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Peoples of the Caucasus

The peoples of the Caucasus, or Caucasians, are a diverse group comprising more than 50 ethnic groups throughout the Caucasus.[2]

Ethnolinguistic groups in the Caucasus region (2007)[1]

By language group

Language families indigenous to the Caucasus

 
Caucasian peoples: Georgians, Persians (in Azerbaijan), Circassians, Tatars, and Ingush
 
The medieval Georgian village of Shatili
 
Ethnic groups inhabiting the Caucasus region
 
The village of Tindi, in Dagestan, in the late 1890s
 
North Caucasian peoples (from left to right): Ossetians, Circassians, Kabardians, and a Chechen

Caucasians who speak languages which have long been indigenous to the region are generally classified into three groups: Kartvelian peoples, Northeast Caucasian peoples and Northwest Caucasian peoples.

Kartvelian languages

Northeast Caucasian languages

Northwest Caucasian languages

The largest peoples speaking languages which belong to the Caucasian language families and who are currently resident in the Caucasus are the Georgians (3,200,000), the Chechens (2,000,000), the Avars (1,500,000), the Lezgins (about 1,000,000) and the Kabardians (600,000), while outside the Caucasus, the largest people of Caucasian origin, in diaspora in more than 40 countries (such as Jordan, Turkey, the countries of Europe, Syria, and the United States) are the Circassians with about 3,000,000-4,000,000 speakers. Georgians are the only Caucasian people who have their own undisputedly independent state—Georgia. Abkhazia's status is disputed. Other Caucasian peoples have republics within Russia: Adyghe (Adygea), Cherkess (Karachay-Cherkessia), Kabardians (Kabardino-Balkaria), Ingush (Ingushetia), Chechens (Chechnya), while other Northeast Caucasian peoples mostly live in Dagestan.

Indo-European

 
Ethnolinguistic groups in the Caucasus region in 1887

Caucasians that speak languages belonging to the Indo-European language family:

†Although these two groups do not have any inhabitants physically living anywhere in the Caucasus, genetic tests have proven their affinity to Caucasian populations and shown that their ancestors originated from the Caucasus.

Armenians number 3,215,800 in their native Armenia, though approximately 8 million live outside the republic, forming the Armenian diaspora. Elsewhere in the region, they reside in Artsakh (which is a de facto independent republic, though not recognised internationally), Georgia (primarily Samtskhe–Javakheti, Tbilisi, and Abkhazia), and the Russian North Caucasus. The Ossetians live in North Ossetia–Alania (an autonomous republic within Russia) and in South Ossetia, which is de facto independent, but is de jure part of Georgia. The Yazidis reside in the western areas of Armenia, mostly in the Aragatsotn marz, and in the eastern areas of Georgia. An autonomous Kurdish region was created in 1923 in Soviet Azerbaijan but was later abolished in 1929. Pontic Greeks reside in Armenia (Lori Province, especially in Alaverdi) and Georgia (Kvemo Kartli, Adjara, the Tsalka, and Abkhazia). Pontic Greeks had also made up a significant component of the South Caucasus region acquired from the Ottoman Empire (following the 1878 Treaty of San Stefano) that centred on the town of Kars (ceded back to Turkey in 1916). Russians mostly live in the Russian North Caucasus and their largest concentration is in Stavropol Krai, Krasnodar Krai, and Adygea. Georgia and the former Russian South Caucasus province of Kars Oblast was also home to a significant minority of ethnic (Swabian) Germans, although their numbers have become depleted as a result of deportations (to Kazakhstan following World War II), immigration to Germany, and assimilation into indigenous communities.

Semitic

Caucasians that speak languages belonging to the Semitic language family:

Mongolic

The Kalmyks — is the name given to the Oirats, western Mongols in Russia, whose ancestors migrated from Dzungaria in 1607. Today they form a majority in the autonomous republic of Kalmykia on the western shore of the Caspian Sea. Kalmykia has Europe's only Buddhist government.[6]

Turkic

Caucasians that speak languages belonging to the Turkic language family:

The largest of the Turkic-speaking peoples in the Caucasus are Azerbaijanis who number 8,700,000 in the Republic of Azerbaijan. In the Caucasus region, they live in Georgia, Russia (Dagestan), Turkey and previously in Armenia (before 1990). The total number of Azerbaijanis is around 35 million (15 million in Iran). Other Turkic speakers live in their autonomous republics within Russia: Karachays (Karachay-Cherkessia), Balkars (Kabardino-Balkaria), while Kumyks and Nogais live in Dagestan.

