- version,
ghalghai is
combination of two
Ingush words, "ghalā" (гIала, 'tower/fortress') and
derivational affix "-gha" (гIа) Therefore,
ghalghai is translated...
-
Ingush (Ingush: Гӏалгӏай, romanized:
Ghalghai,
pronounced [ˈʁəlʁɑj]),
historically known as Durdzuks,
Gligvi and Kists, are a
Northeast Caucasian ethnic...
-
Ghalghai Koashke or
Ghalghai Na'arghe (Ingush: ГӀалгӀай коашке, ГIалгIай наIарге) is the name of
ancient Ingush outposts in the ****a
valley of the Dzheyrakhsky...
- The
Georgian Military Road or
Georgian Military Highway also
known as
Ghalghaï Military Road, is the
historic name for a
major route through the Caucasus...
-
mainly due to the fact that the
Ingush commonly referred to
themselves as "
Ghalghaï",
while the
Chechens called themselves "Nakhchoy" or "Nokhchoy". The oldest...
-
Ingush towers (Ingush: гӀалгӀай гӀалаш/вӀовнаш, romanized:
ghalghai ghālash/vhóvnash) are
medieval Ingush stone structures used as residences,
signal posts...
-
Ingush (/ˈɪŋɡʊʃ/; Гӏалгӏай мотт,
Ghalghai mott,
pronounced [ˈʁəlʁɑj mot]) is a
Northeast Caucasian language spoken by
about 350,000 people,
known as the...
-
Khamkhins (Ingush: Хамхой, romanized: Khamkhoy), also
known as
Ghalghaï, were a
historical Ingush ethnoterritorial society,
which was
located in the upper...
- 16th-19th centuries. The
ethnonym corresponds to the self-name of the Ingush,
Ghalghaï.
Gligvi are
mentioned in
Georgian sources as an
ethnonym that
existed during...
-
throughout the
existence of
Ingush people from
Middle Ages to the
modern day.
Ghalghaï (Ingush: ГIалгIай, [ˈʁəlʁɑj]) is the self-name of the Ingush. Some scholars...