Abazins live in the provinces of Eski ehir , Samsun , Yozgat , Adana and Kayseri Uzunyayla the long ... fought within the Russian forces. History Tribes Abazins is found in the writings of the ancient ... on the shore of the Sea, along with other points and the tribe of the Abazgii. Strabo called Abazins ... Category Abazins Category Muslim communities of Russia Category Republic of Adygea Asia ethno group ... more details
Abasin or Abaseen lang ps Ab sin , lit. Father River is an alternate name of the Indus River for the area of the Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa . This term means the Father of Rivers in Pashto language . This river has started from hills of the Gilgit , Kohe Hamaliya, stretching through the Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa , Punjab, Pakistan Punjab and at last through Sindh Sind , and there it meets the Arabian Sea Arabian Ocean . Abasin is used by the local poets poet in their poetry . They compare their hearts with the width and depth of the Abasin. Especially in the district Swabi , it is considered an important place for picnics and fishing . See also Said Abasin Abazins Category Indus River ... more details
Infobox language family name Abazgi altname Abkhaz Abaza region Caucasus familycolor Caucasian family Northwest Caucasian languages Northwest Caucasian child1 Abaza language Abaza child2 Abkhaz language Abkhaz map Caucasic languages.svg mapcaption legend FF6C60 Abazgi The term Abazgi refers to both the Abazins Abaza and Abkhaz people Abkhaz as if they were all one people. It was once the preferred designation, but has now been replaced mainly by the two subdesignations. The literary dialects of Abkhaz and Abaza are simply two ends of a dialect continuum . Grammatically, the two are very similar however, the differences in phonology are substantial, and are the main reason why many other linguists prefer to keep the two separate. Most linguists see for instance Chirikba 2003 believe that Ubykh language Ubykh is the closest relative of the Abazgi dialect continuum. References Wixman, Ronald. The Peoples of the USSR . p. 2 Chirikba, V. A. 2003 Abkhaz . Languages of the World Materials 119. Muenchen Lincom Europa. Category Ethnic groups in Russia Category Ethnic groups in Abkhazia Category Northwest Caucasian languages abkhazia stub ... more details
Inzhich Chukun Russian language Russian , Abaza language Abaza is an aul located in Karachay Cherkessia . Currently the capital of Abazinsky District , it was a part of Khabezsky District prior to creation of the said district in Abazinia territory. Located on the banks of Maly Zelenchuk River , it was founded by Russian people Russians in 1861. In 1925, its original name Zelenchuksko Loovsky was changed to Inzhich Chukun, the Russified local name of Maly Zelenchuk, due to Bolshevik policy of removing the names of Russian nobility nobility Loovsky in this case from the names of locations. ref http www.ug cei.ru mos ingichChukun history ref Inzhich Chukun today has a population of around 2000 people, composed mainly of Abazins . References Reflist coord 44 03 N 41 47 E display title region RU type city source GNS enwiki Category Rural localities in Karachay Cherkessia os it In i ukun ru ... more details
ensuring native Egyptian ancestry for the entire clan. The Abazins were one of several Muslim ethnic ..., the Abazins took or were given the last name Abaza . Afaf Lutfi Sayyid Marsot in the study, Egypt in the reign ... surnames Category Abazins Category Arab groups Category Egyptian people of Circassian descent Category ... more details
Apsilae different sound Apsils, Apshils one of the ancient tribes that lived on the territory of modern Abkhazia and had played a decisive role in the formation of the Abkhazian nation ref name 1 http bse.sci lib.com article066618.html Apsils in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia ref . Apsils lived in that part of modern Abkhazia which previously called Apsilia Tsebelda ref http annals.xlegio.ru kavkaz cebelda cebelda.htm . . The Mystery of the Tsebelda valley. M. , 1975 ref . For the first time Apsilae are mentioned in the writings of Pliny the Elder Pliny of the 1 st century ad ref name 1 , as well as the Arrian Flavius Arrianus in the II century are mentioned as . From the 2 nd half of the 8th century Apsilae in the documents are not mentioned. Apsilae descended from the coastal part of the ancient tribes Zygii ref http bse.sci lib.com article047332.html Zikhis in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia ref . The high development of the local manufacturing of products and tools of metal archeological artifacts Tsebelda culture . See also Zygii Tsebelda culture References reflist Category Ethnic groups in Russia Category Ancient Greek geography Category Ancient peoples of Georgia country Category Abazins Category Abkhazia Category Caucasus ka ru ... more details
