The Tatars of Crimea

Edward A. Allworth

The Tatars of Crimea Gönderileri

The Tatars of Crimea kitaplarını, The Tatars of Crimea sözleri ve alıntılarını, The Tatars of Crimea yazarlarını, The Tatars of Crimea yorumları ve incelemelerini 1000Kitap'ta bulabilirsiniz.
The 17th century Turkish traveler Evliya Celebi described the population of the Steppe Crimea as follows: They always eat meat. They eat the meat of every animal, and dress in its skin, that is, they make a fur coat out of it.... mixing blood with millet, they drink the blood of every animal like stew. There are also several thousand Tatars who have never drunk water in their lives.
Crimean people are divided into three subethnic groups: The Steppe Tatars (Nogai) are racially Caucasian and have elements of Mongoloidity (about 10%). They have a shorter stature, a smaller skull height, a smaller palpebral fissure length, and a larger oblique angle than other types. Gustav Radde writes about the steppe inhabitants: "...yellowish and dark complexion, often turning into copper-red; dark eyes; small nose and almost always flattened; black hair and a very sparse beard."
Reklam
Ugolovnyi Kodeks RSFSR: "Incitement of ethnic discord."
And only out in the sands of Kazakstan did the transport guards open the doors, so as to toss out the corpses alongside the railway. They did not give us time to bury the dead. Many people went insane.
The majority of the Tatar community is well integrated into the mainstream population of Turkiye. Over the last several decades, the community in Turkiye produced many celebrities and high-ranking public and political figures, such as Esin Engin and Nesrin Sipahi (singers), Aziz Nesin (a writer), Ahmet Ihsan Kirimli (the former minister of tourism), and Safa Giray (the former state minister). However, many members of the community, especially some of the public figures, have no sense of or interest in being Crimean Tatars, even though in some cases their names clearly imply a Tatar background.
Among the emigre communities, the largest group resides in the Republic of Turkiye. Emigre Tatars are largely concentrated in the following provinces of Turkiye: Adana, Ankara, Balikesir, Bursa, Chorum, Eskishehir, Istanbul, Konya, Kutahya, and Tekirdagh.
Reklam
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