Ингушетия на английском как пишется

Republic of Ingushetia

Республика Ингушетия

Republic

Official titular nation transcription(s)
 • Ingush Гӏалгӏай Мохк

Flag of Republic of Ingushetia

Flag

Coat of arms of Republic of Ingushetia

Coat of arms

Anthem: Ghalghajčen gimn
(State Anthem of Ingushetia)
Location of Republic of Ingushetia
Coordinates: 43°12′N 44°58′E / 43.200°N 44.967°ECoordinates: 43°12′N 44°58′E / 43.200°N 44.967°E
Country Russia
Federal district North Caucasian
Economic region North Caucasus
Capital Magas
Largest city Nazran
Government
 • Type People’s Assembly[1]
 • Head[1] Mahmud-Ali Kalimatov[2]
Area

[3]

 • Total 4,000 km2 (2,000 sq mi)
Population

 (2021 Census)[4]

 • Total Increase 509,541
 • Rank 74th
 • Density 163.16/km2 (422.6/sq mi)
 • Urban 54.8%
 • Rural 45.2%
Time zone UTC+3 (MSK[5])
ISO 3166 code RU-IN
Vehicle registration 06
Official language(s) Ingush[6] • Russian[7]
Website ingushetia.ru

Ingushetia (; Ingush: ГӀалгӏайче, romanized: Ghalghajče; Russian: Ингуше́тия), officially the Republic of Ingushetia,[a] is a republic of Russia located in the North Caucasus of Eastern Europe. The republic is part of the North Caucasian Federal District, and shares land borders with the country of Georgia to its south; and borders the Russian republics of North Ossetia–Alania and Chechnya to its west and east, respectively; while having a border with Stavropol Krai to its north. It also is one of the least-populated republics of Russia at under 500,000.

Its capital is the town of Magas, while the largest city is Nazran. At 4,000 square km, in terms of area, the republic is the smallest of Russia’s non-city federal subjects. It was established on June 4, 1992, after the Checheno-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was split in two.[8][9] The republic is home to the indigenous Ingush, a people of Nakh ancestry. As of the 2021 Census, its population was 509,541.[4]Estimation of the number of resident population by constituent entities of the Russian Federation

Largely due to the insurgency in the North Caucasus, Ingushetia remains one of the poorest and most unstable regions of Russia. Although the violence has died down in recent years,[10][11] the insurgency in neighboring Chechnya has occasionally spilled into Ingushetia. According to Human Rights Watch in 2008, the republic has been destabilized by corruption, a number of high-profile crimes (including kidnapping and murder of civilians by government security forces),[12] anti-government protests, attacks on soldiers and officers, Russian military excesses and a deteriorating human rights situation.[13][14]

Etymology[edit]

The name Ingushetia is derived from the ancient village Angusht, which was renamed Tarskoye and transferred to North Ossetia in 1944 after the deportation of 23 February 1944, a.k.a. «Operation Lentil».

The Ingush ethnic group[edit]

Kisty-Ingoschofski (Ingush) on Jacob von Staehlin’s map in 1771, over a decade prior to the establishment of the fortress Vladikavkaz on the right bank of the Terek river.

The Ingush, a nationality group indigenous to the Caucasus, mostly inhabit Ingushetia. According to the linguist Johanna Nichols, the Ingush speak the Ingush language, which is different from Chechen but is placed into the same language group due to the passive bilingualism of the Ingush people.

The Ingush are, to a great extent, traditionally a classless society based on a clan system and unwritten law. Approximately 350 clans live in Ingushetia today. Every clan, and each clan member, are viewed as equal. Unlike the neighboring nations in the Caucasus (excluding Chechens), the Ingush rarely had social superiors or inferiors.[citation needed]

The history of the Ingush is closely related to that of the Chechens. Byzantine and Georgian missionaries partially Christianised the Ingush, although Christianity was weakened by the Mongol invasions. The remains of several churches, notably the Tkhaba-Yerdy and the Albe-Yerd can be found in Ingushetia. The Ingush gradually converted to Islam throughout the 18th–19th century. Vakhushti of Kartli wrote in 1745 that the inhabitants of the village Angushti were Sunni Muslims.

Endonyms and exonyms[edit]

1855 Atlas Map of Turkey and the North Caucasus. The map drawn by the American cartographer J.H.Colton at the request of the U.S. Congress. Gelia, Lesgistan, and Dagestan are shown on the map, top right corner.

The Ingush refer to themselves as Ghalghaj (from Ingush: Ghala (‘fortress’ or ‘town’) and ghaj (‘inhabitants’ or ‘citizens’).

The Ingush and Ingushetians were also known by the following ethnonyms or demonyms:

Exonyms: Gelia (American cartographer J. H. Colton, Strabo), Tschetschna (German geographers Joseph Grassl and Joseph Meyer), Kist (Georgian), Gergar, Dzurdzuk (Georgian), Ghlighvi (Georgian), Angushtini (Russian), Machaloni (Ossetian); Chechen highlanders called Ingush Makhaloni or Makhloi (according to Chechen historian Khalid Oshayev).

Endonyms: These self-namings represent different Vainakh tribes which make up the Ingush population today.[15]

Ghalghaj or Gelgaj, Nakh (meaning ‘people’), Vainakh (meaning ‘our people’), Orstkhoi, Nart-Orstkhoi, Galash, Tsori, Dzheirakhoi, Khamhoi, Metshal, Fyappi, and Nyasareth.

Population origins[edit]

According to Leonti Mroveli, the 11th-century Georgian chronicler, the word Caucasian is derived from the Vainakh ancestor Kavkas.[16]

According to Professor George Anchabadze of Ilia State University:[17][18]

The Vainakhs are the ancient natives of the Caucasus. It is noteworthy, that according to the genealogical table drawn up by Leonti Mroveli, the legendary forefather of the Vainakhs was «Kavkas», hence the name Kavkasians, one of the ethnicons met in the ancient Georgian written sources, signifying the ancestors of the Chechens and Ingush. As appears from the above, the Vainakhs, at least by name, are presented as the most «Caucasian» people of all the Caucasians (Caucasus – Kavkas – Kavkasians) in the Georgian historical tradition.

The Soviet-Russian anthropologists and scientists, N.Ya. Marr, V.V. Bounak, R.M. Munchaev, I.M Dyakonov, E.I. Krupnov, and G.A. Melikashvilli, wrote: «Among Ingush the Caucasian type is preserved better than among any other North Caucasian nation».[19] Professor G.F. Debets recognized that Ingush Caucasian anthropologic type is the most Caucasian among Caucasians.[20]

In an article in Science magazine, Bernice Wuethrich states that American linguist Dr. Johanna Nichols «has used language to connect modern people of the Caucasus region to the ancient farmers of the Fertile Crescent» and that her research suggests that «farmers of the region were proto-Nakh-Daghestanians». Nichols is quoted as stating that «The Nakh–Dagestanian languages are the closest thing we have to a direct continuation of the cultural and linguistic community that gave rise to Western civilization»[21]

Population genetics[edit]

The Ingush have 89% of J2 Y-DNA which is the highest known frequency in the world and J2 is closely associated with the Fertile Crescent.[22]

The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) of the Ingush differs from other Caucasian populations and the rest of the world. «The Caucasus populations exhibit, on average, less variability than other [World] populations for the eight Alu insertion polymorphisms analyzed here. The average heterozygosity is less than that of any other region of the world, with the exception of Sahul. Within the Caucasus, the Ingush have much lower levels of variability than any of the other populations. The Ingush also showed unusual patterns of mtDNA variation when compared with other Caucasus populations (Nasidze and Stoneking, submitted), which indicates that some feature of the Ingush population history, or of this particular sample of the Ingush, must be responsible for their different patterns of genetic variation at both mtDNA and the Alu insertion loci.»[23][24]

History[edit]

Prehistory[edit]

Map of Vakhushti Bagrationi in Russian clearly shows three Ingush societies: Kisti (Kist), Tsurtsuki (Dzurdzuki), Ghligvi (Gligvi) as parts of one country and Chechens (Chachans) as part of Daghestan without common border with the Ingush

Pottery: an ancient Ingush vessel with three handles. The side handles used to tie the knots, and the vessel itself is well balanced for an operator to pour water down with one hand. Dzheirakhovski district of Ingushetia.

Koorkhars (600 BC – 1800s AD) is a traditional Ingush female head cover (hair is put into the «horns») which comes either single «horn» for usage as cushion with helmet, or double «horns» during peacetime which are covered in jewelry.

Ingush male warrior helmet.

Typical Ingush medieval castle. Many of the towers and walls were destroyed by Russian army in 19th and 20th centuries.

