Kumandins
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Kumandins
Summary
Kumandins is an ethnic group[1]. They draws 156 Wikipedia views per month (ethnic_group category, ranking #654 of 4,529).[2]
Key Facts
- Kumandin was Kumandins's native language[3].
- Kumandins's religion is recorded as Eastern Orthodoxy[4].
- Kumandins's religion is recorded as Burkhanism[5].
- Kumandins's religion is recorded as Shamanism in Siberia[6].
- Kumandins is located in Altai Krai[7].
- Kumandins is located in Altai Republic[8].
- Kumandins is located in Biysky District[9].
- Kumandins is located in Krasnogorsky District[10].
- Kumandins is located in Soltonsky District[11].
- Kumandins is located in Turochaksky District[12].
- Kumandins is in the country of Russia[13].
- Kumandins's instance of is recorded as ethnic group[14].
- Kumandins's instance of is recorded as people[15].
- The location of Kumandins was Altai[16].
- Kumandins is a type of Asian people[17].
- Kumandins is a type of indigenous peoples of Siberia[18].
- Kumandins is a type of indigenous small-numbered peoples of Russia[19].
- Kumandins is a type of human population[20].
- Kumandins is part of Turkic peoples[21].
- Kumandins is part of ethnic groups in Russia[22].
- Kumandins's Commons category is recorded as Kumandin people[23].
- Kumandins's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Indigenous peoples of Siberia[24].
- Kumandins has a population of {'amount': '+2408'}[25].
- Kumandins's described by source is recorded as Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1926–1947)[26].
- Kumandins's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'alt', 'text': 'Къуманды, Къуванды(г)'}[27].
Body
Origins and Family
Kumandin was Kumandins's native language[3].
Personal Life
Religious affiliations include Eastern Orthodoxy[4], a Christian denominational family[28]; Burkhanism[5], an ethnic religion[29], in Russia[30], founded in 1904[31]; and Shamanism in Siberia[6], a religion of an area[32].
Why It Matters
Kumandins draws 156 Wikipedia views per month (ethnic_group category, ranking #654 of 4,529).[2] They has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[33]