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Kalmykia

Kalmykia (Russian: Калмыкия; Kalmyk: Хальмг, romanized: Haľmg, IPA: [xɑlʲˈməg]), officially the Republic of Kalmykia,[a] is a republic of Russia, located in the Lower Volga region of Southern Russia. The republic is part of the Southern Federal District, and borders Dagestan to the south and Stavropol Krai to the southwest; Volgograd Oblast to the northwest and north and Astrakhan Oblast to the north and east; Rostov Oblast to the west and the Caspian Sea to the east. Kalmykia is the only region in Europe where Buddhism is the predominant religion.[15]

Republic of Kalmykia
Республика Калмыкия
Other transcription(s)
 • KalmykХальмг Таңһч
Anthem:
"Khalmg Tanghchin chastr"
"Anthem of the Republic of Kalmykia"
[3]
Coordinates: 46°34′N 45°19′E / 46.567°N 45.317°E / 46.567; 45.317Coordinates: 46°34′N 45°19′E / 46.567°N 45.317°E / 46.567; 45.317
CountryRussia
Federal districtSouthern[1]
Economic regionVolga[2]
CapitalElista[4]
Government
 • BodyPeople's Khural[5]
 • Head[7]Batu Khasikov[6]
Area
 • Total76,100 km2 (29,400 sq mi)
 • Rank41st
Population
 • Total267,133
 • Estimate 
(2018)[10]
275,413
 • Rank78th
 • Density3.5/km2 (9.1/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+3 (MSK [11])
ISO 3166 codeRU-KL
License plates08
OKTMO ID85000000
Official languagesRussian;[12] Kalmyk[13]

The republic covers an area of 76,100 square kilometres (29,400 square miles), with a small population of about 275,000 residents.[16] The republic is home to the Kalmyks, a people of Mongol origin who are primarily of Buddhist faith. The capital of the republic is the city of Elista, which has gained a reputation for international chess.

Geography

The republic is located in Southern Russia, lying north of the North Caucasus. A small stretch of the Volga River flows through eastern Kalmykia. Other major rivers include the Yegorlyk, the Kuma, and the Manych. Lake Manych-Gudilo is the largest lake; other lakes of significance include Lakes Sarpa and Tsagan-Khak. The highest point of Kalmykia is 222 metres (728 ft) high Shared, located in the Yergeni hills.[17]

Kalmykia's natural resources include coal, oil, and natural gas.

The republic's wildlife includes the saiga antelope, whose habitat is protected in Chyornye Zemli Nature Reserve.

Climate

The average January temperature is −5 °C (23 °F) and the average July temperature is 24 °C (75 °F). Average annual precipitation ranges from 170 millimeters (6.7 in) in the east of the republic to 400 millimeters (16 in) in the west. The small town of Utta is the hottest place in Russia. On July 12, 2010, during a significant heatwave affecting all of Russia, an all-time record-high temperature was observed at 45.4 °C (113.7 °F).

Flora and fauna

 
Bamb Tsetsg (Tulip) Island national park

National Parks

  • Bamb Tsetsg Tulip Island

History

 
Map of the Republic of Kalmykia.

According to the Kurgan hypothesis, the upland regions of modern-day Kalmykia formed part of the cradle of Indo-European culture. Hundreds of Kurgans can be seen in these areas, known as the Indo-European Urheimat (Samara culture, Sredny Stog culture, Yamna culture).

The territory of Kalmykia is unique in that it has been home to many major world religions and cultures over the course of history. Some of the first recorded peoples to move into this territory were the Scythians and Sarmatians from the central Eurasian steppe, bringing their respective religious systems with them. Later on, all three major Abrahamic religions also took root, with the Khazar conversion to Judaism being a notable (if historically contested) episode in the religion's history. The Alans were a major Muslim people group, who faced the invading Mongols and their Tengrist practices, with some of the latter settling permanently. The later Nogais were Muslim, but were replaced by the contemporaneous Kalmyks, who practice Buddhism. With the annexation of the region by the Russian Empire, there was an influx of Slavic-speaking Christian settlers. Many religious institutions were suppressed in the wake of the Russian Revolution.

Kalmyk autonomy

The ancestors of the Kalmyks, the Oirats, migrated from the steppes of southern Siberia on the banks of the Irtysh River, reaching the Lower Volga region by the early 17th century. Historians have given various explanations for the move, but generally recognise that the Kalmyks sought abundant pastures for their herds. Another motivation may have involved escaping the growing dominance of the neighbouring Dzungar Mongol tribe.[18] They reached the lower Volga region in or about 1630. That land, however, was not uncontested pastures, but rather the homeland of the Nogai Horde, a confederation of Turkic-speaking nomadic tribes. The Kalmyks expelled the Nogais, who fled to the Caucasian plains and to the Crimean Khanate, areas (at least theoretically) under the control of the Ottoman Empire. Some Nogai groups sought the protection of the Russian garrison at Astrakhan. The remaining nomadic Mongol Oirat tribes became vassals of the Kalmyk Khan.

The Kalmyks settled in the wide-open steppes – from Saratov in the north to Astrakhan on the Volga delta in the south and to the Terek River in the southwest. They also encamped on both sides of the Volga River, from the Don River in the west to the Ural River in the east. Although these territories had been recently annexed by the Tsardom of Russia, Moscow was in no position to settle the area with Russian colonists. This area under Kalmyk control would eventually be called the Kalmyk Khanate.

Within twenty-five years of settling in the Lower Volga region, the Kalmyks became subjects of the Tsar of Russia. In exchange for protecting Russia's southern border, the Kalmyks were promised an annual allowance and access to the markets of Russian border settlements. The open access to Russian markets was supposed to discourage mutual raiding on the part of the Kalmyks and of the Russians and Bashkirs, a Russian-dominated Turkic people, but this was not often the practice. In addition, Kalmyk allegiance was often nominal, as the Kalmyk Khans practised self-government, based on a set of laws they called the Great Code of the Nomads (Iki Tsaadzhin Bichig).

The Kalmyk Khanate reached its peak of military and political power under Ayuka Khan (ruled 1672–1724, khan 1690–1724). During his era, the Kalmyk Khanate fulfilled its responsibility to protect the southern borders of Russia and conducted many military expeditions against its Turkic-speaking neighbours. Successful military expeditions were also conducted in the Caucasus. The Khanate experienced economic prosperity from free trade with Russian border towns, with China, with Tibet and with Muslim neighbours. During this era, the Kalmyks also kept close contacts with their Oirat kinsmen in Dzungaria, as well as with the Dalai Lama in Tibet.

Russian Civil War

 
Kalmyk Khurul Tsagan Aman

After the October Revolution in 1917, many Don Kalmyks joined the White Russian army and fought under the command of Generals Denikin and Wrangel during the Russian Civil War. Before the Red Army broke through to the Crimean Peninsula towards the end of 1920, a large group of Kalmyks fled from Russia with the remnants of the defeated White Army to the Black Sea ports of Turkey.

The majority of the refugees chose to resettle in Belgrade, Serbia. Other, much smaller, groups chose Sofia (Bulgaria), Prague (Czechoslovakia) and Paris and Lyon (France). The Kalmyk refugees in Belgrade built a Buddhist temple there in 1929.

Soviet period

 
Coat of arms of Kalmyk ASSR

In July 1919, Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin issued an appeal[19] to the Kalmyk people, calling for them to revolt and to aid the Red Army. Lenin promised to provide the Kalmyks, among other things, a sufficient quantity of land for their own use. The promise came to fruition on November 4, 1920, when a resolution was passed by the All-Russian Central Executive Committee proclaiming the formation of the Kalmyk Autonomous Oblast. Fifteen years later, on October 22, 1935, the Oblast was elevated to republic status, Kalmyk Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.

In line with the policy of Korenizatsiya based on the concept of titular nations, the government of the Soviet Union adopted a strategy of national delimitation, while at the same time enforcing the Leninist principle of democratic centralism. According to Dorzha Arbakov, decentralized governing bodies were a tool the Bolsheviks used to control the Kalmyk people:

... the Soviet authorities were greatly interested in Sovietizing Kalmykia as quickly as possible and with the least amount of bloodshed. Although the Kalmyks alone were not a significant force, the Soviet authorities wished to win popularity in the Asian and Buddhist worlds by demonstrating their evident concern for the Buddhists in Russia.[20]

After establishing control, the Soviet authorities did not overtly enforce an anti-religion policy, other than through passive means, because it sought to bring Mongolia[21] and Tibet[22] into its sphere of influence. The government also was compelled to respond to domestic disturbances resulting from the economic policies of War Communism and the 1921 famine. The passive measures that were taken by Soviet authorities to control the people included the imposition of a harsh tax to close places of worship and religious schools. The Cyrillic script replaced Todo Bichig, the traditional Kalmyk vertical script.

On January 22, 1922, Mongolia proposed to migrate the Kalmyks during the famine in Kalmykia, but Russia refused. 71–72,000 Kalmyks died during the famine.[23][dubious ] Revolts erupted among the Kalmyks in 1926 and 1930 (on 1942–1943, see the next section). In March 1927, Soviet deported 20,000 Kalmyks to the tundras of Siberia and Karelia.[23]

The Kalmyks of the Don Voisko Oblast were subject to the policies of de-cossackization where villages were destroyed, khuruls (temples) and monasteries were burned down and executions were indiscriminate. At the same time, grain, livestock and other foodstuffs were seized.[citation needed] In December 1927 the Fifteenth Party Congress of the Soviet Union passed a resolution calling for the "voluntary" collectivization of agriculture. The change in policy was accompanied by a new campaign of repression, directed initially against the small farming class. The objective of this campaign was to suppress the resistance of farming peasants to the full-scale collectivization of agriculture.

