Islamic Peoples Of The Soviet UnionRoutledge, 5 sep. 2013 - 476 sidor First published in 1987. The aim of this historical and statistical handbook is to answer three basic questions about the Islamic peoples of the USSR: who they are, where they are and how many of them there are. It is convenient to speak of them as 'Soviet Muslims', grouping them all together under a single, collective heading, but they are in fact quite disparate. For this reason it was decided to treat each ethnic group individually here. |
Innehåll
Structure Citizenship and Nationality Economic Status Education | |
Glossary | |
Transcaucasia and Northern Caucasus | |
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Islamic Peoples of the Soviet Union: (with an Appendix on the Non-Muslim ... Shirin Akiner Ingen förhandsgranskning - 1983 |
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1970 Primary Total 1970 Urban Rural 1979 As mother Abazins Abkhazian Adygei Altais amongst andthe Autonomous Province Avar Azerbaidzhanis AzSSR Balkars Bashkir Bukhara bythe Caucasian Caucasus cent Central Asia century Chechen Cherkess Chuvash Crimean Tatars Cyrillic script Daghestan Daghestan ASSR Darghins dialects DISTRIBUTION Number Dungans Elsewhere in USSR enjoy full Soviet Ethnic composition full Soviet citizenship Gagauz Georgian Higher only Total Horde Ingush Islam itwas Kabardians KabardinoBalkar Karachais Karaims Karakalpak Kazakh Kazakhstan Khakass Khanate Kipchak Kirghiz knowledge of Russian Kumyks Kurds Latin script Lezghis Literacy In 1926 literary language live loanwords Mongol mosques mother tongue 1926 n.a. In rural n.a. Percentage Nogais NUMBER AND DISTRIBUTION official proceedings ofthe Ossetian Ownname Percentage claiming Persian Regional distribution Republic RSFSR Russian name Rutuls Scripts and alphabets Soviet Union subgroup Sunni Muslims Tabasarans Tadzhik theywere total literate tothe Transcaucasia tribes Tsakhurs Turkic Turkmen TurkSSR Tuvinian Uighur Urban/rural distribution Uzbek UzSSR Women Yakuts Yazidis