10,000–8000 BC
According to Bernice Wuethrich’s article «Peering Into the Past, With Words», Johanna Nichols showed that linguistic evidence indicates the ancestors of Nakh people migrated to the slopes of the Caucasus from the Fertile Crescent where farming and raising sheep and cattle had been discovered. Nichols stated: «The Nakh–Dagestanian languages are the closest thing we have to a direct continuation of the cultural and linguistic community that gave rise to Western civilisation.» Anthropologist Henry Harpending of the University of Utah is impressed by her research.[25]
6000–4000 BC
Neolithic era. Pottery is known to the region. Old settlements near Ali-Yurt and Magas, discovered in the modern times, revealed tools made out of stone: stone axes, polished stones, stone knives, stones with holes drilled in them, clay dishes etc. Settlements made out of clay bricks discovered in the plains. In the mountains, there were discovered settlements made out of stone surrounded by walls some of them dated back to 8000 BC.[26]
4000–3000 BC
Invention of the wheel (3000 BC), horseback riding, metal works (copper, gold, silver, iron) dishes, armor, daggers, knives, arrow tips. The artifacts were found near Nasare-Cort, Muzhichi, Ja-E-Bortz (also known as Surkha-khi), Abbey-Gove (also known as Nazran or Nasare).[26]
20 BC
Strabo first mentions Geli, or Galgay in his reference to a nation in the center of the Caucasus. O.W. Wahl in 1875 in his book «The Land of the Czar» page 239 mentioned «These two opinions mentioned by Strabo come after all to the same point ; for the Legi are the modern Lesghi, and the Geli the Ingush tribe Galgai, and the Keraunian Mountains are the northern ranges of the Caucasus as far as the Beshtaú.»[27] The same statement about Gelia being Ingush was made by a German professor Karl Koch in 1843 in his book «Reise durch Russland nach dem kaukasischen Isthmus» page 489.[28] Jacobus Van Wijk Roelandszoon, Jacobus van Wijk (Roelandszoon) in 1821 book «Algemeen aardrijkskundig woordenboek volgens de nieuwste staatkundige veranderingen, en de laatste, beste en zekerste berigten» page 1050 also mention that Gelli or Gelad are the Ingush people which is mentioned by Zonaras.[29]
900 AD – 1200 AD
the kingdom in the center of the Caucasus splits into Alania and Noble Alania (known from Russian as Царственные Аланы). German scientist Peter Simon Pallas believed that Ingush people (Kist) were the direct descendants from Alania.[30][31]
1239 AD
Destruction of the Alania capital of Maghas (both names known solely from Muslim Arabs) and Alan confederacy of the Northern Caucasian highlanders, nations, and tribes by Batu Khan (a Mongol leader and a grandson of Genghis Khan) «Magas was destroyed in the beginning of 1239 by the hordes of Batu Khan. Historically Magas was located at approximately the same place on which the new capital of Ingushetia is now built» – D.V.Zayats[32]
1300 AD – 1400 AD
War between the Alans, Tamerlan, Tokhtamysh, and the Battle of the Terek River. The Alan tribes build fortresses, castles, and defense walls locking the mountains from the invaders. Part of the lowland tribes occupied by Mongols. The insurgency against Mongols begins. «One map of the area during the Mongol period gives us a clue why there was not much written about the Vainakh— as the area of Chechnya-Ingushetia on that map is simply marked as «ungovernable». This is not surprising, as the majority of armies moving north or south would be interested in passing through the mountains and getting to their ultimate destinations as quickly as possible— leaving the peoples between the two passes relatively unmolested.» – Schaefer, Robert W. «Insurgency in Chechnya and the North Caucasus: From Gazavat to Jihad» p. 51. In 1991 the Jordanian historian Abdul-Ghani Khassan presented the photocopy from old Arabic scripts claiming that Alania was in Chechnya and Ingushetia, and the document from Alanian historian Azdin Vazzar (1395–1460) who claimed to be from Nokhcho tribe of Alania.[33][34]
1558 AD
Russian conquest of the Caucasus. 1558 Temryuk of Kabarda sends his emissaries to Moscow requesting help against Ingush tribes from Ivan the Terrible. Ivan the Terrible marries Temryuk’s daughter Maria Temryukovna the Circassian (Kabardin) tsaritsa. Alliance formed to gain the ground in the central Caucasus for the expanding Tsardom of Russia against stubborn Vainakh defenders.[35]
1562 AD
Joint Russian, Kabardian, and Nogay forces attack Ingush. According to Russian sources 164 Ingush settlements were completely destroyed in this war. Lowland Ingushetia occupied by Russia and their Kabardian allies.[35]

In Caucasian War and as part of Terek Cossacks Okrug[edit]

In the 18th century, Ingush were mostly pagan and Christian with some Muslim minority. Beginning 1588 some Chechen societies joined Russia (Shikh Okotsky [ru]; Albir-Murza Batayev [ru]).
Russian historians claim that the Ingush volunteered to become a part of Russia. This conclusion is based mostly on the document signed on 13 June 1810, by General-Major Delpotso and representatives of 2 Ingush clans. Other clans resisted the Russian conquest. In 1811 Russian envoy of a German origin Moritz von Engelhardt at czar’s request visited mountainous Ingushetia and offered Ingush people to join Russia promising many benefits from czar. The representative of the Ingush people rejected the proposal with the reply: «Above my hat I see only sky». This encounter later will be used by Goethe in his «Freisinn»[36]

On June 29, 1832, Russian baron Rozen reported in letter No.42 to count Chernishev that «on the 23rd of this month I exterminated eight Ghalghaj (Ingush) villages. On the 24th I exterminated nine more villages near Targim.» By November 12, 1836 (letter no.560, he was claiming that highlanders of Dzheirkah, Kist, and Ghalghaj had been temporarily conquered.[37] In 1829 Imam Shamil starts the rebellion against Russia. He conquers Dagestan, Chechnya and then attacks Ingushetia hoping to convert Ingush people into Islam thus gaining strategic ally. Ingush defeated Imam Shamil forces then and later in 1858 when he tried again two more times to capture Ingushetia. Locked in warfare with two strong opponents and their allies, Ingush forces were decimated. According to Russian officer Fedor Tornau who fought the Ingush with the aid of Ossetian allies, at most Ingush had only six hundred warriors.[38] However, the Russian conquest in Ingushetia was extremely difficult and the Russian forces began to rely on the method of colonization: extermination of the local population and repopulation of the area with Cossack and Ossetian loyalists.

Colonization of Ingush land by Russians and Ossetians started in the middle of the 19th century. Russian General Evdokimov and Ossetian colonel Kundukhov in ‘Opis no. 436’ «gladly reported» that «the result of colonization of Ingush land was successful»:

  • Ingush village Ghazhien-Yurt was renamed to Stanitsa Assinovskaya in 1847.
  • Ingush village Ebarg-Yurt was renamed to Stanitsa Troitskaya in 1847.
  • Ingush town Dibir-Ghala was renamed to Stanitsa Sleptsovskaya in 1847.
  • Ingush village Magomet-Khite was renamed to Stanitsa Voznesenskaya in 1847.
  • Ingush village Akhi-Yurt was renamed to Stanitsa Sunzhenskaya in 1859.
  • Ingush village Ongusht was renamed to Stanitsa Tarskaya in 1859.
  • Ingush town Ildir-Ghala was renamed to Stanitsa Karabulakskaya in 1859.
  • Ingush village Alkhaste was renamed to Stanitsa Feldmarshalskaya in 1860.
  • Ingush village Tauzen-Yurt was renamed to Stanitsa Vorontsov-Dashkov in 1861.
  • Ingush village Sholkhi was renamed to Khutor Tarski in 1867.[39]

After multiple losses of Imam Shamil at the end of Caucasian War, Russians and Chechens unify their forces. Former Chechen rebels and their men join Russian ranks. 3 November 1858 General Evdokimov ordered (order N1896) a former rebel commander naib Saib-Dulla Gekhinski (Saadulla Ospanov) of Chechnya to attack and destroy Ingush settlements near Assa and Fortanga rivers: Dattikh, Meredzhi, Aseri, Shagot-Koch and others.[40] After the losses, the remaining Ingush clans resorted mostly to underground resistance.[41]

The Russians built the fortress Vladikavkaz («ruler of the Caucasus») on the place of Ingush village of Zaur.[42] Russian General Aleksey Petrovich Yermolov wrote in a letter to the Tsar of Russia, «It would be a grave mistake for Russia to alienate such a militaristic nation as the Ingush.» He suggested the separation of the Ingush and Chechens in order for Russia to win the war in the Caucasus. In another letter from General Ermolov to Lanski (dated 12 January 1827) on the impossibility of forceful Christianization of the Ingush, Yermolov wrote: «This nation, the most courageous and militaristic among all the highlanders, cannot be allowed to be alienated …»

The last organized rebellion (the so-called «Nazran insurrection») in Ingushetia occurred in 1858 when 5,000 Ingush started a fight but lost to superior Russian forces. The rebellion signaled the end of the First Russo-Caucasian War. In the same year, the Russian Tsar encouraged the emigration of Ingush and Chechens to Turkey and the Middle East by claiming that «Muslims need to live under Muslim rulers». It seems that he wanted to liberate the land for Ossetians and Cossacks.[41] Some Ingush became exiled to deserted territory in the Middle East where many of them died. The remainder were assimilated. It was estimated that 80% of the Ingush left Ingushetia for the Middle East in 1865.[43][44]

After the Russian Revolution of 1917, the Soviets promised the Ingush that the villages and towns annexed during the colonization would be returned to the Ingush. Ingushetia becomes a major battleground between the old archenemies: general Denikin and Ingush resistance fighters. In his memoirs, general Denikin writes:[45]

Ingush people are the least numerous, most welded, and strongly martial organization. They were, in essence, the supreme arbiter of the North Caucasus. The moral of the appearance was defined long ago in Russian text-books of geography, «the chief occupation – animal husbandry and robbery  …» The last one of the two reached special art in the society. Political aspirations came from the same trend. The Ingush are mercenaries of the Soviet regime, they support it but don’t let the spread of it in their province. At the same time, they tried to strike up relations with Turkey and sought the assistance from the Turks from Elisavetpol, and Germany – from Tiflis. In August, when the Cossacks and Ossetians captured Vladikavkaz, the Ingush intervened and saved the Soviet Board of Commissioners of Terek, but sacked the city and captured the state bank and mint. They robbed all the neighbors: the Cossacks and Ossetians in the name of «correcting historical errors» for a shortage of land, the Bolsheviks – in return for their services, Vladikavkaz citizens – for their helplessness, and the Kabardins – just out of habit. They were hated by everyone, and they did their «craft» in unison, well organized, in a big way, becoming the richest tribe in the Caucasus.