Onesource date March 2009 nofootnotes date April 2009 ethnic group group Ubykh poptime popplace Turkey rels Sunni Islam langs Turkish language Turkish , Hakuchi Adyghe related other Circassians Circassian peoples The Ubykh are a group who spoke the Northwest Caucasian languages Northwest Caucasian Ubykh language , until other local languages displaced it and its last speaker died in 1992. The Ubykh used to inhabit an area just northwest of Abkhazia in the Caucasus . They may well have been inhabitants of the ancient state of Colchis . Outside of mythology, the probable ancestors of the Ubykh were mentioned in book IV of Procopius De Bello Gothico The Gothic War , under the name Bruchi , a corruption of the native term t a . The Ubykh were semi nomad ic horsemen, and their language contained a finely differentiated vocabulary related to horses and tack. Some Ubykh also practised favomancy and scapulomancy . However, the Ubykh gained more prominence in modern times. By 1864, during the reign of Tsar Alexander II of Russia Alexander II , the Russian conquest of the Northwestern Caucasus had been completed. The Adyghe people Adyghe and Abkhaz people Abkhaz were decimated, and the Abazins Abaza were partially driven out of the Caucasus. Faced with the threat of subjugation by the Russian army, the Ubykh, as well as Muhajir Caucasus other Muslim peoples of Caucasus , left their homeland en masse beginning on March 6, 1864. By May 21, the entire Ubykh nation had departed from the Caucasus. They eventually settled in a number of villages in western Turkey around the municipality of Manyas . In order to avoid discrimination, the Ubykh Elder administrative title elder s encouraged their people to assimilate into Turkish culture. Having abandoned their traditional nomadic culture, they became a nation of farmers. The Ubykh language was rapidly displaced by Turkish language Turkish and Adyghe language Circassian the last native speaker of Ubykh, Tevfik Esen , died in ... more details
The terms Peoples of the Caucasus and Peoples of the Caucasus Caucasian peoples indicate two main groups of people in Turkey Muhajir Caucasus Immigrants from North Caucasus Circassians including the Abkhaz people Abkhaz , Abazins , and Ubykh people Ubykh Following the end of Circassian insurgency in 1864 and as Muhajir Caucasus an exodus from North Caucasia, Circassian peoples had settled in the territory of Turkey. Circassian population in Turkey is concentrated on two belts of habitation first one from the province of Samsun Province Samsun to Hatay Province Hatay , the second from D zce Province D zce to anakkale Province anakkale , especially in Bal kesir Province Bal kesir . Dagestan Dagestani peoples They live in villages in the provinces like Bal kesir Province Bal kesir , Tokat Province Tokat and also scattered in other parts of the country. Majority among them are Lezgins , Caucasian Avars Avars are the second significant ethnic group. Kumyks are also present. Nakh peoples Nakh peoples Chechens and Ingush people Ingush live in the provinces Kahramanmara , Mardin Province Mardin , Sivas Province Sivas and Mu Province Mu . Ossetians in Turkey Ossetians This ethnic group is found in provinces Kars Province Kars and Yozgat Province Yozgat . Karachay They live in villages concentrated in Konya Province Konya and Eski ehir Province Eski ehir . Azeris in Turkey Azeris arrived in Turkey in several waves throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth century settling consistently in the eastern regions Erzurum Province Erzurum , A r Province A r , Kars Province Kars , as well as in Afyonkarahisar Province Afyon , Bursa Province Bursa , and Amasya Province Amasya . Autochthonous peoples of Transcaucasia speaking South Caucasian languages Laz people Laz They are found in the territory of former Lazistan sanjak and also in D zce Province D zce , Sakarya Province Sakarya , Kocaeli Province Kocaeli , Bart n Province Bart n . Georgians Muslim Georgians form the majo ... more details
Image Road to Pskhu.jpg thumb Mountain road to Pskhu Pskhu lang ab , Ps hwy lang ka , Pskhu lang ru , Pskhu is a village in the Sukhumi district of Abkhazia , a disputed region on the Black Sea coast. Its population was about 150 as of 2005 with ethnic Russians constituting a majority. The village is situated in the eponymous valley between the Greater Caucasus and Bzyb range s. The river Bzyb River Bzyb and several of its tributaries flow near the village. The valley was inhabited by the Abazins tribe which was one of the last peoples of the Caucasus to be Caucasian War conquered by Russia . After their subjection in 1864 almost all of them Muhajir Caucasus escaped to Turkey many perished at the Black sea coast from hunger and malaria , during the transportation to Ottoman Empire. ref , http sharpni.ru index.php?go Pages&in view&id 1 ref Pskhu was the only settlement in the Transcaucasia to be occupied by Wehrmacht during the Battle of the Caucasus of WWII in the autumn of 1942. ref cite book title Battle for the Caucasus last Grechko first Andrei authorlink Andrey Grechko year 2001 publisher University Press of the Pacific isbn 9780898753967 pages 143 144 http militera.lib.ru memo russian grechko aa 1 index.html whole book in Russian ref The small hydro small hydro electric power station supplies the energy to the village. Pskhu also has an airport with grass covered surface. There are no regular flights although it is still used occasionally by tourists and by the local inhabitants. Several dolmen s and the ruins of the mediaeval fortress remained near Pskhu. The nearby Inal kuba Pskhu Nykha mountain 1290 m is one of the Seven shrines of the Abkhaz people seven shrines of the Abkhaz people . coord 43 22 N 40 49 E region GE type city display title approximate References http ve.free travels.ru articles item.php?country abkhazia . . Sergey Vereshchagin. Abkhazia 2004 2005. Refl ... more details
