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He occupied the throne with the help of the Nogay nobility.
The republic is also home to Abazin and Nogay minorities.
They are used as a modifier of the general ethnonym, for instance, Nogay Tarari.
The undulating plains of the Nogay Steppe are in the northern part of the country.
In the 15th century, Romanov was ruled by the khans of Nogay Horde.
Many Nogay were transplanted in Kazakhstan and Daghestan.
Often, troops from Nogay, the Crimea and Russia also served the Kazan khans.
Pro-muscovite nobles and Nogay tribesmen supported Russian forces occupying Astrakhan.
Sporadic raids reached out into the land, which was partially populated by the Nogay, though territorially part of the Crimean khanate.
The Nogay pastoral nomads north of the Black Sea were nominally subject to the Crimean Khan.
By accepting the Russian citizenship, the Bashkirs confirmed their patrimonial rights to the land, and ensured protection from the Nogay trespassers.
With the help of the Nogay Horde, Ghali took the throne, while Möxammädämin fled to Moscow.
The "eastern" faction wanted Ghali, Ibrahim's son from Nogay's wife, Fatima, to occupy the throne.
Nogai (also Nogay or Nogai Tatar) is a Turkic language spoken in southwestern Russia.
He provided a policy against Crimean Khanate and Nogay Horde for Astrakhan Khanate's independence.
Bachman Khan is mentioned in several Tatar and Nogay legends, some nomad clans originated from Bachman.
He maintained friendly relations with his powerful neighbors - the Nogay Horde and the Great Horde and coined his own money.
In the 1530s Astrakhan cooperated with the Crimean Khanate and the Nogay Horde in a campaign against Russia.
Vilayat Nogay steppe (northern part of Krasnodar Krai and Stavropol Krai)
In 1989, having created a Nogai music group, they released their first CD called Nogay Keşeler (Nogai Nights).
Kyrgyz is a Turkic language of the Kipchak branch, closely related to Kazakh, Karakalpak, and Nogay Tatar.
Starting with 16th-17th century nomadic Tatar and Nogay cavalry from the Crimean Khanate also served as akıncıs for the Ottoman Empire.
In 1495, the "eastern" (Nogay) faction decided to replace Möxammädämin with Mamuq, khan from the Shaybanid dynasty of Siberian khans.
In 1633 they destroyed the remnants of the Nogay Horde and a decade later aided the Don Cossacks against the Crimean Khanate in 1646.
The vowel digraphs are used for front vowels for other Dagestanian languages and also the local Turkic languages Kumyk and Nogay.
The horde was also known simply as Nogai Tatars.
According to Arab chronicles, the Nogai Tatars settled in the town in the late 13th century.
During his rule, Moldavia was twice invaded, once by Nogai Tatars, and a second time by Poland.
Nogai Tatars, who had settled herds in the region after the 1240s, inhabited the steppe, while Romanians inhabited the surrounding hills and the port cities.
A huge army of the Kazan and Nogai Tatars then advanced towards Nizhny Novgorod and besieged the city.
When the Habsburg troops entered Moldavia, Racoviță suffered heavy losses, and called on help from the Nogai Tatars in Yedisan.
'Nogai' (also 'Nogay' or 'Nogai Tatar'), is a Turkic languages language spoken in southwestern Russia.
In September 1583, a call for help from a Tatar leader named Karacha was delivered to Yermak begging for assistance against the Nogai Tatars.
In Dobruja, which was included in the Silistra Eyalet, Nogai Tatars settled and the local Gypsy tribes converted to Islam.
Mennonites lived alongside Nogais-semi-nomadic pastoralists-in the Molochna region of southern Ukraine starting from 1803, when Mennonites first arrived, until 1860, when the Nogai Tatars departed.
Muslim, Turkic-speaking Nogai Tatars inhabited Ottoman-dominated Budjak until the start of the 19th century, but were forced to abandon the region once the Russian Empire got control over the territory.
It was also referred to as Nogai Tartary or West Nogai, as the Yedisans were Nogai Tatars living in the west of Little Tartary.
According to the first Russian census of the Yedisan region conducted in 1793 (after the expulsion of the Nogai Tatars) 49 villages out of 67 between the Dniester and the Southern Bug were Romanian.
As used in Middle Ages, the term might (if referred to the geographical area) or might not (if referred to the area predominated by Nogai Tatars) include Cetatea Albă, Chilia and Izmail counties.
The region was inhabited by Moldovans (Romanians / Vlachs) and Nogai Tatars through the Middle Ages, but became a home to several other ethnicities and religious groups in the 19th century when it was part of the Russian Empire.