— Anton Denikin, Essays on the Russian Troubles (1925)

As part of the Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus[edit]

On December 21, 1917 Ingushetia, Chechnya, and Dagestan declared independence from Russia and formed a single state called the «United Mountain Dwellers of the North Caucasus» (also known as Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus), which was recognized by Central Powers (Germany, Austro-Hungary and Turkey), Georgia, and Azerbaijan (which declared their independence from Russia in 1918) as an independent state.[46] For example, Anna Zelkina writes that in May 1918 the first country to recognize independence was Turkey:[47]

The First Congress of the North Caucasus formed a Provisional Government of the North Caucasian Free State (SeveroKavkazskoye Svobodnoye Gosudarstvo) and in May 1918 declared the establishment of the North Caucasian Republic. The only country to recognize it was Turkey.

Later Germany and others followed the recognition. According to P. Kosok:[48]

Azerbaidzhan and Armenia (May 28, 1918). All three states then concluded independent treaties with Turkey, which similarly acknowledged the independence of the Northern Caucasus and concluded a treaty of friendship with it on June 8, 1918. An exchange of diplomatic notes then took place between the head of the German Extraordinary Delegation, General von Lossov, and the North Caucasian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Bammat, resulting in the de facto recognition by Germany of the independence of the Northern Caucasus.

According to British War Office, Germans tried to establish the military base in Ingushetia.[49][50]

…the German Command with the object of securing the presence of German regiments within Ingush territory. The Ingushi declare that all attempts of any foreign armed force to enter into the Terek region will be regarded by the Ingushi as an attack upon themselves, and the Ingushi will oppose all their forces to such attempts.

The capital of the new state was moved to Temir-Khan-Shura (Dagestan).[51][52][53] The first prime minister of the state was elected Tapa Chermoyev, a Chechen prominent statesman; the second prime minister was Ingush statesman Vassan-Girey Dzhabagiev who also was the author of the Constitution of the land in 1917. In 1920 he was reelected for a third term. In 1921 Russians attacked and occupied the country and forcefully merged it with the Soviet state. The Caucasian war for independence continued and the government went into exile.[54]

As part of Chechen-Ingush ASSR[edit]

Cossack General Andrei Shkuro in his book writes:[55]

Ingushetia was the most unanimous and entirely Bolshevik. Ever since the conquest of the Caucasus, the brave and freedom-loving Ingush, who were desperately defending their independence, were partly exterminated and partly driven into barren mountains. The Terek Cossacks were settled on the fertile lands that had belonged to them, and Cossacks founded their villages on the wedge that had cut into Ingushetia. Deprived of the opportunity to earn their bread in an honest way, the Ingush lived by robbery and raids on the Cossack lands. Even in peacetime, the Terek Cossacks bordering Ingush did not go to the field without rifles. Not a day went by without shooting and bloodshed. Considering the Cossacks as oppressors, and the Cossack lands were still theirs, the Ingush mercilessly took revenge on them. The relationship was created completely irreconcilable; further cohabitation was unthinkable. It was necessary either to exterminate the Ingush completely, or to evict the Cossacks from the former Ingush lands, returning those to their former owners.

The Soviets confiscated the remaining Ingush properties by collectivization and dekulakization[56] and unified Chechnya and Ingushetia into Chechen-Ingush ASSR.

During World War II Ingush youth were drafted into the Russian army. In August 1942 Nazi German forces captured half of the North Caucasus within thirty-three days moving from Rostov-On-Don to Mozdok 560 km or almost 17 km per day (see Battle of the Caucasus). From Mozdok to Malgobek same thirty three days, 20 km the German forces moved roughly 600 meters per day and were stopped only at Ordzhonikidze (modern-day Vladikavkaz) and Malgobek which were mostly populated by Ingush before the genocide of 23 February 1944. The fighting for the Malgobek was so intense that the small town was captured and recaptured four times until the Germans finally retreated.

According to the Soviet military newspaper Red Star, after receiving the news about German brutality toward civilians in Kabardino-Balkaria, Ingush people declare Jihad(Gazavat) against Germans. Stalin planned the expansion of the USSR in the south through Turkey. Muslim Chechens and Ingush could become a threat to the expansion.[57] In February 1944 near the end of World War II, Russian Army and NKVD units flooded the Chechen-Ingush ASSR. The maneuvers were disguised as military exercises of the southern district.

Genocide of 1944[edit]

During World War II, in 1942 German forces entered the North Caucasus. For three weeks Germans captured over half of the North Caucasus. They were only stopped at two Chechen-Ingush cities: Malgobek and Ordzhonikidze (a.k.a. «Vladikavkaz») by heroic resistance of natives of Chechen-Ingush ASSR.[58] Soviet propaganda portrayed Chechens and Ingush as «traitors».
On 23 February 1944, Ingush and Chechens were falsely accused of collaborating with the Nazis, and the entire Ingush and Chechen populations were deported to Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Siberia in Operation Lentil, on the orders of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, while the majority of their men were fighting on the front. The initial phase of the deportation was carried out on American-supplied Studebaker trucks specifically modified with three submachine gun-nest compartments above the deported to prevent escapes. American historian Norman Naimark writes:

Troops assembled villagers and townspeople, loaded them onto trucks – many deportees remembered that they were Studebakers, fresh from Lend-Lease deliveries over the Iranian border – and delivered them at previously designated railheads. …Those who could not be moved were shot. …[A] few fighters aside, the entire Chechen and Ingush nations, 496,460 people, were deported from their homeland.[59]

The deportees were gathered on the railroad stations and during the second phase transferred to the cattle railroad carts. Up to 30% of the population perished during the journey or in the first year of the exile.[60][61][62] The Prague Watchdog claims that «in the early years of their exile about half of the Chechens and Ingush died from hunger, cold and disease».[63] The deportation was classified by the European Parliament in 2004 as genocide.[64] After the deportation Ingush resistance against Soviets rises again. Those who escaped the deportation, shepherds who were high in the mountains during the deportation combine forces and form rebel groups which constantly attack Russian forces in Ingushetia. Major rebel groups were led by Akhmed Khuchbarov, Tsitskiev brothers, and Ingush femalesniper Laisat Baisarova. The last one of the male Ingush rebels was killed in 1977 by the KGB officers, while Baisarova was never captured or killed.[65] American professor Johanna Nichols, who specializes in Chechen and Ingush philology, provided the theory behind the deportation:[66]

In 1944 the nationalities themselves were abolished and their lands resettled when the Chechen and Ingush, together with the Karachay-Balkar, Crimean Tatars, and other nationalities were deported en masse to Kazakhstan and Siberia, losing at least one-quarter and perhaps half of their population in transit. (The reason, never clarified, seems to have been Stalin’s wish to clear all Muslims from the main invasion routes in a contemplated attack on Turkey.)

After return from Central Asia[edit]

After 13 years of exile, the Ingush were allowed to return to Chechen-Ingushetia (but not to Ordzhonikidze a.k.a. «Vladikavkaz» or the Prigorodny District). Most of Ingushetia’s territory had been settled by Ossetians and part of the region had been transferred to North Ossetia. The returning Ingush faced considerable animosity from the Ossetians. The Ingush were forced to buy their homes back from the Ossetians and Russians. These hardships and injustices led to a peaceful Ingush protest in Grozny on 16 January 1973, which was crushed by the Soviet troops[67] In 1989, the Ingush were officially rehabilitated along with other peoples that had been subjected to repressions.[68]

Post-Soviet period[edit]

In 1991, when the Chechens declared independence from the Soviet Union to form the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria, the Ingush chose to secede from the Chechen-Ingush Republic. Thus, in 1992 the Ingush joined the newly created Russian Federation to try to resolve the conflict with Ossetia peacefully, also in the hope that the Russians would return their land as a token of their loyalty.

Ethnic cleansing of 1992[edit]

However, ethnic tensions in North Ossetia which were orchestrated by Ossetian nationalists (per Helsinki Human Right Watch), led to an outbreak of violence in the Ossetian–Ingush conflict in October–November 1992, when another ethnic cleansing of the Ingush population started.[69] According to media reports, Ingush hostages were held in 1992 in Beslan high school gymnasium. The hostages were all kept in the same gymnasium, and deprived of food and water; at least one newborn, and several dozen male Ingush hostages were executed.[70][71][72][73]

In a possible retaliation in 2004, Chechen and Ingush militants took over 500 Osset hostages in Beslan high-school. (It was the same building where Ossetian militants had held hundreds of Ingush hostages in 1992). Over 60,000 Ingush civilians were forced from their homes in the Prigorodny District of North Ossetia.[41] As a result of the conflict, pro-Russian general Ruslan Aushev, a decorated war hero from the War in Afghanistan, was appointed by the Russian government as the first president of Ingushetia to stop the spread of the conflict. Partial stability returned under his rule.