World War II

On June 22, 1941, the German army invaded the Soviet Union. By August 12, 1942, the German Army Group South captured Elista, the capital of the Kalmyk ASSR. After capturing the Kalmyk territory, German army officials established a propaganda campaign with the assistance of anti-communist Kalmyk nationalists, including white emigre, Kalmyk exiles. The total Jewish dead numbered between 100[24] and upwards of 700, according to documents held in the Kalmyk State Archives.[25] The campaign was focused primarily on recruiting and organizing Kalmyk men into anti-Soviet militia units.

  • Kalmüken Verband Dr. Doll (Kalmukian Volunteers)
  • Abwehrtrupp 103 (Kalmukian Volunteers)
  • Kalmücken-Legion or Kalmücken-Kavallerie-Korps (Kalmukian Volunteers)

The Kalmyk units were extremely successful in flushing out and killing Soviet partisans. But by December 1942, the Soviet Red Army retook the Kalmyk ASSR, forcing the Kalmyks assigned to those units to flee, in some cases with their wives and children in hand.

The Kalmyk units retreated westward into unfamiliar territory with the retreating German army and were reorganized into the Kalmuck Legion, although the Kalmyks themselves preferred the name Kalmuck Cavalry Corps. The casualty rate also increased substantially during the retreat, especially among the Kalmyk officers. To replace those killed, the German army imposed forced conscription, taking in teenagers and middle-aged men. As a result, the overall effectiveness of the Kalmyk units declined.

By the end of the war, the remnants of the Kalmuck Cavalry Corps had made their way to Austria where the Kalmyk soldiers and their family members became post-war refugees.

Those who did not want to leave formed militia units that chose to stay behind and harass the oncoming Soviet Red Army.

Although a number of Kalmyks chose to fight against the Soviet Union, the majority by and large did not, fighting the German army in regular Soviet Red army units and in partisan resistance units behind the battlelines throughout the Soviet Union. Before their removal from the Soviet Red Army and from partisan resistance units after December 1943, approximately 8,000 Kalmyks were awarded various orders and medals, including 21 Kalmyk men who were recognized as a Hero of the Soviet Union.[26]

 
Memorial to the deportation in Troitskoye

On December 27, 1943, Soviet authorities declared that "many Kalmyks" were guilty of cooperation with the German Army[27] and cited that as a justification to order the deportation of the entire Kalmyk population, including those who had served with the Soviet Army, to various locations in Central Asia and Siberia. In conjunction with the deportation, the Kalmyk ASSR was abolished and its territory was split between adjacent Astrakhan, Rostov and Stalingrad Oblasts and Stavropol Krai. To completely obliterate any traces of the Kalmyk people, the Soviet authorities renamed the former republic's towns and villages.[28]

Post-war Kalmykia

 
Elista, the capital of Kalmykia, 9 May 2015.

Due to their widespread dispersal in Siberia, their language and culture suffered a possibly irreversible decline. Khrushchev finally allowed their return in 1957, when they found their homes, jobs, and land occupied by imported Russians and Ukrainians, who remained.[citation needed] On January 9, 1957, Kalmykia again became an autonomous oblast, and on July 29, 1958, an autonomous republic within the Russian SFSR.

In the following years, bad planning of agricultural and irrigation projects resulted in widespread desertification. On orders from Moscow, sheep production increased beyond levels that the fragile steppe could sustain, resulting in 1.4 million acres (5666 km2) of the artificial desert.[29] To ramp up output, economically nonviable industrial plants were constructed.

After the dissolution of the USSR, Kalmykia kept the status of an autonomous republic within the newly formed Russian Federation (effective March 31, 1992).

Politics

 
Parliament of Kalmykia in Lenin Square, Elista.

The head of the government in Kalmykia is called "The Head of the Republic". The President of Russia selects a candidate for the Head of the Republic position and presents it to the Parliament of Kalmyk Republic, the People's Khural, for approval. If a candidate is not approved, the President of the Russian Federation can dissolve the Parliament and set up new elections.

 
Flag of Kalmykia in 1992–1993

From 1993 to 2010, the Head of the Republic was Kirsan Nikolayevich Ilyumzhinov. He also was the president of the world chess organization FIDE until the Russo-Ukrainian War. He has spent much of his fortune on promoting chess in Kalmykia—where chess is compulsory in all primary schools—and also overseas, with Elista, the capital of Kalmykia, hosting many international tournaments.

In the late 1990s, the Ilyumzhinov government was alleged to be spending too much government money on chess-related projects. The allegations were published in Sovietskaya Kalmykia, the opposition newspaper in Elista. Larisa Yudina, the journalist who investigated these accusations, was kidnapped and murdered in 1998. Two men, Sergei Vaskin and Tyurbi Boskomdzhiv, who worked in the local civil service, were charged with her murder, one of them having been a former presidential bodyguard. After prolonged investigations by the Russian authorities, both men were found guilty and jailed, but no evidence was discovered that Ilyumzhinov himself was in any way responsible.[30][31][32]

On October 24, 2010, Ilyumzhinov was replaced by Alexey Orlov as the new Head of Kalmykia. Since September 2019 the acting President of Kalmykia is Batu Khasikov.[33]

Since 2008, Anatoly Kozachko has been President of the Parliament, the People's Khural. The current[when?] Prime Minister of Kalmykia is Lyudmila Ivanovna. All the three top politicians belong to the Kremlin's "United Russia" Party.[34]

The Kalmyk Nationalist Oirat-Kalmyk People’s Congress has been convening since 2015 and supporting certain people in the People's Khural of Kalmykia elections, as well as pushing for political change inside Kalmykia.[35][36]

Administrative divisions

Demographics

 
Life expectancy at birth in Kalmykia

Population: 267,133 (2021 Census);[37] 289,481 (2010 Census);[16] 292,410 (2002 Census);[38] 322,589 (1989 Census).[39]

Life expectancy:[40][41]

2019 2021
Average: 74.8 years 71.4 years
Male: 69.3 years 67.3 years
Female: 80.3 years 75.4 years

Vital statistics

Vital statistics
Source: Russian Federal State Statistics Service April 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
Average population (x 1000) Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate (per 1000) Crude death rate (per 1000) Natural change (per 1000) Fertility rates
1970 269 4,801 1,661 3,140 17.8 6.2 11.7
1975 283 5,923 2,228 3,695 20.9 7.9 13.1
1980 299 7,062 2,735 4,327 23.6 9.1 14.5
1985 314 7,945 2,832 5,113 25.3 9.0 16.3
1990 326 6,828 2,669 4,159 20.9 8.2 12.7 2,66
1991 327 6,369 2,755 3,614 19.5 8.4 11.1 2,58
1992 323 5,865 2,806 3,059 18.2 8.7 9.5 2,57
1993 319 5,027 3,167 1,860 15.8 9.9 5.8 2,30
1994 317 4,684 3,226 1,458 14.8 10.2 4.6 2,20
1995 316 4,321 3,359 962 13.7 10.6 3.0 2,03
1996 314 3,929 3,232 697 12.5 10.3 2.2 1,82
1997 313 3,845 3,072 773 12.3 9.8 2.5 1,77
1998 311 3,858 3,279 579 12.4 10.5 1.9 1,76
1999 309 3,598 3,356 242 11.6 10.8 0.8 1,62
2000 308 3,473 3,439 34 11.3 11.2 0.1 1,55
2001 302 3,530 3,357 173 11.7 11.1 0.6 1,57
2002 295 3,729 3,637 92 12.7 12.3 0.3 1,70
2003 291 3,874 3,437 437 13.3 11.8 1.5 1,77
2004 291 3,923 3,184 739 13.5 11.0 2.5 1,77
2005 290 3,788 3,350 438 13.1 11.5 1.5 1,69
2006 289 3,820 3,207 613 13.2 11.1 2.1 1,69
2007 289 4,146 3,141 1,005 14.3 10.9 3.5 1,83
2008 289 4,354 2,976 1,378 15.1 10.3 4.8 1,93
2009 289 4,270 3,115 1,155 14.8 10.8 4.0 1,81
2010 289 4,432 3,191 1,241 15.3 11.0 4.3 1,88
2011 288 4,194 2,920 1,274 14,5 10,1 4.4 1,81
2012 286 4,268 2,870 1,398 15,0 10,1 4.9 1,89
2013 283 4,126 2,805 1,321 14,6 9,9 4.7 1,88
2014 281 3,969 2,787 1,182 14,1 9,9 4.2 1,85
2015 280 3,823 2,743 1,080 13,6 9,8 3.8 1,83
2016 278 3,492 2,709 783 12.5 9.7 2.8 1,72(e)
2017 277 3,028 2,755 273 10.9 9.9 1.0
2018 275 3,043 2,649 394 11.0 9.6 1.4
2019 2,814 2,561 253 10.3 9.4 0.9
2020 2,758 3,013 -255 10.2 11.1 -0.9

