around the end of the 1st millennium AD into the Kingdom of Alania Between the 10th and 13th centuries Georgia had influence on the Adyghe Circassian peoples In 1382 Circassian mamluks took the Mamluk throne the Burji dynasty took over and the Mamluks became a Circassian state The Mongols who started invading the Caucasus in 1223 destroyed some of the Circassians and most of the Alans The Circassians who lost most of their lands during the ensuing Golden Horde attacks had to retreat to the back of the Kuban River In 1395 Circassians fought violent wars against Tamerlane and although the Circassians won the wars 104 Tamerlane plundered Circassia 105 King Inal the Great Edit Inal is called the Prince of Princes by Circassians and Abkhazians because he united all Circassian tribes and established the Circassian state According to popular belief Inal is the ancestor of Kabardian Besleney Chemguy and Hatuqwai princes Inal who during the 1400s 106 owned land in the Taman peninsula established an army consisting mostly of the Khegayk tribe and declared that his goal was to unite the Circassians 107 which were divided into many states at that time under a single state and after declaring his own princedom conquered all of Circassia one by one 108 Circassian nobles and princes tried to prevent Inal s rise but in a battle near the Msimta River 30 Circassian lords were defeated by Inal and his supporters Ten of them were executed while the remaining twenty lords took an oath of allegiance and joined the forces of Inal s new state 109 Inal who ruled Western Circassia established the Kabarda region in Eastern Circassia in 1434 and drove the Crimean Tatar tribes in the Circassian lands to the north of the Kuban River in 1438 104 and as a result of his effective expansions he was ruling all 109 104 of the Circassian land The capital of this new Circassian state founded by Inal became the city of Shanjir built in the Taman region where he was born and raised 110 111 112 113 Although the exact location of the city of Shanjir is unknown the most supported theory is that it is the Krasnaya Batareya district which fits the descriptions of the city made by Klarapoth and Pallas 110 114 115 Although he united the Circassians Inal still wanted to include the cousin people the Abkhaz in his state Abkhaz dynasties Chachba and Achba announced that they would side with Inal in a possible war Inal who won the war in Abkhazia officially conquered Northern Abkhazia and the Abkhaz people recognized the rule of Inal and Inal finalized his rule in Abkhazia 104 116 109 117 118 One of the stars on the flag of Abkhazia represents Inal Inal divided his lands between his sons and grandchildren in 1453 and died in 1458 Following this Circassian tribal principalities were established Some of these are Chemguy founded by Temruk Besleney founded by Beslan Kabardia founded by Qabard and Shapsug founded by Zanoko According to the Abkhaz claim Inal died in North Abkhazia 119 Although most sources cite this theory researches and searches in the region have shown that Inal s tomb is not here 120 According to Russian explorer and archaeologist Evgeniy Dimitrievich Felitsin Inal s tomb is not in Abkhazia In a map published in 1882 Felitsin has shown great importance to Inal and placed his grave in the Ispravnaya region in Karachay Cherkessia not in Abkhazia He added that there are ancient sculptures mounds tombs churches castles and ramparts in this area which would be an ideal tomb for someone like Inal 120 121 At the end of the 15th century a detailed description of Circassia and of its inhabitants was made by Genovese traveller and ethnographer Giorgio Interiano 122 Modern Era Edit Kanzhal Edit Main article Battle of Kanzhal In 1708 Circassians paid a great tribute to the Ottoman sultan in order to prevent Tatar raids but the sultan did not fulfill the obligation and the Tatars raided all the way to the center of Circassia robbing everything they could 123 For this reason Kabardian Circassians announced that they would never pay tribute to the Crimean Khan and the Ottoman Sultan again The Ottomans sent their army of at least 20 000 men 124 to Kabardia under the leadership of the Crimean khan Kaplan Girey to conquer the Circassians and ordered him collect the tribute 125 126 The Ottomans expected an easy victory against the Kabardinians but the Circassians won because of the strategy set up by the Kazaniko Jabagh 123 127 128 129 130 131 The Turkish Crimean army was completely destroyed overnight The