First and Second Chechen Wars[edit]

In 1994, when the First Chechen War started, the number of refugees in Ingushetia from both conflicts doubled. According to the UN, for every citizen of Ingushetia, one refugee arrived from Ossetia or Chechnya. This influx was very problematic for the economy, which collapsed after Aushev’s success. The second Russo-Chechen war which started in 1999 brought more refugees (at some point there was one refugee for every Ingush citizen: 240,000 from Chechnya plus 60,000 from North Ossetia at the peak in 2000) and misery to Ingushetia. In 2001, Aushev was forced to leave his presidency and was succeeded by Murat Zyazikov, a former KGB general. The situation worsened under his rule. Many young Ingush men were abducted by Russian and Ossetian death squads.[74][75][76][77] according to Human rights watchdogs Memorial[78] and Mashr.[79] The Ingush mountains are closed for Ingush nationals.[80]

The number of rebel attacks in Ingushetia rose, especially after the number of Russian security forces was tripled. For example, according to a Russian news agency a murder of an ethnic-Russian school teacher in Ingushetia was committed by two ethnic-Russian and ethnic-Ossetian soldiers; Issa Merzhoev the Ingush Police detective who solved the crime was shot at and killed by «unknown» assailants shortly after he had identified the murderer.[81]
At least four people were injured when a vehicle exploded on 24 March 2008. An upsurge in violence in these months targeted local police officers and security forces. In January 2008, the Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation launched a «counter-terrorism» operation in Ingushetia after receiving information that insurgents had been preparing a series of attacks.[82]

Early in August 2008, the war between Georgia and South Ossetia broke out, in which the Russian Federation subsequently became involved.[83] After the outbreak of the war, there were virtually no more attacks or abductions of Ingush civilians by «unknown» forces. Most of the Russian forces were transferred to North and South Ossetia[84] 31 August 2008 Magomed Yevloyev, the head of Ingush opposition and the owner of the website ingushetiya.ru, was killed by Russian security forces[85] Shortly before the unrecognised opposition group People’s Parliament of Ingushetia Mekhk-Kkhel called for the recognition of the Russian semi-autonomous republic’s independence, opposition activist Magomed Khazbiyev proclaimed, «We must ask Europe or America to separate us from Russia.»[86][87]

On October 18, 2008, a Russian military convoy came under grenade attack and machine gun fire near Nazran. Official Russian reports of the ambush, which has been blamed on local Muslim separatists, said two soldiers were killed and at least seven injured. Reports from Ingush opposition sources suggested as many as forty to fifty Russian soldiers were killed.[88][89]

On October 30, 2008, Zyazikov was dismissed from his office (he himself claimed he resigned voluntarily). On the next day, Yunus-Bek Yevkurov was nominated by Dmitry Medvedev and approved as President by the People’s Assembly of Ingushetia (later the title President was renamed to Head). This move was endorsed by major Russian political parties and by the Ingush opposition.[90][91] Under the current rule of Yevkurov, Ingushetia seems much calmer, showing some semblance of the Russian government. Attacks on policemen have fallen by 40% and abductions by 80%.[92]

Military history[edit]

According to professor Johanna Nichols, in all the recorded history and reconstructable prehistory, the Ingush people have never undertaken battle except in defense.[41] In the 3rd and 2nd centuries BC Pharnavaz, his son Saurmag the Iberian kings, and the relatives of Ingush people per Leonti Mroveli, received military assistance from Ingush people in defense of Iberia against the Kartli occupation.[93]

During World War I, 500 cavalrymen from an Ingush regiment of the Wild Division attacked the German Iron Division. The Russian Emperor Nicholas II, assessing the performance of the Ingush and Chechen regiments during the Brusilov breakthrough on the Russian-German front in 1915 wrote in a telegram to the Governor-General of the Tersky region Fleisher:

The Ingush regiment pounced upon the German «Iron Division» like an avalanche. It was immediately supported by the Chechen regiment. The Russian history, including the history of our Preobrazhensky regiment, does not know a single instance of a horse cavalry attacking an enemy force armed with heavy artillery: 4.5 thousand killed, 3.5 thousand taken prisoner, 2.5 thousand wounded. Less than in an hour and a half the «Iron Division» ceased to exist, the division that had aroused fear in the best armies of our allies. On behalf of me, the royal court and the whole of the Russian army send our best regards to fathers, mothers, sisters, wives and brides of those brave sons of the Caucasus whose heroism paved the way for the destruction of German hordes. Russia bows low to the heroes and will never forget them. I extend my fraternal greetings, Nicholas II, August 25, 1915.[94]

In 1994–1996 Ingush volunteers fought alongside Chechens in the First Chechen War. Aside from a few incidents (including the killings of Ingush civilians by Russian soldiers), Ingushetia was largely kept out of the war by a determined policy of non-violence pursued by President Ruslan Aushev.[41]

This changed after the beginning of the Second Chechen War, and especially since Murat Zyazikov became the second Russian appointed president of Ingushetia in 2002. The first major rebel attack of the conflict, in which a military convoy was destroyed occurred in May 2000 and caused the deaths of 19 soldiers. In the June 2004 Nazran raid, Chechen and Ingush rebels attacked government buildings and military bases across Ingushetia, resulting in the deaths of at least 90 Ingush people and an unknown number of Russian troops. Among them the Republic’s acting interior minister Abukar Kostoyev, his deputy Zyaudin Kotiyev. In response to a sharp escalation in attacks by insurgents since the summer of 2007,[95] Moscow sent in an additional 25,000 MVD and FSB troops, tripling the number of special forces in Ingushetia.

Resistance[edit]

  • 1800s–1860s: Insurgency against Russian conquest.
  • 1860s–1890s: Raids of Ingush abreks on the Georgian Military Highway and Mozdok.
  • 1890s–1917: Insurgency of Ingush resistance under Chechen abrek Zelimkhan Gushmazukaev and Ingush abrek Sulom-beck Sagopshinski, execution of Russian viceroy to Ingushetia colonel Mitnik by Ingush resistance fighter Buzurtanov.
  • 1917–1920s: Insurgency of Ingush resistance fighters against combined Russian White Guards, Cossacks, Ossetians, and general Denikin forces.
  • 1920s–1930s: Insurgency of Ingush people against Communists, executions of Communist leader of Ingushetia Chernoglaz by Ingush rebel Uzhakhov. Execution of Communist party leader of Ingushetia Ivanov by Ingush rebels.
  • 1944–1977: Ingush rebels avenging the deportation of the Ingush nation. Scores of Russian army units and NKVD, KGB officers killed.
  • 1992: Ossetian-Ingush conflict. In combat operations Ingush rebels capture armor which later transferred to Chechens or given back to Russian army after the conflict ended.
  • 1994: Nazran. Ingush civilians stop Russian army, flip armor, burn military trucks which were on the march to Chechnya in Russian-Chechen war. First Russian casualties reported from hands of Ingush rebels.
  • 1994–1996: Ingush rebels defend Grozny and participate in combat operations on Chechen side.
  • 1999–2006: Ingush rebels join Chechen rebels, the independence war turns into Jihad.
  • 13 July 2001: Ingush people protest «defiling and desecration» of historical Christian Ingush church Tkhaba-Yerdy after Russian troops made the church into a public toilet. Though Ingush are Muslims they highly respect their Christian past.[96]
  • 15 September 2003: Ingush rebels use bomb truck and attack FSB headquarters in Maghas. Several dozens of Russian FSB officers killed including the senior officer overseeing the FSB in Chechen republic. The several story HQ building is severely damaged.[97]
  • 6 April 2004: Ingush rebels attack Russian appointed president of Ingushetia Murat Zyazikov. He was wounded when a car bomb was rammed into his motorcade.
  • 22 June 2004: Chechen and Ingush rebels raid on Russian troops in Ingushetia. Hundreds of Russian troops killed.
  • 10 July 2006: In the night, Chechen politician and leader of the terrorists Shamil Basayev and other four militants were killed in the village of the Ekazhevo during a truck explosion.
  • 31 August 2008: Execution of Magomed Yevloyev Ingush dissident, journalist, lawyer, businessman, and the owner of the news website Ingushetiya.ru, known for being highly critical of Russian regime in Ingushetia. He was shot in the temple.[98] Awarded posthumously, and his name is engraved in stone on the monuments at the Journalists’ Memorials in Bayeux, France and Washington D.C., the United States.[99]
  • 30 September 2008: A suicide bomber attacked the motorcade of Ruslan Meiriyev, Ingushetia’s top police official.
  • 10 June 2009: Snipers killed Aza Gazgireyeva, deputy chief justice of the regional Supreme Court, as she dropped her children off at school. Russian news agencies also cited investigators as saying she was likely killed for her role in investigating the 2004 attack on Ingush police forces by Chechen fighters.[100]
  • 13 June 2009: Two gunmen sprayed former deputy prime minister Bashir Aushev with automatic-weapon fire as he got out of his car at the gate outside his home in the region’s main city, Nazran.[101]
  • 22 June 2009: Russian appointed president of Ingushetia Yunus-Bek Yevkurov was badly hurt when a suicide bomber detonated a car packed with explosives as the president’s convoy drove past. The attack killed three bodyguards.[102]
  • 12 August 2009: Gunmen killed construction minister Ruslan Amerkhanov in his office in the Ingush capital, Magas.[103]
  • 17 August 2009: A suicide bomber killed 21 Ingush police officers and unknown numbers of Russian Internal Ministry troops which were stationed in Nazran, after he drove a truck full of explosives into a MVD police base.
  • 25 October 2009: Execution of Maksharip Aushev, an Ingush businessman, dissident, and a vocal critic of Russian regime policies in Ingushetia. His body had over 60 bullet holes. Awarded posthumously by the U.S. Department of State in 2009.[104]
  • 2 March 2010: Another terrorist has been killed in the village of the Ekazhevo, his name is Said Buryatsky, but his real one is Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Tikhomirov, although he was born in Republic of Buryatia.
  • 5 April 2010: A suicide bomber injured three police officers in the town of Karabulak. Two officers died at the hospital as a result of their injuries. While investigators arrived on scene, another car bomb was set off by remote. Nobody was hurt in the second blast.[105]
  • 24 January 2011: A suicide bomber, Magomed Yevloyev (same first and last name as the slain Ingush opposition journalist Magomed Yevloyev), killed 37 people at Domodedovo airport, Moscow, Russia.
  • 2012: Ingush rebels participate in war against Assad, Iranian, and Russian advisors in Syria which is largely viewed by the Ingush rebels as war against Russia and the Iranian-speaking Ossetians. The rebel Ingush commanders are veterans of Ossetian-Ingush conflict, wars in Chechnya, Daud Khalukhayev from Ingush village of Palanazh (Katsa), and a descendant of Ingush deportees of 1860’s Syrian-born Ingush Walid Didigov.[106][107]
  • 6 June 2013: Accusation of Ingush rebel leader Ali «Maghas» Taziev in Rostov-On-Don regional Russian court, who was captured after he voluntarily given himself up in on 9 June 2010 to Russian forces in Ingushetia on the agreement that Russians will liberate his relatives held hostage on one of the Russian military bases.
  • 27 August 2013: Execution of the head of security of Ingushetia Akhmet Kotiev and his bodyguard by Ingush rebels. Kotiev was actively involved in the assassination of Magomed Yevloyev.
  • 10 December 2013: Ingush opposition leader Magomed Khazbiev, who was a close friend of assassinated Magomed Yevloyev, attends Euromaidan in Ukraine and participates in anti-Russian campaign there after which his parents were threatened and harassed in Russia. On his website he writes: «the fact that Putin’s slaves harass my parents do not make any sense, if you [Russians] want me to stop you have to kill me like Magomed Yevloyev and Makhsharip Aushev».[108]
  • 2 February 2014: Russian FSB officially confirms that in the middle of December 2013 four North Caucasian instructors operate in Ukraine, and prepare Ukrainians for street battles against Russian interests.[109]
  • 20 April 2014: Famous Ingush human rights defender Ibrgim Lyanov stated that Ingushetia wants to separate from Russia and become an independent state using the example of the Crimean separation from Ukraine.[110]
  • 24 May 2014: Ingush rebel leader Arthur Getagazhev, 4 rebels, and 2 civilians were killed in action in the village of Sagopshi by Russian forces.[111]
  • 2 July 2014: After several months of denial, pro-Russian president of Ingushetia finally recognizes that Ingush rebels are fighting in Ukraine against pro-Russia forces.[112]
  • 2 July 2014: Ingush rebels attack Russian armored military convoy killing 1 and wounding 7 soldiers.[113]
  • 6 July 2014: Russian special forces prepared an ambush near the morgue in Nazran hospital where the body of Arthur Getagazhev was located. The intelligence reported that Ingush rebels will try to recover the body of the slain leader. The intelligence was correct. Radio Free Europe (section specializing in the Caucasus), reports that in the middle of the day 2 Ingush rebels attacked the ambush, according to unofficial source two rebels killed 7 and wounded 4 Russian FSB and spetsnaz officers in less than 40 seconds, after which the rebels left the scene unharmed. The source in Ingush police who wanted to stay anonymous said that exact number of killed are known only by the FSB but nobody would dare to declare if officially.[114] According to pro-Kremlin LifeNews released video the attack lasted less than 19 seconds.[115]
  • 17 January 2015: Maghas. Rise of anti-Western sentiments. Over 20,000 Ingush citizens protest against European terrorism toward Muslims.[116][117]
  • 28 February 2015: Russian opposition leader Nemtsov’s death linked to Ingushetia by Russian police.[118]
  • 26 March 2019: Thousands of people in Ingushetia have protested against a controversial border deal with neighboring Chechnya, denouncing land swaps under the agreement and calling for Ingushetia head Yunus-Bek Yevkurov to step down.
  • 25 June 2019: Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, has announced his resignation after almost 11 years in the position. De facto Ingushetia has no active leader. Civil protests continue, Ingush people boycotting the Russian appointed elections.