By location

class=notpageimage|
Homeland of peoples of the Caucasus
Abbreviations: mouseover for name

This gives ethnic locations about 1775 before the Russians came.[7] NECLS means 'Northeast Caucasian Language Speakers' and NWCLS means 'Northwest Caucasian Language Speakers'. The linguistic nationalities that we now recognise are somewhat artificial. Two hundred years, ago a person's loyalty was to their friends, kin, village and chief and not primarily to their language group. The difference between steppe, mountain and plain was far more important than difference of language. Only the southern half (and the southernmost part of Dagestan) had organized states, usually Persian or Turkish vassals and few, if any, of these states corresponded well to language groups.

Northern Lowlands: The Turkic-speaking Nogai nomads occupied almost all of the steppe north of the Caucasus. In the nineteenth century they were pushed far southeast to their present location. Formerly part of the eastern steppe was occupied by Kalmyks – Buddhist Mongols who migrated from Dzungaria about 1618. In 1771 many returned to their original homeland and they contracted to their present location in the far northeast, Nogais temporarily taking their place. In the southeast were the isolated Terek Cossacks. Their settlements later grew into the North Caucasus Line. There were a few Turkmens in the center of the steppe.

North Slope: The western two thirds was occupied by Circassians – NWCLS divided into twelve or so tribes. They long resisted the Russians and in 1864 several hundred thousand of them were expelled to the Ottoman Empire. To their east were the Kabardians – NWCLS similar to the Circassians but with a different political organization. The term Lesser Kabardia refers to the eastern area. South of the eastern Circassian-Kabardians were three groups that seem to have been driven into the high mountains about 500 years previously. The Karachays and Balkars spoke similar Turkic languages. East of the Balkars were the Ossetians – Iranian speakers descended from the ancient Alans who controlled the future Georgian Military Road and had a growing Christian minority. East of the future highway was a north-south band of Ingush – NECLS similar to the Chechens. The numerous Chechens to the east were later to wage the long Murid War against the Russians. For the small groups south of the Ingush-Chechens see South Slope below. To the east along the coast were the Turkic Kumyks.

Mountain Dagestan: All the peoples of mountain Dagestan were NECLS except the Tats. In the northwest were a number of small language groups (Tsez people (Dido) and Andi people), similar to the Avars. To their southeast were the numerous Avars with a khanate at Khunzakh who fought in the Murid War. Southeast were the Dargins and west of them the Laks who held the Kumukh Khanate. Southeast along the Samur were the Lezgins with many subgroups and then the Iranian-speaking Tats down to Baku.

Caspian Coast: From Astrakhan to the Terek River there were the Buddhist Kalmyk nomads. Along the Terek were the isolated Terek Cossacks. From the Terek to Derbent were the Turkic-speaking Kumyks with a state at Tarki. The town of Derbent itself had a majority Persian (Russian: персы) population, as it had for many centuries, until the late 19th century.[8] On the coastal plain south of Derbent was a mixed population, mostly Azeri ("Transcaucasian Tatar"), and further south to Baku were the Iranian-speaking Tats. When Baku became a boom town the Tats retained a majority only in the mountains. The Mountain Jews, who had a number of villages inland from the coast, spoke a form of Tat called Judeo-Tat. The lowlands south of Baku were held by Azerbaijanis, Turkic-speaking Shiites. On both sides of the current Iranian border were the Iranian-speaking Talysh. Based on genetic studies the Gilaki and Mazanderani ethnic groups in northern Iran (near the Caspian Sea) have been proven to be genetically similar to Armenians, Georgians and Azeris. This indicates that the Gilaki and Mazanderani ethnic groups are people that immigrated from the Caucasus region to what is now northern Iran.[9]

South Slope: Black Sea coast: In the northwest the mountains came down to the sea and the population was Circassian. Southward the coastal plain broadened and the population was Abkhazians – similar to the Circassians but under Georgian influence.

