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Kumyks

Kumyks (Kumyk: Къумукълар, romanized: Qumuqlar, Russian: Кумыки) are a Turkic people, living in Dagestan, Chechnya and North Ossetia.[9][10] They are the largest Turkic people in the North Caucasus.

Kumyks
Kumyk: къумукълар, qumuqlar
Abdul-Wahab son of Mustafa — a prominent Kumyk architect of the 19th century pictured wearing a traditional Caucasian papakha and chokha.
Total population
near 600,000
Regions with significant populations
 Russia565 830[1]
 Turkey10,000[2]
 Ukraine718[3] (2001)
 Uzbekistan1200[4] (2016)
 Kazakhstan481[5] (2009)
 Belarus360[6] (2009)
 Latvia33[7] (2020)
Languages
Kumyk language
Religion
predominately Sunni Islam
Related ethnic groups
Crimean Tatars, Balkars, Karachays[8]

They traditionally populate the Kumyk plateau (northern Dagestan and north-eastern Chechnya), lands bordering the Caspian Sea, areas in North Ossetia, Chechnya and along the banks of the Terek river. They speak the Kumyk language, which until the 1930s had been the lingua-franca of the Northern Caucasus.

Territories where Kumyks have traditionally lived, and where their historical state entities used to exist, are called Kumykia[11][12][13] (Kumyk: Къумукъ, Qumuq).[14] All of the lands populated by Kumyks were once part of the independent Tarki Shamkhalate.[15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23]

Population and present settlement area Edit

Kumyks comprise 14% of the population of the Republic of Dagestan, the third-largest population of Chechnya, and the fifth-largest population of North Ossetia, all of which are parts of the Russian Federation.[24]

Kumyks are the second largest Turkic-speaking ethnic group after Azerbaijanis in the Causasus, the largest Turkic people of the North Caucasus and the third largest ethnic group of Dagestan.

According to the Russian national census of 2010 there were more than 500,000 Kumyks in Russia.

Russian Federation Edit

In terms of administrative division in their native lands, Kumyks today are mostly divided between a few administrative regions of Russia, such as Republic of Dagestan, Republic of North-Ossetia, Chechen Republic.

Russian'a territorial subject (krai, oblast, republic etc.) Population
2002
2010[25]
2021
Dagestan 365,804[26] 431,736 496,455
North Ossetia-Alania 12,659[27] 16,092 18,054
Khanty-Mansi autonomous okrug 9,554[28] 13,849 13,669
Chechnya 8,883[29] 12,221 12,184
Stavropol krai 5,744[30] 5,639 5,213
Yamal-Nenets Autonomous Okrug 2,613[31] 4,466 4,838
Moscow oblast 818[32] 1,622 1,704
Moscow 1,615[33] 2,351 1,576
Saint Petersburg 895[34] 1,018 1,340
Astrakhan oblast 1,356[35] 1,558 1,240
Rostov oblast 1,341[36] 1,511 1,100
the table contains regions with the population exceeding 1000 people only.

Turkey and the Middle East Edit

In the 19th century, during and following the Caucasian War, numbers of Kumyks were subject to or willingly resettled (made hijra) to the Ottoman Empire[37] as a result of Russian deportation campaigns in the region.

In the 1910s-1920s, during the Bolshevik Revolution, another emigration wave to Turkey took place. Among the muhajirs (migrants) of that period were many prominent Kumyk nobility.[38][39]

 
Kumyk population in its native areas of the Northern Caucasus

Kumyks also used to move to Syria and Jordan, where a few Kumyk families still live.[40] The Syrian village of Dar-Ful was established in 1878-1880 by Kumyk emigrants.[41][42]

There is no official state census of ethnic minorities in Turkey (ethnic or racial censuses are outlawed), but according to the studies of 1994—1996, there were more than 20 settlements with Kumyk population.[43][44]

Ethnonym Edit

The majority of researchers (Bakikhanov, S.A. Tokarev, A.I. Tamay, S. Sh. Gadzhieva) derive the name "Kumyk" from a Turkic ethnonym Kimak, or from another name for KipchaksCuman.[45]

According to P. Uslar, in the 19th century the names "Kumyk" and "Kumuk" pertained to the Turkic speaking population of the Northern Caucasian lowlands.[46] In Dagestan, Chechnya and Ingushetia, the name Kumyk, or originally Kumuk pertained to the Kumyks only.[46] Y. Fyodorov wrote, based on sources from the 8–19 cc., that "Gumik — Kumyk — Kumuk" is originally a Dagestani toponym from the Middle Ages.[47]

In various Russian, European, Ottoman and Persian sources Kumyks were also called Dagestan Tatars (or Dagestan Turks),[48] Circassian[49] and Caucasus Tatars.[50]

Origin Edit

There is no universal opinion regarding the origin of the Kumyks. Some scholars propose that the population of the Kumyk plains of the 8th-10th centuries were directly ancestral to modern Kumyks.[51] A view close to that is that the Kumyks appeared in Dagestan along with the Khazars in the 8th century and stayed afterwards.[52] Whereas others believe that the Kumyks appeared in Dagestan in the 12th-13th centuries along with Kipchaks.[53]

Kumyk verbal tradition carried through ages some proverbs and sayings coming from the times of the Khazar Kaghanate.[54]

S. Tokarev wrote that:[55]

...Kumyks have very diverse ancestry. Its ancient stratum is, undoubtedly, pre-Turkic, Japhetic. There is an opinion that people of Kami, Kamaks, mentioned as long ago as by Ptolemaeus, are historically related to Kumyks. Their turkization started at the times of Khazars already, in the second half of the first millennium... Arrival of Cumans extended Turkic element further. That time point, marked by dissolution of the Khazar Kaghanate, is likely to be the period of the core formation for Kumyks, although some researchers (Bartold) linked their appearance to the latter period, when remains of Cumans defeated by Mongols fled to the lands of Dagestan.

A modern interpretation was proposed that "from the Turkified Lezgins, Kumyks also emerged".[56][57]

However, professor of Caucasus studies L. Lavrov doubted the "Turkification" hypothesis of Kumyk origin:[58]

It's unlikely that Kumyks might be Turkified Dagestanians, as some claim. Rather, their ancestors are considered to be Kipchaks, Khazars and, probably, other Turks of the early Middle Ages. It would be preferable to also identify whether Kamaks, who used to be settled in the North Dagestan in the beginning of our era, are related to Kumyks.

Another prominent Russian Orientalist, V. Minorsky, proposed his adjustment to the views mentioned, stating that:[59]

Today's Kumyk Turks, who populate North Eastern part of Dagestan, along the shore, possibly come from the basic Khazar stratum, strengthened and assimilated by the later re-settlers from the Kipchak steppes.

The final stages of the Kumyk ethnogenesis stretched from the 12th-17th centuries.[60]

Some of the Turkic peoples who assimilated into the Kumyk nation were those of Tumens from the Tumen Khanate (Caucasian Tumen), which emerged in the 15th century as a fragment of the dissolved Golden Horde; those of Bothe Bogans, Sople[61] and pre-Cuman Turks,[62] who populated the Botheragan-Madjar region in the 7th century, which encompassed the vast North Caucasian plains.[63]

History Edit

 
Rifle of the Kumyk Shamhal of Tarki, 19th century, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New-York

Kumyks historically were related to the states of the Caucasian Huns, Cuman-Kipchaks, and the Golden Horde.[62][64][65]

The beginning of the Kumyk nation is often considered to be in the Khazar Kaganate[66][58] era.

Until the 19th century, the Kumyks were a largely feudal, decentralized entity of strategical geographic and political importance for Russia, Persia and the Ottomans,[67][68] headed by a leader called the Shamkhal (originally Shawkhal, in Russian sources Shevkal). The Kumyk polity known as the Shamkhalate of Tarki was mentioned as early as the 14th century by Timurid historians.[69]

Other Kumyk states included the Endirey Principality,[70] Utamish Sultanate,[71] Tumen Possession,[72] Braguny Principality,[72] Mekhtuly Khanate,[73] Kaytag Uzminate[74] and others.[74]

Expansion of the Russian state, Ottoman Empire and Persia Edit

In the 16th century, Kumyk rulers tried to balance their relationships with their three neighbouring states, and as a result the Shamkhalate established itself as a considerable regional power. The two Empires and yet-to-be one Russian state considered the Caspian area as their influence domain.

Shamkhal Chopan became a subject of the Ottoman Empire in the late 16th century, and participated in the 1578-1590 Ottoman-Persian war.[75]

The 1560s marked the start of the numerous campaigns of the Russian army against Kumyks, provoked by the requests of the Georgians and Kabardians. Commander Cheremisinov seized and plundered the capital of Tarki in 1560. The Tumen khanate, allied with the Shamkhalate also resisted the invasion, but in 1588 was conquered by Russia. The Russians established the Terki stronghold (Not to be mistaken for Tarki) in its former capital. Tumen ruler Soltaney fled to the protection of Sultan-Mahmud of Endirey,[76] recognized today as a pan-Caucasian hero. In 1594, the other Campaign of Khvorostinin in Dagestan was organised, during which Russian forces and Terek Cossacks seized Tarki again, but were blocked by the Kumyk forces and forced to retreat to Terki, which resulted in a stampede.

In 1604—1605, Ivan Buturlin conducted one more campaign against the Kyumks, often known as the Shevkal Campaign. This also failed and resulted in a significant loss for Russia at the Battle of Karaman. The united forces of the Dagestani peoples under the banners of the Kumyk Shamkhalian, Prince Soltan-Mahmud of Endirey prevailed, and according to the prominent Russian historian Karamzin, stopped Russian expansion for the next 118 years until the rule of Peter I.[77]

In 1649 and 1650 Nogai leader Choban-murza sought the protection of their allies in the Shamkhalate. Russia, at war with the Nogais, sent 8,000 men in order to force the nomadic tribe to return to Russian territory. Surkhay-Shawkhal III attacked and routed Russian troops at the Battle of Germenchik.[78] Kumyk military success continued from 1651 to 1653, when the Kumyks, this time in an alliance with Safavid forces, destroyed the Russian fortress at the river Sunzha. Iranian Shah Abbas II intended to strengthen the Persian hold on the Kumyk lands, which didn't match with Surkhay's plans. In an alliance with Kaytag Uzmi Rustem, Surkhay III confronted Persians but was forced to withdraw. Nevertheless, the high losses disrupted the Shah's intentions of building fortresses in the Kumyk lands.[79]

Resistance to Peter I Edit

In the 18th century, Russian Emperor Peter I organised the Persian Campaign of the 1722—1723. The Endirey principality was the first to oppose the Russian forces, and despite their defeat, caused great losses which shocked the Emperor.[80] Kumyks of the Utamish Soltanate also fiercely resisted during the Battle at the River Inchge. Peter I stated afterwards:[81]

 
Roubaud, Peter I in Tarki, the Capital of Tarki Shamkhalate

If these people had a comprehension of the Military Science [Art], no other nation could take arms against them.