Ethnic groups

 
Ethnic map of Caucasus

According to the 2021 Census, Kalmyks make up 62.5% of the republic's population. Other groups include Russians (25.7%), Dargins (2.8%), Kazakhs (1.7%), Turks (1.6%), Chechens (1.1%), Avars (1.0%), and Koreans (0.4%).[42]

Ethnic
group
1926 census 1939 census 1959 census 1970 census 1979 census 1989 census 2002 census 2010 census 2021 census1
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
Kalmyks 107,026 75.6% 107,315 48.6% 64,882 35.1% 110,264 41.1% 122,167 41.5% 146,316 45.4% 155,938 53.3% 162,740 57.4% 159,138 62.5%
Russians 15,212 10.7% 100,814 45.7% 103,349 55.9% 122,757 45.8% 125,510 42.6% 121,531 37.7% 98,115 33.6% 85,712 30.2% 65,490 25.7%
Others 19,356 13.7% 12,555 5.7% 16,626 9.0% 34,972 13.0% 46,850 15.9% 54,732 17.0% 38,357 13.1% 35,239 12.4% 30,135 11.8%
1 12,370 people were registered from administrative databases, and could not declare an ethnicity. It is estimated that the proportion of ethnicities in this group is the same as that of the declared group.[43]

This statistics is about the demographics of the Kalmyks in the Russian Empire, Soviet Union and Russian Federation.

1897[44] 1926 1939 1959 1970 1979 1989 2002 2010 2021
190,648 128,809 129,786 100,603 131,318 140,103 165,103 174,000 183,372 179,547

Religion

Religion in Kalmykia (2012)[45]

  Buddhism (47.6%)
  Other and undeclared (9.6%)
  Atheist (8%)
  Islam (4.8%)
  Tengrism and Shamanism (3%)
  Other Christians (0.8%)

Tibetan Buddhism is the traditional and most popular religion among the Kalmyks, while Russians in the country practice predominantly Russian Orthodoxy. A minority of Kalmyks practice pre-Buddhist shamanism or Tengrism (a contemporary revival of the Turkic and Mongolic shamanic religions). Many people are unaffiliated and non-religious.

According to a 2012 survey,[46] 47.6% of the population of Kalmykia adhere to Buddhism, 18% to the Russian Orthodox Church, 4.8% to Islam, 3% to Tengrism or Kalmyk shamanism, 1% are unaffiliated Christians, 1% are either Orthodox Christian believers who do not belong to a church or are members of non-Russian Orthodox churches, 0.4% adhere to forms of Hinduism, and 9.0% follow other religions or did not give an answer to the survey. In addition, 13% of the population declared themselves to be "spiritual but not religious" and another 13% to be atheist.[46]

Education

Kalmyk State University is the largest higher education facility in the republic.

Economy

Kalmykia has a developed agricultural sector. Other developed industries include the food processing and oil and gas industries.

As most of Kalmykia is arid, irrigation is necessary for agriculture. The Cherney Zemli Irrigation Scheme (Черноземельская оросительная система) in southern Kalmykia receives water from the Caucasian rivers Terek and Kuma via a chain of canals: water flows from the Terek to the Kuma via the Terek-Kuma Canal, then to the Chogray Reservoir on the East Manych River via the Kuma-Manych Canal, and finally into Kalmykia's steppes over the Cherney Zemli Main Canal, constructed in the 1970s.[47]

The government of Kalmykia spends about $100 million annually. Its annual oil production is about 1,270,000 barrels.

Emigration and culture

 
Traditional instruments include the dombra.

The Kalmyks of Kyrgyzstan live primarily in the Karakol region of eastern Kyrgyzstan. They are referred to as Sart Kalmyks. The origin of this name is unknown. Likewise, it is not known when, why and from where this small group of Kalmyks migrated to eastern Kyrgyzstan. Due to their minority status, the Sart Kalmyks have adopted the Kyrgyz language and culture of the majority Kyrgyz population. As a result, nearly all now are Muslims.[citation needed]

Although Sart Kalmyks are Muslims, Kalmyks elsewhere, by and large, remain faithful to the Gelugpa Order of Tibetan Buddhism. In Kalmykia, for example, the Gelugpa Order with the assistance of the government has constructed numerous Buddhist temples. In addition, the Kalmyk people recognize Tenzin Gyatso, 14th Dalai Lama as their spiritual leader and Erdne Ombadykow, a Kalmyk American, as the supreme lama of the Kalmyk people. The Dalai Lama has visited Elista on a number of occasions.

The Kalmyks have also established communities in the United States, primarily in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. The majority are descended from those Kalmyks who fled from Russia in late 1920 to France, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, and, later, Germany. Many of those Kalmyks living in Germany at the end of World War II were eventually granted passage to the United States.

As a consequence of their decades-long migration through Europe, many older Kalmyks are fluent in German, French, and Serbo-Croatian, in addition to Russian and their native Kalmyk language. There are several Kalmyk Buddhist temples in Monmouth County, New Jersey, where the vast majority of American Kalmyks reside, as well as a Tibetan Buddhist Learning Center and monastery in Washington Township, New Jersey. At one point during the 20th century, there was a Kalmyk Buddhist temple in Belgrade, Serbia.

The word Kalmyk means 'those who remained'. Its origin is unknown but this name was known centuries before a large part of the Kalmyks moved back from the Volga River to Dzhungaria in the 18th century.

There are three cultural subgroups within the Kalmyk nation: Turguts, Durbets (Durwets), and Buzavs (Oirats, who joined the Russian Cossacks), as well as some villages of Hoshouts and Zungars. The Durbets subgroup includes the Chonos tribe (literally meaning "a tribe of the wolf", also called "Shonos", "Chinos", "A-Shino", or "A-Chino"), which is considered[by whom?] to be one of the most ancient tribes in the world, dating back to the 6th to 11th century.

Kalmykia staged the 2006 World Chess Championship between Veselin Topalov and Vladimir Kramnik.[48]

Most of the Republic of Kalmykia lies in the Caspian Depression, a low-lying region down to 27 meters (89 ft) below sea level.

See also

References

Notes

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Russian: Респу́блика Калмы́кия, tr. Respublika Kalmykiya, IPA: [rʲɪsˈpublʲɪkə kɐlˈmɨkʲɪjə]; Kalmyk: Хальмг Таңһч, Haľmg Tañğç IPA: [xɑɮʲˈməg ˈtʰɑŋɣət͡ʃʰə]

