Advanced Search

Cancel
Found: 34 Piece 0.001 sn
- You can use the 'AND' / 'OR' / 'NOT' option for the things you want to add or remove.
- You can return to normal search by pressing the Cancel button.
Filters
Filters
Found: 34 Piece 0.001 sn
Faculty / Institute [1]
Language [1]
Index Type 2 [2]
Department [1]
National/International [2]
Access to Files

İktidarı Meşrulaştırmada Soy Mitolojisinin Yeri “Hokand Hanlığı Dönemi Örneği”

Ceenbek ALIMBAYEV

Dünya tarihinde iktidarı meşrulaştırma her zaman güncel ve aynı zamanda ciddi meselelerden biri olarak bilinir. Her iktidar sahibi saltanatını halkın tanıması, ondan sonraki çocuklarına miras olarak bırakmayı kanunlaştırma konusunda çabalamıştır. Bu yönde girişimler Moğol işgalinden sonra XV-XVIII. yüzyıl arasında Orta Asya’da hüküm süren devletlerin çoğunda ( günümüzde de bazı devletlerde mevcuttur) da kendini göstermektedir. O dönemde dahi devlet başkanı (padişah, han, emir, knez vb.) halkın kendi içindeki birliğini, devletin dış politikasını düzene koymak için bir takım mefkureye ihtiyaç du ...More

Access to Files

A Wooly Way? Fiber technologies and cultures 3,000-years-ago along the Inner Asian Mountain Corridor

Kubatbek TABALDİYEV

Wool-focused economies yielded a pastoralist materiality that visibly shaped the lived experiences of Central Asian populations today. In this paper, we investigate the earlier application of fibers through a key mountain corridor for social interactions during Prehistory. We focus on the site of Chap 1 located in the highlands of the Tien Shan Mountains of Kyrgyzstan where researchers have found a complex agropastoral subsistence culture was established from at least ca. 3,000 BCE. The perishable materials that would have accompanied the early spread of cultural and technological traditions r ...More

Access to Files

Erratum to: 137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes (Nature, (2018), 557, 7705, (369-374), 10.1038/s41586-018-0094-2)

Alpaslan AŞIK | Kubatbek TABALDİYEV | Künbolot AKMATOV

Correction to: Nature https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0094-2, published online 09 May 2018.In this Article, Angela M. Taravella and Melissa A. Wilson Sayres should have been listed as authors, with the affiliation: School of Life Sciences, Center for Evolution and Medicine, The Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA. These authors provided an overview of major Y-chromosomal haplogroups in Supplementary Information Section 8. The author list and Author Information section have been corrected online.

Access to Files

The Kok-Tash underground mausoleum in north-eastern Kyrgyzstan: the first-ever identified Qara Khitai elite tomb?

Kubatbek TABALDİYEV | Künbolot AKMATOV

The Qara Khitai or Western Liao dynasty (1124-1218) is one of the most fascinating polities in medieval Eurasia, but also one of the least documented in terms of both literary sources and material culture. Founded by Khitan refugees who escaped from North China when the Jurchen Jin dynasty (1115-1234) vanquished the Khitan Liao dynasty (907-1125), the Qara Khitai soon established a multicultural empire in Central Asia, combining Khitan, Chinese, and Muslim elements. The Buddhist Qara Khitai ruled over their mostly Muslim population in rare harmony until the rise of Chinggis Khan (r. 1206-1227) ...More

Access to Files

Above ground and underground-An integrated approach of the burial mounds within the Suusamyr plateau, Kyrgyzstan

Kubatbek TABALDİYEV | Künbolot AKMATOV

Archaeological research in the Kyrghyz Tian Shan Mountains using state-of-the-art technology such as geophysical investigations and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) is still in its early stages. The current investigations have shed light on the complexity of burial grounds in the Suusamyr Plateau, where over 951 structures have withstood the test of time and now serve as a silent expression of ancient civilizations. This study utilized an integrative approach that combined UAV data and geophysical prospection to map surface and subsurface features. Of the identified structures, 68.2 are burial ...More

Access to Files

Prospects of continuity and change of China's role in Central Asia: Case studies of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan

Yunus Emre GÜRBÜZ

This study evaluates the prospects for continuity and change of People's Republic of China's role in Central Asia in relation with the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). There have been significant global, regional, and national events between 2020 and 2022, which might alter China's position in Central Asia. The possibility of change can be estimated by examining the developments so far. China's position in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan are taken here as examples for China's role. The One Belt One Road initiative, renamed in 2016 as the BRI, presents multiple trade routes, some of which pass through ...More