The Tarki Shamkhalate initially took a pro-Russian stance, but after a new Russian fortress had been built they confronted Russia again. However, this time the Shamkhalate couldn't unite the neighboring local peoples and remained alone in their struggle. Russian historian Sergey Solovyov wrote:[82]

In October 1725 general-majors Kropotov and Sheremetev embarked to devastate the possessions of the Shamkhal and burned down twenty settlements, including Tarki, the capital of the Shamkhal, which comprised 1,000 households; the total number of destroyed households amounts to 6,110. Shamkhal, having only 3,000 troops, couldn't resist the overwhelming number of Russians, who had in their ranks 8,000 Cossacks and Kalmyks only, not counting the regular troops, and two infantry regiments and two cavalries; Adil-Girey [Shamkhal] left Tarki and together with the Turkish ambassador had sent letters to other mountaineer possessors, asking for help, but got a refusal.

Caucasian War Edit

Russian 19th century general Gregory Phillipson [ru], known for his important actions in subjugating the Adyghe and Abaza ethnic groups at the left flank of the Caucasian front in Circassia, wrote:

I had vague knowledge about Caucasia and the Caucasian war, although professor Yazikov on the lectures in the military geography used to tell about one and the other; and according to his words it turned out that the most valiant and inimical to us tribe was that of the Kumyks.

Kumyks were one of the major forces in the late 18th century Sheikh Mansur's insurgence. Kumyk prince Chepalow, in alliance with Mansur made several attempts to attack the Russian stronghold of Kizlyar. In the final battle, Mansur led the Kumyk forces himself.[83] Despite the formal acceptance of the Russian sovereignty over the Shamkhals at the beginning of the Caucasian war (resulting from the Treaty of Gulistan), there were numerous revolts in Kumykia. In 1825 the village of [Old] Aksay was destroyed and 300 men from the settlement were gathered for their participation in the insurgence against Russian Empire led by the Chechen leader Taymiyev Biybolat, and murdered when Ochar-Haji, one of the Kumyks, killed two Russian generals on the spot.[84] In the same year the people of Endirey joined forces with mountain communities against the Russians.[85]

In total, there were at least five revolts in Shamkhalate and on the Kumyk plateau (called also Kumyk plains): the Anti-Russian revolt, resulting in the defeat of Northern Kumyks (Endirey and Aksay principalities) and the then-disestablished Mekhtula Khanate,[86] the Shamkhalate Revolt of 1823,[87] participation in Beybulat Taymiyev's revolt (who though recently had pledged allegiance to Russia),[88] the Shamkhalate Revolt of 1831,[89] the revolt at the Kumyk plains in 1831 and the Shamkhalate Revolt of 1843.[90]

There were also preparations for an insurgency on the Kumyk plains in 1844 and for a general Kumyk insurgency in 1855,[91] which had been planned as a joined action with the advance of Imam Shamil, but the advance didn't progress enough into the Kumyk lands.[91] In the insurgency in Dagestan in 1877-1878, one of the major centres of conflict was the Kumyk village of Bashly.[91]

Despite the devastation brought by the Imperial Army for their attempts to rise against Russia,[92] the Kumyk plains were also exposed to plundering forays from the neighboring tribes. For instance, in 1830, one Chechen leader, Avko, gathered forces in a call to allegedly join the troops of the leader of the Caucasian resistance, Gazi-Muhammad, but at the last moment declared the true reason "to use the opportunity to attack the city of Endirey and plunder Kumyks' cattle". However, the troops disbanded in disappointment.[93] Gazi-Muhammad himself tried to make Kumyks resettle higher in the mountains from the plains and join his resistance by destroying Kumyk settlements, as stated in the Russian military archives:[92]

Kazi-mulla, trying to hold Kumyks close, came up with a strange trick: destroying their auls [settlements] in order to force them to resettle in the mountains by depriving of living spaces. On the 24th of July he, in front of our troops, made the first experiment on Endirey village and burned down the third of it. Prince [Knyaz] Bekovich [Russian officer] at that time was burning Kumyks' bread at the slopes of the mountains...

During the Caucasian War, Kumyks found themselves between a rock and a hard place, not always supported by the insurgents on one hand, and being a target of retaliation from Russians on the other. The same archives also described that:

...Kazi-mulla... used all the means to push away from us the population of the Small Chechnya and Kachkalik ridge, which however remained loyal to us only by their appearance, and namely because they didn't want to get between two fires as Kumyks did.

Kumyks during the War gave the Caucasus many common heroes. Imam of Dagestan and Chechnya Shamil was of Kumyk descent,[94][95][96] as well as his companion and the second pretender to the Imam's position Tashaw-Hadji.[91][97][98][99] Also, Kumyks were the leaders of the earlier Dagestani revolts, such as Soltan Ahmed-Khan of the Avars, and Umalat-bek of Boynak (the heir of the Tarki throne), companion of the imam Gazi-Muhammad Razibek of Kazanish, trusted companion of the Imam Shamil — Idris of Endirey.

Colonization by Russia Edit

The tsarist and Soviet government pursued a policy of settling the Kumyk lands with other peoples from the end of the 18th and the beginning of the 19th century.

Back in 1811 Tormasov is known to order "to incline the Chechens to retire from the mountains to the plane."[100] Another governor of the Caucasus, Vorontsov, pursued the same policy of "colonizing" the possessions of the Kumyks, also by Chechens, arguing that "the Kumyks have no right to those lands."[101] Kumyk possessions also included such areas as Kachkalyk and Aukh, gradually settled by Chechens, and the region of Salatavia.[102][103][104]

In the late 1870s, the entire southern part of the Khasavyurt district, from Gerzel-aul to Endirey, was populated by Chechens, sometimes by force, by the decree of Russia. From 1870 to 1877, the number of Chechens in the region increased from 5,912 Aukh to 14,000 Chechens and continued to rise to 18,128 in 1897.[105] The possessions of the Kumyks in the Terek-Sunzha interfluve were lost, some of them along with the Kumyk population are now part of Chechnya.[106]

In the 1850s, the Kumyk princes of the Kumyk district of the Terek region voluntarily gave up half of their lands in favor of the Kumyk people, however, documents confirming the relevant rights were issued only to the princes and uzdens, and the rights of the rest of the population were not documented. Local authorities, using various pretexts, moved newcomers to Kumyk lands. This policy of neglecting the right of the Kumyk population was recorded as continuing in 1907.[107]

Dissolution of Shamkhalate and the Kumyk okrug (district) Edit

When the Caucasian War ended on the 30th of December 1869, the Kumyk district of the Terek oblast (Northern Kumykia) was dissolved and renamed as Khasavyurt okrug.

According to The Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary, issued at the turn of the 19 - 20th centuries, there were 32,087 thousand Kumyks in Dagestan (which at that time did not comprised the Northern Kumykia[108]). According to an 1891 survey , 108,800 Kumyks lived in the Dagestan and Terek oblasts of the Russian Empire.[109]

Somewhat earlier, in 1867 the Tarki Shamkhalate was abolished by the Russian authorities, which might be considered as the end of the Kumyk statehood.

1916 revolt, Russian Revolution, Soviet and Modern times Edit

 
Haidar Bammate, one of the founders of the North Caucasian Republic

In mid-July 1916 (late July 1916 N.S.), Kumyk rebels rose up against Russian authorities in Aksay. The cause of the uprising laid in the Kumyk's unwillingness to be conscripted into the Russian Imperial Army. The uprising ended on 24 July (6 August N.S.), when the draft was cancelled.[110]

During the establishment of the Soviet Union, Kumyk political elite were an active part in the creation of the Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus.[111] Haydar Bammate was the Minister of Foreign Affairs and one of the ideologists of the state, Prince Rashitkhan Kaplan was the Minister of Internal Affairs, one of the major military leaders was prince Nuh-bek Tarkovskiy, and Zubair Temirhanov was the speaker of the Alliance Council ("Mejlis" - Senate) of the Republic.

In 1926 the Soviet Population Census stated that there were 94 549 Kumyks in the Russian empire, indicating demographic crisis,[112] compared to the 1891 data.

Demographics Edit

In 1795 Russian Empire's estimates give a number of 100 thousand people in the lands of Shamkhal (including other than Kumyks).

In 1833 rough estimations showed around 88 thousand Kumyks within the areas of influence of the Russian Empire. In 1866, after the end of the Caucasian War, some estimations showed around 78 thousand. In 1886, 1891 and 1897 accordingly — 88, 108, 83 thousand, in 1916 — 98 thousand.

The Soviet census of 1926 showed 88 thousand. Thus, there are no indications of any growth almost in a century, due to wars, emigration from Russian-conquered territories and disease.[113][114][115][116][117]

Due to the continuous resettlement policies by the Russian Empire, then the Soviet government, and continuing today in the modern Republic of Dagestan of the Russian Federation, during the 19th through 21st century the native territories of Kumyks have been dramatically reduced; Kumyks became a minority in their own lands.[118]

Ethnocide by Soviet Union Edit

Deportation Edit

By the decree of Stalin's government, on the 12 of April 1944 the Kumyk population of historical Kumyk capital Tarki and adjacent villages were entirely deported to the Central Asian SSRs (Chechens, Karachays, Balkars and Crimean Tatars also were deported). The reason was stated as "freeing the area for the agricultural needs" of mountain peoples being resettled in the region. The deportation, despite the historical record in Russian law, is still not acknowledged by the Russian government. As a result of this event, the local population lost for years their ancient capital of Tarki, which led to the permanent destruction of the most of the Kumyk cultural heritage.[119]

Reasoning for Ethnocide Edit

As UNPO describes the membership of Kumyks as follows:[120]

Under Soviet occupation, a policy of ethnocide was implemented and leaders of the Kumyk movements were repressed, persecuted and killed. The introduction of mono-culture agriculture, the exploitation of the soil and deforestation led to an economic and ecological crisis in the area. In addition, the Kumyk people were unable to preserve their culture, as, for example, they were denied the right to write their language in the traditional Arabic script or teach their language in schools.
During their UNPO membership, the Kumyk people advocated for an administrative reform in the Republic of Dagestan and seek self-determination in the form of national autonomy. They also strived to preserve their traditional way of life, culture and customs.