Citations

  1. ^ Президент Российской Федерации. Указ №849 от 13 мая 2000 г. «О полномочном представителе Президента Российской Федерации в федеральном округе». Вступил в силу 13 мая 2000 г. Опубликован: "Собрание законодательства РФ", No. 20, ст. 2112, 15 мая 2000 г. (President of the Russian Federation. Decree #849 of May 13, 2000 On the Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in a Federal District. Effective as of May 13, 2000.).
  2. ^ Госстандарт Российской Федерации. №ОК 024-95 27 декабря 1995 г. «Общероссийский классификатор экономических регионов. 2. Экономические районы», в ред. Изменения №5/2001 ОКЭР. (Gosstandart of the Russian Federation. #OK 024-95 December 27, 1995 Russian Classification of Economic Regions. 2. Economic Regions, as amended by the Amendment #5/2001 OKER. ).
  3. ^ Law #44-I-Z
  4. ^ Steppe Code (Constitution) of the Republic of Kalmykia, Article 19: Столицей Республики Калмыкия является город Элиста. [The capital of the Republic of Kalmykia is the city of Elistaрственными языками в Республике Калмыкия являются калмыцкий и русский языки.|date=March 2023}} [The official languages of the Republic of Kalmykia are the Kalmyk and Russian languages.]
  5. ^ Steppe Code (Constitution) of the Republic of Kalmykia, Article 33
  6. ^ Official website of the Head of the Republic of Kalmykia. Alexey Maratovich Orlov February 16, 2019, at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
  7. ^ Steppe Code (Constitution) of the Republic of Kalmykia, Article 25
  8. ^ Федеральная служба государственной статистики (Federal State Statistics Service) (May 21, 2004). "Территория, число районов, населённых пунктов и сельских администраций по субъектам Российской Федерации (Territory, Number of Districts, Inhabited Localities, and Rural Administration by Federal Subjects of the Russian Federation)". Всероссийская перепись населения 2002 года (All-Russia Population Census of 2002) (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved November 1, 2011.
  9. ^ "Оценка численности постоянного населения по субъектам Российской Федерации". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved September 1, 2022.
  10. ^ "26. Численность постоянного населения Российской Федерации по муниципальным образованиям на 1 января 2018 года". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved January 23, 2019.
  11. ^ "Об исчислении времени". Официальный интернет-портал правовой информации (in Russian). June 3, 2011. Retrieved January 19, 2019.
  12. ^ Official throughout the Russian Federation according to Article 68.1 of the Constitution of Russia.
  13. ^ Steppe Code (Constitution) of the Republic of Kalmykia, Article 17: Государственными языками в Республике Калмыкия являются калмыцкий и русский языки. [The official languages of the Republic of Kalmykia are the Kalmyk and Russian languages.]
  14. ^ Decree of July 29, 1958
  15. ^ Nikolay Shevchenko (February 21, 2018). "Check out Russia's Kalmykia: The only region in Europe where Buddhism rules the roost". Russia Beyond. Retrieved November 29, 2020.
  16. ^ a b Russian Federal State Statistics Service (2011). Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года. Том 1 [2010 All-Russian Population Census, vol. 1]. Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года [2010 All-Russia Population Census] (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service.
  17. ^ Google Earth
  18. ^ Robert L. Worden and Andrea Matles Savada. "Caught Between the Russians and the Manchus". Mongolia a Country Study. GPO for the Library of Congress. Retrieved February 13, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  19. ^ Isvestia, Moscow, July 24, 1919
  20. ^ Dorzha Arbakov, 'The Kalmyks' in Nikolai Dekker and Andrei Lebed, (Eds) Genocide in the USSR, Chapter II, Complete Destruction of National Groups as Groups, Series I, No. 40, (Institute for the Study of the USSR, 1958), p. 90.
  21. ^ Bawden, C.R. The Modern History of Mongolia, Frederick A. Praeger, Publishers, New York, (1968).
  22. ^ Meyer, Karl E. and Brysac, Shareen Blair. Tournament of Shadows, Counterpoint, Washington, DC, (1999)
  23. ^ a b XX зууны 20, 30-аад онд халимагуудын 98 хувь аймшигт өлсгөлөнд автсан (Mongolian)
  24. ^ "Freitag 03 – eine Karawanserei". www.freitag.de. Archived from the original on November 24, 2005. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
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  27. ^ "Указ Президиума ВС СССР от 27.12.1943 о ликвидации Калмыцкой АССР и образовании Астраханской области в составе РСФСР — Викитека". ru.wikisource.org.
  28. ^ Polian, P.M.; Pobol', N.L., eds. (2005). Stalinskie deportatsii 1928–1953. Rossiia. XX vek. Dokumenty (in Russian). Moscow: Mezhdunarodnyi fond "Demokratiia"; Maternik. pp. 410–34. ISBN 5-85646-143-6. OCLC 65289542.
  29. ^ National Geographic Society, "Caspian Sea." March 1999.
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  32. ^ Kalder. Lost Cosmonaut, p70.
  33. ^ "Republic of Kalmykia » Batu Khasikov won the election of the head of Kalmykia". Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  34. ^ – See the web site of the Government of Kalmykia with links.
  35. ^ "Обращение Исполкома Съезда ойрат-калмыцкого народа" [Address of the Executive Committee of the Congress of the Oirat-Kalmyk people]. Элистинский Курьер. Retrieved May 25, 2022.
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  39. ^ Всесоюзная перепись населения 1989 г. Численность наличного населения союзных и автономных республик, автономных областей и округов, краёв, областей, районов, городских поселений и сёл-райцентров [All Union Population Census of 1989: Present Population of Union and Autonomous Republics, Autonomous Oblasts and Okrugs, Krais, Oblasts, Districts, Urban Settlements, and Villages Serving as District Administrative Centers]. Всесоюзная перепись населения 1989 года [All-Union Population Census of 1989] (in Russian). Институт демографии Национального исследовательского университета: Высшая школа экономики [Institute of Demography at the National Research University: Higher School of Economics]. 1989 – via Demoscope Weekly.
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General sources

  • Конституционное Собрание Республики Калмыкия. 5 апреля 1994 г. «Степное Уложение (Конституция) Республики Калмыкия», в ред. Закона №358-IV-З от 29 июня 2012 г. «О внесении изменений в отдельные законодательные акты Республики Калмыкия по вопросам проведения выборов Главы Республики Калмыкия». Вступил в силу со дня официального опубликования в газетах "Хальмг Унн" и "Известия Калмыкии". Опубликован: "Известия Калмыкии", №60, 7 апреля 1994 г. (Constitutional Assembly of the Republic of Kalmykia. April 5, 1994 Steppe Code (Constitution) of the Republic of Kalmykia, as amended by the Law #358-IV-Z of June 29, 2012 On Amending Various Legislative Acts of the Republic of Kalmykia on the Issues of Organization of the Elections of the Head of the Republic of Kalmykia. Effective as of the day of the official publications in the "Khalmg Unn" and "Izvestiya Kalmykii" newspapers.).
  • Народный Хурал (Парламент) Республики Калмыкия. Закон №44-I-З от 14 июня 1996 г. «О государственных символах Республики Калмыкия», в ред. Закона №152-IV-З от 18 ноября 2009 г. «О внесении изменения в Закон Республики Калмыкия "О государственных символах Республики Калмыкия"». Вступил в силу с момента опубликования. Опубликован: "Ведомости Народного Хурала (Парламента) Республики Калмыкия", №2, стр. 113, 1997 г. (People's Khural (Parliament) of the Republic of Kalmykia. Law #44-I-Z of June 14, 1996 On the Symbols of State of the Republic of Kalmykia, as amended by the Law #152-IV-Z of November 18, 2009 On Amending the Law of the Republic of Kalmykia "On the Symbols of State of the Republic of Kalmykia". Effective as of the moment of publication.).
  • Президиум Верховного Совета СССР. Указ от 29 июля 1958 г. «О преобразовании Калмыцкой автономной области в Калмыцкую Автономную Советскую Социалистическую Республику». (Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. Decree of July 29, 1958 On the Transformation of Kalmyk Autonomous Oblast into the Kalmyk Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. ).

Further reading

  • Arbakov, Dorzha. Genocide in the USSR, Chapter II, "Complete Destruction of National Groups as Groups, The Kalmyks", Nikolai Dekker and Andrei Lebed, Editors, Series I, No. 40, Institute for the Study of the USSR, Munich, 1958.
  • Balinov, Shamba. Genocide in the USSR, Chapter V, "Attempted Destruction of Other Religious Groups, The Kalmyk Buddhists", Nikolai Dekker and Andrei Lebed, Editors, Series I, No. 40, Institute for the Study of the USSR, Munich, 1958.
  • Bethell, Nicholas. The Last Secret, Futura Publications Limited, Great Britain, 1974.
  • Corfield, Justin. The History of Kalmykia: From Ancient times to Kirsan Ilyumzhinov and Aleksey Orlov, Australia, 2015. The first major history of Kalmykia in English, heavily illustrated, and drawing on interviews with Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, Nicholas Ilyumzhinov and Aleksey Orlov amongst others.
  • Epstein, Julius. Operation Keelhaul, Devin-Adair, Connecticut, 1973.
  • Grousset, René. The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia, Rutgers University Press, 1970.
  • Halkovic, Stephen A. Jr. The Mongols of the West, Indiana University Uralic and Altaic Series, Volume 148, Larry Moses, Editor, Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington, 1985.
  • Hoffmann, Joachim: Deutsche und Kalmyken 1942 bis 1945, Rombach Verlag, Friedberg, 1986.
  • Kalder, Daniel. Lost Cosmonaut: Observations of an Anti-tourist
  • Muñoz, Antonio J. The East Came West: Muslim, Hindu and Buddhist Volunteers in the German Armed Forces, 1941–1945, Chapter 8, "Followers of 'The Greater Way': Kalmück Volunteers in the German Army", Antonio J. Muñoz, Editor, Axis Europa Books, Bayside, NY, 2001.
  • Tolstoy, Nikolai. The Secret Betrayal, 1944–1947, Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1977.

External links

  • Official website of the Republic of Kalmykia February 24, 2018, at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
  • News from Kalmykia (in English)
  • News from Kalmykia (in German)
  • News from Kalmykia (in Spanish)
  • Official website of the Kalmyk diplomatic representation at the President of the Russian Federation (in English and Russian)
  • Tourism in Kalmykia
  • News about life in Kalmykia (in Russian)
  • (in Russian)
  • (in English and Russian)
  • Ethnologue report on Kalmyk language
  • Forum of Kalmyk Internet Community
  • Web-Portal of the Interregional Not-for-Profit Organization "The Leaders of Kalmykia"
  • Mistaken Foreign Myths about Shambhala
  • The man who bought chess, The Observer 29 October 2006
  • The Buddhist hordes of Kalmykia, The Guardian September 19, 2006
  • Kalmyk Buddhist Temple in Belgrade (1929–1944)
  • Czech republics, New Humanist November–December, 2007
  • Lagansky Express free bulletin board of the city Lagan
  • The nature of Kalmykia Video
  • hotographs of Buddhist sites in Kalmykia and in Central Asia

