|
Visit our new topic page about
Tatars
|
Tatars
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
Tatars or Tartars , 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; their numbers there now exceed prewar levels. 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).
Author not available, TATARS.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
AID TO RUSSIA:DAVID J. KRAMER
Congressional Testimony; 6/9/1999; 4188 words
; ... anti- Russian attitude. Russia, of course, provides ample justification for such criticism with its behavior and rhetoric. With news reports about corruption appearing almost daily, Russia appears to many critics as a hopeless and helpless sinkhole undeserving ...
Read more
|
|
Soviets let Crimean Tatars return home
Chicago Sun-Times; 6/10/1988; 423 words
; ... right to return to Crimea, relocating to an area with few available jobs and a shortage of housing will be difficult. The Tass news agency said 2,500 Tatars had already been given permission to return to Crimea in the last year. Last July, hundreds of Crimean ...
Read more
|
|
Why "Globalization" Didn't Rescue Russia.
Policy Review; 2/1/2001; SAUNDERS, PAUL J.; 5453 words
; RUSSIA HAS NOT LIVED up to its hype. After nine years of independence and tens of billions of dollars in international assistance -- not to mention voluminous foreign advice -- Russia is far from having met the expectations of a bright future so widespread in 1991, the time of the fall of communism
Read more
|
|
Crimea's sad Tatars.(Tatars fight for their rights in Russia)(Brief Article)
The Economist (US); 5/6/2000; 571 words
; SIMFEROPOL A VISITOR walking up the shabby stairs of the Crimean Tatars' Mejlis (headquarters) in the regional capital of Simferopol sees four oddly assorted but telling pictures. The first and biggest is a faded portrait of Numan Celebicihan, certainly not one of Europe's best-known politicians
Read more
|
|
Gromyko to meet Tatar protesters
Chicago Sun-Times; 7/27/1987; 324 words
; MOSCOW Crimean Tatars who tested official patience with an overnight protest in Red Square won a promise Sunday of a meeting with President Andrei A. Gromyko but failed to gain an audience with Kremlin leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev. A delegation of about 20 Tatars will meet with Gromyko today. More
Read more
|
|
Russia's Relations with the EU after WTO Accession
Aussenwirtschaft; 12/1/2006; Lissovolik, Yaroslav; 3568 words
; Russia's accession to the WTO next year will set the stage for a more active dialogue with the EU on deeper integration and trade liberalisation. In this respect the formation of a FTA with the EU is a necessary, but not a sufficient condition for engaging Russia into an active dialogue on a broad
Read more
|
|
Is Russia different? (prospects for democracy and free enterprise)
The Economist (US); 6/15/1996; 2782 words
; RUSSIA is a special world a special type of civilisation. It is hostile in its soul to the West because of the West's extreme individualism, militant soullesssness, religious indifference [and] adherence to mass culture. These remarks obviously tell you a lot about the writer: Gennady Zyuganov,
Read more
|
|
Vladimir Putin's long, hard haul - What Russia wants.(Russia and the West)
The Economist (US); 5/18/2002; 2763 words
; Relations between Russia and the West have rarely been better. But what does it mean in practice? And can it last? FOR more than ten years, Russia's relations with the advanced countries of the western world have been a torrid and unsatisfying mixture of unrequited love, misunderstanding, dashed
Read more
|
|
Odom's russia: A forum.(response to William Odom's essay, "Realism About Russia ," in the Fall 2001 issue)
The National Interest; 12/22/2001; 9082 words
; ... wrong? (*.) Alexey K. Pushkov is a member of the Russian Council on Foreign and Defense Policies and the anchor of Postscript, a news and analysis program aired on Russian Television Channel 3. He also serves as a member of the editorial board of The National ...
Read more
|
|
Soviets Say Crimean Tatars May Return to Homeland;Commission Rejects Restoration of Autonomy
The Washington Post; 6/10/1988; David Remnick; 630 words
; ... to Crimea, relocating to an area with few available jobs and a shortage of housing will be extremely difficult. The official news agency Tass said 2,500 Tatars had already won permission to return to Crimea in the last year. Last July, hundreds of Crimean ...
Read more
|
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
Tatars
Junior Worldmark Encyclopedia of World Cultures
Tatars PRONUNCIATION: TAH-tars ALTERNATE NAMES: Tartars LOCATION ... and Ural mountains to eastern Siberia, and include the Tatars, Chuvash, Bashkirs, Sakha, Tuvans, Karachai, Khakass, Altays ... the largest Turkic group in the Russian Federation, the Tatars. Historically, the Tatars lived farther west ...
Read more
|
|
Tatar Republic
World Encyclopedia
... Autonomous region in the Russian Federation populated mainly by the Tatars . Tatar nationalism has its origins in the Crimean Autonomous Socialist ... the Soviet Union in 1991, many of the 300–400,000 exiled Tatars began to return to the Crimea.
Read more
|
|
Tatar language
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... speakers. Its speakers include less than half the population of Tatarstan in Russia, with the remainder scattered in enclaves across ... between a central group that includes the Tatar of most of Tatarstan and the literary language based on Kazan speech, a western ...
Read more
|
|
Tatar
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... ceramics, leather, cloth, and metal and have been well known as traders. Today there are about six million Tatars in all regions; they constitute about half the population of the Russian republic of Tatarstan. Tatar language . Tatar Tatar Tatar
Read more
|
|
Tatar Strait
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
Wide passage in the northwestern Pacific Ocean, connecting the Sea of Japan (East Sea) and the Sea of Okhotsk . Located between Sakhalin Island and Russia's Far East mainland, it is generally shallow, with depths less than 700 ft (210 m). Ice impedes its ports for half the year. Tatar Strait Tatar
Read more
|