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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KabardiansKabardians - Wikipedia

    The Kabardians (Kabardian: Къэбэрдей адыгэхэр; Adyghe: Къэбэртай адыгэхэр; Russian: Кабардинцы) or Kabardinians are one of the twelve major Circassian tribes, representing one of the twelve stars on the green-and-gold Circassian flag.

  2. Kabardian (/ k ə ˈ b ɑːr d i ə n /) 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".

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KabardiaKabardia - Wikipedia

    In 1552 a Kabardian embassy reached Moscow. In 1556 Kabardians and Cossacks took the Turkish fort Temryuk on the Taman peninsula. When Astrakhan was captured in 1556 Russia had a base 250 miles northeast of Kabardia. A few Kabardians entered Russian service. Temryuk came to power some time before 1558 and in 1561 his daughter married Ivan the ...

  4. 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 ...

  5. Kabardian, the easternmost Circassian language, originated in and still has hundreds of thousands of speakers in what is today the Kabardino-Balkaria Republic within the Russian Federation, centered on its capital of Nalchik, though large numbers are now in diaspora in Turkey and elsewhere.

  6. For a few years, a language at the foot of the mighty Elbrus mountain in the Caucasus seemed to disprove the assumption that a language needs vowels. This language is Kabardian or East-Circassian. It is spoken by more than 500,000 people in the North Caucasus in Russia and by many more in other countries.

  7. Kabardian language, language spoken in Kabardino-Balkaria republic, in southwestern Russia, in the northern Caucasus. It is related to the Abkhaz, Abaza, Adyghian, and Ubykh languages, which constitute the Abkhazo-Adyghian, or Northwest Caucasian, language group.