Academic literature on the topic 'Caucasus – History'

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Journal articles on the topic "Caucasus – History"

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Main, Steven J. "The Caucasus. A History." Europe-Asia Studies 67, no. 4 (April 21, 2015): 685–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09668136.2015.1033184.

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Krylov, A. "South Caucasus: Stages of Post-Soviet History." Russia and New States of Eurasia, no. 2 (2021): 147–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.20542/2073-4786-2021-2-147-162.

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The post-Soviet history of the South Caucasus is divided into three stages of different duration, format and character. The first stage (1991-2008) began after the collapse of the USSR and continued until the war in South Ossetia in August 2008. At this time, the formation of independent states took place, the vectors of foreign policy of the new states were determined. The second stage of the post-Soviet history of the South Caucasus (2008-2020) began after a five-day war and Russia's recognition of the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Russia has strengthened its position in the South Caucasus by building a long-term system of response to potential threats in the southern direction. The Georgian factor has ceased to play an important role, the Armenian direction has become the main one in the policy of the United States and the collective West. To reformat the South Caucasus in American interests, “football diplomacy” was used, and then the second Karabakh war followed. After the end of the second Karabakh war, the third stage of the post-Soviet development of the South Caucasus began. At the end of 2020, Moscow managed to stabilize the situation and bring a contingent of Russian peacekeepers into the conflict zone. Further prospects for the development of the South Caucasus depend on many contradictory factors. The more tense the international situation and Russia's relations with the United States and the collective West will be, the higher the likelihood of the outbreak of new wars and conflicts in the South Caucasus.
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HÜSEYNOV, Gurban. "KARACHAI-BALKAR IN RUSSIAN PERSECUTION." SOCIAL SCIENCE DEVELOPMENT JOURNAL 8, no. 35 (January 15, 2023): 50–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.31567/ssd.819.

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Karachai-Balkar is one of the major Turkish tribes living in the Caucasus region. This people whose history is full of exile and migration lived at first under Ottoman reign and then enters under Russian domination. After they were suppressed by Russians during Ottoman reign, Russian people who captured Caucasia, forced Turkic tribes to escape as they oppessed to Russian people. Hasavk war was the keywar for the Russian to seize the Caucasus region. At the beginning of the war Karachai-Balkar resisted to Russians, later they ceased fired but even so they had their share of Russian cruelty. Karachai-Balkar who fought to survive under Russian pressure began to migrate to Anatolia. The rest of the these people who stayed in the Caucasia were accused of treason and exiled during the World War II. A gradual migration to Anatolia from the Caucasus region started and Karachai-Balkar lived a comfortable life, they didn’t forget their own culture and traditions and have maintained these traditions until today. Many studies have been conducted on the subject before. The purpose of this research is to examine Hasavk War which was a significant milestone in Karachai-Balkar history and tham as sacresan dexiles Russian carried out after the war through compiling studies and articles written on this subject.
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Manafi, Mojtaba, Mehran Arian, Seyed Hashem Tabatabaee Raeesi, and Ali Solgi. "Tethys Subduction History in Caucasus Region." Open Journal of Geology 03, no. 03 (2013): 222–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojg.2013.33026.

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Sosranova, Zalina V., and Zalina M. Basieva. "On the History of the Anglo-Russian Confrontation in the Western Caucasus." Vestnik of North-Ossetian State University, no. 4 (December 25, 2021): 66–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.29025/1994-7720-2021-4-66-72.