Access to Files

Ancient Turkic Stone Statues at Tuura-Suu, Kyrgyzstan

Kubatbek TABALDİYEV

Fully and partially preserved ancient Turkic stone statues discovered by the Kyrgyz archaeologists at Tuura-Suu, Issyk-Kul Region, Kyrgyzstan, are described with reference to the burial practices of the ancient Turks during the time when the Western Turkic and Tyurgesh states existed in the Tien Shan and Zhetysu. On the basis of archaeological parallels to the artifacts shown on the statues, their chronology and cultural attribution are assessed, and their diagnostic features are specified. The completely preserved statue showing a figure in man's clothes and with weapons may be that of a high ...More

Access to Files

Weaponry, Adornments, and Garment Accessories from the Krasnyi Stroitel Site in the Chuy Valley of Kyrgyzstan

Kubatbek TABALDİYEV

The article analyzes the findings from the destroyed site of Krasnyi Stroitel located on the bank of the Ala-Archa River at the northern outskirts of the city of Bishkek, in the Chuy Valley, Kyrgyzstan. In this area, now taken by a city dump, local school students accidentally found some valuable artifacts, including objects of gold and silver. The analysis of the findings allows determination of their function, time of existence, and cultural affiliation. These objects were part of the adornments and garment accessories of noblemen belonging to ancient nomadic tribes—the carriers of the Kenko ...More

Access to Files

Composite Bows from Uch-kurbu in Kyrgyzstan

Kubatbek TABALDİYEV

The article addresses the topic of composite bows from nomadic sites in Tien Shan and Zhetysu. Horn plates from bows discovered in 2008–2009 at Uch-Kurbu on the Tosor River, the Issyk-Kul Depression (Kyrgyzstan), are described and analyzed. The original design of the wooden core of the bow and the location of horn plates thereon are reconstructed. Based on our earlier classification of weapons, these are composite bows of the Xiongnu-Xianbei period. Two subtypes are identified, based on the design of plates at the ends of the bow. Evidently, composite bows with end, medio-lateral, and medio-fr ...More

Access to Files

Kyrgyzstan: In search for stability

Yunus Emre GÜRBÜZ

In the last two decades, Kyrgyzstan has searched for stability while swinging on a pendulum between democratic reforms and suppression of democracy. Political changes in Kyrgyzstan started with the liberal democratic promises of President Akayev in 1990 and President Bakiyev in 2005, but they both ended with disillusionment. The state's capacity had to be reestablished in the post-Soviet period, which was sought to be institutionalized by authoritarian measures. The failure of the authoritarian path proves that the people of Kyrgyzstan are more open to a parliamentary democracy, where the mult ...More

Access to Files

“Ucha” tradition in Kyrgyz culture and its Historical- Ethnographic counterparts = Kırgızlarda “Uça” Geleneği ve Bu Geleneğin Tarihî-Etnografik yönden benzerleri = Обычай «Уча» у кыргызов. Аналоги данного обычая у других народов

Olcobay KARATAYEV

There is an old Kyrgyz tradition named the “ucha tartuu” i.e. “sacral bone offer” which has been held by the Kyrgyzs since ancient times at feasts and receptions of distinguished, respected guests. This is the tradition of offering horseflesh, exactly a sacrum to the eldest guest of distinction or a very respected man. The sacrum is made from horseflesh. The Kyrgyzs slaughter a horse to show their respect to guests, cut it into pieces and then boil them. This ancient “ucha” i.e. sacrum tradition has been held and known as “nemat” among the Turkic-language ethnicities of Southern Siberia (Kuu- ...More

Access to Files

One Migration, Two Different Historiographies: The Migration of the Uzbeks and Kazakhs in the 15th Century = Bir Göç iki Farklı Tarih Yazımı: Özbeklerin ve Kazakların On Beşinci Yüzyıldaki Göçü

Yunus Emre GÜRBÜZ

History education has a crucial role in training the future generations. Each nation-state teaches history according to necessities of forming national identities for its citizens. After the dissolution of the USSR, following the fail demise of the common identity, New Soviet Man, newly independent Central Asian states moved to find distinct national identities for their citizens. During the Soviet period the historiography was based on territoriality within the driven borders. The common past, however, cannot be delimited to contemporary borders. Kazakh and Uzbek peoples consist of some simil ...More

Our obligations and policy regarding cookies are subject to the TR Law on the Protection of Personal Data No. 6698.
OK

creativecommons
Bu site altında yer alan tüm kaynaklar Creative Commons Alıntı-GayriTicari-Türetilemez 4.0 Uluslararası Lisansı ile lisanslanmıştır.
Platforms