Islamic Peoples of the Soviet Union: With an Appendix on the Non-Muslim Turkic Peoples of the Soviet Union : an Historical and Statistical HandbookKPI, 1986 - 462 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
General information | 16 |
European USSR and Siberia | 55 |
Transcaucasia and Northern Caucasus | 105 |
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1926 Census figures 1979 As mother Abazins Abkhazian Adygei Altais amongst Arabic script Autonomous Province Avar Azerbaidzhan SSR Azerbaidzhani AzSSR Baku Balkars Bashkir Books and pamphlets Bukhara Caucasus Census figures Population cent Central Asia Chechen Cherkess Chuvash Crimean Tatars Cyrillic script Daghestan Daghestan ASSR Darghins dialects DISTRIBUTION Number Dungans Elsewhere in USSR enjoy full Soviet full Soviet citizenship Gagauz Georgian Golden Horde Ingush Islam Kabardians Karachais Karaims Karakalpak Kazakh Kazakh SSR Kazakhstan Khakass Khanate Kirghiz knowledge of Russian Kumyks Kurds Laks LANGUAGE The national Latin script Lezghi listed separately Literacy In 1926 literary language live loan-words majority medium of instruction Mongol mosques mother tongue 1926 n.a. In rural national language Nogais NUMBER AND DISTRIBUTION Ossetian Percentage claiming Persian Republic RSFSR Russian name Russian rule Rutuls Scripts and alphabets Shi'i Soviet Union Sunni Muslims Tabasarans Tadzhik Transcaucasia tribes Tsakhurs Turkic Turkmen TurkSSR Tuvinian Uighurs Urban/rural distribution Uzbek SSR UZSSR Volga Yakut