TARTARS - ترجمة إلى العربية
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TARTARS - ترجمة إلى العربية

HISTORICAL REGION IN NORTHERN AND CENTRAL ASIA
Tartars; Tatary; Tartaria; Tataria; East Tartary; East or Maritime Tartary; Maritime Tartary; Great Tartary; Tartaria Magna; Great Tartaria; Greater Tartary; Tartar language; Tartarian Empire
  •  Map of independent Tartary (in yellow) and [[Chinese Tartary]] (in violet), in 1806.
  • Tartaria map and description by [[Giovanni Botero]] from his "Relationi universali" ([[Brescia]], 1599).

TARTARS         

ألاسم

حَفْر

الصفة

سَرِيع اَلِانْفِعَال ; سَريعُ الغَضَب

Tatar         
  • [[Khan's Palace]] in Bağçasaray
  • [[Orkhon inscriptions]] in [[Old Turkic]]
  • Charles X Gustav]] in a skirmish with Tatars near [[Warsaw]] during the [[Second Northern War]] of 1655–1660
  • Contemporary distribution of [[Kipchak languages]]: <span style="background-color:#FF0000;color:white;">&nbsp;Kipchak–Bolgar&nbsp;</span>
<span style="background-color:#00B927;color:white;">&nbsp;Kipchak–Cuman&nbsp;</span>
<span style="background-color:#FF8400;color:white;">&nbsp;Kipchak–Nogay and Kyrgyz–Kipchak&nbsp;</span>
  • Share of Tatars in regions of Russia, 2010 census
  • Siberian Tatar folklore group Naza from Omsk Oblast
  • Szigetvár campaign]] showing Ottoman troops and [[Crimean Tatars]] as vanguard
  • [[Lithuanian Tartars of the Imperial Guard]] at the charge, by [[Richard Knötel]]
  • Battle of Warsaw]] in 1656 Tatars fought with the Poles against the Swedes.
  • Abandoned houses in [[Qarasuvbazar]]
  • The areas of settlement of Tatars in Russia according to the National Population Census 2010
  • Tat and Yaliboylu Crimean Tatars
  • Volga Tatars in traditional clothing
  • Steppe Crimean Tatars
UMBRELLA TERM FOR DIFFERENT TURKIC ETHNIC GROUPS IN ASIA AND EUROPE
Tatar (word); Tatar peoples; Tatar nationality; Tatar (people); Tatar people; Tatar; Tatar Turks; Татарлар; Astrakan Tatars; Tatarian; Tatars (east Asians); Tartar people; Tatar Australians
تتاري أو تتري جـ تتر اللغة التتارية
TATAR         
  • [[Khan's Palace]] in Bağçasaray
  • [[Orkhon inscriptions]] in [[Old Turkic]]
  • Charles X Gustav]] in a skirmish with Tatars near [[Warsaw]] during the [[Second Northern War]] of 1655–1660
  • Contemporary distribution of [[Kipchak languages]]: <span style="background-color:#FF0000;color:white;">&nbsp;Kipchak–Bolgar&nbsp;</span>
<span style="background-color:#00B927;color:white;">&nbsp;Kipchak–Cuman&nbsp;</span>
<span style="background-color:#FF8400;color:white;">&nbsp;Kipchak–Nogay and Kyrgyz–Kipchak&nbsp;</span>
  • Share of Tatars in regions of Russia, 2010 census
  • Siberian Tatar folklore group Naza from Omsk Oblast
  • Szigetvár campaign]] showing Ottoman troops and [[Crimean Tatars]] as vanguard
  • [[Lithuanian Tartars of the Imperial Guard]] at the charge, by [[Richard Knötel]]
  • Battle of Warsaw]] in 1656 Tatars fought with the Poles against the Swedes.
  • Abandoned houses in [[Qarasuvbazar]]
  • The areas of settlement of Tatars in Russia according to the National Population Census 2010
  • Tat and Yaliboylu Crimean Tatars
  • Volga Tatars in traditional clothing
  • Steppe Crimean Tatars
UMBRELLA TERM FOR DIFFERENT TURKIC ETHNIC GROUPS IN ASIA AND EUROPE
Tatar (word); Tatar peoples; Tatar nationality; Tatar (people); Tatar people; Tatar; Tatar Turks; Татарлар; Astrakan Tatars; Tatarian; Tatars (east Asians); Tartar people; Tatar Australians

ألاسم

تَتَارِيّ ; تَتَرِيّ

تعريف

tatar
<human language> A Turkic language spoken by about five million Tatars in Russia, Ukraine, Turkey and elsewhere; the official language of the Republic of Tatarstan (Russian Federation). language codes: tt, tat. (2006-12-11)

ويكيبيديا

Tartary

Tartary (Latin: Tartaria; French: Tartarie; German: Tartarei; Russian: Тартария, romanized: Tartariya) or Tatary (Russian: Татария, romanized: Tatariya) was a blanket term used in Western European literature and cartography for a vast part of Asia bounded by the Caspian Sea, the Ural Mountains, the Pacific Ocean, and the northern borders of China, India and Persia, at a time when this region was largely unknown to European geographers.

The active use of the toponym (place name) can be traced from the 13th to the 19th centuries. In European sources, Tartary became the most common name for Central Asia that had no connection with the real polities or ethnic groups of the region; until the 19th century, European knowledge of the area remained extremely scarce and fragmentary. In modern English-speaking tradition, the region formerly known as Tartary is usually called Inner or Central Eurasia. Much of this area consists of arid plains, the main nomadic population of which in the past was engaged in animal husbandry.

Ignorance surrounding Tartary's use as a place name has spawned conspiracy theories including ideas of a "hidden past" and "mud floods". Such theories assert that Tartary (or "Tartaria") was a lost civilization with advanced technology and culture. This ignores the well-documented history of Asia, which Tartary refers to. In the present day, the Tartary region covers a region spanning from central Afghanistan to northern Kazakhstan, as well as areas in present Mongolia, China and the Russian Far East in "Chinese Tartary".

أمثلة من مجموعة نصية لـ٪ 1
1. There you find Russians, Americans, Georgians, Tartars, Uzbeks, Kazakhs, Mongols.
2. Indiscriminate slaughter is proceeding in which Armenians, Tartars, Persians and Kurds are all engaged.
3. Ibn Taymiyyah fought against the Tartars who attacked the Muslim world and almost reached Damascus.
4. In the early 1'40s, entire populations of "anti–Soviet" peoples – including Tartars, Chechens, Ingush, Volga Germans and Koreans – were dumped in the Kazakh steppes.
5. A decade earlier its native population of Crimean Tartars had been deported by Joseph Stalin to Uzbekistan for allegedly cooperating with the Germans during the war.