Crimean Khan Kaplan Giray barely managed to save his life and was humiliated all the way to his shoes taken leaving his brother son field tools tents and personal belongings 123 Russo Circassian War Edit Main article Russian Circassian War Kabarda east Circassia supreme princes In 1714 Peter I established a plan to occupy the Caucasus Although he was unable to implement this plan he laid the political and ideological foundation for the occupation to take place Catherine II started putting this plan into action The Russian army was deployed on the banks of the Terek River 132 The Russian military tried to impose authority by building a series of forts but these forts in turn became the new targets of raids and indeed sometimes the highlanders actually captured and held the forts 133 Under Yermolov the Russian military began using a strategy of disproportionate retribution for raids Russian troops retaliated by destroying villages where resistance fighters were thought to hide as well as employing assassinations kidnappings and the execution of whole families 7 Because the resistance was relying on sympathetic villages for food the Russian military also systematically destroyed crops and livestock and killed Circassian civilians 134 135 Circassians responded by creating a tribal federation encompassing all tribes of the area 135 In 1840 Karl Friedrich Neumann estimated the Circassian casualties at around one and a half million 136 Some sources state that hundreds of thousands of others died during the exodus 137 Several historians use the phrase Circassian massacres 138 for the consequences of Russian actions in the region 139 In a series of sweeping military campaigns lasting from 1860 to 1864 the northwest Caucasus and the Black Sea coast were virtually emptied of Muslim villagers Columns of the displaced were marched either to the Kuban River plains or toward the coast for transport to the Ottoman Empire One after another entire Circassian tribal groups were dispersed resettled or killed en masse 140 Circassians established an assembly called Great Freedom Assembly in the capital city of Shashe Sochi on June 25 1861 Haji Qerandiqo Berzedj was appointed as the head of the assembly This assembly asked for help from Europe 141 arguing that they would be forced into exile soon However before the result was achieved Russian General Kolyobakin invaded Sochi and destroyed the parliament 142 and no country opposed this 141 In May 1864 a final battle took place between the Circassian army of 20 000 Circassian horsemen and a fully equipped Russian army of 100 000 men citation needed Circassian warriors attacked the Russian army and tried to break through the line but most were shot down by Russian artillery and infantry 84 The remaining fighters continued to fight as militants and were soon defeated All 20 000 Circassian horsemen died in the war The Russian army began celebrating victory on the corpses of Circassian soldiers and so May 21 1864 was officially the end of the war 143 Circassian Genocide Edit Main article Circassian genocide A map of the expulsion of Circassians to the Ottoman Empire The light green area denotes the final borders of Circassians who had already been pushed southwards prior to their expulsion to the Ottoman Empire In the late 18th century Circassians lost their northern territories which do not appear in green on this map The proposal to deport the Circassians was ratified by the Russian government and a flood of refugee movements began as Russian troops advanced in their final campaign 144 Circassians prepared to resist and hold their last stand against Russian military advances and troops 145 With the refusal to surrender Circassian civilians were targeted one by one by the Russian military with thousands massacred and the Russians started to raid and burn Circassian villages 135 destroy the fields to make it impossible to return cut trees down and drive the people towards the Black Sea coast 146 Although the main target of the genocide was the Circassians some Abkhaz Abazin Chechen Ossetian and other Muslim Caucasian 147 communities were also affected Although it is not known exactly how many people are affected researchers have suggested that at least 75 90 148 149 94 150 or 95 97 151 not including the other ethniticies such as Abkhaz of the ethnic Circassian population are affected Considering these rates calculations including those taking into account the Russian government s own archival figures have estimated a loss 600 000 1 500 