In 1925 Russian scholar Nikolay Trubetskoy expressed opinions, which may explain the given policy of Russia with regard to Kumyks:[121]

Kumyk is the "international" language of almost the entire North Caucasus (from the Caspian Sea to Kabarda inclusive), Azerbaijani dominates in most of the Transcaucasia (except the Black Sea coast) and, in addition, in Turkish Armenia, Kurdistan and Northern Persia. Both of these languages are Turkic. It must be held in mind that with the intensification of economic life, the use of "international" languages acquires such importance that it displaces native languages: many auls of the southern districts of Dagestan have already become completely "Azerbaijanified". It is hardly in Russia's interests to allow such a Turkification of Dagestan. After all, if the whole of Dagestan becomes Turkic, then there will be a continuous mass of Turks from Kazan to Anatolia and Northern Persia, which will create the most favorable conditions for the development of Pan-Turan ideas with a separatist, Russophobic bias. Dagestan should be used as a natural barrier to the Turkification of this part of Eurasia.

Communist leader of Dagestan, who conducted the deportation of Kumyks, reasoned non-ethnical administrative bordering of Dagestan in this way:[122]

“Firstly, it [meaning splitting Dagestan by non-ethnic principle] was necessary to do this for economic reasons. If it were decided to grant national autonomy to at least the main peoples of Dagestan (Avars, Dargins, Kumyks, Lezgins, Laks, Tabasarans), then the main wealth of Dagestan (arable land, pastures) would go to the Kumyks, because they were located on their territory... Secondly, political and ethnic considerations were taken into account. So, the Avars in the entire history of their existence did not have a unified state entity... "

Language Edit

Kumyks speak the Kumyk language, which is a part of the Kipchak-Cuman subfamily of the Kipchak family of the Turkic languages. It is a direct descendant of the Khazar languages and in addition contains words from the Bulghar and Oghuz substratum.[123]

Nikolay Baskakov, based on a famous 12th century scripture named Codex Cimanicus, included modern Kumyk, Karachai-Balkar, Crimean Tatar, Karaim, and the language of Mamluk Kipchaks in the Cuman-Kipchak languages. Alexander Samoylovich also considered Cuman-Kipchak close to Kumyk and Karachai-Balkar.[124]

Kumyk had been a lingua-franca of a great part of the Northern Caucasus, from Dagestan to Kabarda, until the 1930s.[125][126][127]

In 1848, a professor of the "Caucasian Tatars" (Kumyks) Timofey Makarov published a grammar of Kumyk, the first ever grammar written in Russian for a language spoken in the North Caucasus.[128]

From the peoples speaking Tatar language I liked the most Kumyks, as for their language's distinction and precision, so for their closeness to the European civilization, but most importantly, I take in account that they live on the Left Flank of the Caucasian Front, where we're conducting military actions, and where all the peoples, apart from their own language, speak also Kumyk.

Kumyk was an official language of communication between North-Eastern Caucasian nations and Russian administration.[129]

Amongst the dialects of the Kumyk there are Kaitag, Terek (Güçük-yurt and Braguny), Buynaksk (Temir-Khan-Shura) and Xasavyurt. The latter two became basis for the literary language.[130]

Kumyk is the oldest script literary language of Dagestan. During the 20th century, the writing system of the language was changed twice: during Soviet times in 1929 traditional Arabic script (called ajam) was substituted by the Latin script, and then in 1938 by Cyrillic script.

The closest languages to Kumyk are the Karachai-Balkar, Crimean Tatar, and Karaim languages.[131]

More than 90% of Kumyks in Russia, according to the 2010 census, also speak Russian, and those in Turkey and the Levant (Sham) speak Turkish and Arabic.

In Russian and European classical literature Edit

German poet Paul Fleming, travelling together with the Holstein embassy through Kumyk lands in 1633 and 1636, had dedicated to Kumykia and its towns a few verses.[132][133]

The Kumyk language was a subject of studies for Russian classical authors such as Leo Tolstoy[134] and Mikhail Lermontov,[135] both of whom served with the Imperial Russian Army in the Caucasus. The language is present in such works of Tolstoy as "The Raid",[136] Cossacks,[137] Hadji Murat, and Lermontov's "A Hero of Our Time".[138][135]

Tolstoy described Kumyk village of Khamamatyurt in his "Hunting in the Caucasus".

Alexander Bestuzhev-Marlinsky also featured the Kumyk language and Kumykia in his works "Molla-nur" and "Ammalat-bek", and described in some details Russian military raids on Kumyk settlements in his "Letters from Dagestan".

Alexander Dumas also described some areas of Kumykia and the time when he was a guest of a Kumyk prince Ali Qazanalp.[139]

See also Edit

References Edit

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  15. ^ Советская Этнография, Изд-во Академии наук СССР, 1953 Цитата: Отдельные селения аварцев входили в ...кумыкское шамхальство Тарковское, кумыкское ханство Мехтулинское...
  16. ^ Пилипчук Я.В. КИН, Взаимоотношения Крымского Ханства с Тюрко-Татаркскими Государствами Северного Кавказа, Астраханским ханством и Ираном. Известия Национального Центра Археографии и Источниковедения, Астана, 2017 Цитаты: 1. "освещены взаимоотношения Крымского ханства с ногайцами, Астраханским ханством, Кумыкским шамхальством" 2. Однако куда большим было влияние Кумыкского шамхальства 3. Он женился на дочери кумыкского шамхала. 4. Крымский хан Гази-Гирей в 1591 г. местью русским за тюменского князя и 66 кумыкского шамхала мотивировал свой поход на Москву
  17. ^ Гусейнов Гарун-Рашид Абдул-Кадырович Тюменское княжество в контексте истории взаимоотношений Астраханского ханства и Кумыкского государства с Русским в XVI в., Институт Истории АН РТ, Казань, 2012 Цитата: И в дальнейшем, о более северных затеречных, включавших и Тюменское княжество, ареальных пределах Кумыкского государства – шамхальства свидетельствуют сведения А.Олеария (1635-1639 гг.)
  18. ^ Документ из Российского государственного архива древних актов (фонд № 121 «Кумыцкие и тарковские дела»). Документы представляют из себя журнал, фиксирующий даты прибытия шамхальского посольства в Кремль
  19. ^ Современные проблемы и перспективы развития исламоведения, востоковедения и тюркологии
  20. ^ Дагестан в эпоху великого переселения народов: этногенетические исследования — Российская академия наук, Дагестанский науч. центр, Ин-т истории, археологии и этнографии, 1998 - Всего страниц: 191
  21. ^ ТЕРРИТОРИЯ И НАСЕЛЕНИЕ ШАМХАЛЬСТВА ТАРКОВСКОГО В ТРУДАХ РУССКИХ И ЗАПАДНОЕВРОПЕЙСКИХ АВТОРОВ XVIII–XIX ВВ, Абдусаламов М.-П. Б., 2012, Известия Алтайского государственного университета Цитата: ...четко выделил границы ряда кумыкских феодальных владений, в том числе шамхальства Тарковского...
  22. ^ ТЕРРИТОРИЯ И НАСЕЛЕНИЕ ШАМХАЛЬСТВА ТАРКОВСКОГО В ТРУДАХ РУССКИХ И ЗАПАДНОЕВРОПЕЙСКИХ АВТОРОВ XVIII–XIX ВВ, Абдусаламов М.-П. Б., 2012, Известия Алтайского государственного университета Цитата: ...четко выделил границы ряда кумыкских феодальных владений, в том числе шамхальства Тарковского... http://izvestia.asu.ru/2012/4-1/hist/TheNewsOfASU-2012-4-1-hist-01.pdf
  23. ^ Из истории русско-кавказскои воины: документы и материалы, А. М Ельмесов, Кабардино-Балкарское отд-ние Всероссииского фонда культуры, 1991, 261 pages, стр. 60 Цитата: ...и Крымскому, и к Шевкальскому (Кумыкское шамхальство — Э. А.)...
  24. ^ Russian Census 2010: Population by ethnicity 2012-04-24 at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
  25. ^ "Итоги Всероссийской переписи населения 2010 года в отношении демографических и социально-экономических характеристик отдельных национальностей". Retrieved 26 December 2017.
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  37. ^ Ömer Karata Mehmed Said Arbatl KUMUK TÜRKLERİNİN KAFKASYA'DAN ANADOLU'YA GÖÇÜ (The Resettlement of Kumyk from the Caucasus to Anatolia), 2015.
  38. ^ among them Dagestanian figure Aselderkhan Kazanalip (1855-1928) and his wife princess Jahbat Tarkovskaya, along with other nobility — Eldar Utsumi khan, Asadullah Utsumi and Akhmat-khan
  39. ^ İrfan Nallar (2003). "Türkiyedeki Kumuklar Damarlarını Arıyorlar" (in Turkish) (исследовательская статья, Стамбул ed.). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  40. ^ Кусов, Олег (24 May 2011). "Мухаджиры (Muhajirs)". Радио Свобода. Retrieved 2017-06-23.
  41. ^ from the settlements of Utamish, Bashlykent and Karabudaghkent, they were later joined by Kumyks from the Northern Kumykia and many other Dagestanians
  42. ^ (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2017-08-01. Retrieved 2017-06-23.
  43. ^ Bursa province — Koşuboğazı, Mustafakemalpaşa (assimilated but keeping family history); Orhangazi province — Yeniköy (along with avars and dargins); Sivaş province — Yıldızeli (Yavuzköy), Yağlıdere, Yıldızeli (Yağköy), Süleymaniye, Hafik (along with Turkish and avars; Tokat province — Doğançaylı (along with karachays), Yavu, Çermik, Artova (along with dargins and avars), Çirdağ (along with dargins and avars), Gültepe, Erbaa (along with dargins and avars), Yeniderbent, Zile (along with lezgins), Turhal (along with karachays, Culture Centre is present); Çanakkale province — Akköprü, Biga (Culture Centre is present), Aziziye, Doğancı, Geyikkırı, Kalafat, Biga (Bozna). Many Kumyk districts and villages, for instance in the town of Samsun, de-kumykised due to assimilation into Turkish culture and resettling.
  44. ^ "Nartajans DAĞISTAN KÖKENLİLERİN TÜRKİYE'DE YAŞADIKLARI ŞEHİRLER VE YERLEŞİM YE". www.nartajans.net. Retrieved 2017-06-23.
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  54. ^ Казиханова (Гусейнова), Асият Абдурагимовна. Этапы расселения тюркоязычных народов на территории Приморского Дагестана в раннесредневековую эпоху : диссертация ... кандидата исторических наук : 07.00.02 Махачкала, 2000 186 c. : 61 01-7/82-5 For instance, in "The Cry of the Heroine" from the story "Petrified Aymesedu," there is a mention of the town of Semender, the capital of the Khazars. There is also a common saying present in the Kumyk language which refers to the "Khazar treasury":

