- army, some
Karachays migrated to the
Ottoman Empire although most
Karachays remain in
modern territory. [need
quotation to verify] All
Karachay officials...
-
representing the
indigenous Caucasian-Turkic
Karachay people and the
Cherkess or Circ****ian people.
Karachays form the
largest ethnic group at
around 44%...
- Lake
Karachay (Russian: Карача́й),
sometimes spelled Karachai or Karachaj, was a
small lake in the
southern Ural
Mountains in
central Russia. Starting...
- with the
Karachays from
Karachay-Cherkessia and have
strong lingual similarities with
Kumyks from Dagestan.
Sometimes Balkars and
Karachays are referred...
- its speakers, is a
Turkic language spoken by the
Karachays and
Balkars in Kabardino-Balkaria and
Karachay–Cherkessia,
European Russia, as well as by an immigrant...
- 20,000
Karachay horses in
Karachay-Cherkessia. The
Karachay horse was a
charger and a
draft horse,
first for the
Karachays, and then for the
Cossack military...
- the
Karachays (Russian: Депортация карачаевцев),
codenamed Operation Seagull, was the
Soviet government's
forcible transfer of the
entire Karachay po****tion...
- Look up
Karachay-Cherkessia in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Karachay may
refer to:
Karachay, a
member of the
Karachays, an
indigenous people of the...
- 8%)
Karachays (1.6%)
Nogais (0.4%) Gr****s (0.4%)
Ossetians (0.4%) The
Soviet census of 1970 recorded:
Russians (74.5%) Circ****ian (6.4%)
Karachays (6.2%)...
-
established connections with the
Karachay people. In 1842,
Russian officials reported concerns about the
Karachays’
intent to
support Haji
Muhammad if...