(Redirected from Kumyk)
'Kumyks' are a
Turkic people occupying the Kumyk plateau in north
Dagestan and south
Terek, and the lands bordering the
Caspian Sea. They comprise 12% of the population of the
Russian republic of Dagestan. They speak the
Kumyk language. Kumyks practice folk Islam, with some religious rituals that trace back to pre-Islamic times.
It is supposed that
Ptolemy knew them under the name of Kami and Kamaks. Various explorers see in them descendants of the
Khazars. A. Vambry supposes that they settled in their present quarters during the flourishing period of the Khazar kingdom in the
8th century. It is certain that some
Kabardians also settled later.
During the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries CE the Kumyks had an independent kingdom, based at
Tarki, and ruled by a leader called the
Shamkhal.
The
Russians built forts in their territory in
1559 and under
Peter I. Having long been more civilized than the surrounding Caucasian mountaineers, the Kumyks have always enjoyed some respect among them. The upper terraces of the Kumyk plateau, which the Kumyks occupy, leaving its lower parts to the
Nogai Tatars, are very fertile.
In recent years Kumyk nationalists such as
Salau Aliev have agitated for Kumyk dominance within
Daghestan, citing
Khazar history as their inspiration.
External links
★
Kumyks at Regnal Chronologies
References
★