Politics[edit]

Up until the dissolution of the Soviet state, Ingushetia was part of the Chechen-Ingush ASSR of the Russian Soviet Socialist Republic. In the late 1920s – early 1930s the Soviet officials were eager to enforce the Chechen-Ingush merger as an «objective» and «natural» process. The Soviet linguist Nikolay Yakovlev, who was a supporter of the merger, suggested that an inclusive name of «Veinakh» («our people») had to be used for both the Chechens and Ingush. According to his views, the rapid urbanization and rapprochement of the Chechens and Ingush within one and the same republic might encourage the formation of a common culture and language and the establishment of a unified «Veinakh» people.

During the late 80’s, together with the separatist tendencies across the Soviet Union, the Second Congress of the Ingush People was held in Grozny on September 9–10, 1989. The gathering was directed at the top leadership of the Soviet Union, and included a request to «restore the Ingush people’s autonomy within their historical borders, the Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic with a capital in the right-bank part of the city of Ordzhonikidze». The Ingush Republic was to be organized out of six traditional Ingush districts (including the contested Prigorodny District). The rise of the Russian Federation gave the Ingushetians the independence they vowed for. During the 1990s, Ingushetia was ruled by its elected president Ruslan Aushev, a former Soviet general and hero of the war in Afghanistan.

The head of government and the highest executive post in Ingushetia is the Head.

Recent heads:

  • Ruslan Aushev: November 10, 1992 (Head of the Republic until March 7, 1993) – December 28, 2001
  • Akhmed Malsagov (interim): December 28, 2001 – May 23, 2002
  • Murat Zyazikov: May 23, 2002 – October 30, 2008[119]
  • Yunus-Bek Yevkurov: October 30, 2008 – June 26, 2019
  • Makhmud-Ali Kalimatov: June 26, 2019–present

Recent Chairmen of the Government:

  • Ruslan Tatiyev: March 24, 1993 – July 5, 1993
  • Tamerlan Didigov: July 5, 1993 – March 21, 1994
  • Mukharbek Didigov: March 21, 1994 – December 9, 1996
  • Belan Khamchiyev: December 10, 1996 – August 3, 1998
  • Magomed-Bashir Darsigov: August 3, 1998 – November 24, 1999
  • Akhmed Malsagov: November 24, 1999 – June 14, 2002
  • Viktor Aleksentsev: August 26, 2002 – June 3, 2003
  • Timur Mogushkov: June 3, 2003 – June 30, 2005
  • Ibragim Malsagov: June 30, 2005 – March 13, 2008
  • Kharun Dzeytov: March 14, 2008 – November 12, 2008
  • Rashid Gaysanov: November 13, 2008 – October 5, 2009
  • Aleksey Vorobyov: October 5, 2009 – March 10, 2010
  • Musa Chiliyev: March 21, 2011 – September 19, 2013
  • Abubakar Malsagov: September 19, 2013 – November 18, 2016
  • Ruslan Gagiyev: November 18, 2016 – September 9, 2018
  • Zyalimkhan Yevloyev: September 9, 2018 – September 8, 2019
  • Konstantin Surikov: September 9, 2019 – January 27, 2020
  • Vladimir Slastenin: March 26, 2020–present

The parliament of the Republic is the People’s Assembly, composed of 34 deputies elected for a four-year term. The People’s Assembly is headed by the Chairman. As of 2022, the Chairman of the People’s Assembly is Vladimir Slastenin.

The Constitution of Ingushetia was adopted on February 27, 1994.

Ingushetia is a member of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization.

The capital was moved from Nazran to Magas in December 2002.

The most recent election was held in 2013.

Administrative divisions[edit]

Administrative divisions of Ingushetia.

  • Cities under republic’s jurisdiction (as of 2016):
    •   Magas (Магас) (capital)

  • Districts:

Demographics[edit]

The Republic of Ingushetia (in green).

Population: 509,541 (2021 Census);[121] 412,529 (2010 Census);[122] 467,294 (2002 Census).[123]

Vital statistics[edit]

Source: Russian Federal State Statistics Service Archived August 14, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
Average population (× 1000) Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate (per 1000) Crude death rate (per 1000) Natural change (per 1000) Total fertility rate
1995 6,889 1,867 5,022 25.3 6.8 18.4
1996 5,980 1,958 4,022 20.9 6.8 14.0
1997 6,055 1,957 4,098 20.6 6.7 14.0
1998 5,929 2,064 3,865 19.8 6.9 12.9
1999 6,624 1,953 4,671 20.6 6.1 14.6
2000 8,463 2,117 6,346 21.5 5.4 16.2
2001 8,753 1,875 6,878 19.4 4.2 15.3
2002 7,578 1,874 5,704 16.4 4.1 12.4
2003 7,059 1,785 5,274 15.3 3.9 11.4
2004 6,794 1,751 5,043 15.0 3.9 11.1
2005 6,777 1,821 4,956 15.2 4.1 11.1
2006 7,391 1,830 5,561 16.9 4.2 12.7
2007 8,284 1,625 6,659 19.3 3.8 15.5
2008 9,215 1,561 7,654 21.8 3.7 18.1
2009 9,572 1,877 7,695 22.9 4.5 18.4 2.51
2010 11,178 1,857 9,321 27.1 4.5 22.6 2.99
2011 414 11,408 1,705 9,703 27.0 4.0 23.0 2.94
2012 430 9,350 1,595 7,755 21.4 3.7 17.7 2.27
2013 442 9,498 1,568 7,930 21.2 3.5 17.7 2.23
2014 453 9,858 1,586 8,272 21.5 3.5 18.0 2.28
2015 463 8,647 1,557 7,090 18.5 3.3 15.2 1.97
2016 472 7,750 1,555 6,195 16.3 3.3 13.0 1.75
2017 480 7,890 1,554 6,336 16.3 3.2 13.1 1.77
2018 488 8,048 1,548 6,500 16.3 3.1 13.2 1.79
2019 497 8,252 1,529 6,723 16.4 3.0 13.4 1.83
2020 507 8,463 1,891 6,572 16.6 3.7 12.9 1.85
2021 513 8,480 2,194 6,286 16.3 4.2 12.1 1.87
2022 7,912 1,727 6,185 15.0 3.3 11.7

Note: Total fertility rate 2009, 2010, 2011 source:[124]

Life expectancy[edit]

Ingushetia has life expectancy noticeably higher than in any other federal subjects of the Russian Federation.[125][126] In such way, Ingushetia is a Russian «blue zone». In the pre-pandemic 2019, life expectancy in Ingushetia was the same as in Switzerland, according to estimation of WHO, — 83.4 years.

2019 2021
Average: 83.4 years 80.5 years
Male: 80.0 years 77.3 years
Female: 86.3 years 83.3 years
  • Life expectancy at birth in Ingushetia

    Life expectancy at birth in Ingushetia

  • Life expectancy with calculated differences

    Life expectancy with calculated differences

  • Life expectancy in Ingushetia in comparison with other regions of the North Caucasus

    Life expectancy in Ingushetia in comparison with other regions of the North Caucasus

  • Interactive chart of comparison of male and female life expectancy for 2021. Open the original svg-file in a separate window and hover over a bubble to highlight it.