unreferenced date February 2012 Coord 43 42 06 N 39 35 16 E display title Loo lang ru lang ady is a microdistrict of Lazarevsky City District of the city of Sochi , Krasnodar Krai , Russia , located convert 18 km mi sp us from the city center. Loo is one of the stations on the North Caucasus Railway and can be reached by the M27 highway Russia M27 highway . History The name Loo derives from the name of one of the greatest Abazins Abazin feudal families, Lau or Loo. Until 1864, Ubykhs from the Vardane, Krasnodar Krai Vardane community lived in the Loo river valley. On the sea coast was the aul of Ismail Barakai Dzepsh, one of the Ubykhs Ubykh leaders during the Caucasian War . Since 1872, the Loo river basin is the property of Vardane. The ruins of a medieval Abkhaz people Abkhaz temple, known as the Loo Temple, were preserved in the mountains near Loo, approximately convert 200 m ft sp us high. The northern wall of the temple, being built from limestone blocks, was preserved better than the remaining parts. The temple is convert 11 m ft sp us wide and convert 20 m ft sp us long, and the thickness of the temple walls exceeds convert 1 m ft sp us . According to the setting of the temple, it is similar to the temples of Pitsunda and Lykhny in Abkhazia . On August 7, 2008, a terrorist attack occurred on the beach of Loo, killing two people and injuring fifteen. Eight people were required to be hospitalized. The unidentified exploding device went off on the city beach at 10 10 Moscow Time . One of the people that died was a female resident of Kiev born in 1986, the other was a male resident of Rostov on Don born in 1977. Leisure in Loo In recent years, a large number of private hotels and cottages appeared in Loo. The level of service in these facilities is constantly increasing. The recreation center Akvaloo achieved wide popularity with its developed infrastructure which includes a water park, restaurants, and a nightclub. The night club Tornado also is situat ... more details
Infobox language name Abaza nativename , Abaza Byz wa ethnicity Abazins ref states Russia , Turkey region Karachay Cherkessia Karachay Cherkess Republic of Russia speakers 48,000 date 1995 2002 familycolor Caucasian fam1 Northwest Caucasian languages Northwest Caucasian fam2 Abazgi language Abazgi nation Russia n autonomous republic of Karachay Cherkess iso3 abq notice IPA File AbazaAlphabet.jpg thumb 150px right Abaza alphabet The Abaza language , Abaza Byz wa is a language of the Caucasus mountains in the Russia n Karachay Cherkessia Karachay Cherkess Republic by the Abazins . It consists of two dialects, the Ashkherewa dialect and the T ap anta dialect, which is the literary standard. Abaza is spoken by approximately 35,000 people in Russia, where it is written in a Cyrillic script Cyrillic alphabet , as well as another 10,000 in Turkey , where the Latin script is used. Abaza, like its relatives in the family of Northwest Caucasian languages , is highly agglutinative and has a large consonantal inventory 63 phonemes coupled with a minimal vowel inventory two vowels . It is very closely related to Abkhaz language Abkhaz , but it preserves a few phonemes which Abkhaz lacks, such as a voiced pharyngeal fricative . Work on Abaza has been carried out by W. S. Allen, Brian O Herin, and John Colarusso. Phonology class wikitable style text align center rowspan 2 colspan 2 rowspan 2 labial consonant Labial colspan 2 alveolar consonant Alveolar colspan 3 postalveolar consonant Post br alveolar colspan 3 velar consonant Velar colspan 3 uvular consonant Uvular colspan 2 pharyngeal consonant Pharyngeal rowspan 2 glottal consonant Glottal class small Central consonant central Lateral consonant lateral plain Palatalization pal. Labialization lab. plain Palatalization pal. Labialization lab. plain Palatalization pal. Labialization lab. plain Labialization lab ... of Turkey Category Karachay Cherkessia Category Abazins Category Endangered Caucasian languages ... more details
Abazins Karachay Cherkessia Ainu people Ainu some of them lived in southern Sakhalin and the Kuril ... 31.5 35.7 34.6 33.1 35.9 Chulyms Chulym 34.2 33.8 34.6 39.3 36.6 41.8 33.8 33.6 34.0 Abazins Abaza ..., signifying a decline of 2.5 times class wikitable sortable Group Total Urban Rural Abazins Abaza ... more details
people Ubykhs , Abazins , Nogais , Chechen people Chechens and in the later stages the Ingush people ... subdued the Circassians, tribe after tribe, with the Ubykhs, Abazins, Abkhaz and Balkars being last ... population was deported i.e., all except Ossete Muslims and Kabardins the modern Circassians and Abazins ... was beaten causing huge crowds of Abazins and Circassians in the capital to lead protests, became ... in Adygea 22 Circassian as of 2003 and Karachay Cherkessia 11 16 , depending on if the Abazins ..., which is defined as including all four of the census groups as well as the Abazins set ... and Abazins vs. Karachay in Karachay Cherkessia Russians vs. Kabardins vs. Balkars in Kabardino ... more details