The Bear in the Mountain: Historical analysis to the role of Russia in Dagestan's ethno-complexity

 

 

Tiago Ferreira Lopes

 

There are few places in the world in which the word complexity reaches its maximum potential like in the Caucasus. In the beginning of the XX century, John Frederick Baddeley explains that «the Caucasus is inhabited probably by a greater number of different tribes, races, and peoples than any similiar extent of territory on the surface of the globe, speaking, too, a greater variety of languages» (1908:xxv). Dagestan is by far the most complex of all the Caucasus subjects. The name of this republic with less than 3 million inhabitants derives from a hybrid between Persian and Turkish words meaning Land/Country of the Mountain. In the thirteen century the Mongol invasions erased the Arab influence (that had erased the Avar Christian kingdom of Sarir) putting the native clans and tribes under the influence of Sarai, the capital of the Golden Horde into which, curiously, Moscow also pledge allegiance (Miller, Vandome, McBrewster, 2009). Russia begins its military campgns in the Caucasus in the XVI century, but only in the XIX century it ensured the dominium over the region. During the Caucasian Wars several Russian strategies used local athno-complexity as a tool, to minimize bloodshed and maximize results (Gammer, 1994). Soviet officials followed a similiar path adding to these strategies the impact of the nativization and sovietisation policies. In the end an already diverse region became even more complex. The goal of this paper is to explore, in an historical perspective, the role of Russia to the augmentation of Dagestan's ethno-complecity. This paper will be divided in four parts corresponding to four historical moments: 1.) Dagestan previous to the Russian conquest; 2.) Dagestan under the Russian empire; 3.) Dagestan in the Soviet Union; 4.) post-soviet Dagestan. 

back to top

Asian Press Review Headlines

  • Friday, 21 February 2020 China

     
    Peking University academic He Weifang says ‘people live in distress and the government in mendacity’ because of the lack of press freedom. Legal specialist’s plea – handwritten to bypass censors – questioned why it had taken more than a month for Xi Jinping’s apparent call for disease control efforts to be reported

     

  • Friday, 07 February 2020 Camboja


    Prime Minister Hun Sen on Tuesday reiterated that the Kingdom’s projected economic growth of 6.5 per cent will be hit hard by the Coronavirus outbreak, and not because of the EU’s partial withdrawal of the ‘Everything But Arms’ (EBA) scheme.

     

  • Friday, 07 February 2020 Israel

     
    Although there was initially greater potential for the trial to open before the March 2 elections, it eventually became clear that the court wanted the trial opening postponed until after elections.

     

View All