    «Xazar getdi — xazna getdi Qumuqdan» — «Khazars are gone [defeated] — and so is gone Kumukia's treasury»

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Further reading Edit

  • Tsibenko, Veronika (2019). "Kumyks". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online. ISSN 1873-9830.

External links Edit

  • Kumyk information portal kumukia.com 2022-02-02 at the Wayback Machine
  • Kumyk dictionaries, study materials and online library
  • Kumyk newspaper Yoldaş

42°23′14″N 47°59′12″E / 42.3873°N 47.9867°E / 42.3873; 47.9867

kumyks, kumyk, Къумукълар, romanized, qumuqlar, russian, Кумыки, turkic, people, living, dagestan, chechnya, north, ossetia, they, largest, turkic, people, north, caucasus, kumyk, къумукълар, qumuqlarabdul, wahab, mustafa, prominent, kumyk, architect, 19th, ce. Kumyks Kumyk Kumuklar romanized Qumuqlar Russian Kumyki are a Turkic people living in Dagestan Chechnya and North Ossetia 9 10 They are the largest Turkic people in the North Caucasus KumyksKumyk kumuklar qumuqlarAbdul Wahab son of Mustafa a prominent Kumyk architect of the 19th century pictured wearing a traditional Caucasian papakha and chokha Total populationnear 600 000Regions with significant populations Russia565 830 1 Turkey10 000 2 Ukraine718 3 2001 Uzbekistan1200 4 2016 Kazakhstan481 5 2009 Belarus360 6 2009 Latvia33 7 2020 LanguagesKumyk languageReligionpredominately Sunni IslamRelated ethnic groupsCrimean Tatars Balkars Karachays 8 They traditionally populate the Kumyk plateau northern Dagestan and north eastern Chechnya lands bordering the Caspian Sea areas in North Ossetia Chechnya and along the banks of the Terek river They speak the Kumyk language which until the 1930s had been the lingua franca of the Northern Caucasus Territories where Kumyks have traditionally lived and where their historical state entities used to exist are called Kumykia 11 12 13 Kumyk Kumuk Qumuq 14 All of the lands populated by Kumyks were once part of the independent Tarki Shamkhalate 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Contents 1 Population and present settlement area 1 1 Russian Federation 1 2 Turkey and the Middle East 2 Ethnonym 3 Origin 4 History 4 1 Expansion of the Russian state Ottoman Empire and Persia 4 1 1 Resistance to Peter I 4 2 Caucasian War 5 Colonization by Russia 5 1 Dissolution of Shamkhalate and the Kumyk okrug district 5 2 1916 revolt Russian Revolution Soviet and Modern times 5 3 Demographics 6 Ethnocide by Soviet Union 6 1 Deportation 6 2 Reasoning for Ethnocide 7 Language 8 In Russian and European classical literature 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksPopulation and present settlement area EditKumyks comprise 14 of the population of the Republic of Dagestan the third largest population of Chechnya and the fifth largest population of North Ossetia all of which are parts of the Russian Federation 24 Kumyks are the second largest Turkic speaking ethnic group after Azerbaijanis in the Causasus the largest Turkic people of the North Caucasus and the third largest ethnic group of Dagestan According to the Russian national census of 2010 there were more than 500 000 Kumyks in Russia Russian Federation Edit In terms of administrative division in their native lands Kumyks today are mostly divided between a few administrative regions of Russia such as Republic of Dagestan Republic of North Ossetia Chechen Republic Russian a territorial subject krai oblast republic etc Population2002 2010 25 2021Dagestan 365 804 26 431 736 496 455North Ossetia Alania 12 659 27 16 092 18 054Khanty Mansi autonomous okrug 9 554 28 13 849 13 669Chechnya 8 883 29 12 221 12 184Stavropol krai 5 744 30 5 639 5 213Yamal Nenets Autonomous Okrug 2 613 31 4 466 4 838Moscow oblast 818 32 1 622 1 704Moscow 1 615 33 2 351 1 576Saint Petersburg 895 34 1 018 1 340Astrakhan oblast 1 356 35 1 558 1 240Rostov oblast 1 341 36 1 511 1 100the table contains regions with the population exceeding 1000 people only Turkey and the Middle East Edit In the 19th century during and following the Caucasian War numbers of Kumyks were subject to or willingly resettled made hijra to the Ottoman Empire 37 as a result of Russian deportation campaigns in the region In the 1910s 1920s during the Bolshevik Revolution another emigration wave to Turkey took place Among the muhajirs migrants of that period were many prominent Kumyk nobility 38 39 nbsp Kumyk population in its native areas of the Northern CaucasusKumyks also used to move to Syria and Jordan where a few Kumyk families still live 40 The Syrian village of Dar Ful was established in 1878 1880 by Kumyk emigrants 41 42 There is no official state census of ethnic minorities in Turkey ethnic or racial censuses are outlawed but according to the studies of 1994 1996 there were more than 20 settlements with Kumyk population 43 44 Ethnonym EditThe majority of researchers Bakikhanov S A Tokarev A I Tamay S Sh Gadzhieva derive the name Kumyk from a Turkic ethnonym Kimak or from another name for Kipchaks Cuman 45 According to P Uslar in the 19th century the names Kumyk and Kumuk pertained to the Turkic speaking population of the Northern Caucasian lowlands 46 In Dagestan Chechnya and Ingushetia the name Kumyk or originally Kumuk pertained to the Kumyks only 46 Y Fyodorov wrote based on sources from the 8 19 cc that Gumik Kumyk Kumuk is originally a Dagestani toponym from the Middle Ages 47 In various Russian European Ottoman and Persian sources Kumyks were also called Dagestan Tatars or Dagestan Turks 48 Circassian 49 and Caucasus Tatars 50 Origin EditThere is no universal opinion regarding the origin of the Kumyks Some scholars propose that the population of the Kumyk plains of the 8th 10th centuries were directly ancestral to modern Kumyks 51 A view close to that is that the Kumyks appeared in Dagestan along with the Khazars in the 8th century and stayed afterwards 52 Whereas others believe that the Kumyks appeared in Dagestan in the 12th 13th centuries along with Kipchaks 53 Kumyk verbal tradition carried through ages some proverbs and sayings coming from the times of the Khazar Kaghanate 54 S Tokarev wrote that 55 Kumyks have very diverse ancestry Its ancient stratum is undoubtedly pre Turkic Japhetic There is an opinion that people of Kami Kamaks mentioned as long ago as by Ptolemaeus are historically related to Kumyks Their turkization started at the times of Khazars already in the second half of the first millennium Arrival of Cumans extended Turkic element further That time point marked by dissolution of the Khazar Kaghanate is likely to be the period of the core formation for Kumyks although some researchers Bartold linked their appearance to the latter period when remains of Cumans defeated by Mongols fled to the lands of Dagestan A modern interpretation was proposed that from the Turkified Lezgins Kumyks also emerged 56 57 However professor of Caucasus studies L Lavrov doubted the Turkification hypothesis of Kumyk origin 58 It s unlikely that Kumyks might be Turkified Dagestanians as some claim Rather their ancestors are considered to be Kipchaks Khazars and probably other Turks of the early Middle Ages It would be preferable to also identify whether Kamaks who used to be settled in the North Dagestan in the beginning of our era are related to Kumyks Another prominent Russian Orientalist V Minorsky proposed his adjustment to the views mentioned stating that 59 Today s Kumyk Turks who populate North Eastern part of Dagestan along the shore possibly come from the basic Khazar stratum strengthened and assimilated by the later re settlers from the Kipchak steppes The final stages of the Kumyk ethnogenesis stretched from the 12th 17th centuries 60 Some of the Turkic peoples who assimilated into the Kumyk nation were those of Tumens from the Tumen Khanate Caucasian Tumen which emerged in the 15th century as a fragment of the dissolved Golden Horde those of Bothe Bogans Sople 61 and pre Cuman Turks 62 who populated the Botheragan Madjar region in the 7th century which encompassed the vast North Caucasian plains 63 History Edit nbsp Rifle of the Kumyk Shamhal of Tarki 19th century Metropolitan Museum of Art New YorkKumyks historically were related to the states of the Caucasian Huns Cuman Kipchaks and the Golden Horde 62 64 65 The beginning of the Kumyk nation is often considered to be in the Khazar Kaganate 66 58 era Until the 19th century the Kumyks were a largely feudal decentralized entity of strategical geographic and political importance for Russia Persia and the Ottomans 67 68 headed by a leader called the Shamkhal originally Shawkhal in Russian sources Shevkal The Kumyk polity known as the Shamkhalate of Tarki was mentioned as early as the 14th century by Timurid historians 69 Other Kumyk states included the Endirey Principality 70 Utamish Sultanate 71 Tumen Possession 72 Braguny Principality 72 Mekhtuly Khanate 73 Kaytag Uzminate 74 and others 74 Expansion of the Russian state Ottoman Empire and Persia Edit In the 16th century Kumyk rulers tried to balance their relationships with their three neighbouring states and as a result the Shamkhalate established itself as a considerable regional power The two Empires and yet to be one Russian state considered the Caspian area as their influence domain Shamkhal Chopan became a subject of the Ottoman Empire in the late 16th century and participated in the 1578 1590 Ottoman Persian war 75 The 1560s marked the start of the numerous campaigns of the Russian