- ISBN 978-5-98390-066-0 Kropotkin,
Peter Alexeivitch; Bealby, John
Thomas (1911). "
Daghestan" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.)...
- The 1999 war in Dagestan, also
known as the
Dagestan incursions (Russian: Война в Дагестане), was an
armed conflict that
began when the Chechen-based Islamic...
- The
province of
Daghestan (Persian: ولایت داغستان, romanized: Velāyat-e
Dâghestân) was a
province of
Safavid Iran,
centred on the
territory of the present-day...
- Abdulvagidovich.
Endirey is an
ancient original Kumyk name. It was
adopted by
Daghestan in 1991,
replacing the
Soviet name
Andreyaul (Андрейаул).
Under Imperial...
- of the
winter snow in the
tight restricted mountain p****es of
northern Daghestan. The
Lezgian leader suffered a
crippling defeat in June 1736 and fled...
-
Terki fortress, Terka, or
Terek (originally
Shamkhalian Tyumen's fortress,
later Tersky redoubt,
sometimes mentioned as
Terskiy town) was a
Russian fortress...
- www.thefooddictator.com. "
DAGHESTAN - JewishEncyclopedia.com". www.jewishencyclopedia.com. The
Mountain Jews of
Daghestan,
Jewish Communities in Exotic...
- of) Khazaria, on the
western s**** of the
Caspian Sea, in what is now
Daghestan. At some
later date, it may have been
moved inland to some
areas near...
-
Lezgin territory in
Daghestan and is the
former seat of the
khanate of Kurin. The
Akhti dialect is
spoken in
southeastern Daghestan. The Kuba dialect,...
-
Russian security forces on a
militant Islamist group's
safehouses in
Daghestan. At
least four
Russian commandos and six
rebels died in the clashes, while...