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The article examines the scale and methods of the anti-Russian military-political activity of British emissaries in the Western Caucasus in the first half of the 19th century. The scientific novelty lies in the fact that for the first time in the work the intelligence activity of British “traveling” agents in the Western Caucasus is subjected to a special study, as an independent, gaining strength way of fighting in international contradictions for the Caucasus. The relevance of the topic of the proposed article seems to us indisputable due to the incompleteness of international rivalry and the eternal Eastern question. Russian Empire in the late 20s — early 30s XIX century. took possession of all legal rights to the North-West Caucasus and outlets to the Black Sea. With its confident military successes and new territorial accessions, Russia threw a serious challenge to the European powers, and especially England, the dominant power on the European continent at that time. One of the most important tasks of England is to nullify all the achievements of Russia in Turkey and prevent its consolidation in the territory of the Western Caucasus. England, adhering to the favorite method of “raking in the heat with someone else’s hands”, and in Circassia is testing its effectiveness. Since the 30s. XIX century. Numerous British agents flooded the Caucasus, turning the Circassians against Russia. The Black Sea coast of the Caucasus has become a place of uninterrupted supply of weapons to the mountaineers. As a result of the work, the author comes to the conclusion that the sources considered in the work can represent a scientific basis for confirming the involvement of Britain in anti-Russian agitation in the Western Caucasus. The uninterrupted supply of weapons to the highlanders organized by British agents helped to maintain military tension and a fighting spirit in Circassia.
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Cornell, Svante E. "The Caucasus in Limbo." Current History 110, no. 738 (October 1, 2011): 283–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/curh.2011.110.738.283.

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Anchabadze, Iu D., S. A. Arutiunov, and N. G. Volkova. "The North Caucasus." Anthropology & Archeology of Eurasia 31, no. 4 (April 1993): 12–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.2753/aae1061-1959310412.

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Novak, Bohdan. "VASYL IVANYS AND HIS VIEWS ON THE PAST AND FUTURE OF THE CAUCASUS." Naukovì zapiski Nacìonalʹnogo unìversitetu "Ostrozʹka akademìâ". Serìâ Ìstoričnì nauki 1, no. 30 (November 30, 2020): 78–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.25264/2409-6806-2020-30-78-83.

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Vasyl Ivanys (1888-1974) is an extraordinary personality of the Ukrainian political and cultural world of the XX century. He was a politician and public figure, engineer, economist, publicist and historian. Exept this, the person of Vasyl Ivanys is interesting because he, as a native of the North Caucasus, directly knew this part of the world, its history, the course of the revolutionary events of 1917-1921, and, unlike other famous figures of Kuban or Ukraine at that time, left a complex idea of the region in the published work «On the problem of the Caucasus». The ideas and views expressed in this publication are the subject of this paper. In addition to «On the problem of the Caucasus», the source base includes the first two volumes of Vasyl Ivanys memoirs of «Paths of Life», publications «Another tragedy of the Cossacks» and «The Kuban struggle for independence». The article pays a lot of attention to the identity of Vasyl Ivanys, which was due to its origin. First of all, he was a Cossack, a native of the North Caucasus, but at the same time he felt his belonging to the Ukrainian cultural space. His publication «On the Problem of the Caucasus» focuses mainly on the ancient history of the region, Russia’s conquest of the Caucasus, the resettlement of the Cossacks in the Kuban, the revolution of 1917-1918 in the North Caucasus and the future of this part of the world. The author of the article concludes that Ivanys views on the history and future of the Caucasus region, expressed in the «On the problem of the Caucasus», due to the origin and its political orientation. The Kuban occupies a central place in the publication, but Vasyl Ivanys covers its history in the general historical context and emphasizes its belonging to the North Caucasus. Although «On the Problem of the Caucasus» is based on extensive bibliographic material, but has a journalistic character. At the same time, Ivanys publication remains one of the few generalizations in Ukrainian historiography that covers the history of the Caucasus from ancient times to the second half of the XX century, gives an idea of the economic and cultural potential of the region and reflects the geopolitical ideas prevailing in Ukrainian politics emigration.
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Bulaeva, K. B. (Kazima Bagdadovna), Lynn B. Jorde, Christopher Ostler, Scott Watkins, Oleg Bulayev, and Henry Harpending. "Genetics and Population History of Caucasus Populations." Human Biology 75, no. 6 (2003): 837–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hub.2004.0003.

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Pollock, Sean. "Who Spoke for Russia’s Muslims?" Canadian-American Slavic Studies 53, no. 4 (December 13, 2019): 387–413. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22102396-05304008.