kalmykia, russian, Калмыкия, kalmyk, Хальмг, romanized, haľmg, xɑlʲˈməg, officially, republic, republic, russia, located, lower, volga, region, southern, russia, republic, part, southern, federal, district, borders, dagestan, south, stavropol, krai, southwest,. Kalmykia Russian Kalmykiya Kalmyk Halmg romanized Haľmg IPA xɑlʲˈmeg officially the Republic of Kalmykia a is a republic of Russia located in the Lower Volga region of Southern Russia The republic is part of the Southern Federal District and borders Dagestan to the south and Stavropol Krai to the southwest Volgograd Oblast to the northwest and north and Astrakhan Oblast to the north and east Rostov Oblast to the west and the Caspian Sea to the east Kalmykia is the only region in Europe where Buddhism is the predominant religion 15 Republic of KalmykiaRepublicRespublika KalmykiyaOther transcription s KalmykHalmg TanһchFlagCoat of armsAnthem Khalmg Tanghchin chastr Anthem of the Republic of Kalmykia source source 3 Coordinates 46 34 N 45 19 E 46 567 N 45 317 E 46 567 45 317 Coordinates 46 34 N 45 19 E 46 567 N 45 317 E 46 567 45 317CountryRussiaFederal districtSouthern 1 Economic regionVolga 2 CapitalElista 4 Government BodyPeople s Khural 5 Head 7 Batu Khasikov 6 Area 8 Total76 100 km2 29 400 sq mi Rank41stPopulation 2021 Census 9 Total267 133 Estimate 2018 10 275 413 Rank78th Density3 5 km2 9 1 sq mi Time zoneUTC 3 MSK 11 ISO 3166 codeRU KLLicense plates08OKTMO ID85000000Official languagesRussian 12 Kalmyk 13 The republic covers an area of 76 100 square kilometres 29 400 square miles with a small population of about 275 000 residents 16 The republic is home to the Kalmyks a people of Mongol origin who are primarily of Buddhist faith The capital of the republic is the city of Elista which has gained a reputation for international chess Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Climate 1 2 Flora and fauna 1 2 1 National Parks 2 History 2 1 Kalmyk autonomy 2 2 Russian Civil War 2 3 Soviet period 2 4 World War II 2 5 Post war Kalmykia 3 Politics 4 Administrative divisions 5 Demographics 5 1 Vital statistics 5 2 Ethnic groups 5 3 Religion 5 4 Education 6 Economy 7 Emigration and culture 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 1 1 Explanatory notes 9 1 2 Citations 9 2 General sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksGeography EditThe republic is located in Southern Russia lying north of the North Caucasus A small stretch of the Volga River flows through eastern Kalmykia Other major rivers include the Yegorlyk the Kuma and the Manych Lake Manych Gudilo is the largest lake other lakes of significance include Lakes Sarpa and Tsagan Khak The highest point of Kalmykia is 222 metres 728 ft high Shared located in the Yergeni hills 17 Kalmykia s natural resources include coal oil and natural gas The republic s wildlife includes the saiga antelope whose habitat is protected in Chyornye Zemli Nature Reserve Climate Edit The average January temperature is 5 C 23 F and the average July temperature is 24 C 75 F Average annual precipitation ranges from 170 millimeters 6 7 in in the east of the republic to 400 millimeters 16 in in the west The small town of Utta is the hottest place in Russia On July 12 2010 during a significant heatwave affecting all of Russia an all time record high temperature was observed at 45 4 C 113 7 F Flora and fauna Edit Bamb Tsetsg Tulip Island national park National Parks Edit Bamb Tsetsg Tulip IslandHistory EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Map of the Republic of Kalmykia The Golden Temple in Elista According to the Kurgan hypothesis the upland regions of modern day Kalmykia formed part of the cradle of Indo European culture Hundreds of Kurgans can be seen in these areas known as the Indo European Urheimat Samara culture Sredny Stog culture Yamna culture The territory of Kalmykia is unique in that it has been home to many major world religions and cultures over the course of history Some of the first recorded peoples to move into this territory were the Scythians and Sarmatians from the central Eurasian steppe bringing their respective religious systems with them Later on all three major Abrahamic religions also took root with the Khazar conversion to Judaism being a notable if historically contested episode in the religion s history The Alans were a major Muslim people group who faced the invading Mongols and their Tengrist practices with some of the latter settling permanently The later Nogais were Muslim but were replaced by the contemporaneous Kalmyks who practice Buddhism With the annexation of the region by the Russian Empire there was an influx of Slavic speaking Christian settlers Many religious institutions were suppressed in the wake of the Russian Revolution Kalmyk autonomy Edit The ancestors of the Kalmyks the Oirats migrated from the steppes of southern Siberia on the banks of the Irtysh River reaching the Lower Volga region by the early 17th century Historians have given various explanations for the move but generally recognise that the Kalmyks sought abundant pastures for their herds Another motivation may have involved escaping the growing dominance of the neighbouring Dzungar Mongol tribe 18 They reached the lower Volga region in or about 1630 That land however was not uncontested pastures but rather the homeland of the Nogai Horde a confederation of Turkic speaking nomadic tribes The Kalmyks expelled the Nogais who fled to the Caucasian plains and to the Crimean Khanate areas at least theoretically under the control of the Ottoman Empire Some Nogai groups sought the protection of the Russian garrison at Astrakhan The remaining nomadic Mongol Oirat tribes became vassals of the Kalmyk Khan The Kalmyks settled in the wide open steppes from Saratov in the north to Astrakhan on the Volga delta in the south and to the Terek River in the southwest They also encamped on both sides of the Volga River from the Don River in the west to the Ural River in the east Although these territories had been recently annexed by the Tsardom of Russia Moscow was in no position to settle the area with Russian colonists This area under Kalmyk control would eventually be called the Kalmyk Khanate Within twenty five years of settling in the Lower Volga region the Kalmyks became subjects of the Tsar of Russia In exchange for protecting Russia s southern border the Kalmyks were promised an annual allowance and access to the markets of Russian border settlements The open access to Russian markets was supposed to discourage mutual raiding on the part of the Kalmyks and of the Russians and Bashkirs a Russian dominated Turkic people but this was not often the practice In addition Kalmyk allegiance was often nominal as the Kalmyk Khans practised self government based on a set of laws they called the Great Code of the Nomads Iki Tsaadzhin Bichig The Kalmyk Khanate reached its peak of military and political power under Ayuka Khan ruled 1672 1724 khan 1690 1724 During his era the Kalmyk Khanate fulfilled its responsibility to protect the southern borders of Russia and conducted many military expeditions against its Turkic speaking neighbours Successful military expeditions were also conducted in the Caucasus The Khanate experienced economic prosperity from free trade with Russian border towns with China with Tibet and with Muslim neighbours During this era the Kalmyks also kept close contacts with their Oirat kinsmen in Dzungaria as well as with the Dalai Lama in Tibet Russian Civil War Edit Kalmyk Khurul Tsagan Aman After the October Revolution in 1917 many Don Kalmyks joined the White Russian army and fought under the command of Generals Denikin and Wrangel during the Russian Civil War Before the Red Army broke through to the Crimean Peninsula towards the end of 1920 a large group of Kalmyks fled from Russia with the remnants of the defeated White Army to the Black Sea ports of Turkey The majority of the refugees chose to resettle in Belgrade Serbia Other much smaller groups chose Sofia Bulgaria Prague Czechoslovakia and Paris and Lyon France The Kalmyk refugees in Belgrade built a Buddhist temple there in 1929 Soviet period Edit Coat of arms of Kalmyk ASSR In July 1919 Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin issued an appeal 19 to the Kalmyk people calling for them to revolt and to aid the Red Army Lenin promised to provide the Kalmyks among other things a sufficient quantity of land for their own use The promise came to fruition on November 4 1920 when a resolution was passed by the All Russian Central Executive Committee proclaiming the formation of the Kalmyk Autonomous Oblast Fifteen years later on October 22 1935 the Oblast was elevated to republic status Kalmyk Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic In line with the policy of Korenizatsiya based on the concept of titular nations the government of the Soviet Union adopted a strategy of national delimitation while at the same time enforcing the Leninist principle of democratic centralism According to Dorzha Arbakov decentralized governing bodies were a tool the Bolsheviks used to control the Kalmyk people the Soviet authorities were greatly interested in Sovietizing Kalmykia as quickly as possible and with the least amount of bloodshed Although the Kalmyks alone were not a significant force the Soviet authorities wished to win popularity in the Asian and Buddhist worlds by demonstrating their evident concern for the Buddhists in Russia 20 After establishing control the Soviet authorities did not overtly enforce an anti religion policy other than through passive means because it sought to bring Mongolia 21 and Tibet 22 into its sphere of influence The government