-
Mordvins (also
Mordvinians, Mordovians; Russian: мордва, romanized: Mordva, lit. 'Mordvins'; no
equivalents in
Moksha and Erzya) is an
official term used...
- The
Mordvinic languages, also
known as the Mordvin,
Mordovian or
Mordvinian languages (Russian: мордовские языки,
mordovskiye yazyki), are a
subgroup of...
- born 2
March 1969) is a Kazakhstani-born
former professional boxer of
Mordvinian origin, who
competed from 1995 to 2013, and held the WBC
heavyweight title...
- The
Mordovian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (Russian: Мордовская Автономная Советская Социалистическая Республика,
Mordovskaya Avtonomnaya Sovetskaya...
-
Qaratays (Karatais, Karatays) are a
Mordvinian ethnic group in Kamsko-Ustyinsky District,
Tatarstan around the
village of
Mordovsky Karatay. They speak...
- 1765–1838), a port-city
tailor and a
former serf of
possible Chuvash,
Mordvinian,
Russian or
Kalmyk descent, who came from
Sergachsky District, Nizhny...
-
Mordovian Republican United Museum of
Regional Studies and the
Museum of
Mordvinian Culture in Saransk. The
National Library of the
Republic of
Mordovia is...
- 1977. pp. 59 (map 2), 57, 60. Deviatkina, Tatiana. "Images of
Birds in
Mordvinian Mythology". In: Folklore:
Electronic Journal of
Folklore Vo. 48 (2011)...
- 2
Uzbeks 12,353 3,604 1,818 5,996 0
Chuvash 10,593 2,268 564 7,636 1
Mordvinians 9,331 1,473 646 7,168 0
Turks 8,844 7,923 133 567 0
Lithuanians 7,207...
- She
received the
Golden Gramophone Award in 2008. She was born in the
Mordvinian village of
Gorki in Tatarstan. Her father,
Nikita Mikhailovich Kadyshev...