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Abstract The article examines the ways that historians think about the evidence they use in their accounts of Russian-Muslim relations. It focuses on a neglected type of source that reflects relations between tsarist officials and the peoples of the Caucasus – North Caucasus Turki letters exchanged between members of the native population and tsarist officials. The article considers the extent to which historians of Russian-Muslim encounters discuss primary sources in their work. It draws attention to and considers the consequences of historians’ neglect of Caucasus-related tsarist and Muslim diplomatics. Finally, the article examines an array of Turki letters for what they reveal about Russian-Muslim encounters in the North Caucasus between the seventeenth and twentieth centuries. The article argues that tsarist officials used correspondence in Turki to claim Caucasus Muslims as subjects. For their part, Caucasus Muslims used Turki to communicate their needs and wants to tsarist officials locally, regionally, and centrally, and to express their willingness to advance Russia’s interests as the tsar’s servants (qullar). The article concludes that tsarist officials and Caucasus Muslims often had compelling reasons to cultivate mutually beneficial relationships, and that their ability to do so, to overcome the myriad internal and external challenges to Russian-Muslim comity, helps to explain the longevity of Russian empire in the Caucasus.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Caucasus – History"

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MacDougall, James Charles. "Post-Soviet strategic alignment the weight of history in the South Caucasus /." Connect to Electronic Thesis (CONTENTdm), 2009. http://worldcat.org/oclc/454028817/viewonline.

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Mirzoyan, Alla. "Armenia's Foreign Policy, 1991-2004: Between History and Geopolitics." FIU Digital Commons, 2007. http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/68.

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This dissertation is the first systematic study of Armenia’s foreign policy during the post-independence period, between 1991 and 2004. It argues that a small state’s foreign policy is best understood when looking at the regional level. Armenia’s geographic proximity to Iran, Russia and Turkey, places it in an area of heightened geopolitical interest by various great powers. This dissertation explores four sets of relationships with Armenia’s major historical ‘partners’: Russia, Iran, Turkey and the West (Europe and the United States). Each relationship reveals a complex reality of a continuous negotiation between ideas of history, collective memory, nationalism and geopolitics. A detailed study of Armenia’s relations with these powers demonstrates how actors’ relations of amity and enmity are formed to constitute a regional security complex. Turkey represents the ultimate “other”, while both Europe and Iran are seen as ideational “others”, whose role in Armenia’s foreign policy, aside from pragmatic policy considerations, reflects a normative quest. Russia and the United States, on the other hand, represent the powerful structural forces that define the regional security complex, in which Armenia operates. This dissertation argues that although Armenia has been severely constrained in certain foreign policy choices, it was adept at carving a space for action that privileged the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh over other geopolitical imperatives.
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Aleksidze, Nikoloz. "Making, remembering and forgetting the Late Antique Caucasus." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2013. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:8a7a37ad-4cdf-482e-abe5-d510676bb750.

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The present thesis examines probably the ultimate focal point in the history of the Christian South Caucasian Cultures – the Caucasian Schism that occurred in the early seventh century – a major scandal that ended the ecclesiastical communion between the Georgian and Armenian Churches and gave impetus to the rise of the so-called national Churches. The schism became the central point of reference in both medieval and modern Caucasian historiographies. Modern scholarship has advanced different claims concerning the nature, reasons and results of the Schism, in many cases arguing that almost all aspects of the respective cultures have been affected by the Schism. As for medieval Armenian historical narratives, they made a good conceptual use of the schism, presenting the schism as a major interpretive schema for the explanation of all aspects of their relations with their northern neighbours. Contrary to such view, I argue that our knowledge of the reasons behind the schism and theological controversies that preceded, accompanied or followed the Schism in the sixth century is in most cases determined by the conceptual framework created in the Middle Ages together with the changes in political state of affairs in the Caucasus. In the period between the tenth to thirteenth centuries, when all major South Caucasian powers were struggling for the unification of the Caucasus under their aegis, the remembrance of the schism became particularly important. The remembrance and indeed forgetting of the Caucasian unity and separation became a rhetorical tool in medieval Armeno-Georgian debates. Therefore instead of taking the Schism at face value, I propose to abandon the traditional liminalist perception of the history of unity and separation in the Caucasus, and adopt a more rewarding approach, that is to say to try to understand when, why and by whom were the crucial events of the Late Antique Caucasian history conceptualized and adapted for contemporary ideological needs.
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Waters, Christopher P. M. "Counsel in the Caucasus : the fall and rise of Georgia's legal profession." Thesis, McGill University, 2002. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=38449.

