Kabardin

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Kabardin
Total population

600,000 (est)

Regions with significant populations
Russia ( primarily in Kabardino-Balkaria), Turkey, Georgia
Languages
Kabardian, Russian,
Religion
Sunni Islam, Orthodox Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Adyghe, other "Circassian" peoples

Kabarda or Kabard are terms referring to a people of the northern Caucasus more commonly known by the plural term Kabardin (or Kebertei as they term themselves). Originally they (with Besleney tribe) comprised the semi-nomadic eastern branch of what was once the Adyghe tribal fellowship. Kabardin still consider themselves as a tribe of Adyghe.

They number around 520,000 in Russia [1](as of 2002), living mainly in Kabardino-Balkaria. Significant populations of Kabardin are found in Turkey and Georgia [2]. There are also communities in the USA and the Middle East. Kabard villages in Turkey are concentrated on Uzunyayla plateau of Kayseri Province.

Most Kabardin are Sunni Muslims. However, Kabardin speakers living in Mozdok District in North Ossetia are Orthodox Christians. They speak Kabardian, a North West Caucasian language that represents the easternmost outpost of the Circassian language group.

In August 1759 a Kabardian Muslim noble, Kurgoko Konchokin, was baptized with his entire family, taking the name Andrei Ivanov and filing a petition to the mayor of Kizliar town to "assign him a plot for settlement between the hamlets of Mozdok and Mekenem. In 1762 he was given the rank of lieutenant colonel and given the name "Konchokin, prince of Cherkassy". It was Ivanov who founded the present town of Mozdok, where many muslim Kabardians settled and voluntarily converted to Orthodoxy. Their descendants number nearly 2,500 and constitute nearly half of the Mozdok Kabardian subgroup. Long before Ivanov, the Kabardian duke Sultan Idarov also converted to Orthodoxy in 1558.

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