also was compelled to respond to domestic disturbances resulting from the economic policies of War Communism and the 1921 famine The passive measures that were taken by Soviet authorities to control the people included the imposition of a harsh tax to close places of worship and religious schools The Cyrillic script replaced Todo Bichig the traditional Kalmyk vertical script On January 22 1922 Mongolia proposed to migrate the Kalmyks during the famine in Kalmykia but Russia refused 71 72 000 Kalmyks died during the famine 23 dubious discuss Revolts erupted among the Kalmyks in 1926 and 1930 on 1942 1943 see the next section In March 1927 Soviet deported 20 000 Kalmyks to the tundras of Siberia and Karelia 23 The Kalmyks of the Don Voisko Oblast were subject to the policies of de cossackization where villages were destroyed khuruls temples and monasteries were burned down and executions were indiscriminate At the same time grain livestock and other foodstuffs were seized citation needed In December 1927 the Fifteenth Party Congress of the Soviet Union passed a resolution calling for the voluntary collectivization of agriculture The change in policy was accompanied by a new campaign of repression directed initially against the small farming class The objective of this campaign was to suppress the resistance of farming peasants to the full scale collectivization of agriculture World War II Edit On June 22 1941 the German army invaded the Soviet Union By August 12 1942 the German Army Group South captured Elista the capital of the Kalmyk ASSR After capturing the Kalmyk territory German army officials established a propaganda campaign with the assistance of anti communist Kalmyk nationalists including white emigre Kalmyk exiles The total Jewish dead numbered between 100 24 and upwards of 700 according to documents held in the Kalmyk State Archives 25 The campaign was focused primarily on recruiting and organizing Kalmyk men into anti Soviet militia units Kalmuken Verband Dr Doll Kalmukian Volunteers Abwehrtrupp 103 Kalmukian Volunteers Kalmucken Legion or Kalmucken Kavallerie Korps Kalmukian Volunteers The Kalmyk units were extremely successful in flushing out and killing Soviet partisans But by December 1942 the Soviet Red Army retook the Kalmyk ASSR forcing the Kalmyks assigned to those units to flee in some cases with their wives and children in hand The Kalmyk units retreated westward into unfamiliar territory with the retreating German army and were reorganized into the Kalmuck Legion although the Kalmyks themselves preferred the name Kalmuck Cavalry Corps The casualty rate also increased substantially during the retreat especially among the Kalmyk officers To replace those killed the German army imposed forced conscription taking in teenagers and middle aged men As a result the overall effectiveness of the Kalmyk units declined By the end of the war the remnants of the Kalmuck Cavalry Corps had made their way to Austria where the Kalmyk soldiers and their family members became post war refugees Those who did not want to leave formed militia units that chose to stay behind and harass the oncoming Soviet Red Army Although a number of Kalmyks chose to fight against the Soviet Union the majority by and large did not fighting the German army in regular Soviet Red army units and in partisan resistance units behind the battlelines throughout the Soviet Union Before their removal from the Soviet Red Army and from partisan resistance units after December 1943 approximately 8 000 Kalmyks were awarded various orders and medals including 21 Kalmyk men who were recognized as a Hero of the Soviet Union 26 Memorial to the deportation in Troitskoye On December 27 1943 Soviet authorities declared that many Kalmyks were guilty of cooperation with the German Army 27 and cited that as a justification to order the deportation of the entire Kalmyk population including those who had served with the Soviet Army to various locations in Central Asia and Siberia In conjunction with the deportation the Kalmyk ASSR was abolished and its territory was split between adjacent Astrakhan Rostov and Stalingrad Oblasts and Stavropol Krai To completely obliterate any traces of the Kalmyk people the Soviet authorities renamed the former republic s towns and villages 28 Post war Kalmykia Edit Elista the capital of Kalmykia 9 May 2015 Due to their widespread dispersal in Siberia their language and culture suffered a possibly irreversible decline Khrushchev finally allowed their return in 1957 when they found their homes jobs and land occupied by imported Russians and Ukrainians who remained citation needed On January 9 1957 Kalmykia again became an autonomous oblast and on July 29 1958 an autonomous republic within the Russian SFSR In the following years bad planning of agricultural and irrigation projects resulted in widespread desertification On orders from Moscow sheep production increased beyond levels that the fragile steppe could sustain resulting in 1 4 million acres 5666 km2 of the artificial desert 29 To ramp up output economically nonviable industrial plants were constructed After the dissolution of the USSR Kalmykia kept the status of an autonomous republic within the newly formed Russian Federation effective March 31 1992 Politics Edit Parliament of Kalmykia in Lenin Square Elista The head of the government in Kalmykia is called The Head of the Republic The President of Russia selects a candidate for the Head of the Republic position and presents it to the Parliament of Kalmyk Republic the People s Khural for approval If a candidate is not approved the President of the Russian Federation can dissolve the Parliament and set up new elections Flag of Kalmykia in 1992 1993 From 1993 to 2010 the Head of the Republic was Kirsan Nikolayevich Ilyumzhinov He also was the president of the world chess organization FIDE until the Russo Ukrainian War He has spent much of his fortune on promoting chess in Kalmykia where chess is compulsory in all primary schools and also overseas with Elista the capital of Kalmykia hosting many international tournaments In the late 1990s the Ilyumzhinov government was alleged to be spending too much government money on chess related projects The allegations were published in Sovietskaya Kalmykia the opposition newspaper in Elista Larisa Yudina the journalist who investigated these accusations was kidnapped and murdered in 1998 Two men Sergei Vaskin and Tyurbi Boskomdzhiv who worked in the local civil service were charged with her murder one of them having been a former presidential bodyguard After prolonged investigations by the Russian authorities both men were found guilty and jailed but no evidence was discovered that Ilyumzhinov himself was in any way responsible 30 31 32 On October 24 2010 Ilyumzhinov was replaced by Alexey Orlov as the new Head of Kalmykia Since September 2019 the acting President of Kalmykia is Batu Khasikov 33 Since 2008 Anatoly Kozachko has been President of the Parliament the People s Khural The current when Prime Minister of Kalmykia is Lyudmila Ivanovna All the three top politicians belong to the Kremlin s United Russia Party 34 The Kalmyk Nationalist Oirat Kalmyk People s Congress has been convening since 2015 and supporting certain people in the People s Khural of Kalmykia elections as well as pushing for political change inside Kalmykia 35 36 Administrative divisions EditMain article Administrative divisions of the Republic of KalmykiaDemographics Edit Life expectancy at birth in Kalmykia Population 267 133 2021 Census 37 289 481 2010 Census 16 292 410 2002 Census 38 322 589 1989 Census 39 Life expectancy 40 41 2019 2021Average 74 8 years 71 4 yearsMale 69 3 years 67 3 yearsFemale 80 3 years 75 4 years Vital statistics Edit Vital statisticsSource Russian Federal State Statistics Service Archived April 12 2008 at the Wayback MachineAverage population x 1000 Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate per 1000 Crude death rate per 1000 Natural change per 1000 Fertility rates1970 269 4 801 1 661 3 140 17 8 6 2 11 71975 283 5 923 2 228 3 695 20 9 7 9 13 11980 299 7 062 2 735 4 327 23 6 9 1 14 51985 314 7 945 2 832 5 113 25 3 9 0 16 31990 326 6 828 2 669 4 159 20 9 8 2 12 7 2 661991 327 6 369 2 755 3 614 19 5 8 4 11 1 2 581992 323 5 865 2 806 3 059 18 2 8 7 9 5 2 571993 319 5 027 3 167 1 860 15 8 9 9 5 8 2 301994 317 4 684 3 226 1 458 14 8 10 2 4 6 2 201995 316 4 321 3 359 962 13 7 10 6 3 0 2 031996 314 3 929 3 232 697 12 5 10 3 2 2 1 821997 313 3 845 3 072 773 12 3 9 8 2 5 1 771998 311 3 858 3 279 579 12 4 10 5 1 9 1 761999 309 3 598 3 356 242 11 6 10 8 0 8 1 622000 308 3 473 3 439 34 11 3 11 2 0 1 1 552001 302 3 530 3 357 173 11 7 11 1 0 6 1 572002 295 3 729 3 637 92 12 7 12 3 0 3 1 702003 291 3 874 3 437 437 13 3 11 8 1 5 1 772004 291 3 923 3 184 739 13 5 11 0 2 5 1 772005 290 3 788 3 350 438 13 1 11 5 1 5 1 692006 289 3 820 3 207 613 13 2 11 1 2 1 1 692007 289 4 146 3 141 1 005 14 3 10 9 3 5 1 832008 289 4 354 2 976 1 378 15 1 10 3 4 8 1 932009 289 4 270 3 115 1 155 14 8 10 8 4 0 1 812010 289 4 432 3 191 1 241 15 3 11 0 4 3 1 882011 288 4 194 2 920 1 274 14 5 10 1 4 4 1 812012 286 4 268 2 870 1 398 15 0 10 1 4 9 1 892013 283 4 126 2 805 1 321 14 6 9 9 4 7 1 882014 281 3 969 2 787 1 182 14 1 9 9 4 2 1 852015 280 3 823 2 743 1 080 13 6 9 8 3 8 1 832016 278 3 492 2 709 783 12 5 9 7 2 8 1 72 e 2017 277 3 028 2 755 273 10 9 9 9 1 02018 275 3 043 2 649 394 11 0 9 6 1 42019 2 814 2 561 253 10 3 9 4 0 92020 2 758 3 013 255 10 2 11 1 0 9 Ethnic groups Edit Main article Demographics of Russia Peoples of the Caucasus Ethnic map of Caucasus According to the 2021 Census Kalmyks make up 62 5 of the republic s population Other groups