TATARS

täˈtərz or Tartarstärˈtərz, Turkic-speaking peoples living primarily in Russia. They number about 5.5 million and are largely Sunni Muslims. The name is derived from Tata or Dada, a Mongolian tribe that inhabited present NE Mongolia in the 5th cent. First used to describe the peoples that overran parts of Asia and Europe under Mongol leadership in the 13th cent., it was later extended to include almost any Asian nomadic invader. Before the 1920s Russians used the name Tatar to designate the Azerbaijani Turks and several tribes of the Caucasus.

The Tatar Empire

The original Tatars probably came from E central Asia or central Siberia; unlike the Mongols, they spoke a Turkic language and were possibly akin to the Cumans or Kipchaks and the Pechenegs. They were nomads, moving across the vast Asian and Russian steppes with their families and their herds of cattle and sheep. After the conquests of the Mongol Jenghiz Khan, the Mongol and Turkic elements merged, and the invaders became known in Europe as Tatars. The Mongol invasion led by Batu Khan into Hungary and Germany in 1241 is also known as the Tatar invasion.

After the wave of invasion receded eastward, the Tatars continued to dominate nearly all of Russia, the Ukraine, and Siberia. Because of the gorgeous tents of Batu Khan, his followers were known as the Golden Horde. The empire of the Golden Horde—also known as the Kipchak khanate—controlled most of Russia either directly or through exacting tribute from the Russian princes. The Golden Horde adopted Islam as its religion in the 14th cent.

Disintegration of the Empire

Internal divisions, the expansion of Moscow, the invasion by Timur, and the appearance of the Ottoman Turks contributed to the disintegration of the Tatar empire in the late 15th cent. The independent khanates of Kazan, Astrakhan, Sibir, and Crimea emerged. In the 16th cent. Russia conquered the khanates of Kazan, Astrakhan, and Sibir (Siberia); the khans of Crimea became (1478) vassals of the Ottoman Empire. Nevertheless Siberia long continued to be known as Tartary and the Crimean domains as Little Tartary. The Crimean Tatars continued to harass the Ukraine and Poland and to exact tribute from the czars of Russia; they raided Moscow in 1572.

The majority of the Tatars in Russia had by that time reached a relatively high degree of civilization. They were generally settled, were skillful in agriculture and crafts, and had great centers of Muslim learning. Only minorities, such as the Nogais, who were subject to the Crimean khans, remained nomadic. Tatar political leaders, administrators, and traders had a great influence on Russian history. Many Russian noble families were of partly Tatar origin. The social and military organization of the Muscovite state was influenced by the institutions of the Tatars, and many Russian customs are traceable to them.

Recent History

In 1783 the last Tatar state, Crimea, was annexed to Russia. The Nogais were gradually pushed eastward into the Caucasus by the Russian settlers. The Crimean Tatars themselves—except for the large numbers that emigrated to Turkey at the time of the Russian conquest of Crimea and after the Crimean War—remained in the Crimea until World War II and formed the basis of the Crimean Autonomous SSR, founded in 1921. It was dissolved in 1945, and all Crimean Tatars (about 200,000 in 1939) were exiled to Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan for alleged collaboration with the Germans. In 1956 they regained civil rights and since the late 1980s many have returned to Crimea. Following the disintegration of the USSR, leaders of Tatarstan began to press the Russian government for increased powers. In a 1992 referendum, over 61% of the voters supported a "sovereign" Tatarstan.

Bibliography

See B. S. Izhbolden, Essays on Tatar History (1963).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Tatars
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books on: Tatars  - 1309 results

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TATARS OF THE CRIMEA CENTRAL ASIA BOOK SERIES Duke University Press Durham and London 1988 TATARS OF THE CRIMEA Their Struggle for Survival Original...paper Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Tatars of the Crimea. Central Asia book series Based on a colloquium...
...of the Tatar Autonomous Republic (or Tatarstan), stay as long as I wanted, and be welcomed...benefited immensely from the emergence in Tatarstan (though markedly less in the Russian...in the autonomous republic called for Tatarstan to be declared an independent, sovereign...
...the presence of ethnic Russians. Crimean Tatars, after nearly fifty years of exile, are returning...KHAKASS. ABAKAN TATAR. The Abakan Abaqan Tatars are part of the larger collection of Siberian Tatars * who originated with the Mongol * invasion...
...the National Archive of the Republic of Tatarstan (NART) and the N. I. Lobachevskii Library...NART Natsionalnyi Arkhiv Respubliki Tatarstan (National Archive of the Republic of Tatarstan), Kazan NRF MarNII Nauchno-Rukopisnyi...
...son Rostislav loses Galich 341 The Tatars invade Ryazan and Suzdalia 342 Mikhail seeks sanctuary in Kamenets 347 The Tatars raze Chernigov 349 Mikhails odyssey...345 14 Stones allegedly used by the Tatars in besieging Chernigov 350 15 A hoard...
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journal articles on: Tatars  - 75 results