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This dissertation examines lawyers and lawyering in post-Soviet Georgia. It suggests that the collapse of the Soviet Union triggered a rapid de-professionalization of lawyers. The monopoly of the Soviet-era Bar was broken, the number of law graduates multiplied, many of the objective conditions for lawyering (such as functioning courts) were simply absent and most jurists employed by state enterprises lost their jobs. In other words, lawyers were left with little control over their markets or work. But there has also been a growing movement towards the professionalization of lawyers since 1991. Intriguingly, the key to understanding the new professionalism lies not with the reconstruction of state-mandated monopolies (indeed for several years there was simply no law regulating the Bar), but rather with lawyers' attempts to control a market through means firmly lodged in culture and the politics of the post-Soviet transition. These means include a traditional reliance on reputation and networks. Comparisons are also made here to the legal professions in Armenia and Azerbaijan, revealing similar findings and rounding out this thesis as a regional study. The empirical findings, which are based on fieldwork carried out in Transcaucasia between 1998 and 2001, have implications for studies of the legal profession and the rule of law in transition societies.
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Collins-Breyfogle, Kristin L. "Negotiating Imperial Spaces: Gender, Sexuality, and Violence in the Nineteenth-century Caucasus." The Ohio State University, 2011. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1313523207.

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Lanzillotti, Ian Thomas. "Land, Community, and the State in the North Caucasus: Kabardino-Balkaria, 1763-1991." The Ohio State University, 2014. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1408624340.

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Pyanzina, Elizaveta Anatolyevna 1981. "Representation of the Peoples of the Caucasus in 20th Century Russian Literature and Cinematography." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/11489.

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ix, 67 p.
For centuries, Russian writers have stressed the important role the Caucasus played in the Russian Empire. In the last few decades, much attention has been directed at the Caucasians in literary works and movies as a result of the two Chechen wars. This thesis addresses the evolution of the Caucasian theme in Russian literature beginning from the 18th century with a focus on the contemporary representation of the peoples of Caucasus, mainly Chechens, in three works: a Soviet-era movie by Leonid Gaidai, Kidnapping, Caucasian Style (1966); Vladimir Makanin's story, Captive of the Caucasus (1994) and Viktor Pelevin's story, Papakhi na bashniakh (1995). The central research question is to what degree contemporary authors have transformed the image of the Caucasians compared to the Romantic period. Of particular interest is the issue of Russia's self-representation in these works.
Committee in charge: Dr. Susanna Soojung Lim, Chairperson; Dr. Katya Hokanson, Member
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Erciyes, Jade Cemre. "Return migration to the Caucasus : the Adyge-Abkhaz diaspora(s), transnationalism and life after return." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2014. http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/48871/.

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This thesis investigates the dual transnationalism of ancestral return migrants, that is to say people “returning” to the territory where their ancestors had once migrated from. Dispersed from their homeland in the second half of the 19th century, the Adyge-Abkhaz diaspora has been involved in a variety of transnational practices in relation to their homeland in the Caucasus; and some, with considerable effort, have been settling there especially in the last two decades. The transnational involvement of this diaspora, most of whom live today in Turkey, is motivated by their search for belonging. Many who go back and forth between Turkey and the Caucasus are involved in transnational diaspora associations and take an active role in the formation of a transnational ethno-political-cultural environment for new generations growing up in the diaspora. The majority of those who have “return migrated” to their homeland in the Caucasus, in this study to two republics, Adygeya (an autonomous republic under the Russian Federation) and Abkhazia (a republic with contested independence), develop new transnational links to their diaspora communities in Turkey. This thesis is the product of a multi-sited, multi-method research project that combines theories related to transnationalism, diaspora and return, as well as migrant adaptation. Using life-history interviews, semi-structured interviews and participant observation, fieldwork for the research took place in rural diaspora settlements and urban diaspora organisations in Turkey as well as in the Caucasus, thereby enabling the researcher to study both ends of the migration route. Existing studies on ancestral return migration focus on pull and push factors, which hitherto have focused on sending and receiving countries separately. This thesis argues that their dual transnationalism, both in the diaspora (in Turkey) looking back towards the diasporic homeland, and after return looking back towards the diaspora, turns them into the “diaspora of their diaspora”.
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Ottosson, Björn. "A Cacophony of Voices : A Neoclassical Realist study of United States Strategy toward Central Asia and Southern Caucasus 1991–2006." Doctoral thesis, Stockholms universitet, Statsvetenskapliga institutionen, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-137026.