    Interactive chart of comparison of male and female life expectancy for 2021. Open the original svg-file in a separate window and hover over a bubble to highlight it.

Ethnic groups[edit]

According to the 2021 Russian census,[4] ethnic Ingush make up 96.4% of the republic’s population. The Ingush, a nationality group indigenous to the Caucasus, mostly inhabit Ingushetia. They refer to themselves as Ghalghaj (from Ingush: Ghala (‘fortress’ or ‘town’) and ghaj (‘inhabitants’ or ‘citizens’). The Ingush speak the Ingush language, which has a very high degree of mutual intelligibility with neighboring Chechen.

Other groups include Chechens (2.5%), Russians (0.7%), and a host of smaller groups, each accounting for less than 0.5% of the total population.[127]

Ethnic
group
1926 Census 1939 Census 1959 Census 1970 Census 1979 Census 1989 Census 2002 Census 2010 Census 2021 Census1
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
Ingush 47,280 61.6% 79,462 58.0% 44,634 40.6% 99,060 66.0% 113,889 74.2% 138,626 74.5% 361,057 77.3% 385,537 94.1% 473,440 96.4%
Chechens 2,553 3.3% 7,746 5.7% 5,643 5.1% 8,724 5.8% 9,182 6.0% 19,195 10.3% 95,403 20.4% 18,765 4.6% 12,240 2.5%
Russians 24,185 31.5% 43,389 31.7% 51,549 46.9% 37,258 24.8% 26,965 17.6% 24,641 13.2% 5,559 1.2% 3,321 0.8% 3,294 0.7%
Ukrainians 1,501 2.0% 1,921 1.4% 1,763 1.6% 1,068 0.7% 687 0.4% 753 0.4% 189 0.0% 91 0.0% 34 0.0%
Others 1,215 1.6% 4,549 3.3% 6,438 5.9% 3,978 2.7% 2,852 1.9% 2,781 1.5% 5,086 1.1% 1,918 0.5% 2,129 0.4%
1 18,404people were registered from administrative databases, and could not declare an ethnicity. It is estimated that the proportion of ethnicities in this group is the same as that of the declared group.[128]

Religion[edit]

Ingushetia is one of the most religious regions of Russia.[130] The Ingush are predominantly Shafi’i Madhhab of Sunni Islam[131] with strong influence of Sufism, which is often associated with one of two traditional Sufi orders: the Sufi tariqa Naqshbandi, represented in Ingushetia by the brotherhood of Deni Arsanov, and the tariqa Qadiriyyah, associated with Kunta-Haji Kishiev.[132][133]

Education[edit]

Ingush State University, the first institute of higher education in the history of Ingushetia, was founded in 1994 in Ordzhonikidzevskaya.[134]

Geography[edit]

Topographic map of the Caucasus. Ingushetia is located on the center right of the map.

Mountains in the Nazran Region

Ingushetia is situated on the northern slopes of the Caucasus. Its area is reported by various sources as either 2,000 square kilometers (770 sq mi)[135] or 3,600 square kilometers (1,400 sq mi);[136] the difference in reporting is mainly due to the inclusion or exclusion of parts of Sunzhensky Districts. The republic borders North Ossetia–Alania (SW/W/NW/N), the Chechnya (NE/E/SE), and the country of Georgia (Mtskheta-Mtianeti) (southwards). The highest point is the Gora Shan[137] (4451 m).

A 150-kilometer (93 mi) stretch of the Caucasus Mountains runs through the territory of the republic.

Rivers[edit]

Major rivers include:

  • Terek River
  • Assa River
  • Sunzha River

Natural resources[edit]

Ingushetia is rich in marble, timber, dolomite, plaster, limestone, gravel, granite, clay, thermal medical water, rare metals, mineral water, oil (over 60 billion tons), and natural gas reserves.

Climate[edit]

Ingushetia’s climate is mostly continental.

  • Average January temperature: −10 °C (14 °F)
  • Average July temperature: 21 °C (70 °F)
  • Average annual precipitation: 450–650 mm (18–26 in)
  • Average annual temperature: +10 °C (50 °F)

Economy[edit]

There are some natural resources in Ingushetia: mineral water in Achaluki, oil and natural gas in Malgobek, forests in Dzheirakh, metals in Galashki. The local government is considering the development of tourism; however, this is problematic due to the uneasy situation in the republic itself and the proximity of some conflict zones. However, Ingushetia continues to remain as one of Russia’s poorest republics, largely due to the ongoing conflict, corruption and civil disorders. Unemployment is estimated to be around 53%, and growing poverty is a major issue.[138]

Notable people[edit]

  • Musa Evloev, Greco-Roman wrestler. He is a two-time world champion, Olympic champion, and two-time national champion
  • Movsar Evloev, #10 Ranked UFC Featherweight[139]
  • Tamerlan Akhriev, inventor of a ceramic rotor engine.[140][141]
  • Idris Bazorkin, writer.[142]
  • Ruslan Aushev, infantry general, hero of USSR, first president of Ingushetia.
  • Rakhim Chakkhiev, boxer.[143]
  • Ismail Esmurziev, engineer.[144]
  • Issa Kodzoev, writer.[145]
  • Issa Kostoyev, policeman who captured serial killer Andrei Chikatilo.[146]
  • Nazyr Mankiev, wrestler.[147]
  • Murad Ozdoev, WWII ace.
  • Sulom-Beck Oskanov, Air Force general.
  • Magomet Sagov, PhD, academician (Academy of Sciences of the USSR).[148]
  • Islam Timurziev, boxer.
  • Sergej Garbariniev, boxer.
  • Amurhan Yandiev, detective who captured serial killer Andrei Chikatilo.[149][150]
  • Djemaldin Yandiev, poet.[151]
  • Tamara Yandieva, actress, singer.[152][153][154][155]

See also[edit]

  • Music in Ingushetia
  • War in Ingushetia

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Ingush: Гӏалгӏай Мохк, romanized: Ghalghaj Moxk; Russian: Респу́блика Ингуше́тия, romanized: Respúblika Ingushétiya

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Constitution of the Republic of Ingushetia, Article 64
  2. ^ Official website of the Republic of Ingushetia. Head of the Republic of Ingushetia Archived October 10, 2011, at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
  3. ^ Федеральная служба государственной статистики (Federal State Statistics Service) (May 21, 2004). «Территория, число районов, населённых пунктов и сельских администраций по субъектам Российской Федерации (Territory, Number of Districts, Inhabited Localities, and Rural Administration by Federal Subjects of the Russian Federation)». Всероссийская перепись населения 2002 года (All-Russia Population Census of 2002) (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service. Archived from the original on September 28, 2011. Retrieved November 1, 2011.
  4. ^ a b c «Оценка численности постоянного населения по субъектам Российской Федерации». Federal State Statistics Service (Russia). Retrieved September 1, 2022.
  5. ^ «Об исчислении времени». Официальный интернет-портал правовой информации (in Russian). Retrieved January 19, 2019.
  6. ^ Constitution of the Republic of Ingushetia, Article 14
  7. ^ Official throughout the Russian Federation according to Article 68.1 of the Constitution of Russia.
  8. ^ Law of June 4, 1992
  9. ^ Official website of the Republic of Ingushetia. Social-Economic Characteristics Archived June 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
  10. ^ «Russia’s North Caucasus Insurgency Widens as ISIS’ Foothold Grows». www.worldpoliticsreview.com. April 12, 2016. Retrieved October 3, 2017. Russia’s North Caucasus insurgency has gone relatively quiet, but reduced casualty numbers belie a still-worrying situation where long-standing grievances remain.
  11. ^ Walker, Shaun (April 4, 2017). «Why suspicion over St Petersburg metro attack is likely to fall on Islamist groups». The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved October 3, 2017. A renewed crackdown on any suspected militant activity in the run-up to the Sochi winter Olympics in 2014 and the departure of many militants to fight in Syria led to a weakening of the North Caucasus insurgency.
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Sources[edit]

  • Конституционный закон №57-РЗ от 7 декабря 2010 г. «О государственном гимне Республики Ингушетия», в ред. Конституционного закона №2-РЗП от 4 июля 2011 г «О внесении изменений в некоторые законодательные акты Республики Ингушетия в связи с принятием Закона Республики Ингушетия от 11 октября 2010 года No. 3-РЗП «О поправке к Конституции»». Вступил в силу со дня официального опубликования. Опубликован: «Ингушетия», No.211–212, 18 декабря 2010 г. (Constitutional Law #57-RZ of December 7, 2010 On the State Anthem of the Republic of Ingushetia, as amended by the Constitutional Law #2-RZP of July 4, 2011 On Amending Various Legislative Acts of the Republic of Ingushetia Due to the Adoption of the Law of the Republic Ingushetia #3-RZP of October 11, 2010 «On the Amendment to the Constitution». Effective as of the day of the official publication.). (in Russian)
  • 27 февраля 1994 г. «Конституция Республики Ингушетия», в ред. Закона №1-РЗП от 8 мая 2013 г. «О поправке к Конституции Республики Ингушетия». Опубликован: Сборник Конституций субъектов Федерации «Конституции Республик в составе Российской Федерации», выпуск 1, 1995. (February 27, 1994 Constitution of the Republic of Ingushetia, as amended by the Law #1-RZP of May 8, 2013 On the Amendment to the Constitution of the Republic of Ingushetia. ). (in Russian)
  • Верховный Совет РСФСР. Закон от 4 июня 1992 г. «Об образовании Республики Ингушетия в составе РСФСР». (Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR. Law of June 4, 1992 On Establishing the Republic of Ingushetia Within the RSFSR. ). (in Russian)

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ingushetia.