include Russians 25 7 Dargins 2 8 Kazakhs 1 7 Turks 1 6 Chechens 1 1 Avars 1 0 and Koreans 0 4 42 Ethnicgroup 1926 census 1939 census 1959 census 1970 census 1979 census 1989 census 2002 census 2010 census 2021 census1Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Kalmyks 107 026 75 6 107 315 48 6 64 882 35 1 110 264 41 1 122 167 41 5 146 316 45 4 155 938 53 3 162 740 57 4 159 138 62 5 Russians 15 212 10 7 100 814 45 7 103 349 55 9 122 757 45 8 125 510 42 6 121 531 37 7 98 115 33 6 85 712 30 2 65 490 25 7 Others 19 356 13 7 12 555 5 7 16 626 9 0 34 972 13 0 46 850 15 9 54 732 17 0 38 357 13 1 35 239 12 4 30 135 11 8 1 12 370 people were registered from administrative databases and could not declare an ethnicity It is estimated that the proportion of ethnicities in this group is the same as that of the declared group 43 This statistics is about the demographics of the Kalmyks in the Russian Empire Soviet Union and Russian Federation 1897 44 1926 1939 1959 1970 1979 1989 2002 2010 2021190 648 128 809 129 786 100 603 131 318 140 103 165 103 174 000 183 372 179 547Religion Edit Religion in Kalmykia 2012 45 Buddhism 47 6 Russian Orthodoxy 18 Other and undeclared 9 6 Spiritual but not religious 8 2 Atheist 8 Islam 4 8 Tengrism and Shamanism 3 Other Christians 0 8 Tibetan Buddhism is the traditional and most popular religion among the Kalmyks while Russians in the country practice predominantly Russian Orthodoxy A minority of Kalmyks practice pre Buddhist shamanism or Tengrism a contemporary revival of the Turkic and Mongolic shamanic religions Many people are unaffiliated and non religious According to a 2012 survey 46 47 6 of the population of Kalmykia adhere to Buddhism 18 to the Russian Orthodox Church 4 8 to Islam 3 to Tengrism or Kalmyk shamanism 1 are unaffiliated Christians 1 are either Orthodox Christian believers who do not belong to a church or are members of non Russian Orthodox churches 0 4 adhere to forms of Hinduism and 9 0 follow other religions or did not give an answer to the survey In addition 13 of the population declared themselves to be spiritual but not religious and another 13 to be atheist 46 Education Edit Kalmyk State University is the largest higher education facility in the republic Economy EditKalmykia has a developed agricultural sector Other developed industries include the food processing and oil and gas industries As most of Kalmykia is arid irrigation is necessary for agriculture The Cherney Zemli Irrigation Scheme Chernozemelskaya orositelnaya sistema in southern Kalmykia receives water from the Caucasian rivers Terek and Kuma via a chain of canals water flows from the Terek to the Kuma via the Terek Kuma Canal then to the Chogray Reservoir on the East Manych River via the Kuma Manych Canal and finally into Kalmykia s steppes over the Cherney Zemli Main Canal constructed in the 1970s 47 The government of Kalmykia spends about 100 million annually Its annual oil production is about 1 270 000 barrels Emigration and culture Edit Traditional instruments include the dombra The Kalmyks of Kyrgyzstan live primarily in the Karakol region of eastern Kyrgyzstan They are referred to as Sart Kalmyks The origin of this name is unknown Likewise it is not known when why and from where this small group of Kalmyks migrated to eastern Kyrgyzstan Due to their minority status the Sart Kalmyks have adopted the Kyrgyz language and culture of the majority Kyrgyz population As a result nearly all now are Muslims citation needed Although Sart Kalmyks are Muslims Kalmyks elsewhere by and large remain faithful to the Gelugpa Order of Tibetan Buddhism In Kalmykia for example the Gelugpa Order with the assistance of the government has constructed numerous Buddhist temples In addition the Kalmyk people recognize Tenzin Gyatso 14th Dalai Lama as their spiritual leader and Erdne Ombadykow a Kalmyk American as the supreme lama of the Kalmyk people The Dalai Lama has visited Elista on a number of occasions The Kalmyks have also established communities in the United States primarily in Pennsylvania and New Jersey The majority are descended from those Kalmyks who fled from Russia in late 1920 to France Yugoslavia Bulgaria and later Germany Many of those Kalmyks living in Germany at the end of World War II were eventually granted passage to the United States As a consequence of their decades long migration through Europe many older Kalmyks are fluent in German French and Serbo Croatian in addition to Russian and their native Kalmyk language There are several Kalmyk Buddhist temples in Monmouth County New Jersey where the vast majority of American Kalmyks reside as well as a Tibetan Buddhist Learning Center and monastery in Washington Township New Jersey At one point during the 20th century there was a Kalmyk Buddhist temple in Belgrade Serbia The word Kalmyk means those who remained Its origin is unknown but this name was known centuries before a large part of the Kalmyks moved back from the Volga River to Dzhungaria in the 18th century There are three cultural subgroups within the Kalmyk nation Turguts Durbets Durwets and Buzavs Oirats who joined the Russian Cossacks as well as some villages of Hoshouts and Zungars The Durbets subgroup includes the Chonos tribe literally meaning a tribe of the wolf also called Shonos Chinos A Shino or A Chino which is considered by whom to be one of the most ancient tribes in the world dating back to the 6th to 11th century Kalmykia staged the 2006 World Chess Championship between Veselin Topalov and Vladimir Kramnik 48 Most of the Republic of Kalmykia lies in the Caspian Depression a low lying region down to 27 meters 89 ft below sea level See also EditBuddhism in Kalmykia Music of Kalmykia Geden Sheddup Choikorling Monastery Burkhan Bakshin Altan SumeReferences EditNotes Edit Explanatory notes Edit Russian Respu blika Kalmy kiya tr Respublika Kalmykiya IPA rʲɪsˈpublʲɪke kɐlˈmɨkʲɪje Kalmyk Halmg Tanһch Haľmg Tangc IPA xɑɮʲˈmeg ˈtʰɑŋɣet ʃʰe Citations Edit Prezident Rossijskoj Federacii Ukaz 849 ot 13 maya 2000 g O polnomochnom predstavitele Prezidenta Rossijskoj Federacii v federalnom okruge Vstupil v silu 13 maya 2000 g Opublikovan Sobranie zakonodatelstva RF No 20 st 2112 15 maya 2000 g President of the Russian Federation Decree 849 of May 13 2000 On the Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in a Federal District Effective as of May 13 2000 Gosstandart Rossijskoj Federacii OK 024 95 27 dekabrya 1995 g Obsherossijskij klassifikator ekonomicheskih regionov 2 Ekonomicheskie rajony v red Izmeneniya 5 2001 OKER Gosstandart of the Russian Federation OK 024 95 December 27 1995 Russian Classification of Economic Regions 2 Economic Regions as amended by the Amendment 5 2001 OKER Law 44 I Z Steppe Code Constitution of the Republic of Kalmykia Article 19 Stolicej Respubliki Kalmykiya yavlyaetsya gorod Elista The capital of the Republic of Kalmykia is the city of Elistarstvennymi yazykami v Respublike Kalmykiya yavlyayutsya kalmyckij i russkij yazyki date March 2023 The official languages of the Republic of Kalmykia are the Kalmyk and Russian languages Steppe Code Constitution of the Republic of Kalmykia Article 33 Official website of the Head of the Republic of Kalmykia Alexey Maratovich Orlov Archived February 16 2019 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Steppe Code Constitution of the Republic of Kalmykia Article 25 Federalnaya sluzhba gosudarstvennoj statistiki Federal State Statistics Service May 21 2004 Territoriya chislo rajonov naselyonnyh punktov i selskih administracij po subektam Rossijskoj Federacii Territory Number of Districts Inhabited Localities and Rural Administration by Federal Subjects of the Russian Federation Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2002 goda All Russia Population Census of 2002 in Russian Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved November 1 2011 Ocenka chislennosti postoyannogo naseleniya po subektam Rossijskoj Federacii Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved September 1 2022 26 Chislennost postoyannogo naseleniya Rossijskoj Federacii po municipalnym obrazovaniyam na 1 yanvarya 2018 goda Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved January 23 2019 Ob ischislenii vremeni Oficialnyj internet portal pravovoj informacii in Russian June 3 2011 Retrieved January 19 2019 Official throughout the Russian Federation according to Article 68 1 of the Constitution of Russia Steppe Code Constitution of the Republic of Kalmykia Article 17 Gosudarstvennymi yazykami v Respublike Kalmykiya yavlyayutsya kalmyckij i russkij yazyki The official languages of the Republic of Kalmykia are the Kalmyk and Russian languages Decree of July 29 1958 Nikolay Shevchenko February 21 2018 Check out Russia s Kalmykia The only region in Europe where Buddhism rules the roost Russia Beyond Retrieved November 29 2020 a b Russian Federal State Statistics Service 2011 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2010 goda Tom 1 2010 All Russian Population Census vol 1 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2010 goda 2010 All Russia Population Census in Russian Federal State Statistics Service Google Earth Robert L Worden and Andrea Matles Savada Caught Between the Russians and the Manchus Mongolia a Country Study GPO for the Library of Congress Retrieved February 13 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Isvestia Moscow July 24 1919 Dorzha Arbakov The Kalmyks in Nikolai Dekker and Andrei Lebed Eds Genocide in the USSR Chapter II Complete Destruction of National Groups as Groups Series I No 40 Institute for the Study of the USSR 1958 p 90 Bawden C R The Modern History of Mongolia Frederick A Praeger Publishers New York 