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U.S. strategy toward Southern Caucasus and Central Asia has not been studied sufficiently. The present study, which takes the disintegration of the Soviet Union and the subsequent independence of the states of CASC (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia) as its starting point, is probably the most detailed tracing of the evolution of U.S. strategy toward this specific region hitherto available. The study is methodologically committed to process-tracing and covers U.S. strategy toward CASC over a 15-year period covering three separate presidential administrations. A vast material has been collected and studied, and the primary contribution of the study is empirical. The study also sets out develop a neoclassical realist framework for analysing U.S. strategy, which introduces strategic culture as an intervening variable between the external actions of the U.S and the international environment.  The theory in this study is based on three pillars. The first is structural realism. With its focus on the international environment and the pressure that is exerts, the study accepts the systemic imperative described by structural realists. The second pillar is cultural/constructivist theory. The study presupposes the notion of malleable norms and identities promoted by such theories. The third and most important pillar is neoclassical realism, which aims at finding intervening variables between a state´s external actions and the international environment. The definition of U.S. strategic culture relies heavily on American political and diplomatic history, the main argument being that U.S. policymakers constantly draw on U.S. strategic culture and have strong incentives to frame their policies so as to be culturally acceptable. The strategic culture thus both constrains and enables actions. The framework contributes to the ongoing effort to bridge the gap between realist and constructivist perspectives. This study will demonstrate that U.S. strategy toward CASC was shaped by specific U.S. strategic culture to a considerable extent. Throughout the entire period studied, the declared goal of the U.S. was the integration of CASC into the community of liberal market democracies. One very important theoretical finding of this study is that U.S. strategic culture had a powerful impact on U.S. strategy, independently of international pressures. This study will also demonstrate that U.S. strategy was incoherent, inconsistent, bureaucratically uncoordinated, susceptible to domestic pressure, and frequently subordinated to more important strategic goals outside of the region.
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Lywood, William George. "From Russia’s Orient To Russia’s Riviera: Reimagining The Black Sea Coast/Caucasus from Romantic Literature to Early Tourist Guidebooks." The Ohio State University, 2009. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1236622370.

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Books on the topic "Caucasus – History"

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Mardzhanly, Musa. Armenians, Russia, the Caucasus. Dubai: Khazar University Press, 2011.

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Menteshashvili, A. M. Trouble in the Caucasus. New York: Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 1995.

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Bocharnikov, Igor'. The Caucasus in the History of Russia. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1318777.

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The monograph defines the origins, essence and content of the Caucasian policy of Russia, its main stages, its significance for the development of Russian statehood and the peoples of the region. The monograph pays special attention to the Caucasian wars of Russia, the experience of suppressing anti-Russian and anti-Soviet armed demonstrations in the region. The historical and modern experience of the development of the Caucasus region shows that the weakening of Russia's position in the region naturally leads to an escalation of tension and conflict, aggravation of inter-ethnic contradictions, manifestations of extremism and other forms of destructive activities that threaten the life of citizens and peoples of the Caucasus. As a result, the strength of Russia's position in the Caucasus is a guarantee of the safe and free development of the peoples of the region. The author's conclusions and suggestions presented in the monograph can be used in the process of implementing a balanced and verified policy in order to ensure the national security and interests of the Russian Federation in the North Caucasus, building relations with neighboring states in the region, as well as other international actors positioning their involvement in the political processes of the South Caucasus. It is addressed to researchers, teachers, students, a wide range of readers.
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I, Kapidze Aleksandro, ed. Caucasus region: Geopolitical nexus? New York: Nova Science Publishers, 2007.

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Henze, Paul B. Conflict in the Caucasus. Santa Monica, CA: RAND, 1993.

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Matveev, K. P. History of Islam in the North Caucasus. London: BookExtra, 2001.

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Lortʻkʻipʻaniże, Važa. The population of the Caucasus. Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science Publishers, 2009.

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Lortʻkʻipʻaniże, Važa. The population of the Caucasus. Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science Publishers, 2009.

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Henze, Paul B. Russia and the Caucasus. Santa Monica, CA: RAND, 1996.