  • News from Ingushetia
  • News and History of Ingushetia
  • Official website of Ingushetia (in Russian)
  • Unofficial website of Ingushetia (in Russian)
  • Ingush Music/Video/Literature website (in Russian)
  • Magas, Ingush youth website (in Russian)
  • Head of Ingushetia’s website (in Russian)
  • Ingushetia’s Republic News Portal (in Russian)
  • Ingushetia Videos (in Russian)
  • National Project: People of Ingushetia (in Russian)

ингушетия

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    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Ингушетия

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    Новый русско-английский словарь > Ингушетия

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    Дополнительный универсальный русско-английский словарь > Ингушетия

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    Новый большой русско-английский словарь > Ингушетия

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    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Чечено-Ингушетия

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    Галашки

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    Орджоникидзевская

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См. также в других словарях:

  • Ингушетия.Ru — Ингушетия.ORG (Ингушетия.Ru) http://www.ingushetia.org Тип сайта: интернет портал Владелец: Евлоев, Магомед Яхьяевич Текущий статус: Работает …   Википедия

  • Ингушетия.ru — Ингушетия.ORG (Ингушетия.Ru) http://www.ingushetia.org Тип сайта: интернет портал Владелец: Евлоев, Магомед Яхьяевич Текущий статус: Работает …   Википедия

  • Ингушетия.ру — Ингушетия.ORG (Ингушетия.Ru) http://www.ingushetia.org Тип сайта: интернет портал Владелец: Евлоев, Магомед Яхьяевич Текущий статус: Работает …   Википедия

  • Ингушетия — Ингушская Республика в составе Российской Федерации. Образована в 1992 г. Название по русск. наименованию коренного населения ингуши., предположительно от названия аула Ангушт. Самоназвание галагаи или хамур горцы . Географические названия мира:… …   Географическая энциклопедия

  • Ингушетия — Ингушетия. Окрестности аула Джейрах. ИНГУШЕТИЯ (Ингушская Республика), в России. Граница между Ингушетией и Чечней не демаркирована (1994). Население 315 тыс. человек. Временный административный центр Назрань. Расположена в центральной части… …   Иллюстрированный энциклопедический словарь

  • ИНГУШЕТИЯ — ИНГУШЕТИЯ, Ингушская Республика, субъект Российской Федерации; расположена на юге Европейской части России. Входит в Северо Кавказский экономический район. Пл. 19,3 тыс. км2 (граница между Ингушетией и Чеченской Республикой не демаркирована,… …   Русская история

  • ИНГУШЕТИЯ — Ингушская Республика, в Российской Федерации. 3,6 тыс. км². население 315 тыс. человек (1993); ингуши (215,5 тыс. человек), русские (14 тыс. человек), чеченцы (13 тыс. человек), турки (2,4 тыс. человек). 4 района, 2 города, 1 поселок… …   Большой Энциклопедический словарь

  • ингушетия — сущ., кол во синонимов: 1 • республика (21) Словарь синонимов ASIS. В.Н. Тришин. 2013 …   Словарь синонимов

  • Ингушетия — У этого термина существуют и другие значения, см. Ингушетия (значения). Координаты: 43°19′ с. ш. 45°00′ в. д. / 43.316667° с. ш. 45° в. д.  …   Википедия

  • ИНГУШЕТИЯ — [Республика Ингушетия офиц. название с 1992], субъект РФ. Территория 3,6 тыс. кв. км. Столица Магас (ингуш. город солнца). География. И. расположена на сев. склонах Б. Кавказского хребта, в центральной его части. Делится на 3 природные почвенно… …   Православная энциклопедия

  • Ингушетия — (Ингушская Республика), в Российской Федерации. 19,3 тыс. км2 (граница между Ингушетией и Чечнёй не демаркирована, 1998). Население 313,3 тыс. человек (1998); ингуши (74,5%), русские (13,2%), чеченцы (10,3%). 4 района, 3 города, 1 посёлок… …   Энциклопедический словарь

Republic of Ingushetia

Республика Ингушетия

Republic

Other transcription(s)
 • Ingush Гӏалгӏай Мохк

Flag of Republic of Ingushetia

Flag

Coat of arms of Republic of Ingushetia

Coat of arms

Anthem: Ġalġayçen gimn
(State Anthem of Ingushetia)
Location of Republic of Ingushetia
Coordinates: 43°12′N 44°58′E / 43.200°N 44.967°ECoordinates: 43°12′N 44°58′E / 43.200°N 44.967°E
Country Russia
Federal district North Caucasian
Economic region North Caucasus
Capital Magas
Largest city Nazran
Government
 • Type People’s Assembly[1]
 • Head[1] Mahmud-Ali Kalimatov[2]
Area

[3]

 • Total 4,000 km2 (2,000 sq mi)
Population

 (2021 Census)[4]

 • Total Increase 509,541
 • Rank 74th
 • Density 163.16/km2 (422.6/sq mi)
 • Urban 54.8%
 • Rural 45.2%
Time zone UTC+3 (MSK[5])
ISO 3166 code RU-IN
Vehicle registration 06
Official language(s) Russian,[6] Ingush[7]
Website ingushetia.ru

Ingushetia (; Russian: Ингуше́тия; Ingush: ГӀалгӏайче, romanized: Ghalghayče), officially the Republic of Ingushetia,[a] is a republic of Russia located in the North Caucasus of Eastern Europe. The republic is part of the North Caucasian Federal District, and shares land borders with the country of Georgia to its south; and borders the Russian republics of North Ossetia–Alania and Chechnya to its west and east, respectively; while having a border with Stavropol Krai to its north. It also is one of the least-populated republics of Russia at under 500,000.

Its capital is the town of Magas, while the largest city is Nazran. At 4,000 square km, in terms of area, the republic is the smallest of Russia’s non-city federal subjects. It was established on June 4, 1992, after the Checheno-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was split in two.[8][9] The republic is home to the indigenous Ingush, a people of Nakh ancestry. As of the 2021 Census, its population was 509,541.[4]Estimation of the number of resident population by constituent entities of the Russian Federation

Largely due to the insurgency in the North Caucasus, Ingushetia remains one of the poorest and most unstable regions of Russia. Although the violence has died down in recent years,[10][11] the insurgency in neighboring Chechnya has occasionally spilled into Ingushetia. According to Human Rights Watch in 2008, the republic has been destabilized by corruption, a number of high-profile crimes (including kidnapping and murder of civilians by government security forces),[12] anti-government protests, attacks on soldiers and officers, Russian military excesses and a deteriorating human rights situation.[13][14] According to Russian media, Ingushetia has the lowest alcohol consumption in Russia.[15]

Map of the Caucasian Isthmus; Designed and drawn by Joseph Grassl (1856)

Etymology[edit]

The name Ingushetia is derived from the ancient village Angusht, which was renamed Tarskoye and transferred to North Ossetia in 1944 after the deportation of 23 February 1944, a.k.a. «Operation Lentil».

The Ingush ethnic group[edit]

The Ingush, a nationality group indigenous to the Caucasus, mostly inhabit Ingushetia. According to the linguist Johanna Nichols, the Ingush speak the Ingush language, which is different from Chechen but is placed into the same language group due to the passive bilingualism of the Ingush people.

The Ingush are, to a great extent, traditionally a classless society based on a clan system and unwritten law. Approximately 350 clans live in Ingushetia today. Every clan, and each clan member, are viewed as equal. Unlike the neighboring nations in the Caucasus (excluding Chechens), the Ingush rarely had social superiors or inferiors.[citation needed]

The history of the Ingush is closely related to that of the Chechens. Byzantine and Georgian missionaries partially Christianised the Ingush, although Christianity was weakened by the Mongol invasions. The remains of several churches, notably the Tkhaba-Yerdy and the Albe-Yerd can be found in Ingushetia. The Ingush gradually converted to Islam throughout the 18th–19th century. Vakhushti of Kartli wrote in 1745 that the inhabitants of the village Angushti were Sunni Muslims.

Endonyms and exonyms[edit]

1855 Atlas Map of Turkey and the North Caucasus. The map drawn by the American cartographer J.H.Colton at the request of the U.S. Congress. Gelia, Lesgistan, and Dagestan are shown on the map, top right corner.

The Ingush refer to themselves as Ghalghai (from Ingush: Ghala (‘fortress’ or ‘town’) and ghai (‘inhabitants’ or ‘citizens’).

The Ingush and Ingushetians were also known by the following ethnonyms or demonyms:

Exonyms: Gelia (American cartographer J. H. Colton, Strabo), Tschetschna (German geographers Joseph Grassl and Joseph Meyer), Kist (Georgian), Gergar, Dzurdzuk (Georgian), Ghlighvi (Georgian), Angushtini (Russian), Machaloni (Ossetian); Chechen highlanders called Ingush Makhaloni or Makhloi (according to Chechen historian Khalid Oshayev).

Endonyms: These self-namings represent different Vainakh tribes which make up the Ingush population today.[16]

Ghalghai or Gelgai, Nakh (meaning ‘people’), Vainakh (meaning ‘our people’), Orstkhoi, Nart-Orstkhoi, Galash, Tsori, Dzheirakhoi, Khamhoi, Metshal, Fyappi, and Nyasareth.

Population origins[edit]

According to Leonti Mroveli, the 11th-century Georgian chronicler, the word Caucasian is derived from the Vainakh ancestor Kavkas.[17]

According to Professor George Anchabadze of Ilia State University:[18][19]

The Vainakhs are the ancient natives of the Caucasus. It is noteworthy, that according to the genealogical table drawn up by Leonti Mroveli, the legendary forefather of the Vainakhs was «Kavkas», hence the name Kavkasians, one of the ethnicons met in the ancient Georgian written sources, signifying the ancestors of the Chechens and Ingush. As appears from the above, the Vainakhs, at least by name, are presented as the most «Caucasian» people of all the Caucasians (Caucasus – Kavkas – Kavkasians) in the Georgian historical tradition.