army against Kumyks provoked by the requests of the Georgians and Kabardians Commander Cheremisinov seized and plundered the capital of Tarki in 1560 The Tumen khanate allied with the Shamkhalate also resisted the invasion but in 1588 was conquered by Russia The Russians established the Terki stronghold Not to be mistaken for Tarki in its former capital Tumen ruler Soltaney fled to the protection of Sultan Mahmud of Endirey 76 recognized today as a pan Caucasian hero In 1594 the other Campaign of Khvorostinin in Dagestan was organised during which Russian forces and Terek Cossacks seized Tarki again but were blocked by the Kumyk forces and forced to retreat to Terki which resulted in a stampede In 1604 1605 Ivan Buturlin conducted one more campaign against the Kyumks often known as the Shevkal Campaign This also failed and resulted in a significant loss for Russia at the Battle of Karaman The united forces of the Dagestani peoples under the banners of the Kumyk Shamkhalian Prince Soltan Mahmud of Endirey prevailed and according to the prominent Russian historian Karamzin stopped Russian expansion for the next 118 years until the rule of Peter I 77 In 1649 and 1650 Nogai leader Choban murza sought the protection of their allies in the Shamkhalate Russia at war with the Nogais sent 8 000 men in order to force the nomadic tribe to return to Russian territory Surkhay Shawkhal III attacked and routed Russian troops at the Battle of Germenchik 78 Kumyk military success continued from 1651 to 1653 when the Kumyks this time in an alliance with Safavid forces destroyed the Russian fortress at the river Sunzha Iranian Shah Abbas II intended to strengthen the Persian hold on the Kumyk lands which didn t match with Surkhay s plans In an alliance with Kaytag Uzmi Rustem Surkhay III confronted Persians but was forced to withdraw Nevertheless the high losses disrupted the Shah s intentions of building fortresses in the Kumyk lands 79 Resistance to Peter I Edit In the 18th century Russian Emperor Peter I organised the Persian Campaign of the 1722 1723 The Endirey principality was the first to oppose the Russian forces and despite their defeat caused great losses which shocked the Emperor 80 Kumyks of the Utamish Soltanate also fiercely resisted during the Battle at the River Inchge Peter I stated afterwards 81 nbsp Roubaud Peter I in Tarki the Capital of Tarki ShamkhalateIf these people had a comprehension of the Military Science Art no other nation could take arms against them The Tarki Shamkhalate initially took a pro Russian stance but after a new Russian fortress had been built they confronted Russia again However this time the Shamkhalate couldn t unite the neighboring local peoples and remained alone in their struggle Russian historian Sergey Solovyov wrote 82 In October 1725 general majors Kropotov and Sheremetev embarked to devastate the possessions of the Shamkhal and burned down twenty settlements including Tarki the capital of the Shamkhal which comprised 1 000 households the total number of destroyed households amounts to 6 110 Shamkhal having only 3 000 troops couldn t resist the overwhelming number of Russians who had in their ranks 8 000 Cossacks and Kalmyks only not counting the regular troops and two infantry regiments and two cavalries Adil Girey Shamkhal left Tarki and together with the Turkish ambassador had sent letters to other mountaineer possessors asking for help but got a refusal Caucasian War Edit Main article Caucasian War Russian 19th century general Gregory Phillipson ru known for his important actions in subjugating the Adyghe and Abaza ethnic groups at the left flank of the Caucasian front in Circassia wrote I had vague knowledge about Caucasia and the Caucasian war although professor Yazikov on the lectures in the military geography used to tell about one and the other and according to his words it turned out that the most valiant and inimical to us tribe was that of the Kumyks Kumyks were one of the major forces in the late 18th century Sheikh Mansur s insurgence Kumyk prince Chepalow in alliance with Mansur made several attempts to attack the Russian stronghold of Kizlyar In the final battle Mansur led the Kumyk forces himself 83 Despite the formal acceptance of the Russian sovereignty over the Shamkhals at the beginning of the Caucasian war resulting from the Treaty of Gulistan there were numerous revolts in Kumykia In 1825 the village of Old Aksay was destroyed and 300 men from the settlement were gathered for their participation in the insurgence against Russian Empire led by the Chechen leader Taymiyev Biybolat and murdered when Ochar Haji one of the Kumyks killed two Russian generals on the spot 84 In the same year the people of Endirey joined forces with mountain communities against the Russians 85 In total there were at least five revolts in Shamkhalate and on the Kumyk plateau called also Kumyk plains the Anti Russian revolt resulting in the defeat of Northern Kumyks Endirey and Aksay principalities and the then disestablished Mekhtula Khanate 86 the Shamkhalate Revolt of 1823 87 participation in Beybulat Taymiyev s revolt who though recently had pledged allegiance to Russia 88 the Shamkhalate Revolt of 1831 89 the revolt at the Kumyk plains in 1831 and the Shamkhalate Revolt of 1843 90 There were also preparations for an insurgency on the Kumyk plains in 1844 and for a general Kumyk insurgency in 1855 91 which had been planned as a joined action with the advance of Imam Shamil but the advance didn t progress enough into the Kumyk lands 91 In the insurgency in Dagestan in 1877 1878 one of the major centres of conflict was the Kumyk village of Bashly 91 Despite the devastation brought by the Imperial Army for their attempts to rise against Russia 92 the Kumyk plains were also exposed to plundering forays from the neighboring tribes For instance in 1830 one Chechen leader Avko gathered forces in a call to allegedly join the troops of the leader of the Caucasian resistance Gazi Muhammad but at the last moment declared the true reason to use the opportunity to attack the city of Endirey and plunder Kumyks cattle However the troops disbanded in disappointment 93 Gazi Muhammad himself tried to make Kumyks resettle higher in the mountains from the plains and join his resistance by destroying Kumyk settlements as stated in the Russian military archives 92 Kazi mulla trying to hold Kumyks close came up with a strange trick destroying their auls settlements in order to force them to resettle in the mountains by depriving of living spaces On the 24th of July he in front of our troops made the first experiment on Endirey village and burned down the third of it Prince Knyaz Bekovich Russian officer at that time was burning Kumyks bread at the slopes of the mountains During the Caucasian War Kumyks found themselves between a rock and a hard place not always supported by the insurgents on one hand and being a target of retaliation from Russians on the other The same archives also described that Kazi mulla used all the means to push away from us the population of the Small Chechnya and Kachkalik ridge which however remained loyal to us only by their appearance and namely because they didn t want to get between two fires as Kumyks did Kumyks during the War gave the Caucasus many common heroes Imam of Dagestan and Chechnya Shamil was of Kumyk descent 94 95 96 as well as his companion and the second pretender to the Imam s position Tashaw Hadji 91 97 98 99 Also Kumyks were the leaders of the earlier Dagestani revolts such as Soltan Ahmed Khan of the Avars and Umalat bek of Boynak the heir of the Tarki throne companion of the imam Gazi Muhammad Razibek of Kazanish trusted companion of the Imam Shamil Idris of Endirey Colonization by Russia EditThe tsarist and Soviet government pursued a policy of settling the Kumyk lands with other peoples from the end of the 18th and the beginning of the 19th century Back in 1811 Tormasov is known to order to incline the Chechens to retire from the mountains to the plane 100 Another governor of the Caucasus Vorontsov pursued the same policy of colonizing the possessions of the Kumyks also by Chechens arguing that the Kumyks have no right to those lands 101 Kumyk possessions also included such areas as Kachkalyk and Aukh gradually settled by Chechens and the region of Salatavia 102 103 104 In the late 1870s the entire southern part of the Khasavyurt district from Gerzel aul to Endirey was populated by Chechens sometimes by force by the decree of Russia From 1870 to 1877 the number of Chechens in the region increased from 5 912 Aukh to 14 000 Chechens and continued to rise to 18 128 in 1897 105 The possessions of the Kumyks in the Terek Sunzha interfluve were lost some of them along with the Kumyk population are now part of Chechnya 106 In the 1850s the Kumyk princes of the Kumyk district of the Terek region voluntarily gave up half of their lands in favor of the Kumyk people however documents confirming the relevant rights were issued only to the princes and uzdens and the rights of the rest of the population were not documented Local authorities using various pretexts moved newcomers to Kumyk lands This policy of neglecting the right of the Kumyk population was recorded as continuing in 1907 107 Dissolution of Shamkhalate and the Kumyk okrug district Edit When the Caucasian War ended on the 30th of December 1869 the Kumyk district of the Terek oblast Northern Kumykia was dissolved and