South Slope proper: On the south side of the Caucasus the mountains fall quickly to the plains and there is only a small transition zone. The inhabitants were either Georgians with mountain customs or northern mountaineers who had moved south. The Svans were Georgian mountaineers. In the center the Iranian Ossets had moved south and were surrounded on three sides by Georgians. East of the Ossets and south of the Ingush-Chechens were three groups of Georgian mountaineers on both sides of the mountain crest: Khevi, Khevsurs, and Tushetians. The Bats were NECLS entangled with the Tushetians and the Kists were Chechens south of the mountains. Near the Georgian-Azeri linguistic border there were some Avars and Tsakhurs (Lezgians) who had crossed the mountains. Associated with the Tsakhurs were the Ingiloy or Georgian-speaking Muslims. In the north Azeri area were a few Udis or southern Lezgians and Lakhij or southern Tats.

Southern Lowlands: The western two thirds were occupied by Georgians – an ancient Christian people with a unique language. The eastern third was Azerbaijanis – a group of Turkic-speaking Shiites under Persian influence. On the fringe of the Georgian area were Georgian speakers who had either adopted Islam or mountain customs.

Armenian Highlands: Further South, the land becomes higher. In the west were the Laz people or Georgian Muslims. In Kars province there were Turks, Kurds and Armenians. The Armenians, which gave the plateau its namesake, were somewhat concentrated in the present-day Armenia but were mostly spread out as a minority all over Asia Minor. There were groups of Azeris west of their main area who tended to blend with the Turks. The Kurds were semi-nomadic shepherds with small groups in various places and concentrations in Kars province and Nakhchivan. In the far southeast were the Iranian Talysh.

Genetic history

Language groups in the Caucasus are closely correlated to genetic ancestry.[10]

Gallery

See also

Further reading

  • "The morphological specificity of Caucasian peoples according to craniological materials". V.P.Alekseev. Journal of Human Evolution.
  • Kovalevskaia, V. B "Central Ciscaucasia in Antiquity and Early Middle Ages: Caucasian Substratum and Migrations of the Iranic-Speaking Tribes." (1988).

References

  1. ^ . Ecmicaucasus.org. Archived from the original on 4 September 2014. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  2. ^ "Caucasian peoples". Britannica.com. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  3. ^ a b "The Yezidi Kurds and Assyrians of Georgia : The Problem of Diasporas and Integration into Contemporary Society" (PDF). Aina.org. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  4. ^ . Tabasaran.com. Archived from the original on 16 December 2008. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  5. ^ Stephen Adolphe Wurm et al. Atlas of languages of intercultural communication. Walter de Gruyter, 1996; p. 966
  6. ^ "Europe - Peace and Harmony in Kalmykia". Buddhistchannel.tv. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  7. ^ Arthur Tsutsiev and Nora Seligman Favorov (translator) Atlas of the Ethno-Political History of the Caucasus, 2014, Map 4 supplemented by Maps 12,18 and 31.
  8. ^ "население дагестана". Ethno-kavkaz.narod.ru. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  9. ^ Nasidze, Ivan; Quinque, Dominique; Rahmani, Manijeh; Alemohamad, Seyed Ali; Stoneking, Mark (April 2006). "Concomitant Replacement of Language and mtDNA in South Caspian Populations of Iran". Curr. Biol. 16 (7): 668–73. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2006.02.021. PMID 16581511. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
  10. ^ O.Balanovsky et al., "Parallel Evolution of Genes and Languages in the Caucasus Region", Mol Biol Evol00 (2011), doi:10.1093/molbev/msr126.
  11. ^ Sevruguin, Antoin. "An Armenian girl from New Julfa, Isfahan, Late 19th Century". The Nelson Collection of Qajar Photography.
  12. ^ "Orden F. Azerbaijani woman from Baku in national costume, circa 1890s". Peter the Great Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography.

