- al-tawarikh
mentions Karluks as one of the
Oghuz (Turkmen) tribes. I. Kafesoğlu (1958)
proposes that Türkmen
might be the
Karluks'
equivalent of the Göktürks'...
-
Western China Karluks (also
known as Qarluqs), a
Turkic pastoral and
agricultural tribe in
Central Asia
Karluk yabghu, a
polity ruled by
Karluk tribes in...
- The
Karluk or
Qarluq languages are a sub-branch of the
Turkic language family that
developed from the
varieties once
spoken by
Karluks. Many
Middle Turkic...
- or Chigils. The
Karluks were a
nomadic people from the
western Altai Mountains who
moved to
Zhetysu (Semirechye). In 742, the
Karluks were part of an...
-
tribes of
karluks that
occupied the
territory between Altai and the
Eastern coast of Lake
Balkhash dates back to the 5th century. The
Karluks were part...
-
Karluk (Kal’uq or Kal’ut in Alutiiq; Russian: Карлук) is a census-designated
place (CDP) in
Kodiak Borough,
Kodiak Island, Alaska,
United States. The po****tion...
- in the
conflict between their v****als: the
Karluks, Karakhanids, and Khwarazm. In
early 1156, the
Karluks killed Ibrahim Tabghach Khan, the
Western Karakhanid...
- The last
voyage of the
Karluk,
flagship of the
Canadian Arctic Expedition of 1913–16,
ended with the loss of the ship in the
Arctic seas, and the subsequent...
- the Kara-Khanid
Khanate from the 9th–12th centuries, a
confederation of
Karluks, Chigils, Yagma, and
other tribes.
Uzbek (along with Uyghur) can be considered...
- to a
series of
intertribal confrontations in the
Eurasian steppes. The
Karluks attacked the
Oghuz Turks,
forcing them to
launch a
westward migration towards...