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Gall, Carlotta. Chechnya: Calamity in the Caucasus. New York: New York University Press, 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "Caucasus – History"

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Aliyev, Huseyn. "History of Civil Society in the Caucasus." In Post-Communist Civil Society and the Soviet Legacy, 52–84. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137489159_3.

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Nakhutsrishvili, George. "History of the Flora and the Vegetation." In The Vegetation of Georgia (South Caucasus), 5–12. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-29915-5_2.

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Gatagova, Liudmila. "The Russian Empire and the Caucasus." In Ethnic and National Issues in Russian and East European History, 10–28. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230596931_2.

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Thunø, Erik. "Cross-Cultural Dressing, the Medieval South Caucasus and Art History." In The Medieval South Caucasus. Artistic Cultures of Albania, Armenia and Georgia, 144–59. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.convisup-eb.5.131087.

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Souleimanov, Emil. "The South Caucasus: A History of Identities, an Identity of Histories." In Understanding Ethnopolitical Conflict, 51–93. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137280237_3.

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"Prehistoric Cultures: From the Neolithic to the Iron Age." In History of the Caucasus. I.B.Tauris, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755639700.ch-003.

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"Photo Credits." In History of the Caucasus. I.B.Tauris, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755639700.0007.

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"The Introduction of Christianity as a State Ideology and the Division of the South Caucasus." In History of the Caucasus. I.B.Tauris, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755639700.ch-007.

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"Acknowledgements." In History of the Caucasus. I.B.Tauris, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755639700.0008.

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"The Formation of the Landscape and the Early Humans of the Palaeolithic." In History of the Caucasus. I.B.Tauris, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755639700.ch-002.

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Conference papers on the topic "Caucasus – History"

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Khasbulatova, Zulay Imranovna, and Zulay Imranovna Khasbulatova. "Relations Of The Chechens With Peoples Of North Caucasus In Modern History." In International Conference on Social and Cultural Transformations in the Context of Modern Globalism. European Publisher, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2021.11.107.

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Natsvaladze, Mamuka. "“GREEK PROJECT” – CLUE TO THE HISTORY OF GEORGIA 50-90-IES OF XVIII CENTURY." In Proceedings of the XXIII International Scientific and Practical Conference. RS Global Sp. z O.O., 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31435/rsglobal_conf/25112020/7247.

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Global international project of the 70-80-s of the XVIII century envisaging a new distribution of Europe based on the areas of the Ottoman Empire is reviewed in the article. This topic acquires a final feature in a conceptual form in the correspondence between Catherine II and the Emperor of Austria and the Holy Roman Empire Josephus II under the name of "Greek Project". The article is a scientific fragment of a monograph, reviewing the Greek Project in regard of the Caucasus for the first time in historiography. Initially, Soviet historiography strictly separated itself from the Greek Project, since the objective research of the latter would ensure presenting the Russian Empire as an aggressive state. Afterwards, the research of this project was converted into a narrow political framework and presented as a plan to conquer Crimea. The Greek Project can be unequivocally considered as a key to the history of Georgia of 50-80-ies of the XVIII century. A number of studies have shown that numerous problematic questions remain unanswered until the present day without considering the Greek Project. Patience and tolerance shown by the King of Kartli - Kakheti Erekle II towards the Russian intrigues cannot be explained without the Greek Project. Georgia acquires qualitatively different and desired form of all time through the implementation of the Greek Project. The Greek Project is an attempt to create a Christian global political model, a political background that can serve as a precondition for the restoration of a real united Caucasian Home, ensuring a guarantee of irreversible development and security for all royal principalities and khanate in the Caucasus. This is the reason, the state oriented thinker Erekle II, avoids responding with aggression to the permanent intrigues of Russia. Erekle II tries to get involved in this great political game as a sovereign of a full-fledged political entity. Such attitude of Erekle is a guarantee of success for the Imperial Court of St. Petersburg. However, Russia chooses a completely different way - confronting Erekle's benevolent alliance with hostile, imperial sentiments. The main message of these sentiments is that a united Caucasus, independent Georgian kingdoms for Russia is considered to be an anti-Russian phenomenon. This consistent and hostile attitude towards the Caucasus became the reason for the failure of Russian policy - it could neither establish a model of Christian globalization nor neutralize the Ottomans. Therefore, the study and understanding of the referred problem is rather important to determine the directions and priorities of modern political processes.
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İkiz, Ahmet Salih. "Economic Expectations for Turkey, Central Asia and Caucasus Beyond 2050." In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c06.01187.