peoples, caucasus, caucasian, theory, races, caucasian, race, peoples, caucasus, caucasians, diverse, group, comprising, more, than, ethnic, groups, throughout, caucasus, ethnolinguistic, groups, caucasus, region, 2007, contents, language, group, language, fam. For Caucasian in the theory of races see Caucasian race The peoples of the Caucasus or Caucasians are a diverse group comprising more than 50 ethnic groups throughout the Caucasus 2 Ethnolinguistic groups in the Caucasus region 2007 1 Contents 1 By language group 1 1 Language families indigenous to the Caucasus 1 2 Indo European 1 3 Semitic 1 4 Mongolic 1 5 Turkic 2 By location 3 Genetic history 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 Further reading 7 ReferencesBy language group EditFurther information North Caucasian languages and Dene Caucasian languages Language families indigenous to the Caucasus Edit Caucasian peoples Georgians Persians in Azerbaijan Circassians Tatars and Ingush The medieval Georgian village of Shatili Ethnic groups inhabiting the Caucasus region The village of Tindi in Dagestan in the late 1890s North Caucasian peoples from left to right Ossetians Circassians Kabardians and a Chechen Caucasians who speak languages which have long been indigenous to the region are generally classified into three groups Kartvelian peoples Northeast Caucasian peoples and Northwest Caucasian peoples Kartvelian languages Georgians Dvals Ingiloys Zans Lazs Mingrelians SvansNortheast Caucasian languages Avar Andic peoples Andis Akhvakhs Avars Bagvalals Botlikhs Chamalals Godoberis Karatas Tindis Dargins Dargwa Kajtak Kubachi Itsari Chirag Khinalugs Laks Lezgic peoples Aguls Archin Budukhs Jeks Kryts Lezgins Rutuls Tabasarans Tsakhurs Udis Nakh peoples Arshtins Bats Chechens Kists Durdzuks Ingush Malkh Tsezic Didoic peoples Bezhtas Hinukhs Hunzibs Khwarshis TsezNorthwest Caucasian languages Abazins Abkhazians Circassians Abzakhs Besleneys Bzhedugs Chemirgoys Kabardians Natukhajs Shapsugs UbykhsThe largest peoples speaking languages which belong to the Caucasian language families and who are currently resident in the Caucasus are the Georgians 3 200 000 the Chechens 2 000 000 the Avars 1 500 000 the Lezgins about 1 000 000 and the Kabardians 600 000 while outside the Caucasus the largest people of Caucasian origin in diaspora in more than 40 countries such as Jordan Turkey the countries of Europe Syria and the United States are the Circassians with about 3 000 000 4 000 000 speakers Georgians are the only Caucasian people who have their own undisputedly independent state Georgia Abkhazia s status is disputed Other Caucasian peoples have republics within Russia Adyghe Adygea Cherkess Karachay Cherkessia Kabardians Kabardino Balkaria Ingush Ingushetia Chechens Chechnya while other Northeast Caucasian peoples mostly live in Dagestan Indo European Edit Ethnolinguistic groups in the Caucasus region in 1887 Terek Cossacks of the North Caucasus Caucasians that speak languages belonging to the Indo European language family Armenians Germans Hellenic group Caucasus Greeks including Turkish speaking Christian Greeks of Georgia or Urums and historically the Latins Pontic Greeks Iranian group Gilaks Mazanderanis Ossetians Digors Talysh Tats Kurds Yazidis Slavic group Russians including Cossacks Doukhobors and Molokans Although these two groups do not have any inhabitants physically living anywhere in the Caucasus genetic tests have proven their affinity to Caucasian populations and shown that their ancestors originated from the Caucasus Armenians number 3 215 800 in their native Armenia though approximately 8 million live outside the republic forming the Armenian diaspora Elsewhere in the region they reside in Artsakh which is a de facto independent republic though not recognised internationally Georgia primarily Samtskhe Javakheti Tbilisi and Abkhazia and the Russian North Caucasus The Ossetians live in North Ossetia Alania an autonomous republic within Russia and in South Ossetia which is de facto independent but is de jure part of Georgia The Yazidis reside in the western areas of Armenia mostly in the Aragatsotn marz and in the eastern areas of Georgia An autonomous Kurdish region was created in 1923 in Soviet Azerbaijan but was later abolished in 1929 