000 It is estimated that the population of Kabardins in Circassia was reduced from 500 000 to 35 000 the Abzakhs from 260 000 to 14 600 and the Natukhajs from 240 000 to merely 175 persons 152 The Shapsugh tribe which numbered some 300 000 were reduced to 3 000 people Ivan Drozdov a Russian officer who witnessed the scene at Qbaada in May 1864 as the other Russians were celebrating their victory remarked On the road our eyes were met with a staggering image corpses of women children elderly persons torn to pieces and half eaten by dogs deportees emaciated by hunger and disease almost too weak to move their legs collapsing from exhaustion and becoming prey to dogs while still alive Drozdov Ivan Posledniaia Bor ba s Gortsami na Zapadnom Kavkaze pp 456 457 The Ottoman Empire regarded the Adyghe warriors as courageous and experienced It encouraged them to settle in various near border settlements of the Ottoman Empire in order to strengthen the empire s borders According to Walter Richmond Circassia was a small independent nation on the northeastern shore of the Black Sea For no reason other than ethnic hatred over the course of hundreds of raids the Russians drove the Circassians from their homeland and deported them to the Ottoman Empire At least 600 000 people lost their lives to massacre starvation and the elements while hundreds of thousands more were forced to leave their homeland By 1864 three fourths of the population was annihilated and the Circassians had become one of the first stateless peoples in modern history 153 As of 2020 update Georgia was the only country to classify the events as genocide while Russia actively denies the Circassian genocide and classifies the events as a simple migration of undeveloped barbaric peoples attribution needed Russian nationalists continue to celebrate the day on May 21 each year as a holy conquest day when the Russian Empire s occupation of the Caucasus ended Circassians commemorate May 21 every year as the Circassian Day of Mourning Population EditThere are twelve historic Adyghe Circassian Adyge Adyge princedoms or tribes of Circassia three democratic and nine aristocratic Abdzakh Besleney Bzhedug Hatuqwai Kabardian Mamkhegh Natukhai Shapsug Temirgoy Ubykh Yegeruqwai and Zhaney 154 Today about 700 000 Circassians remain in historical Circassia in today s Russia The 2010 Russian Census recorded 718 727 Circassians of which 516 826 are Kabardians 124 835 are Adyghe proper 73 184 are Cherkess and 3 882 Shapsugs 155 The largest Circassian population resides in Turkey pop 1 400 000 6 000 000 156 157 A Circassian population also exists in other countries including Jordan Syria Iraq Iran Lebanon Serbia Egypt and Israel but is considerably smaller 158 159 citation needed National religion EditMain article Religion in Circassia Circassia gradually went through the following various religions Paganism Christianity and then Islam 160 Paganism Edit Main article Circassian paganism The ancient beliefs of the Circassians were based on animism and magic within the framework of the customary rules of Xabze Although the main belief was Monistic Monotheistic they prayed using water fire plants forests rocks thunder and lightning They performed their acts of worship accompanied by dance and music in the sacred groves used as temples An old priest led the ceremony accompanied by songs of prayer and supplications Thus it was aimed to protect the newborn babies from diseases and the evil eye 161 Another important aspect was ancestors and honor Therefore the goal of man s earthly existence is the perfection of the soul which corresponds to the maintenance of honour manifestation of compassion gratuitous help which along with valour and bravery of a warrior enables the human soul to join the soul of the ancestors with a clear conscience 162 Judaism Edit Some Circassian tribes converted to Judaism in the past as a result of the settlement of approximately 20 thousand Jews in 8th century Circassia along with the relations established with the Turkic Jewish Khazar Khaganate 161 Although Judaism in Circassia eventually assimilated into Christianity and Islam Christianity Edit It is the tradition of the early church that Christianity made its first appearance in Circassia in the 1st century AD via the travels and preaching of the Apostle Andrew 163 but recorded history suggests that as a result of Greek and Byzantine influence Christianity first spread throughout Circassia between the 3rd and 5th centuries AD 164 165 166 The spread of the