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The majority—in European Russia—are descendants of the Volga Bulgars which were conquered by Mongol invasion of the 13th century12th century 13th century 14th century other centuries) As a means of recording the passage of time, the 13th century was that century which lasted from 1201 to 1300. Events Fourth through eighth crusades of western European kingdoms against Islam Fall of and kept the name of their conquerors. Tatars of SiberiaSiberia ( Russian: , common English transliterations: Sibir Sibir' is a vast region of Russia and northern Kazakhstan, constituting all of northern Asia, and extending eastward from the Ural Mountains to the Pacific Ocean, and southward from the Arctic Oc are survivors of the once much more numerous Turkic population of the UralSee: Ural Mountains Ural River IMZ-Ural Russian motorcycle Ural automobile.- AltaiFor the republic in Russia, see Altai Republic. Altai (in Mongolian Altain-ula the "Mountains of Gold"), a term used in Asiatic geography with various significations. The Altai region in West Siberia and Mongolia, is similar in character to Switzerland, bc region, mixed to some extent with FinnFinn may be used in one of the following meanings: a Finn might be Finnish in one or another sense of that word Legendary personages: Fionn mac Cumhail (Finn mac Cumhail) was a legendary warrior of Irish mythology. Finn (Frisian is a Frisian lord who appeish and Nenets (Samoyed) stems, as also with Mongols.
The name is derived from that of the Ta-ta MongolsThe Mongols are an ethnic group that originated in what is now Mongolia, Russia, and China, particularly Inner Mongolia. They currently number about 8. 5 million and speak the Mongol language. They form one of the 56 nationalities officially recognized by, who in the 5th century4th century 5th century 6th century other centuries) Events Rome sacked by Visigoths in 410. Attila the Hun conquers large parts of Europe, threatens to attack Rome in 452 Vandals conquer Carthage in 439, sack Rome in 455 At some point after 440, the Angl inhabited the north-eastern Gobi, and, after subjugation in the 9th century by the Khitans, migrated southward, there founding the Mongol empire under Genghis Khan. Under the leadership of his grandson Batu Khan they moved westwards, driving with them many stems of the Turkic Ural-Altaians towards the plains of Russia.
The ethnographical features of the present Tatar inhabitants of European Russia, as well as their language, show that they contain no admixture (or very little) of Mongolian blood, but belong to the Turkic branch of the Ural-Altaic stock, necessitating the conclusion that only Batu, his warriors, and a limited number of his followers were Mongols, while the great bulk of the 13th century invaders were Turks. On the Volga they mingled with remnants of the old Bulgarian empire ( Volga Bulgaria), and elsewhere with Finnish stems, as well as with remnants of the ancient Italian and Greek colonies in the Crimea and Caucasians in the Caucasus.
The name of Tatars, or Tartars, given to the invaders, was afterwards extended so as to include different stems of the same Turkic branch in Siberia, and even the bulk of the inhabitants of the high plateau of Asia and its northwestern slopes, described under the general name of Tartary. This last name has almost disappeared from geographical literature, but the name Tatars, in the above limited sense, remains in full use.
This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica. 1911 Britannica
The present Tatar inhabitants of Eurasia form three large groups: