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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SighnaqSighnaq - Wikipedia

    Sighnaq ( Turki / Kypchak: سغناق ‎; Kazakh: Сығанақ, romanized: Syğanaq) was an ancient city in Central Asia (in modern Kazakhstan, Kyzylorda Region ). It was the capital of the Blue Horde (i.e., the White Horde of Persian sources), although the city is almost unknown.

  2. Apr 3, 2024 · Sighnaq (Turki/Kypchak: سغناق ‎; Kazakh: Сығанақ, romanized: Syğanaq) was an ancient city in Central Asia (in modern Kazakhstan, Kyzylorda Region). It was the capital of the Blue Horde (i.e., the White Horde of Persian sources), although the city is almost unknown.

  3. Sighnaq (also known as Syganak) is a major historical landmark of Kazakhstan. It is included in the tentative list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites. The city was first mentioned in written sources in the 10th/11th century, stating stating it was the town of the Oghuz.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Urus_KhanUrus Khan - Wikipedia

    The early years of Urus Khan are not recorded in the sources. In the 1350s Urus decided to move from the Volga region to the south-eastern part of the Golden Horde. This was the former Ulus of Orda, which had been suppressed by 1330 by Öz Beg Khan. It was governed on behalf of the khan from Sighnaq by a Kiyat governor, Jir-Qutluq, son of ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TokhtamyshTokhtamysh - Wikipedia

    Tokhtamysh ( Turki / Kypchak and Persian: توقتمش‎; Kazakh: Тоқтамыс; Tatar: Тухтамыш, romanized: Tuqtamış; c. 1342 – 1406) was Khan (ruler) of the Golden Horde, who briefly succeeded in consolidating the Blue and White Hordes into a single polity. [a]

    • Tuy Khwāja
    • 1379–1380
  6. Sep 29, 2020 · [Show full abstract] physicists, biologists and philosophers. On the same side of the scale I put the progress in the logico-mathematical investigations (some of which use the title of foundations ...

  7. Research objective: To analyze the importance of Sïghnaq both as the “port of Dasht-i Qïpchaq” and as a “mausolean city (where the tombs of rulers of nomadic regimes were placed for generations and many charitable facilities and shrines for saints were built)” for the Left Hand of the ulus of Jochi – a nomadic state of the Dasht-i Qïpchaq. Another aim is to reexamine the ...

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