Catholic faith was only possible with the Latin Conquest of Constantinople by the crusaders and the establishment of the Latin state The Catholic religion was adopted by the Circassians following Farzakht a distinguished figure who greatly contributed to the spread of this religion in his country The pope sent him a letter in 1333 thanking him for his effort as an indication of his gratitude For Circassians the most important and attractive personality in all Christian teachings was the personality of St George They saw in him the embodiment of all the virtues respected in the Caucasus His name in Circassian is Aushe Gerge Christianity in Circassia experienced its final collapse in the 18th century when all Circassians accepted Islam The ex priests joined the Circassian nobility and were given the name shogene teacher and over time this name became a surname Islam Edit A small Muslim community in Circassia has always existed since the Middle Ages but the widespread of Islam occurred after 1717 167 Travelling Sufi preachers and the increasing threat of an invasion from Russia helped expedite the spread of Islam in Circassia 167 168 169 Circassian scholars educated in the Ottoman Empire boosted the spread of Islam 170 Circassian nationalism EditMain article Circassian nationalism Under Russian and Soviet rule ethnic and tribal divisions between Circassians were promoted resulting in several different statistical names being used for various parts of the Circassian people Adyghes Cherkess Kabardins Shapsugs Consequently Circassian nationalism has developed Circassian nationalism is the desire among Circassians all over the world to preserve their culture and save their language from extinction 171 172 achieve full international recognition of the Circassian genocide 173 174 175 globally revive Adyghe Xabze among Circassians 176 177 178 return to their homeland Circassia 179 180 181 182 and ultimately reestablish an independent Circassian state 181 182 183 There is also an effort among Circassians to unite under the name Circassian Adyghe in Russian Censuses to reflect and revive the concept of the Circassian nation The overwhelming majority of the diaspora already tends to call itself only Circassian See also EditEmanne Beasha Circassian Assembly Circassian beauties Circassian coast Circassian Day of Mourning Circassian diaspora Circassian genocide Circassian language Circassian music Circassian nationalism Circassian people Russian Circassian WarReferences EditCitations Edit The Circassian state was a federal state consisting of four levels of government Village council chyle hase made up of village elders district council made up of representatives from 7 neighboring village councils regional council sholyr hase made up from neighboring district councils people s council lepk zefes where every council had a representative There wasn t a central ruler until the 1800s and in the early 1800s the leader was symbolic in nature A central government emerged during the mid to late 1800s Dunyayi yikimdan kurtaracak olan sey Cerkes tipi hukumet sistemi Ghuaze 5 November 2022 Alfavitnyj spisok narodov obitayushih v Rossijskoj Imperii Archived 5 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Demoskop Weekly 187 188 24 yanvarya 6 fevralya 2005 ve buradan alinma olarak Papsu Murat Rusya Imparatorlugu nda Yasayan Halklarin Alfabetik Listesinde Kafkasyalilar Archived 18 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine Genel Komite HDP 2014 The Circassian Genocide www hdp org tr in Turkish Retrieved 2020 09 26 Richmond Walter 2013 04 09 The Circassian Genocide Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 6069 4 Gecmisten gunumuze Kafkaslarin trajedisi uluslararasi konferans 21 Mayis 2005 in Turkish Kafkas Vakfi Yayinlari 2006 ISBN 978 975 00909 0 5 a b Tarihte Kafkasya ismail berkok Nadir Kitap NadirKitap in Turkish Retrieved 2020 09 26 a b de Galonifontibus I 1404 II Cherkesiya Gl 9 a b Hotko S K Sadzy dzhigety de Galonifontibus I 1404 I Taty i goty Velikaya Tatariya Kumaniya Hazariya i drugie Narody Kavkaza Gl 8 Prim 56 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Circassia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 380 381 Evliya Celebi Seyahatname II 61 70 VII 265 295 Genel Komite HDP 2014 The Circassian Genocide www hdp org tr in Turkish Retrieved 2020 09 26 Richmond Walter 2013 04 09 The Circassian Genocide Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 6069 4 Gecmisten gunumuze Kafkaslarin trajedisi uluslararasi konferans 21 Mayis 2005 in Turkish Kafkas Vakfi Yayinlari 2006 ISBN 978 975 00909 0 5 UNPO The Circassian Genocide unpo org Retrieved 2020 09 26 Tarihte Kafkasya ismail berkok Nadir Kitap NadirKitap in Turkish Retrieved 2020 09 26 Bilge Sadik Mufit Cerkezler Kafkaslar da yasayan halklardan biri TDV Islam Ansiklopedisi in Turkish Retrieved 2021 06 24 a b Bashqawi Adel 15 September 2017 Circassia Born to Be Free ISBN 978 1543447644 a b Jaimoukha Amjad The Circassians A Handbook a b c d Richmond Walter 9 April 2013 The Circassian Genocide Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 6069 4 a b Capobianco Michael 13 October 2012 Blood on the Shore The Circassian Genocide Caucasus Forum Richmond Walter 2013 The Circassian Genocide Rutgers University Press p 130 ISBN 978 0813560694 Zhemukhov Sufian 2008 Circassian World Responses to the New Challenges PDF PONARS Eurasia Policy Memo No 54 2 Retrieved 8 May 2016 Danver Steven L 2015 Native Peoples of the World An Encyclopedia of Groups Cultures and Contemporary Issues Routledge p 528 ISBN 978 1317464006 single The Jamestown Foundation Jamestown org 7 May 2013 Retrieved 20 August 2013 Douglas Harper Etymonline states 1550s in reference to a people people of the northern Caucasus along the Black Sea from Circassia Latinized from Russian Cherkesŭ which is of unknown origin Their name for themselves is Adighe Their language is non Indo European The race was noted for the fine physical formation of its members especially its women Century Dictionary who were much sought by neighboring nations as concubines etc James Stuart Olson et al eds Cherkess An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires Greenwood Publishing 1994 p 150 ISBN 9780313274978 The Beslenei Beslenej are located between the upper Urup and Khozdya rivers and along the Middle Laba River in the western reaches of the North Caucasus Yamisha Jonty The Circassians An Introduction Bashqawi Adel 15 September 2017 Circassia Born to Be Free ISBN 978 1543447644 Richmond Walter 2013 The Circassian Genocide Rutgers University Press back cover ISBN 978 0 8135 6069 4 Strabo Geographica 11 2 Circassians www encyclopedia com Retrieved 20 June 2019 Home thoughts from abroad Circassians mourn the past and organise for the future The Economist 2012 05 26 Spelen zijn op massagraven Nederlandse Omroep Stichting 2014 02 03 Prince Inal the Great I The Tomb of the Mighty Potentate Is Located in Circassia Not Abkhazia Amjad Jaimoukha Circassian Voices 2013 Archived from the original on 4 June 2020 Cherkesiya cherty socio kulturnoj identichnosti Archived from the original on 17 October 2013 Retrieved 20 August 2013 De facto Ungariae Magnae a fretre Riccardo invento tempori domini Gregorii Noni Istoricheskij arhiv 1940 T 3 S 96 Atti della Societa Ligure di storia patria T VII f 2 737 Kolli L Kafa v period vladeniya eyu bankom sv Georgiya 1454 1475 Izvestiya Tavricheskoj Uchenoj Arhivnoj komissii 47 Simferopol 1912 S 86 Berkok Ismail Tarihte Kafkasya Istanbul Matbaasi Berkok Ismail Tarihte Kafkasya KAFFED Cerkes Ozgurluk Meclisi These regions were Shapsugo Natukhaj Abdzakh Chemguy Barakay Bzhedug Kabardo Besleney Hatuqway Makhosh Bashilbey Taberda Abkhazia and Ubykh Hatajuqua Ali Hadji Ismail Dagomuqua Berzeg Circassian Warrior and Diplomat 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named Stachemfak Adyghe Stahemfaku a b D S Cerkes Krallar Hukumdarlar In the 3rd and 4th centuries AD the Goths settled in the north of the Black Sea There were constant wars with the Circassian kingdoms Prince Baksan one of the 8 sons and eldest of King Daw was one of the rare leaders who made his mark in the wars against the Goths was one of the rare leaders to whom a statue was erected and died with his eighty warriors in a war against the Goths in which his 7 brothers joined him Natho Kadir Ancient Circassian History D S Cerkes Krallar Hukumdarlar Lawristan is the 6th century King of the Circassians and is known for his war with the Avars Upon his refusal to come under Avar rule Avar Khan with an army of 60 thousand destroyed the Black Sea coast D S Cerkes Krallar Hukumdarlar Zenkovsky Sergei A Medieval Russia s Cronicles 58 59 D S Cerkes Krallar Hukumdarlar The leader of the Circassian tribes Hapach with his army of horsemen and allied principalities attacked Sarkel a city of the Khazars The Khazar army was defeated and the Sarkel prince and his surviving army were shackled by their feet and imprisoned The Laurentian Codex provides the following information In 1022 Prince Mstislav the Brave who at the time was the prince of Tmutarakan started a military operation against the Alans During the operation he encountered the Kassogian army commanded by Rededya To avoid unnecessary bloodshed Mstislav and Rededya who possessed an extraordinary physical force decided to have a personal fight with the condition that the winner would be considered the winner of the battle The fight lasted some hours and eventually Rededya was knocked to the ground and stabbed with a knife Pdf scans of the original text from The Complete Collection of Russian Manuscripts in Russian Historian Rashid ad Din in the Persian Chronicles wrote that the Circassian king Tuqar was killed in battle against the Mongols Rashid ad Din Sbornik letopisej M L 1952 T 2 S 39 L I Lavrov Kuzey Kafkasya da Mogol Istilasi FAZLALLAH RAShID AD DIN gt SBORNIK LETOPISEJ gt PUBLIKACIYa 1941 G gt TEKST In his letter to the king of Zichia Verzacht Ferzakht Pope John XXII thanks the Governor of Circassians for his assistance in implementing the Christian faith among the Circassians Verzacht s power and status was so high that his example was followed by the rest of the Circassian princes who took the Roman Catholic faith A contract was signed between the ruler of Circassia and the ruler of Caffa naming another ruler of Zichia Petrezok the paramount lord of Zichia Under the contract Zichia would supply large quantities of grain to Caffa Kressel R Ph The Administration of Caffa under the Uffizio di San Giorgio University of Wisconsin 1966 P 396 Malʹbakhov Boris 2002 Kabarda na etapakh politicheskoĭ istorii seredina XVI pervai a chetvertʹ XIX veka Moskva Pomatur ISBN 5 86208 106 2 Ulusal Toplu Katalog Tarama www toplukatalog gov tr Retrieved 2020 11 02 a b Cerkesler Turk mu 2018 Archived from the 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from the original on 2012 12 22 Opisanie Cherkesii www vostlit info Archived from the original on 29 December 2007 Retrieved 12 January 2019 1724 god Zapiski Gerbera Ioganna Gustava www vostlit info Archived from the original on 27 March 2013 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Engelbert Kempfer www vostlit info Archived from the original on 29 November 2011 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Vasilij Kashirin Eshyo odna Mat Poltavskoj batalii K yubileyu Kanzhalskoj bitvy 1708 goda www diary ru in Russian Archived from the original on 22 September 2018 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Cw 2009 10 15 Circassian World News Blog Documentary Kanzhal Battle Circassian World News Blog Archived from the original on 19 October 2010 Retrieved 2020 09 18 Weismann Ein Blick auf die Circassianer Serbes Nahit 2012 Yasayan Efsane Xabze Phoneix Yayinlari ISBN 9786055738884 Curey Ali 2011 Hatti Hititler ve Cerkesler Chiviyazilari Yayinevi ISBN 9786055708399 a b c Ahmed 2013 p 161 Neumann 1840 Shenfield 1999 Levene 2005 299 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Studies thesis The First Circassian Exodus to the Ottoman Empire 1858 1867 and the Ottoman Response Based on the Accounts of Contemporary British Observers Page 16 with one estimate showing that the indigenous population of the entire north western Caucasus was reduced by a massive 94 per cent Text of citation The estimates of Russian historian Narochnitskii in Richmond ch 4 p 5 Stephen Shenfield notes a similar rate of reduction with less than 10 per cent of the Circassians including the Abkhazians remaining Stephen Shenfield The Circassians A Forgotten Genocide in The Massacre in History p 154 Richmond Walter The Circassian Genocide Page 132 If we assume that Berzhe s middle figure of 50 000 was close to the number who survived to settle in the lowlands then between 95 percent and 97 percent of all Circassians were killed outright died during Evdokimov s campaign or were deported A Surikov Neizvestnaya gran Kavkazskoj vojny Archived 2013 08 19 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Russian Federation Kabards and Balkars Minority Rights Archived from the original on 2 October 2015 Retrieved 20 July 2020 Gammer Mos u030Ce 2004 The Caspian Region a Re emerging Region London Routledge p 67 Russian Census 2010 Population by ethnicity 2010 Retrieved 2015 12 16 Turkey s Circassians Demand Freedom to Travel to AbkhaziaA 2009 Retrieved 2015 12 16 Country Turkey People groups Kabardian Adyge 2015 Retrieved 2015 12 16 World Europe Circassians flee Kosovo conflict BBC News 1998 08 02 Retrieved 2008 07 06 N J Circassians join international