Pontic Greeks reside in Armenia Lori Province especially in Alaverdi and Georgia Kvemo Kartli Adjara the Tsalka and Abkhazia Pontic Greeks had also made up a significant component of the South Caucasus region acquired from the Ottoman Empire following the 1878 Treaty of San Stefano that centred on the town of Kars ceded back to Turkey in 1916 Russians mostly live in the Russian North Caucasus and their largest concentration is in Stavropol Krai Krasnodar Krai and Adygea Georgia and the former Russian South Caucasus province of Kars Oblast was also home to a significant minority of ethnic Swabian Germans although their numbers have become depleted as a result of deportations to Kazakhstan following World War II immigration to Germany and assimilation into indigenous communities Semitic Edit Caucasians that speak languages belonging to the Semitic language family Assyrians in the Caucasus number approximately 35 000 people and live in Armenia Georgia 3 Azerbaijan and southern Russia There are up to 15 000 in Georgia 3 5000 in Armenia up to 15 000 in southern Russian regions of the Caucasus and 1400 in Azerbaijan They descend from the ancient Mesopotamians and are indigenous to what is today Iraq Northeastern Syria Northwestern Iran and Southeastern Turkey They are Eastern Rite Christians mainly followers of the Assyrian Church of the East and speak and write Mesopotamian Eastern Aramaic dialects Caucasus Jews of two sub ethnic groups Mountain Jews and Georgian Jews There are about 15 000 30 000 Caucasus Jews as 140 000 immigrated to Israel and 40 000 to the US Arabs in the Caucasus a population of nomadic Arabs was reported in 1728 as having rented winter pastures near the Caspian shores of the Mugan plain in present day Azerbaijan In 1888 an unknown number of Arabs still lived in the Baku Governorate of the Russian Empire As well as descendants of Sayyid and Siddiqui the people with Arabian origin but mostly assimilated by other Caucasian peoples However some people identify not just as Sayyid or Siddiqui with non Arabian ethnicity but as Arabs 4 5 Mongolic Edit Main article Mongolic languages KalmyksThe Kalmyks is the name given to the Oirats western Mongols in Russia whose ancestors migrated from Dzungaria in 1607 Today they form a majority in the autonomous republic of Kalmykia on the western shore of the Caspian Sea Kalmykia has Europe s only Buddhist government 6 Turkic Edit Caucasians that speak languages belonging to the Turkic language family Kipchaks Kumyks Balkars Karachays Nogais Oghuz Turks Azerbaijanis Meskhetian TurksThe largest of the Turkic speaking peoples in the Caucasus are Azerbaijanis who number 8 700 000 in the Republic of Azerbaijan In the Caucasus region they live in Georgia Russia Dagestan Turkey and previously in Armenia before 1990 The total number of Azerbaijanis is around 35 million 15 million in Iran Other Turkic speakers live in their autonomous republics within Russia Karachays Karachay Cherkessia Balkars Kabardino Balkaria while Kumyks and Nogais live in Dagestan By location Edit lt lt lt Kalmyks Nogais Nogais Nogais Terek Cossacks Circassians Circassians Circassians Oset GMR In Ks Kv Tu Kists Kabardians Kr Bk Avars Di An Laks Dargins Chechens Kumyks Ku Ku Lezgins Derbent Azerbaijanis Tats Tats Talysh people Tsk Av Udi Azerbaijanis Arm Armenians Arm Az Kurds Assyrians Georgians Georgians Georgians Svaneti Abkhazians Laz Kars Turksclass notpageimage Homeland of peoples of the CaucasusAbbreviations mouseover for name This gives ethnic locations about 1775 before the Russians came 7 NECLS means Northeast Caucasian Language Speakers and NWCLS means Northwest Caucasian Language Speakers The linguistic nationalities that we now recognise are somewhat artificial Two hundred years ago a person s loyalty was to their friends kin village and chief and not primarily to their language group The difference between steppe mountain and plain was far more important than difference of language Only the southern half and the southernmost part of Dagestan had organized states usually Persian or Turkish vassals and few if any of these states corresponded well to language groups Northern Lowlands The Turkic speaking Nogai nomads occupied almost all of the steppe north of the Caucasus In the nineteenth