Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

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

    The Kipchaks or Qipchaqs, also known as Kipchak Turks or Polovtsians, were Turkic nomads and then a confederation that existed in the Middle Ages inhabiting parts of the Eurasian Steppe.

  2. Los kipchaks (denominados pólovtsy en ruso y ucraniano) eran una confederación tribal que se es estableció originalmente en la cuenca del río Irtish, posiblemente emparentados con los kimäks.

  3. Kipchak, a loosely organized Turkic tribal confederation that by the mid-11th century occupied a vast, sprawling territory in the Eurasian Steppe, stretching from north of the Aral Sea westward to the region north of the Black Sea. Some tribes of the Kipchak confederation probably originated near.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Originaria del kanato de Kimek, conquistaron junto con los cumanos gran parte de la estepa euroasiática durante la expansión túrquica de los siglos XI y XII, y fueron a su vez conquistados por las invasiones mongolas de principios del siglo XIII.

  5. Kimaks, Kipchaks, Oguzes, Petchenegs, Ugrians and other peoples and ethnic groups of the multi-ethnic Kimak Kaganate lived peacefully and prosperous. In the beginning of the 11th century the Kimaks and Kipchaks pushed the Oguzes to the south, Petchenegs to the west, Karluks to the southeast, and the Ugrians to the north into the ...

  6. 15 de abr. de 2024 · Fergana Kipchaks were formed on the basis of «fragments» of different Kazakh tribes that fled from the Dzungar invasion in 1722 and were called «Kipchaks» by the locals (according to the traditional name of Kazakhstan — Desht-i Kipchak).

  7. The Kipchak languages (also known as the Kypchak, Qypchaq, Qypshaq or the Northwestern Turkic languages) are a sub-branch of the Turkic language family spoken by approximately 30 million people in much of Central Asia and Eastern Europe, spanning from Ukraine to China.