WikiPedia definition of "dagestani"
Dagestani nationalism, however, rested on very unstable foundations, as the republic was (and is) extremely multiethnic, with many of its regions being recent additions, and even ...
>>
Kommunist, a Lezgin language newspaper in Dagestan ASSR, Soviet Union. It was published in Makhachkala 3 times a week. The newspaper had several different names.
>>
The Northeast Caucasian languages, also called Nakh (o)-Dag (h) estanian, constitute a language family spoken in the Russian republics of Dagestan, Chechnya, Ingushetia, northern ...
>>
Georgian cuisine refers to the cooking styles and dishes with origins in the nation of Georgia and prepared by Georgian people around the world. The Georgian cuisine is very specific ...
>>
Khalilov was unknown to Dagestani security forces prior to 1998. In the Soviet times he had served as a border guard along the border with Mongolia; after that, he wae was a co-owner ...
>>
Mountain Jews, or Juhuri, are Jews of the eastern Caucasus, mainly of Azerbaijan and Dagestan. They are also known as Caucasus Jews, Caucasian Jews, or less commonly East Caucasian ...
>>
... Omeljan Pritsak and some other scholars, this Avar invasion of the Caucasus resulted in the establishment of the Avar ruling dynasty in Sarir, a Christian state in the Dagestani ...
>>
The Balkars (Karachay-Balkar: sg. малкъар - malqar, pl. малкъарла - malqarla) are a Turkic people of the Caucasus region, the titular population of Kabardino-Balkaria.
>>
The music of Dagestan includes both the Dagestani Philharmonic Orchestra and the State Academic Dance Ensemble. Gotfrid Hasanov, said to be the first professional composer from ...
>>
Furthermore, the Dagestani mercenaries were frequently used by rival Georgian kings and princes against each other. In the early 1720s, the Georgian king Vakhtang VI intensified his ...
>>