1968 Meyer Karl E and Brysac Shareen Blair Tournament of Shadows Counterpoint Washington DC 1999 a b XX zuuny 20 30 aad ond halimaguudyn 98 huv ajmshigt olsgolond avtsan Mongolian Freitag 03 eine Karawanserei www freitag de Archived from the original on November 24 2005 Retrieved February 2 2022 USHMM Receives Lost Archives from Kalmyk Republic of the Russian Federation Detailing Previously Unknown Atrocities United States Holocaust Memorial Museum December 22 2000 Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 9 2015 Registraciya v bukmekerskoj kontore Vinlajn s telefona i kompyutera postomania ru Ukaz Prezidiuma VS SSSR ot 27 12 1943 o likvidacii Kalmyckoj ASSR i obrazovanii Astrahanskoj oblasti v sostave RSFSR Vikiteka ru wikisource org Polian P M Pobol N L eds 2005 Stalinskie deportatsii 1928 1953 Rossiia XX vek Dokumenty in Russian Moscow Mezhdunarodnyi fond Demokratiia Maternik pp 410 34 ISBN 5 85646 143 6 OCLC 65289542 National Geographic Society Caspian Sea March 1999 World Press Freedom Review Archived March 9 2007 at the Wayback Machine In Russia many conform few resist Archived from the original on January 10 2014 Retrieved February 25 2007 Kalder Lost Cosmonaut p70 Republic of Kalmykia Batu Khasikov won the election of the head of Kalmykia Retrieved February 28 2021 1 See the web site of the Government of Kalmykia with links Obrashenie Ispolkoma Sezda ojrat kalmyckogo naroda Address of the Executive Committee of the Congress of the Oirat Kalmyk people Elistinskij Kurer Retrieved May 25 2022 Kalmykia Russia s Emerging Powder Keg Jamestown Foundation Retrieved May 25 2022 Russian Federal State Statistics Service Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2020 goda Tom 1 2020 All Russian Population Census vol 1 XLS in Russian Federal State Statistics Service Russian Federal State Statistics Service May 21 2004 Chislennost naseleniya Rossii subektov Rossijskoj Federacii v sostave federalnyh okrugov rajonov gorodskih poselenij selskih naselyonnyh punktov rajonnyh centrov i selskih naselyonnyh punktov s naseleniem 3 tysyachi i bolee chelovek Population of Russia Its Federal Districts Federal Subjects Districts Urban Localities Rural Localities Administrative Centers and Rural Localities with Population of Over 3 000 XLS Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2002 goda All Russia Population Census of 2002 in Russian Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1989 g Chislennost nalichnogo naseleniya soyuznyh i avtonomnyh respublik avtonomnyh oblastej i okrugov krayov oblastej rajonov gorodskih poselenij i syol rajcentrov All Union Population Census of 1989 Present Population of Union and Autonomous Republics Autonomous Oblasts and Okrugs Krais Oblasts Districts Urban Settlements and Villages Serving as District Administrative Centers Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1989 goda All Union Population Census of 1989 in Russian Institut demografii Nacionalnogo issledovatelskogo universiteta Vysshaya shkola ekonomiki Institute of Demography at the National Research University Higher School of Economics 1989 via Demoscope Weekly Demograficheskij ezhegodnik Rossii The Demographic Yearbook of Russia in Russian Federal State Statistics Service of Russia Rosstat Retrieved June 28 2022 Ozhidaemaya prodolzhitelnost zhizni pri rozhdenii Life expectancy at birth Unified Interdepartmental Information and Statistical System of Russia in Russian Retrieved June 28 2022 Nacionalnyj sostav naseleniya Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved December 30 2022 Perepis 2010 russkih stanovitsya bolshe Perepis 2010 ru 2011 12 19 Retrieved on 2013 07 28 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej www demoscope ru Arena Atlas religij i nacionalnostej Arena Atlas of Religions and Nationalities PDF Sreda Sreda 2012 See also the results main interactive mapping and the static mappings Religions in Russia by federal subject Map Ogonek 34 5243 August 27 2012 Archived from the original on April 21 2017 The Sreda Arena Atlas was realised in cooperation with the All Russia Population Census 2010 Vserossijskoj perepisi naseleniya 2010 the Russian Ministry of Justice Minyusta RF the Public Opinion Foundation Fonda Obshestvennogo Mneniya and presented among others by the Analytical Department of the Synodal Information Department of the Russian Orthodox Church See Proekt ARENA Atlas religij i nacionalnostej Project ARENA Atlas of religions and nationalities Russian Journal December 10 2012 a b Arena Atlas of Religions and Nationalities in Russia Sreda 2012 What Kalmykia s economy is based on Archived from the original on May 26 2007 Rohrer Finlo 2006 Game of kings takes centre stage General sources Edit Konstitucionnoe Sobranie Respubliki Kalmykiya 5 aprelya 1994 g Stepnoe Ulozhenie Konstituciya Respubliki Kalmykiya v red Zakona 358 IV Z ot 29 iyunya 2012 g O vnesenii izmenenij v otdelnye zakonodatelnye akty Respubliki Kalmykiya po voprosam provedeniya vyborov Glavy Respubliki Kalmykiya Vstupil v silu so dnya oficialnogo opublikovaniya v gazetah Halmg Unn i Izvestiya Kalmykii Opublikovan Izvestiya Kalmykii 60 7 aprelya 1994 g Constitutional Assembly of the Republic of Kalmykia April 5 1994 Steppe Code Constitution of the Republic of Kalmykia as amended by the Law 358 IV Z of June 29 2012 On Amending Various Legislative Acts of the Republic of Kalmykia on the Issues of Organization of the Elections of the Head of the Republic of Kalmykia Effective as of the day of the official publications in the Khalmg Unn and Izvestiya Kalmykii newspapers Narodnyj Hural Parlament Respubliki Kalmykiya Zakon 44 I Z ot 14 iyunya 1996 g O gosudarstvennyh simvolah Respubliki Kalmykiya v red Zakona 152 IV Z ot 18 noyabrya 2009 g O vnesenii izmeneniya v Zakon Respubliki Kalmykiya O gosudarstvennyh simvolah Respubliki Kalmykiya Vstupil v silu s momenta opublikovaniya Opublikovan Vedomosti Narodnogo Hurala Parlamenta Respubliki Kalmykiya 2 str 113 1997 g People s Khural Parliament of the Republic of Kalmykia Law 44 I Z of June 14 1996 On the Symbols of State of the Republic of Kalmykia as amended by the Law 152 IV Z of November 18 2009 On Amending the Law of the Republic of Kalmykia On the Symbols of State of the Republic of Kalmykia Effective as of the moment of publication Prezidium Verhovnogo Soveta SSSR Ukaz ot 29 iyulya 1958 g O preobrazovanii Kalmyckoj avtonomnoj oblasti v Kalmyckuyu Avtonomnuyu Sovetskuyu Socialisticheskuyu Respubliku Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR Decree of July 29 1958 On the Transformation of Kalmyk Autonomous Oblast into the Kalmyk Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic Further reading EditArbakov Dorzha Genocide in the USSR Chapter II Complete Destruction of National Groups as Groups The Kalmyks Nikolai Dekker and Andrei Lebed Editors Series I No 40 Institute for the Study of the USSR Munich 1958 Balinov Shamba Genocide in the USSR Chapter V Attempted Destruction of Other Religious Groups The Kalmyk Buddhists Nikolai Dekker and Andrei Lebed Editors Series I No 40 Institute for the Study of the USSR Munich 1958 Bethell Nicholas The Last Secret Futura Publications Limited Great Britain 1974 Corfield Justin The History of Kalmykia From Ancient times to Kirsan Ilyumzhinov and Aleksey Orlov Australia 2015 The first major history of Kalmykia in English heavily illustrated and drawing on interviews with Kirsan Ilyumzhinov Nicholas Ilyumzhinov and Aleksey Orlov amongst others Epstein Julius Operation Keelhaul Devin Adair Connecticut 1973 Grousset Rene The Empire of the Steppes A History of Central Asia Rutgers University Press 1970 Halkovic Stephen A Jr The Mongols of the West Indiana University Uralic and Altaic Series Volume 148 Larry Moses Editor Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies Indiana University Bloomington 1985 Hoffmann Joachim Deutsche und Kalmyken 1942 bis 1945 Rombach Verlag Friedberg 1986 Kalder Daniel Lost Cosmonaut Observations of an Anti tourist Munoz Antonio J The East Came West Muslim Hindu and Buddhist Volunteers in the German Armed Forces 1941 1945 Chapter 8 Followers of The Greater Way Kalmuck Volunteers in the German Army Antonio J Munoz Editor Axis Europa Books Bayside NY 2001 Tolstoy Nikolai The Secret Betrayal 1944 1947 Charles Scribner s Sons New York 1977 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kalmykia Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Kalmykia Official website of the Republic of Kalmykia Archived February 24 2018 at the Wayback Machine in Russian News from Kalmykia in English News from Kalmykia in German News from Kalmykia in Spanish Official website of the Kalmyk diplomatic representation at the President of the Russian Federation in English and Russian Tourism in Kalmykia News about life in Kalmykia in Russian Official website of the Kalmyk State University in Russian News Agency of the Republic of Kalmykia in English and Russian Ethnologue report on Kalmyk language Forum of Kalmyk Internet Community Kalmyk Portal Web Portal of the Interregional Not for Profit Organization The Leaders of Kalmykia Mistaken Foreign Myths about Shambhala The man who bought chess The Observer 29 October 2006 The Buddhist hordes of Kalmykia The Guardian September 19 2006 Kalmyk Buddhist Temple in Belgrade 1929 1944 Czech republics New Humanist November December 2007 Lagansky Express free bulletin board of the city Lagan Caspian fish City Lagan The nature of Kalmykia Video hotographs of Buddhist sites in Kalmykia and in Central Asia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kalmykia amp oldid 1143425288, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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