renamed as Khasavyurt okrug According to The Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary issued at the turn of the 19 20th centuries there were 32 087 thousand Kumyks in Dagestan which at that time did not comprised the Northern Kumykia 108 According to an 1891 survey 108 800 Kumyks lived in the Dagestan and Terek oblasts of the Russian Empire 109 Somewhat earlier in 1867 the Tarki Shamkhalate was abolished by the Russian authorities which might be considered as the end of the Kumyk statehood 1916 revolt Russian Revolution Soviet and Modern times Edit nbsp Haidar Bammate one of the founders of the North Caucasian RepublicIn mid July 1916 late July 1916 N S Kumyk rebels rose up against Russian authorities in Aksay The cause of the uprising laid in the Kumyk s unwillingness to be conscripted into the Russian Imperial Army The uprising ended on 24 July 6 August N S when the draft was cancelled 110 During the establishment of the Soviet Union Kumyk political elite were an active part in the creation of the Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus 111 Haydar Bammate was the Minister of Foreign Affairs and one of the ideologists of the state Prince Rashitkhan Kaplan was the Minister of Internal Affairs one of the major military leaders was prince Nuh bek Tarkovskiy and Zubair Temirhanov was the speaker of the Alliance Council Mejlis Senate of the Republic In 1926 the Soviet Population Census stated that there were 94 549 Kumyks in the Russian empire indicating demographic crisis 112 compared to the 1891 data Demographics Edit In 1795 Russian Empire s estimates give a number of 100 thousand people in the lands of Shamkhal including other than Kumyks In 1833 rough estimations showed around 88 thousand Kumyks within the areas of influence of the Russian Empire In 1866 after the end of the Caucasian War some estimations showed around 78 thousand In 1886 1891 and 1897 accordingly 88 108 83 thousand in 1916 98 thousand The Soviet census of 1926 showed 88 thousand Thus there are no indications of any growth almost in a century due to wars emigration from Russian conquered territories and disease 113 114 115 116 117 Due to the continuous resettlement policies by the Russian Empire then the Soviet government and continuing today in the modern Republic of Dagestan of the Russian Federation during the 19th through 21st century the native territories of Kumyks have been dramatically reduced Kumyks became a minority in their own lands 118 Ethnocide by Soviet Union EditDeportation Edit By the decree of Stalin s government on the 12 of April 1944 the Kumyk population of historical Kumyk capital Tarki and adjacent villages were entirely deported to the Central Asian SSRs Chechens Karachays Balkars and Crimean Tatars also were deported The reason was stated as freeing the area for the agricultural needs of mountain peoples being resettled in the region The deportation despite the historical record in Russian law is still not acknowledged by the Russian government As a result of this event the local population lost for years their ancient capital of Tarki which led to the permanent destruction of the most of the Kumyk cultural heritage 119 Reasoning for Ethnocide Edit As UNPO describes the membership of Kumyks as follows 120 Under Soviet occupation a policy of ethnocide was implemented and leaders of the Kumyk movements were repressed persecuted and killed The introduction of mono culture agriculture the exploitation of the soil and deforestation led to an economic and ecological crisis in the area In addition the Kumyk people were unable to preserve their culture as for example they were denied the right to write their language in the traditional Arabic script or teach their language in schools During their UNPO membership the Kumyk people advocated for an administrative reform in the Republic of Dagestan and seek self determination in the form of national autonomy They also strived to preserve their traditional way of life culture and customs In 1925 Russian scholar Nikolay Trubetskoy expressed opinions which may explain the given policy of Russia with regard to Kumyks 121 Kumyk is the international language of almost the entire North Caucasus from the Caspian Sea to Kabarda inclusive Azerbaijani dominates in most of the Transcaucasia except the Black Sea coast and in addition in Turkish Armenia Kurdistan and Northern Persia Both of these languages are Turkic It must be held in mind that with the intensification of economic life the use of international languages acquires such importance that it displaces native languages many auls of the southern districts of Dagestan have already become completely Azerbaijanified It is hardly in Russia s interests to allow such a Turkification of Dagestan After all if the whole of Dagestan becomes Turkic then there will be a continuous mass of Turks from Kazan to Anatolia and Northern Persia which will create the most favorable conditions for the development of Pan Turan ideas with a separatist Russophobic bias Dagestan should be used as a natural barrier to the Turkification of this part of Eurasia Communist leader of Dagestan who conducted the deportation of Kumyks reasoned non ethnical administrative bordering of Dagestan in this way 122 Firstly it meaning splitting Dagestan by non ethnic principle was necessary to do this for economic reasons If it were decided to grant national autonomy to at least the main peoples of Dagestan Avars Dargins Kumyks Lezgins Laks Tabasarans then the main wealth of Dagestan arable land pastures would go to the Kumyks because they were located on their territory Secondly political and ethnic considerations were taken into account So the Avars in the entire history of their existence did not have a unified state entity Language EditMain article Kumyk languageKumyks speak the Kumyk language which is a part of the Kipchak Cuman subfamily of the Kipchak family of the Turkic languages It is a direct descendant of the Khazar languages and in addition contains words from the Bulghar and Oghuz substratum 123 Nikolay Baskakov based on a famous 12th century scripture named Codex Cimanicus included modern Kumyk Karachai Balkar Crimean Tatar Karaim and the language of Mamluk Kipchaks in the Cuman Kipchak languages Alexander Samoylovich also considered Cuman Kipchak close to Kumyk and Karachai Balkar 124 Kumyk had been a lingua franca of a great part of the Northern Caucasus from Dagestan to Kabarda until the 1930s 125 126 127 In 1848 a professor of the Caucasian Tatars Kumyks Timofey Makarov published a grammar of Kumyk the first ever grammar written in Russian for a language spoken in the North Caucasus 128 From the peoples speaking Tatar language I liked the most Kumyks as for their language s distinction and precision so for their closeness to the European civilization but most importantly I take in account that they live on the Left Flank of the Caucasian Front where we re conducting military actions and where all the peoples apart from their own language speak also Kumyk Kumyk was an official language of communication between North Eastern Caucasian nations and Russian administration 129 Amongst the dialects of the Kumyk there are Kaitag Terek Gucuk yurt and Braguny Buynaksk Temir Khan Shura and Xasavyurt The latter two became basis for the literary language 130 Kumyk is the oldest script literary language of Dagestan During the 20th century the writing system of the language was changed twice during Soviet times in 1929 traditional Arabic script called ajam was substituted by the Latin script and then in 1938 by Cyrillic script The closest languages to Kumyk are the Karachai Balkar Crimean Tatar and Karaim languages 131 More than 90 of Kumyks in Russia according to the 2010 census also speak Russian and those in Turkey and the Levant Sham speak Turkish and Arabic In Russian and European classical literature EditGerman poet Paul Fleming travelling together with the Holstein embassy through Kumyk lands in 1633 and 1636 had dedicated to Kumykia and its towns a few verses 132 133 The Kumyk language was a subject of studies for Russian classical authors such as Leo Tolstoy 134 and Mikhail Lermontov 135 both of whom served with the Imperial Russian Army in the Caucasus The language is present in such works of Tolstoy as The Raid 136 Cossacks 137 Hadji Murat and Lermontov s A Hero of Our Time 138 135 Tolstoy described Kumyk village of Khamamatyurt in his Hunting in the Caucasus Alexander Bestuzhev Marlinsky also featured the Kumyk language and Kumykia in his works Molla nur and Ammalat bek and described in some details Russian military raids on Kumyk settlements in his Letters from Dagestan Alexander Dumas also described some areas of Kumykia and the time when he was a guest of a Kumyk prince Ali Qazanalp 139 See also EditRussian Kumyk Wars List of Kumyk peopleReferences Edit Nacionalnyj sostav naseleniya Rossijskoj Federacii soglasno perepisi naseleniya 2021 goda Kumykskij mir Tak kakova zhe vse taki chislennost kumykov v Turcii Archived from the original on 2020 05 16 Retrieved 2019 11 15 State statistics committee of Ukraine National composition of population 2001 census Ukrainian Uzbekistan Joshua Project Agentstvo Respubliki Kazahstan po statistike Perepis 2009 Archived May 1 2012 at the Wayback Machine Nacionalnyj sostav naseleniya Perepis naseleniya Respubliki Belarus 2009 goda NASELENIE PO NACIONALNOSTI I RODNOMU YaZYKU PDF belstat gov by Archived PDF from the