Talk:Staryi Krym

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[edit] Ukrainian name

Thanks for the name and the copyedit. I have put a redirect on Staryi Krym. If you feel that the article needs to be moved, do not forget to check for double redirects. The enciclopedias seems to use the form of Stary Crym, it is a kind of neutral, strict Russian transliteraion will be Stariy Krym. Thanks abakharev 08:01, 30 October 2005 (UTC)

Would there be any objection to moving this to Eski kırım? Tomertalk 21:54, 5 December 2005 (UTC)

In Tatar, it is Eski kırım, formerly Solhat, Solkhat, and Surhat. In some other language it's apparently Salaciq (presumably a Turkic language). Tomertalk 23:53, 5 December 2005 (UTC)

[edit] Additional info

I put these links here bcz they were what I came up with when I was planning to write Eski Kırım, of which I was planning to make a subsection called Solhat. They contain, cumulatively, quite a bit of information, but leave a lot of stuff out as well...for starters, I can't even find a map indicating where this place is! Tomertalk 23:56, 5 December 2005 (UTC)

[edit] Foundation Date

Turkic name in the 6th cent.? the claim is dubitable

Ghirlandajo

First Turks in Crimea were Kutigurs and Utrigurs, who came to the peninsula in the 5-th cenrury. And at the end of the 6-th century eastern Crimea was a part of the Turkic Kaganate for a period of approximately 30 years. So, in the 6-th cent. Crimean steppes were alreay inhabited by Turkic-speaking peoples.
BUT! As far as I know, The city of Solkhat was founded only in the 13-th century, after the Mogol conquest.
Don Alessandro 19:41, 2 March 2006 (UTC)