century they were pushed far southeast to their present location Formerly part of the eastern steppe was occupied by Kalmyks Buddhist Mongols who migrated from Dzungaria about 1618 In 1771 many returned to their original homeland and they contracted to their present location in the far northeast Nogais temporarily taking their place In the southeast were the isolated Terek Cossacks Their settlements later grew into the North Caucasus Line There were a few Turkmens in the center of the steppe North Slope The western two thirds was occupied by Circassians NWCLS divided into twelve or so tribes They long resisted the Russians and in 1864 several hundred thousand of them were expelled to the Ottoman Empire To their east were the Kabardians NWCLS similar to the Circassians but with a different political organization The term Lesser Kabardia refers to the eastern area South of the eastern Circassian Kabardians were three groups that seem to have been driven into the high mountains about 500 years previously The Karachays and Balkars spoke similar Turkic languages East of the Balkars were the Ossetians Iranian speakers descended from the ancient Alans who controlled the future Georgian Military Road and had a growing Christian minority East of the future highway was a north south band of Ingush NECLS similar to the Chechens The numerous Chechens to the east were later to wage the long Murid War against the Russians For the small groups south of the Ingush Chechens see South Slope below To the east along the coast were the Turkic Kumyks Mountain Dagestan All the peoples of mountain Dagestan were NECLS except the Tats In the northwest were a number of small language groups Tsez people Dido and Andi people similar to the Avars To their southeast were the numerous Avars with a khanate at Khunzakh who fought in the Murid War Southeast were the Dargins and west of them the Laks who held the Kumukh Khanate Southeast along the Samur were the Lezgins with many subgroups and then the Iranian speaking Tats down to Baku Caspian Coast From Astrakhan to the Terek River there were the Buddhist Kalmyk nomads Along the Terek were the isolated Terek Cossacks From the Terek to Derbent were the Turkic speaking Kumyks with a state at Tarki The town of Derbent itself had a majority Persian Russian persy population as it had for many centuries until the late 19th century 8 On the coastal plain south of Derbent was a mixed population mostly Azeri Transcaucasian Tatar and further south to Baku were the Iranian speaking Tats When Baku became a boom town the Tats retained a majority only in the mountains The Mountain Jews who had a number of villages inland from the coast spoke a form of Tat called Judeo Tat The lowlands south of Baku were held by Azerbaijanis Turkic speaking Shiites On both sides of the current Iranian border were the Iranian speaking Talysh Based on genetic studies the Gilaki and Mazanderani ethnic groups in northern Iran near the Caspian Sea have been proven to be genetically similar to Armenians Georgians and Azeris This indicates that the Gilaki and Mazanderani ethnic groups are people that immigrated from the Caucasus region to what is now northern Iran 9 South Slope Black Sea coast In the northwest the mountains came down to the sea and the population was Circassian Southward the coastal plain broadened and the population was Abkhazians similar to the Circassians but under Georgian influence South Slope proper On the south side of the Caucasus the mountains fall quickly to the plains and there is only a small transition zone The inhabitants were either Georgians with mountain customs or northern mountaineers who had moved south The Svans were Georgian mountaineers In the center the Iranian Ossets had moved south and were surrounded on three sides by Georgians East of the Ossets and south of the Ingush Chechens were three groups of Georgian mountaineers on both sides of the mountain crest Khevi Khevsurs and Tushetians The Bats were NECLS entangled with the Tushetians and the Kists were Chechens south of the mountains Near the Georgian Azeri linguistic border there were some Avars and Tsakhurs Lezgians who had crossed the mountains Associated with the Tsakhurs were the Ingiloy or Georgian speaking Muslims In the north Azeri area