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...minority groups (Russians and Crimean Tatars) are now in the process of adopting a...are Ukrainians, 10 percent are Crimean Tatars, and 3 percent are Belorussians, Armenians...from the resettlement of 250,000 Crimean Tatars who had been deported to Central Asia...
...foreign invaders (1992: 151), East adds the Tatars (1973: 2). The importance of this phenomenon...for his help in a campaign against the Tatars (1992: 151; see also Spinei, 1986:196...was also of interest to the Crimean Tatars, and in 1428 the Khan proposed an alliance...
...begin when the intervening khanate of Tatarstan had been subdued, which was achieved in 1552. In medieval times, Tatarstan was an extremely prosperous and militarily...Turkic-speaking and Islamic by religion, the Tatars have traditionally played a very important...
...anthropological and cultural evidence, the Kazan Tatars (as well as the Chuvash) are the heirs...The same may be said about the Kazan Tatars closest language relatives, the Bashkir...The present territory of the Republic of Tatarstan generally coincides with the territory...
...problematic nationalities -- Crimean Tatars, Armenians, and Jews -- may provide some clues. Both the Crimean Tatars and the Armenians in Azerbaijan have...state commission to examine the Crimean Tatars plight. Last fall the commission recommended...
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magazine articles on: Tatars  - 58 results

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...circulating in the press that Muslims in Tatarstan, an oil-producing Russian republic some...al Qaeda in Afghanistan. War-minded Tatars, it turned out, numbered only about seventy...Union, in 1991, the number of mosques in Tatarstan has grown from eighteen to more than...
...says Gousman Iskhakov, the mufti of Tatarstan. After living for three generations...This rebirth of Islam is obvious in Tatarstan, an autonomous republic of the Russian Federation, where half the population are Tatars, a muslim people since the 10th century...
...history and reclaim their story? The Krimsky Tatars call themselves the indigenous people...In 1783 there were an estimated 250,000 Tatars (or 90 percent of the population, as compared...of others fled to the Ottoman Empire. Tatars, however, continued to live on the Crimean...
...the Muslims who live in Russia. Most are Tatars, Turkic-speakers concentrated in a swathe...prevents them from acting as a bloc. Most Tatars subscribe to the moderate Hanafi school...differences in practice and belief. Younger Tatars who live in cities mix with non-Muslims...
...circulating in the press that Muslims in Tatarstan, an oil-producing Russian republic some...al Qaeda in Afghanistan. War-minded Tatars, it turned out, numbered only about seventy...Union, in 1991, the number of mosques in Tatarstan has grown from eighteen to more than...
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newspaper articles on: Tatars  - 21 results

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Perpetual plight of the Crimean Tatars by Cord Meyer On May 18...transformed the life of 250,000 Crimean Tatars whose ancestral home was the Crimean Peninsula...hour to gather food and possessions, the Tatars were herded onto freight trains and then...
Tatarstan explores culture, semi-independence by Jason...a quiet, snowy neighborhood in the ancient capital of Tatarstan, three generations of actors are performing an operetta...The ethnically mixed crowd reflects modern society in Tatarstan, a place that is trying to manage a full-scale revival...
...interfaith families. He and his family have been touring Israel in late December and sharing his observations with our readers. The Tatars were in the Old City of Jerusalem at midnight Saturday, as the 1900s met 2000. On a typical Friday night in Jerusalem after...
...Russias Muslim community is extremely diverse, including Volga Tatars, the myriad ethnicities of the North Caucasus and newly arrived...Muslims, however, are bucking that trend. The fertility rate for Tatars living in Moscow is six children per woman, Mr. Goble said...
...Mr Lipkas father had came to the UK during the Second WorldWar as a member of the Free Polish Army. His ancestors were Mongol Tatars who lived in Poland in the 14th century. While working for the Student Loan Company, he said he was nicknamed Osama BinLipka...
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encyclopedia articles on: Tatars  - 63 results

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TATARS ta t rz or Tartars tar t rz, Turkic-speaking peoples...tribes of the Caucasus. The Tatar Empire The original Tatars probably came from E central Asia or central Siberia; unlike...elements merged, and the invaders became known in Europe as Tatars. The Mongol invasion led by Batu Khan into Hungary and...
TARTARS see Tatars . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...Russian prince since the Mongol conquest who dared to wage open war on the Tatars . His great victory at Kulikovo (1380) made him a popular Russian hero, but the Tatars regained their overlordship by their successful surprise attack on Moscow...
...a movement back to the area of native Tatars who had been exiled to Central Asia in...Timurs destruction of the Golden Horde, the Tatars established (1475) an independent khanate...they became Turkish vassals, the Crimean Tatars were powerful rulers who became the scourge...
...Founded probably before Poland accepted Christianity, Sandomierz became the capital of a duchy in 1139. It was razed by the Tatars in 1241 and again in 1259, but was rebuilt (14th cent.) by Casimir III and became (16th cent.) a flourishing trade and cultural...
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