- States. New-York: Routledge. p. 211. ISBN 978-1-57958-133-6. "Ossetian
Digorians. The
mystery of the
origin of iriston,
digoras and the
great tamerlane"...
-
Digor Ossetian (/ˈdɪɡər/; [дигорон ӕвзаг] Error: {{Langx}}:
transliteration text not
Latin script (pos 9) (help)
pronounced [digɔːrɔːn ɐvzɑːg]) also known...
-
possibly the
modern Ossetian Ir (adj. Iron),
spelled Irä or Erä in the
Digorian dialect. The
Rabatak inscription,
written in the
Bactrian language in the...
-
annexation of the
Digoria region into
Russia in 1771, the vast
majority of
Digorians professed Islam.
Previously in 1750.
representatives of the
Digor families...
- main
dialect groups:
Ironian (os. – Ирон) in
North and
South Ossetia and
Digorian (os. – Дыгурон) in
Western North Ossetia. In
these two
groups are some...
- (Turkic)
north of Sea of Azov
around Prymorsk 1/87 1.2%
Ossetian Digors Digorian (Scythian)
North Ossetia 1/127 0.8%
Yemeni Arabs Sanaani Arabic (Semitic)...
-
cattle as a
sacrifice among the celestials, and in
another he
endows the
Digorians with sheep,
goats and horses. But Fælværa was not
always favorable to...
- from it. The next
Salmon word to be
discovered was Ossetian: læsæg in the
Digorian dialekt of Ossetian,
which belongs to the
Iranian branch of Indo-European...
-
about the
descendants of
those Orstkhoy settlers. Tagaurians, Karabulaks,
Digorians, Balkars, Uruspians, Chegils, Khulams, Bezengi, part of
Chechens and Gumbets...
- Hory-Uacilla (Ossetian: Уацилла, Wacilla;
Digorian: Елиа, "Elijah") or Uacilla,
Wacilla for short, is the name of
Saint Elijah in
Ossetian folklore. It...