were a few Udis or southern Lezgians and Lakhij or southern Tats Southern Lowlands The western two thirds were occupied by Georgians an ancient Christian people with a unique language The eastern third was Azerbaijanis a group of Turkic speaking Shiites under Persian influence On the fringe of the Georgian area were Georgian speakers who had either adopted Islam or mountain customs Armenian Highlands Further South the land becomes higher In the west were the Laz people or Georgian Muslims In Kars province there were Turks Kurds and Armenians The Armenians which gave the plateau its namesake were somewhat concentrated in the present day Armenia but were mostly spread out as a minority all over Asia Minor There were groups of Azeris west of their main area who tended to blend with the Turks The Kurds were semi nomadic shepherds with small groups in various places and concentrations in Kars province and Nakhchivan In the far southeast were the Iranian Talysh Genetic history EditMain article Prehistoric Caucasus Genetic history Further information Y DNA haplogroups in populations of the Caucasus Language groups in the Caucasus are closely correlated to genetic ancestry 10 Gallery Edit African descendants in Karabakh African descendants in Abkhazia Armenian from Shusha Nagorno Karabakh early 20th century An Armenian girl from New Julfa Isfahan or Azerbaijani woman from Baku late 19th century 11 12 Young Azerbaijani from Shusha Chechen warrior 19th century Chechen family from 1920 Circassian warrior Dagestani 1904 Georgians Ingush people Jek people Karachays Khevsur clansmen in Georgia c 1910 Kuban Cossacks 1915 A raid by Kurds Group of Lezgin men 1880 Mingrelians 1865 Mountain Jews c 1898 Nogai Ossetian warrior Russian settlers in Azerbaijan c 1910 Terek Cossacks Groom wearing a chokha at a Tushetian wedding Tat men from Quba 1880 Mullahs at the Mosque near Batumi c 1910See also Edit Asia portal Europe portalAbkhazians of African descent Languages of the Caucasus Peoples of the Caucasus in Turkey Peoples of the Caucasus in Iran Peoples of the Caucasus in Iraq Y DNA haplogroups in populations of the Caucasus Homo erectus georgicus Ethnic groups in Europe List of dishes from the Caucasus Caspians Shashka enthnic caucasian backswordFurther reading Edit The morphological specificity of Caucasian peoples according to craniological materials V P Alekseev Journal of Human Evolution Kovalevskaia V B Central Ciscaucasia in Antiquity and Early Middle Ages Caucasian Substratum and Migrations of the Iranic Speaking Tribes 1988 References Edit ECMI European Centre For Minority Issues Georgia Ecmicaucasus org Archived from the original on 4 September 2014 Retrieved 11 January 2018 Caucasian peoples Britannica com Retrieved 11 January 2018 a b The Yezidi Kurds and Assyrians of Georgia The Problem of Diasporas and Integration into Contemporary Society PDF Aina org Retrieved 11 January 2018 Personazhi tradicionnyh religioznyh predstavlenij azerbajdzhancev Tabasarana Tabasaran com Archived from the original on 16 December 2008 Retrieved 11 January 2018 Stephen Adolphe Wurm et al Atlas of languages of intercultural communication Walter de Gruyter 1996 p 966 Europe Peace and Harmony in Kalmykia Buddhistchannel tv Retrieved 11 January 2018 Arthur Tsutsiev and Nora Seligman Favorov translator Atlas of the Ethno Political History of the Caucasus 2014 Map 4 supplemented by Maps 12 18 and 31 naselenie dagestana Ethno kavkaz narod ru Retrieved 11 January 2018 Nasidze Ivan Quinque Dominique Rahmani Manijeh Alemohamad Seyed Ali Stoneking Mark April 2006 Concomitant Replacement of Language and mtDNA in South Caspian Populations of Iran Curr Biol 16 7 668 73 doi 10 1016 j cub 2006 02 021 PMID 16581511 Retrieved 4 April 2014 O Balanovsky et al Parallel Evolution of Genes and Languages in the Caucasus Region Mol Biol Evol00 2011 doi 10 1093 molbev msr126 Sevruguin Antoin An Armenian girl from New Julfa Isfahan Late 19th Century The Nelson Collection of Qajar Photography Orden F Azerbaijani woman from Baku in national costume circa 1890s Peter the Great Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peoples of the Caucasus amp oldid 1152551936, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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