group to protest Winter Olympics in Russia NJ com 9 February 2010 Chamokova Susanna Turkubievna 2015 TRANSFORMACIYa RELIGIOZNYH VZGLYaDOV ADYGOV NA PRIMERE OSNOVNYH ADYGSKIH KOSMOGONIChESKIH BOZhESTV Vestnik Majkopskogo gosudarstvennogo tehnologicheskogo universiteta a b Ovur Ayse 2006 Cerkes mitolojisinin temel unsurlari Tanrilar ve Cerkesler PDF Toplumsal Tarih 155 Khabze info Khabze the religious system of Circassians Antiquitates christianae or The history of the life and death of the holy Jesus as also the lives acts and martyrdoms of his Apostles in two parts by Taylor Jeremy 1613 1667 p 101 The Penny Magazine London Charles Knight 1838 p 138 Minahan James One Europe Many Nations a Historical Dictionary of European National Groups Westport USA Greenwood 2000 p 354 Jaimoukha Amjad M 2005 The Chechens A Handbook Psychology Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 415 32328 4 Retrieved 28 June 2017 a b Natho Kadir I Circassian History Pages 123 124 Shenfield Stephen D The Circassians A Forgotten Genocide In Levene and Roberts The Massacre in History Page 150 Richmond Walter The Circassian Genocide Page 59 Serbes Nahit Cerkeslerde inanc ve hosgoru PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2013 05 12 Cerkes milliyetciligi nedir Ajans Kafkas in Turkish 2011 03 15 Retrieved 2021 02 17 Cerkes Milliyetciligi Entegre Kapsayici Bir Ideolojidir www ozgurcerkes com in Turkish Retrieved 2021 02 17 152 yildir dinmeyen aci www aa com tr Retrieved 2021 02 17 Kayseri Haberi Cerkeslerden anma yuruyusu Sozcu Retrieved 2021 02 17 Cerkes Forumu Cerkes Soykirimini yil donumunde kinadi Milli Gazete in Turkish Retrieved 2021 05 21 Paul Golbe Window on Eurasia Circassians Caught Between Two Globalizing Mill Stones Russian Commentator Says On Windows on Eurasia January 2013 Avraam Shmulevich Habze protiv Islama Promezhutochnyj manifest North Caucasus Insurgency Admits Killing Circassian Ethnographer Caucasus Report 2010 Retrieved 24 09 2012 Suriyeli Cerkesler Anavatanlari Cerkesya ya Donmek Istiyor Haberler com in Turkish 2013 09 05 Retrieved 2021 02 17 Kaffed Donus www kaffed org in Turkish Retrieved 2021 02 17 a b Kaffed Evimi Cok Ozledim www kaffed org in Turkish Retrieved 2021 02 17 a b Besleney Zeynel A COUNTRY STUDY THE REPUBLIC OF ADYGEYA Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 5 April 2010 Ozalp Aysegul Parlayan Savbas Ve Surgun Kafdagi nin Direnisi Atlas in Turkish Retrieved 2021 02 17 Cited works Edit Ahmed Akbar 2013 The Thistle and the Drone How America s War on Terror Became a Global War on Tribal Islam Washington D C Brookings Institution Press ISBN 978 0 8157 2379 0 Shenfield Stephen D 1999 The Circassians A Forgotten Genocide In Levene Mark Roberts Penny eds The Massacre in History New York Berghahn Books pp 149 162 ISBN 978 1 57181 935 2 Ioann de Galonifontibus Svedeniya o narodah Kavkaza 1404 g Baku Elm 1979 Hotko S K Sadzy dzhigety Proishozhdenie i istoriko kulturnyj portret abazinskogo subetnosa Sajt APSUARA Istoriya i kultura Abhazii www apsuara ru 25 April 2014 a takzhe pervonachalno na Sajte Avdyge mak www adygvoice ru 12 aprelya 2011 Chast 1 29 aprelya 2011 Chast 2 29 aprelya 2011 Chast 3 29 aprelya 2011 Chast 4 General references EditBell James Stanislaus Journal of a residence in Circassia during the years 1837 1838 and 1839 in English Bullough Oliver Let Our Fame Be Great Journeys Among the Defiant People of the Caucasus Allen Lane 2010 ISBN 978 1846141416 Jaimoukha Amjad The Circassians A Handbook London Routledge New York Routledge amp Palgrave 2001 ISBN 978 0700706440 Jaimoukha Amjad Circassian Culture and Folklore Hospitality Traditions Cuisine Festivals and Music Bennett amp Bloom 2010 ISBN 978 1898948407 Kaziev Shapi and Igor Karpeev Povsednevnaya zhizn gorcev Severnogo Kavkaza v XIX v Everyday Life of the Caucasian Highlanders The 19th Century Moscow Molodaya Gvardiy 2003 ISBN 5 235 02585 7 King Charles The Ghost of Freedom A History of the Caucasus Oxford University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0195392395 Levene Mark Genocide in the Age of the Nation State Volume II The Rise of the West and the Coming of Genocide London I B Tauris 2005 ISBN 978 1845110574 Richmond Walter The Circassian Genocide Rutgers University Press 2013 ISBN 9780813560694 External links Edit Media related to Circassia at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Circassia amp oldid 1148748247, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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