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Kabardia, Cabardia o Kabarda (en ruso: Кабарда; en idioma cabardiano: Къэбэрдей), también conocida como Cherkesia de Piatigorsk, es una región histórica, situada en la actual república de Kabardia-Balkaria de la Federación Rusa, en el centro del Cáucaso septentrional. Debe su nombre al pueblo cabardino, emparentado con los ...
- Kabardia-Balkaria
Constitución de la República Kabardia-Balkaria: Eventos...
- Kabardia-Balkaria
By 1793 25000 Cossacks were settled along the Mozdok line. In the early nineteenth century a plague struck the north Caucasus which lasted until the 1830s. It is estimated that Kabardia lost 90% of its population, falling from 200,000 in 1790 to 30,000 in 1830. In 1804 there was a general uprising all over the north Caucasus.
Along with the Besleney tribe, they speak a distinctive dialect of the Circassian. Historically the Kabardians lived in Kabardia, a region of the north Caucasus. In modern times the Kabardians live mostly in the Russian republic of Kabardino-Balkaria, which partly corresponds to the historic region.
Kabardia, Cabardia o Kabarda, también conocida como Cherkesia de Piatigorsk, es una región histórica, situada en la actual república de Kabardia-Balkaria de la Federación Rusa, en el centro del Cáucaso septentrional. Debe su nombre al pueblo cabardino, emparentado con los adigué.
Kabardino-Balkaria includes two major ethnic communities, the Kabardins (Circassians), who speak a North-West Caucasian language, and the Balkars who speak a Turkic language. According to the 2021 Census, [31] Kabardins make up 57.1% of the republic's population, followed by Russians (19.8%) and Balkars (13.7%).
t. e. Yinal speaking Kabardian. Kabardian ( / kəˈbɑːrdiən /) [3] [a] also known as East Circassian, is a Northwest Caucasian language closely related to the Adyghe (West Circassian) language. Circassian nationalists reject the distinction between the two languages and refer to them both as "Circassian". [4] It is spoken mainly in parts of ...