original on 2012 01 18 Retrieved 2011 10 16 Raspredelenie naseleniya Latvii po nacionalnomu sostavu i gosudarstvennoj prinadlezhnosti na 01 01 2020 Archived 2020 03 02 at the Wayback Machine in Latvian K T Lajpanov Etnogeneticheskie vzaimosvyazi karachaevo balkarcev s drugimi narodami 2000 Iz istorii otnoshenij kumykov s karachaevcami balkarcami i nogajcami v XVI XX vv Yusup Idrisov Ruslan Hadimullin Kumyki odin iz narodov Dagestana 5 09 2016 06 08 ETNIChESKAYa DEMOGRAFIYa DAGESTANA KUMYKI VO VTOROJ POLOVINE XIX NAChALE XXI V M R A Ibragimov A M Makgasharipova Institut IAE DNC RAN Mahachkala Regionalnyj centr etnopoliticheskih issledovanij DNC RAN Mahachkala Valerij Aleksandrovich Tishkov Vadim Aleksandrovich Aleksandrov Narody Rossii enciklopediya Nauch izd vo Bolshaya rossijskaya enciklopediya 1994 S 214 A L Narochnickij I90 Istoriya narodov Severnogo Kavkaza konec XVIII v 1917 g M Nauka 1988 str 605 ADMINISTRATIVNOE UPRAVLENIE ShAMHALSTVA TARKOVSKOGO V XVII XVIII vekah ABDUSALAMOV Magomed Pasha Balashovich str 9 Yarceva V N i dr red Yazyki Rossijskoj Federacii i sosednih gosudarstv Tom 2 K R str 182 183 Citata Do 1917 g slovo kumuk oboznachalo i territoriyu gde zhivut kumyki Kumykiya Sovetskaya Etnografiya Izd vo Akademii nauk SSSR 1953 Citata Otdelnye seleniya avarcev vhodili v kumykskoe shamhalstvo Tarkovskoe kumykskoe hanstvo Mehtulinskoe Pilipchuk Ya V KIN Vzaimootnosheniya Krymskogo Hanstva s Tyurko Tatarkskimi Gosudarstvami Severnogo Kavkaza Astrahanskim hanstvom i Iranom Izvestiya Nacionalnogo Centra Arheografii i Istochnikovedeniya Astana 2017 Citaty 1 osvesheny vzaimootnosheniya Krymskogo hanstva s nogajcami Astrahanskim hanstvom Kumykskim shamhalstvom 2 Odnako kuda bolshim bylo vliyanie Kumykskogo shamhalstva 3 On zhenilsya na docheri kumykskogo shamhala 4 Krymskij han Gazi Girej v 1591 g mestyu russkim za tyumenskogo knyazya i 66 kumykskogo shamhala motiviroval svoj pohod na Moskvu Gusejnov Garun Rashid Abdul Kadyrovich Tyumenskoe knyazhestvo v kontekste istorii vzaimootnoshenij Astrahanskogo hanstva i Kumykskogo gosudarstva s Russkim v XVI v Institut Istorii AN RT Kazan 2012 Citata I v dalnejshem o bolee severnyh zaterechnyh vklyuchavshih i Tyumenskoe knyazhestvo arealnyh predelah Kumykskogo gosudarstva shamhalstva svidetelstvuyut svedeniya A Oleariya 1635 1639 gg Dokument iz Rossijskogo gosudarstvennogo arhiva drevnih aktov fond 121 Kumyckie i tarkovskie dela Dokumenty predstavlyayut iz sebya zhurnal fiksiruyushij daty pribytiya shamhalskogo posolstva v Kreml Sovremennye problemy i perspektivy razvitiya islamovedeniya vostokovedeniya i tyurkologii Dagestan v epohu velikogo pereseleniya narodov etnogeneticheskie issledovaniya Rossijskaya akademiya nauk Dagestanskij nauch centr In t istorii arheologii i etnografii 1998 Vsego stranic 191 TERRITORIYa I NASELENIE ShAMHALSTVA TARKOVSKOGO V TRUDAH RUSSKIH I ZAPADNOEVROPEJSKIH AVTOROV XVIII XIX VV Abdusalamov M P B 2012 Izvestiya Altajskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta Citata chetko vydelil granicy ryada kumykskih feodalnyh vladenij v tom chisle shamhalstva Tarkovskogo TERRITORIYa I NASELENIE ShAMHALSTVA TARKOVSKOGO V TRUDAH RUSSKIH I ZAPADNOEVROPEJSKIH AVTOROV XVIII XIX VV Abdusalamov M P B 2012 Izvestiya Altajskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta Citata chetko vydelil granicy ryada kumykskih feodalnyh vladenij v tom chisle shamhalstva Tarkovskogo http izvestia asu ru 2012 4 1 hist TheNewsOfASU 2012 4 1 hist 01 pdf Iz istorii russko kavkazskoi voiny dokumenty i materialy A M Elmesov Kabardino Balkarskoe otd nie Vserossiiskogo fonda kultury 1991 261 pages str 60 Citata i Krymskomu i k Shevkalskomu Kumykskoe shamhalstvo E A Russian Census 2010 Population by ethnicity Archived 2012 04 24 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Itogi Vserossijskoj perepisi naseleniya 2010 goda v otnoshenii demograficheskih i socialno ekonomicheskih harakteristik otdelnyh nacionalnostej Retrieved 26 December 2017 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej demoscope ru Retrieved 26 December 2017 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej demoscope ru Retrieved 26 December 2017 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej demoscope ru Retrieved 26 December 2017 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej demoscope ru Retrieved 26 December 2017 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej demoscope ru Retrieved 26 December 2017 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej demoscope ru Retrieved 26 December 2017 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej demoscope ru Retrieved 26 December 2017 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej demoscope ru Retrieved 26 December 2017 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej demoscope ru Retrieved 26 December 2017 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej demoscope ru Retrieved 26 December 2017 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej demoscope ru Retrieved 26 December 2017 Omer Karata Mehmed Said Arbatl KUMUK TURKLERININ KAFKASYA DAN ANADOLU YA GOCU The Resettlement of Kumyk from the Caucasus to Anatolia 2015 among them Dagestanian figure Aselderkhan Kazanalip 1855 1928 and his wife princess Jahbat Tarkovskaya along with other nobility Eldar Utsumi khan Asadullah Utsumi and Akhmat khan Irfan Nallar 2003 Turkiyedeki Kumuklar Damarlarini Ariyorlar in Turkish issledovatelskaya statya Stambul ed a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Kusov Oleg 24 May 2011 Muhadzhiry Muhajirs Radio Svoboda Retrieved 2017 06 23 from the settlements of Utamish Bashlykent and Karabudaghkent they were later joined by Kumyks from the Northern Kumykia and many other Dagestanians Severokavkazskaya diaspora Sirii nadeetsya na Rossiyu North Caucasus Diaspora hopes for help from Russia in Russian Archived from the original on 2017 08 01 Retrieved 2017 06 23 Bursa province Kosubogazi Mustafakemalpasa assimilated but keeping family history Orhangazi province Yenikoy along with avars and dargins Sivas province Yildizeli Yavuzkoy Yaglidere Yildizeli Yagkoy Suleymaniye Hafik along with Turkish and avars Tokat province Dogancayli along with karachays Yavu Cermik Artova along with dargins and avars Cirdag along with dargins and avars Gultepe Erbaa along with dargins and avars Yeniderbent Zile along with lezgins Turhal along with karachays Culture Centre is present Canakkale province Akkopru Biga Culture Centre is present Aziziye Doganci Geyikkiri Kalafat Biga Bozna Many Kumyk districts and villages for instance in the town of Samsun de kumykised due to assimilation into Turkish culture and resettling Nartajans DAGISTAN KOKENLILERIN TURKIYE DE YASADIKLARI SEHIRLER VE YERLESIM YE www nartajans net Retrieved 2017 06 23 Ageeva R A 2000 Kakogo my rodu plemeni Narody Rossii imena i sudby Slovar spravochnik Academia pp 190 191 ISBN 5 87444 033 X a b Uslar P K Etnografiya Kavkaza Yazykoznanie 4 Lakskij yazyk Tiflis 1890 s 2 G S Fyodorov Gusejnov 1996 Istoriya proishozhdeniya kumykov Mahachkala Dagestanskoe knizhnoe izdatelstvo Kumyk po tyurkski kipchakski izgnannyj pp 138 139 Olearij Adam OPISANIE PUTEShESTVIYa GOLShTINSKOGO POSOLSTVA V MOSKOVIYu I PERSIYu www vostlit info Retrieved 2017 06 21 Epigraficheskie pamyatniki Severnogo Kavkaza M Nauka 1966 Ch I 300s str 202 privedeny istochniki Hosrov hana Shemahanskij T N Makarov Tatarskaya grammatika kavkazskogo narechiya 1848 Tiflis Smirnov K F Arheologicheskie issledovaniyav Dagestane v 1948 1950 gg Kratk soobsh IMK XIV 1952 s 95 96 G S Fyodorov Gusejnov 1996 Istoriya proishozhdeniya kumykov Mahachkala Dagestanskoe knizhnoe izdatelstvo p 18 S Bronevskij Novejshie geograficheskie i istoricheskie izvestiya o Kavkaze V 2 chastyah Moskva 1823 Kazihanova Gusejnova Asiyat Abduragimovna Etapy rasseleniya tyurkoyazychnyh narodov na territorii Primorskogo Dagestana v rannesrednevekovuyu epohu dissertaciya kandidata istoricheskih nauk 07 00 02 Mahachkala 2000 186 c 61 01 7 82 5 For instance in The Cry of the Heroine from the story Petrified Aymesedu there is a mention of the town of Semender the capital of the Khazars There is also a common saying present in the Kumyk language which refers to the Khazar treasury Xazar getdi xazna getdi Qumuqdan Khazars are gone defeated and so is gone Kumukia s treasury S A Tokarev Etnografiya narodov SSSR istoricheskie osnovy byta i kultury Izd vo Moskovskogo universiteta 1958 229 Sakinat Shihamedovna Gadzhieva 1961 Kumyki istoriko etnograficheskoe issledovanie Vol 5 Izd vo Akademii nauk SSSR p 44 Vasilij Vladimirovich Bartold 1968 Sochineniya Vol 5 Nauka p 213 a b Lavrov L I Istoriko etnograficheskie ocherki Kavkaza Leningrad 1978 C 37 38 V F Minorskij Istoriya Shirvana i Derbenda X XI vv Izd vo Vostochnoj literatury 1963 C 145 KUMYKI Narody Rossii Enciklopediya Moskva Bolshaya Rossjiskaya Enciklopediya 1994 Archived from the original on 2013 11 04 G R A K Gusejnov Kumyki braguncy istoriya i sovremennost a b Istoriya narodov Severnogo Kavkaza s drevnejshih vremen do konca XVIII veka Moscow Nauka Akademiya nauk SSSR 1988 Avabi Muhammad Aktashi al Endiravi c 1600s Derbent name Pigulevskaya N V Sirijskie istochniki po istorii narodov SSSR M la 1941 C 165 166 Kavkaz evropejskie dnevniki XIII XVIII vekov Sost V Atalikov Nalchik Izdatelstvo M i V Kotlyarovyh 2010 304 s str 6 7 Vasilij Vladimirovich Bartold Sochineniya Nauka 1968 T 5 S 213 SHAMKHLATE of Tarki IN RUSSIAN IRANIAN AND RUSSIAN TURKISH RELATIONS IN THE SECOND HALF OF