Kumyks
Kumyks (Kumyk: Къумукълар, romanized: Qumuqlar, Russian: Кумыки) are a Turkic ethnic group living in Dagestan, Chechnya and North Ossetia. They are the largest Turkic people in the North Caucasus.
Kumyk: къумукълар, qumuqlar | |
---|---|
Abdul-Wahab son of Mustafa — a prominent Kumyk architect of the 19th century pictured wearing a traditional Caucasian papakha and chokha. | |
Total population | |
near 600,000 | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Russia | 565,830 |
Turkey | 10,000 |
Uzbekistan | 1,200 (2016) |
Ukraine | 718 (2001) |
Kazakhstan | 481 (2009) |
Belarus | 360 (2009) |
Latvia | 33 (2020) |
Languages | |
Kumyk language | |
Religion | |
Sunni Islam | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Crimean Tatars, Balkars, Karachays, Karapapakhs |
They traditionally populate the Kumyk plateau (northern Dagestan and north-eastern Chechnya), lands bordering the Caspian Sea, areas in North Ossetia, Chechnya and along the banks of the Terek river. They speak the Kumyk language, which until the 1930s had been the lingua-franca of the Northern Caucasus.
Territories where Kumyks have traditionally lived, and where their historical state entities used to exist, are called Kumykia (Kumyk: Къумукъ, Qumuq). All of the lands populated by Kumyks were once part of the independent Tarki Shamkhalate.
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