Tatars
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Tatars
Summary
Tatars is an ethnic group[1]. Tatars has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Tatar was Tatars's native language[3].
- Russian was Tatars's native language[4].
- Tatars's religion is recorded as Sunni Islam[5].
- Tatars's religion is recorded as Eastern Orthodoxy[6].
- Tatars's instance of is recorded as ethnic group[7].
- Tatars is a type of Turkic peoples[8].
- Tatars is part of Kipchak[9].
- Tatars is part of Kipchak–Bulgar[10].
- Tatars is part of Turkic peoples[11].
- Tatars's Commons category is recorded as Tatar people[12].
- Tatars comprises Volga Tatars[13].
- Tatars comprises Sybyrs[14].
- Tatars comprises Astrakhan Tatars[15].
- Tatars comprises Lipka Tatars[16].
- Tatars comprises Crimean Tatars[17].
- Tatars's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Tatar people[18].
- Tatars has a population of {'amount': '+6421500'}[19].
- Tatars's described by source is recorded as The Nuttall Encyclopædia[20].
- Tatars's described by source is recorded as Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary[21].
- Tatars's described by source is recorded as Q25851640[22].
- Tatars's described by source is recorded as Encyclopædia Britannica 11th edition[23].
- Tatars's described by source is recorded as The New Student's Reference Work[24].
- Tatars's described by source is recorded as Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary[25].
- Tatars's described by source is recorded as Small Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary[26].
- Tatars's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as Tatar[27].
Body
Definition and Type
Tatars's instance of is recorded as ethnic group[7]. Tatars is a type of Turkic peoples[8].
Use and Application
Components include Volga Tatars[13], an ethnic group[28]; Sybyrs[14], an ethnic group[29], in Russia[30]; Astrakhan Tatars[15], an ethnic group[31], in Russia[32]; Lipka Tatars[16], an ethnic group[33], in Belarus[34]; and Crimean Tatars[17], a people[35]. Part of include Kipchak[9], a language family[36]; Kipchak–Bulgar[10], a language family[37]; and Turkic peoples[11], an ethnolinguistic group[38].
Influence
Things named for Tatars include Tatarkale[39], a mahalle[40], in Turkey[41]; Tatarstan[42], a republic of Russia[43], in Russia[44], founded in 1990[45]; tartar sauce[46]; Tatar[47], a village of Turkey[48], in Turkey[49]; Strait of Tartary[50], a strait[51], in Russia[52]; Tatar quarter[53], a neighborhood[54], in Bulgaria[55]; and Tatarlı[56], a human settlement[57], in Turkey[58].
Why It Matters
Tatars has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] Tatars is known by 80 alternative names across languages and contexts.[59]
Entities named for Tatars include Tatarkale[39], a mahalle[40], in Turkey[41]; Tatarstan[42], a republic of Russia[43], in Russia[44], founded in 1990[45]; tartar sauce[46]; Tatar[47], a village of Turkey[48], in Turkey[49]; Strait of Tartary[50], a strait[51], in Russia[52]; and Tatar quarter[53], a neighborhood[54], in Bulgaria[55].