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In this study main international strategic theories will be shortly discussed under the time and space dimension. Almost all of the Turkic republics do have common historical and cultural ties with Turkey compared to the other European countries. Even though common values have simply forgotten during the time frame under different regimes spatial history and ties had never disappeared. Thus, the citizens of those countries preserve common spatial memory so they shared same land in history. So it is expected that those people would reach the idea of economic and political integration if certain social grounds were initiated. This is basically the idea of economic integration between those republics and Turkey for better economic standards. So, in final part of the study, author will provide his humble opinions for future expectations for 2050 and beyond.
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Kuzminov, P. A., A. A. Zhurtova, E. G. Muratova, and M. B. Shorova. "The Path of History: Historical Narrative and Historiosophy of North Caucasus People's Cognition." In International Session on Factors of Regional Extensive Development (FRED 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/fred-19.2020.113.

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Subbotina, Irina. "Gagauz and Bulgarian peoples of the North Caucasus: History with Ethnology and Demography." In Ethnology Symposium "Ethnic traditions and processes", Edition II. Institute of Cultural Heritage, Republic of Moldova, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.52603/9789975333788.27.

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Materials from population censuses in Russia, data from state archives of KabardinoBalkaria and Northern Ossetia (Alania), materials from stanitsa Ekaterinogradskaya rural household registers of 1940s, 1950s, 1970s and 1990s as well as data from the author’s ethnosociological studies have been used to describe the ethnodemographic dynamics of Gagauz and Bulgarian population in Malgobek and Sukhotskoe villages in Northern Ossetia (Alania) and stanitsa Ekaterinogradskaya in Kabardino-Balkaria.
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Seyidova, A., T. Hamzayeva, L. Aliyeva, G. Najafzadeh, S. Ismayilzadeh, R. Naghiyev, E. Mahyaddinli, et al. "Structural Styles and Tectonic History of the Candy Cane Mountains (Eastern Part of the Greater Caucasus)." In Third International Conference on Geology of the Caspian Sea and Adjacent Areas. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201952024.

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Daukaev, A. A., L. S. Gatsaeva, A. S. Elzhaev, Z. R. Khamzatov, Z. Kh Sulumov, U. T. Gayrabekov, Kh S. Talkhigova, Y. A. Kindarova, and A. A. Daukaev. "History of Oil Production in the North Caucasus (Second Half of the XIX - Early XX Centuries." In Proceedings of the International Symposium "Engineering and Earth Sciences: Applied and Fundamental Research" dedicated to the 85th anniversary of H.I. Ibragimov (ISEES 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/isees-19.2019.137.

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Hajiyeva, Dilara. "Liberation from the occupation of the territories of the Karabakh region of the Republic of Azerbaijan is an honorable period of our history." In Development of legal systems in Russia and foreign countries: problems of theory and practice. ru: Publishing Center RIOR, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.29039/02061-6-86-92.

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The Armenian emigrated to the Caucasus in XIX century always made unreasonable territorial claims and provoked conflicts in the region. Investigations based on the facts and arguments make it possible to determine specific features of some problems and processes and understand the essence. Unreasonable territory claims by Armenia caused the loss of 20% of Azerbaijan territory and the war with Azerbaijan in 90`s of last century. Azerbaijan army freed its territory occupated by Armenia despite of Armenian`s new territory claims and millitary retreats.
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Narozhny, E. I. "THE CENTRAL ASIAN TRACE IN THE HISTORY OF THE NORTH CAUCASUS (13TH - 14TH CENTURIES): HISTORICAL AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS." In Международная научная конференция "Мир Центральной Азии-V", посвященная 100-летию Института монголоведения,буддологии и тибетологии Сибирского отделения Российской академии наук. Новосибирск: Сибирское отделение РАН, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.53954/9785604788981_77.

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Киракосян, Ц. "On the History of Study of the Zaza People." In CAUCASO-CASPICA. Ереван: Россйиско-Армянский (Славянский) университет, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.48200/9789939672694_115.

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