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The Crimean Tatars From Soviet Genocide To Putins Conquest 1st Edition Brian Glyn Williams

  • SKU: BELL-5893948
The Crimean Tatars From Soviet Genocide To Putins Conquest 1st Edition Brian Glyn Williams
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The Crimean Tatars From Soviet Genocide To Putins Conquest 1st Edition Brian Glyn Williams instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.08 MB
Pages: 217
Author: Brian Glyn Williams
ISBN: 9780190494704, 9780190494711, 9780190494735, 0190494700, 0190494719, 0190494735
Language: English
Year: 2016
Edition: 1

Product desciption

The Crimean Tatars From Soviet Genocide To Putins Conquest 1st Edition Brian Glyn Williams by Brian Glyn Williams 9780190494704, 9780190494711, 9780190494735, 0190494700, 0190494719, 0190494735 instant download after payment.

The Russian annexation of the Crimea in March 2014 focused the world's attention on the Peninsula in ways not seen since the Crimean War. Thousands of Crimean Tatars clashed with pro-Russian militiamen in Simferopol, while Moscow has in turn stoked fears of jihadi terrorism among the overwhelmingly Muslim Tatars as retrospective justification for its invasion. The key thread in this book is the Crimean Tatars' changing relationship with their Vatan (homeland) and how this interaction with their natal territory changed under the Ottoman Sultans, Russian Tsars, Soviet Commissars, post-Soviet Ukrainian authorities and now Putin's Russia. Taking as its starting point the 1783 Russian conquest of the independent Tatar state known as the Crimean Khanate, Williams explains how the peninsula's native population, with ethnic roots among the Goths, Kipchak Turks, and Mongols, was scattered across the Ottoman Empire. He also traces their later emigration and the radical transformation of this conservative tribal-religious group into a modern, politically mobilized, secular nation under Soviet rule. Stalin's genocidal deportation of the Crimean Tatars in 1944 to Uzbekistan and their almost messianic return to their cherished 'Green Isle' in the 1990s are examined in detail, while the author's archival investigations are bolstered by his field research among the Crimean Tatar exiles in Uzbekistan and in their samozakhvat (self-seized) squatter camps and settlements in the Crimea.

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