THE XVI CENTURY https cyberleninka ru article n shamhalstvo tarkovskoe v politike rossii na kavkaze v kontse xvi pervoy polovine xvii v SHAMKHALATE OF TARKI IN THE RUSSIAN CAUCASIAN POLITICS IN THE LATE 16TH FIRST HALF OF THE 17TH CENTURIES Abdusalamov M P B https cyberleninka ru article n shamhalstvo tarkovskoe v politike rossii na kavkaze v kontse xvi pervoy polovine xvii v NIZAM AD DIN ShAMI gt KNIGA POBED gt PUBLIKACIYa 1941 G gt TEKST www vostlit info Retrieved 2018 01 05 TERRITORIYa I NASELENIE FEODALNYH VLADENIJ DAGESTANA V XVIII NAChALE XIX VEKA ABDUSALAMOV MAGOMED PAShA BALAShOVICh BUChAEV MURAD GADZhIEVICh 2012 Abdusalamov M P B Kumykskie feodalnye vladeniya v politicheskoj zhizni Dagestana v pervoj polovine XVIII v Mahachkala 2008 a b Tyumenskoe knyazhestvo v kontekste istorii vzaimootnoshenij Astrahanskogo hanstva i Kumykskogo gosudarstva s Russkim v XVI v G R A K Gusejnov Magomadova T S Bragunskoe knyazhestvo feodalnoe vladenie v Chechne v XVII v 12 2010 Groznyj B i 2010 a b KUMYKI Narody Rossii Enciklopediya Moskva Bolshaya Rossjiskaya Enciklopediya 1994 Archived from the original on 2013 11 04 Evliya Chelebi Kniga puteshestviya Izvlecheniya iz sochineniya tureckogo puteshestvennika XVII veka Perevod i kommentarii Vypusk 2 Moskva 1979 g Belokurov Sergey Alekseevich 1862 1918 Russia s relations with the Caucasus Materials extracts from Moscow chapters archive M va inostr Affairs Sergey Al Belokurov Issue 1 Moscow Univ a type 1889 26 cm Issue 1 1578 1613 1889 CLX 584 p Karamzin 1816 1829 s 72 T 11 D S Kidirniyazov Zh K Musaurova Ocherki istorii nogajcev XV XVIII vv Izd vo dom Narody Dagestana 2003 S 199 Kumykskij mir Surhaj III padishah Dagestanskij kumukia ru Archived from the original on 2018 01 03 Retrieved 2018 01 05 Golikov I I Deyaniya Petra Velikogo mudrogo preobrazitelya Rossii sobrannye iz dostovernyh istochnikov Izd 2 e M Tipografiya N Stepanova 1838 Bruce P H Memoirs of Peter Henry Bruce esq a military officer in the services of Prussia Russia and Great Britain Containing an account of his travels in Germany Russia Tartary Turkey the West Indies London 1782 Solovyov Istoriya Rossii s drevnejshih vremen Tom 19 Ot carstvovaniya imperatricy Ekateriny I Alekseevny do carstvovaniya imperatricy Anny Ioannovny 1727 1730 gg GLAVA PERVAYa OKONChANIE CARSTVOVANIYa IMPERATRICY EKATERINY I ALEKSEEVNY Idrisov Yu M Abdusalamov M B Kumykskie feodalnye vladeniya v kontekste razvitiya i kraha teokraticheskogo proekta imama Mansura v 1785 1786 godah Vestnik Adygejskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta Seriya 1 Regionovedenie filosofiya istoriya sociologiya yurisprudenciya politologiya kulturologiya 2012 4 A V Potto Kavkazskaya vojna Kavkazskaya vojna v otdelnyh ocherkah epizodah legendah i biografiyah v 5 ti tomah 1899 g Tom 2 Ruk fond IIYaL d 659 l 46 Perevod s arabskogo V hode voennyh dejstvij v Chechne byli unichtozheny mnogie kachkalykovskie auly imevshie smeshannoe kumyksko chechenskoe naselenie http www vostlit info Texts Dokumenty Kavkaz XIX 1820 1840 Filipson G I text1 htm Vasilij Potto Kavkazskaya vojna Tom 2 Ermolovskoe vremya M Centrpoligraf 2008 g N I Pokrovskij Kavkazskie vojny i imamat Shamilya Moskva Rossijskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya ROSSPEN 2000 S 135 137 N I Pokrovskij Kavkazskie vojny i imamat Shamilya Moskva Rossijskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya ROSSPEN 2000 S 139 148 N I Pokrovskij Kavkazskie vojny i imamat Shamilya Moskva Rossijskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya ROSSPEN 2000 S 207 218 N I Pokrovskij Kavkazskie vojny i imamat Shamilya Moskva Rossijskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya ROSSPEN 2000 S 318 a b c d N I Pokrovskij Kavkazskie vojny i imamat Shamilya Moskva Rossijskaya politicheskaya enciklopediya ROSSPEN 2000 a b VOJNA NA VOSTOChNOM KAVKAZE www vostlit info Retrieved 2017 10 21 Kavkazskaya vojna Tom 5 Vremya Paskevicha ili Bunt Chechni Glava XVIII ChEChNYa POSLE ERMOLOVA Bliev M M 2004 Rossiya i gorcy Bolshogo Kavkaza na puti k civilizacii M Mysl p 279 ISBN 5 244 01004 2 Halilov A M Idrisov M M 1998 Shamil v istorii Severnogo Kavkaza i narodnoj pamyati Mahachkala a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Halilov A M 1991 Nacionalno osvoboditelnoe dvizhenie gorcev Severnogo Kavkaza pod predvoditelstvom Shamilya Mahachkala Daguchpedgiz ISBN 9785743702282 Gammer M Shamil Musulmanskoe soprotivlenie carizmu Zavoevanie Chechni i Dagestana M KRON PRESS 1998 512 s str 101 Shamil v istorii Severnogo Kavkaza i narodnoj pamyati Arslan Magomedsoltanovich Halilov Murad Magomedovich Idrisov 1998 S 80 Aleksej Golovlev Ocherki o Chechne priroda naselenie novejshaya istoriya Vektor S 2007 Biryukov A V Rossijsko chechenskie otnosheniya v XVII seredine XIX vv Voprosy istorii 1998 2 Pokrovskiĭ N I 2000 Kavkazskie voĭny i imamat Shamili a Moskva ROSSPĖN ISBN 5 8243 0078 X OCLC 44909551 Istoriya Dagestana s drevnejshih vremen do nashih dnej T I Istoriya Dagestana s drevnejshih vremen do XX veka otv red A I Osmanov M 2004 627 s S M Bronevskij Novejshie geograficheskie i istoricheskie izvestiya o Kavkaze M 1823 Chast Vtoraya str 176 177 Istoriya Chechni s drevnejshih vremen do nashih dnej t 3 2013 str 13 Z H Ibragimova ChEChENCY V ZERKALE CARSKOJ STATISTIKI 1860 1900 Monografiya Moskva PROBEL 2000 2006 Pervye russkie kreposti v mezhdureche Tereka i Sunzhi v 16 17 vv T S Magomadova Iz stenogrammy vystupleniya chlena Gosudarstvennoj dumy vtorogo sozyva ot Terskoj oblasti T E Eldorhanova Z maya 1907 g Dagestan Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary In 86 Volumes 82 Volumes and 4 Additional Volumes St Petersburg 1890 1907 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Alfavitnyj spisok narodov obitayushih v Rossijskoj Imperii Demoskop Archived from the original on 2011 09 16 Morrison Alexander Drieu Cloe Chokobaeva Aminat 2019 10 02 The Central Asian Revolt of 1916 A collapsing empire in the age of war and revolution Manchester University Press p 30 ISBN 978 1 5261 2944 4 Hadzhi Murada Donogo Gajdar Bammat izvestnyj i neizvestnyj Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1926 goda Nacionalnyj sostav naseleniya po respublikam SSSR Demoskop Archived from the original on 2011 05 22 Dagestan Enciklopedicheskij slovar Brokgauza i Efrona v 86 t 82 t i 4 dop SPb 1890 1907 Alfavitnyj spisok narodov obitayushih v Rossijskoj Imperii www demoscope ru Retrieved 2022 06 04 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej www demoscope ru Retrieved 2022 06 04 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej www demoscope ru Retrieved 2022 06 04 Butkov P G Svedeniya o silah chisle dush i dereven v Dagestane 1795 g IGED M 1958 Alieva V F Gimbatov Sh M Eldarov E M Efendiev I I 2004 Sovremennye migracionnye processy v Dagestane Regionalnye aspekty socialnoj politiki Vyp 6 Mahachkala Kumykskij mir HH VEK V SUDBE KUMYKOV kumukia ru Retrieved 2022 06 04 permanent dead link UNPO Kumyk unpo org Retrieved 2022 05 16 Nikolaj Trubeckoj O Narodah Kavkaza Centr Lva Gumilyova in Russian 2013 05 27 Retrieved 2022 06 04 Stroitelstvo socializma v Dagestane 1921 1940 uzlovye problemy Abdurahman Daniyalovich Daniyalov Nauka 1975 str 42 Baskakov N A Vvedenie v izuchenie tyurkskih yazykov M 1962 s 236 Abibullaeva S Kodeks Kumanikus PAMYaTNIK TYuRKSKIH YaZYKOV KONCA XIII NAChALA XIV VEKOV PDF in Russian a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Pieter Muysken 2008 Studies in language companion series From linguistic areas to areal linguistics Vol 90 John Benjamins Publishing Company p 74 ISBN 9789027231000 Nansen Gjennem Kaukasus til Volga Oslo Jacob Dybwads Forlag 1929 N S Trubeckoj 1925 O narodah Kavkaza statya ed a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Kafkaz Lehceni Tatar Grammatikasi Makarov 1848 caucasian space in Kumyk and Russian Archived from the original on 2017 11 07 Retrieved 2017 06 28 Yarceva V N i dr red Yazyki Rossijskoj Federacii i sosednih gosudarstv Tom 2 K R str 183 Kumykskij yazyk Bolshaya sovetskaya enciklopediya v 30 t gl red A M Prohorov 3 e izd Moskva Sovetskaya enciklopediya 1969 1978 Kumykskij enciklopedicheskij slovar Mahachkala 2012 S 218 Paul Fleming i my kumukia ru Archived from the original on 2014 03 26 Retrieved 26 December 2017 Golshtinii syny my zdes ne na chuzhbine kumukia ru Archived from the original on 2014 01 31 Retrieved 26 December 2017 Lev Tolstoj Dnevnik 1847 1854 gg Tetrad G Mart maj 1851 g tolstoy lit info ru Retrieved 2017 03 10 a b Mugumova Anna Lvovna K probleme orientalnogo leksicheskogo vliyaniya na yazyk russkoj hudozhestvennoj literatury 20 30 h godov XIX v Na materiale proizvedenij M Yu Lermontova dissertaciya ed a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help s Nabeg Tolstoj s Kazaki Tolstoj XL s Geroj nashego vremeni Lermontov Predislovie Dumas Alexandre 1962 Adventures in Caucasia Chilton Books ISBN 978 0 598 72218 8 Further reading EditTsibenko Veronika 2019 Kumyks In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 3rd ed Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 External links EditKumyk information portal kumukia com Archived 2022 02 02 at the Wayback Machine Kumyk dictionaries study materials and online library Kumyk newspaper Yoldas 42 23 14 N 47 59 12 E 42 3873 N 47 9867 E 42 3873 47 9867 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kumyks amp oldid 1171499904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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