The Soviet-Russian anthropologists and scientists, N.Ya. Marr, V.V. Bounak, R.M. Munchaev, I.M Dyakonov, E.I. Krupnov, and G.A. Melikashvilli, wrote: «Among Ingush the Caucasian type is preserved better than among any other North Caucasian nation».[20] Professor G.F. Debets recognized that Ingush Caucasian anthropologic type is the most Caucasian among Caucasians.[21]

In an article in Science magazine, Bernice Wuethrich states that American linguist Dr. Johanna Nichols «has used language to connect modern people of the Caucasus region to the ancient farmers of the Fertile Crescent» and that her research suggests that «farmers of the region were proto-Nakh-Daghestanians». Nichols is quoted as stating that «The Nakh–Dagestanian languages are the closest thing we have to a direct continuation of the cultural and linguistic community that gave rise to Western civilization»[22]

Population genetics[edit]

The Ingush have 89% of J2 Y-DNA which is the highest known frequency in the world and J2 is closely associated with the Fertile Crescent.[23]

The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) of the Ingush differs from other Caucasian populations and the rest of the world. «The Caucasus populations exhibit, on average, less variability than other [World] populations for the eight Alu insertion polymorphisms analyzed here. The average heterozygosity is less than that of any other region of the world, with the exception of Sahul. Within the Caucasus, the Ingush have much lower levels of variability than any of the other populations. The Ingush also showed unusual patterns of mtDNA variation when compared with other Caucasus populations (Nasidze and Stoneking, submitted), which indicates that some feature of the Ingush population history, or of this particular sample of the Ingush, must be responsible for their different patterns of genetic variation at both mtDNA and the Alu insertion loci.»[24][25]

History[edit]

Prehistory[edit]

Map of Vakhushti Bagrationi in Russian clearly shows three Ingush societies: Kisti (Kist), Tsurtsuki (Dzurdzuki), Ghligvi (Gligvi) as parts of one country and Chechens (Chachans) as part of Daghestan without common border with the Ingush

Pottery: an ancient Ingush vessel with three handles. The side handles used to tie the knots, and the vessel itself is well balanced for an operator to pour water down with one hand. Dzheirakhovski district of Ingushetia.

Koorkhars (600 BC – 1800s AD) is a traditional Ingush female head cover (hair is put into the «horns») which comes either single «horn» for usage as cushion with helmet, or double «horns» during peacetime which are covered in jewelry.

Ingush male warrior helmet.

Typical Ingush medieval castle. Many of the towers and walls were destroyed by Russian army in 19th and 20th centuries.

10,000–8000 BC
According to Bernice Wuethrich’s article «Peering Into the Past, With Words», Johanna Nichols showed that linguistic evidence indicates the ancestors of Nakh people migrated to the slopes of the Caucasus from the Fertile Crescent where farming and raising sheep and cattle had been discovered. Nichols stated: «The Nakh–Dagestanian languages are the closest thing we have to a direct continuation of the cultural and linguistic community that gave rise to Western civilisation.» Anthropologist Henry Harpending of the University of Utah is impressed by her research.[26]
6000–4000 BC
Neolithic era. Pottery is known to the region. Old settlements near Ali-Yurt and Magas, discovered in the modern times, revealed tools made out of stone: stone axes, polished stones, stone knives, stones with holes drilled in them, clay dishes etc. Settlements made out of clay bricks discovered in the plains. In the mountains, there were discovered settlements made out of stone surrounded by walls some of them dated back to 8000 BC.[27]
4000–3000 BC
Invention of the wheel (3000 BC), horseback riding, metal works (copper, gold, silver, iron) dishes, armor, daggers, knives, arrow tips. The artifacts were found near Nasare-Cort, Muzhichi, Ja-E-Bortz (also known as Surkha-khi), Abbey-Gove (also known as Nazran or Nasare).[27]
20 BC
Strabo first mentions Geli, or Galgai in his reference to a nation in the center of the Caucasus. O.W. Wahl in 1875 in his book «The Land of the Czar» page 239 mentioned «These two opinions mentioned by Strabo come after all to the same point ; for the Legi are the modern Lesghi, and the Geli the Ingush tribe Galgai, and the Keraunian Mountains are the northern ranges of the Caucasus as far as the Beshtaú.»[28] The same statement about Gelia being Ingush was made by a German professor Karl Koch in 1843 in his book «Reise durch Russland nach dem kaukasischen Isthmus» page 489.[29] Jacobus Van Wijk Roelandszoon, Jacobus van Wijk (Roelandszoon) in 1821 book «Algemeen aardrijkskundig woordenboek volgens de nieuwste staatkundige veranderingen, en de laatste, beste en zekerste berigten» page 1050 also mention that Gelli or Gelad are the Ingush people which is mentioned by Zonaras.[30]
900 AD – 1200 AD
the kingdom in the center of the Caucasus splits into Alania and Noble Alania (known from Russian as Царственные Аланы). German scientist Peter Simon Pallas believed that Ingush people (Kist) were the direct descendants from Alania.[31][32]
1239 AD
Destruction of the Alania capital of Maghas (both names known solely from Muslim Arabs) and Alan confederacy of the Northern Caucasian highlanders, nations, and tribes by Batu Khan (a Mongol leader and a grandson of Genghis Khan) «Magas was destroyed in the beginning of 1239 by the hordes of Batu Khan. Historically Magas was located at approximately the same place on which the new capital of Ingushetia is now built» – D.V.Zayats[33]
1300 AD – 1400 AD
War between the Alans, Tamerlan, Tokhtamysh, and the Battle of the Terek River. The Alan tribes build fortresses, castles, and defense walls locking the mountains from the invaders. Part of the lowland tribes occupied by Mongols. The insurgency against Mongols begins. «One map of the area during the Mongol period gives us a clue why there was not much written about the Vainakh— as the area of Chechnya-Ingushetia on that map is simply marked as «ungovernable». This is not surprising, as the majority of armies moving north or south would be interested in passing through the mountains and getting to their ultimate destinations as quickly as possible— leaving the peoples between the two passes relatively unmolested.» – Schaefer, Robert W. «Insurgency in Chechnya and the North Caucasus: From Gazavat to Jihad» p. 51. In 1991 the Jordanian historian Abdul-Ghani Khassan presented the photocopy from old Arabic scripts claiming that Alania was in Chechnya and Ingushetia, and the document from Alanian historian Azdin Vazzar (1395–1460) who claimed to be from Nokhcho tribe of Alania.[34][35]
1558 AD
Russian conquest of the Caucasus. 1558 Temryuk of Kabarda sends his emissaries to Moscow requesting help against Ingush tribes from Ivan the Terrible. Ivan the Terrible marries Temryuk’s daughter Maria Temryukovna the Circassian (Kabardin) tsaritsa. Alliance formed to gain the ground in the central Caucasus for the expanding Tsardom of Russia against stubborn Vainakh defenders.[36]
1562 AD
Joint Russian, Kabardian, and Nogay forces attack Ingush. According to Russian sources 164 Ingush settlements were completely destroyed in this war. Lowland Ingushetia occupied by Russia and their Kabardian allies.[36]

In Caucasian War and as part of Terek Cossacks Okrug[edit]

In the 18th century, Ingush were mostly pagan and Christian with some Muslim minority. Beginning 1588 some Chechen societies joined Russia (Shikh Okotsky [ru]; Albir-Murza Batayev [ru]). In 1785 Chechen leader Sheikh Mansur starts the rebellion against Russia. He gathers his Chechen and Dagestani forces and because of the fear of looting of his own villages from his standing army he orders the attack against Ingush Karabulak settlements. However, the Ingush defeated Mansur and he is forced to retreat.[37]

Russian historians claim that the Ingush volunteered to become a part of Russia. This conclusion is based mostly on the document signed on 13 June 1810, by General-Major Delpotso and representatives of 2 Ingush clans. Other clans resisted the Russian conquest. In 1811 Russian envoy of a German origin Moritz von Engelhardt at czar’s request visited mountainous Ingushetia and offered Ingush people to join Russia promising many benefits from czar. The representative of the Ingush people rejected the proposal with the reply: «Above my hat I see only sky». This encounter later will be used by Goethe in his «Freisinn»[38]

On June 29, 1832, Russian baron Rozen reported in letter No.42 to count Chernishev that «on the 23rd of this month I exterminated eight Ghalghai (Ingush) villages. On the 24th I exterminated nine more villages near Targim.» By November 12, 1836 (letter no.560, he was claiming that highlanders of Dzheirkah, Kist, and Ghalghai had been temporarily conquered.[39] In 1829 Imam Shamil starts the rebellion against Russia. He conquers Dagestan, Chechnya and then attacks Ingushetia hoping to convert Ingush people into Islam thus gaining strategic ally. Ingush defeated Imam Shamil forces then and later in 1858 when he tried again two more times to capture Ingushetia. Locked in warfare with two strong opponents and their allies, Ingush forces were decimated. According to Russian officer Fedor Tornau who fought the Ingush with the aid of Ossetian allies, at most Ingush had only six hundred warriors.[40] However, the Russian conquest in Ingushetia was extremely difficult and the Russian forces began to rely on the method of colonization: extermination of the local population and repopulation of the area with Cossack and Ossetian loyalists.

Colonization of Ingush land by Russians and Ossetians started in the middle of the 19th century. Russian General Evdokimov and Ossetian colonel Kundukhov in ‘Opis no. 436’ «gladly reported» that «the result of colonization of Ingush land was successful»:

  • Ingush village Ghazhien-Yurt was renamed to Stanitsa Assinovskaya in 1847.
  • Ingush village Ebarg-Yurt was renamed to Stanitsa Troitskaya in 1847.
  • Ingush town Dibir-Ghala was renamed to Stanitsa Sleptsovskaya in 1847.
  • Ingush village Magomet-Khite was renamed to Stanitsa Voznesenskaya in 1847.
  • Ingush village Akhi-Yurt was renamed to Stanitsa Sunzhenskaya in 1859.
  • Ingush village Ongusht was renamed to Stanitsa Tarskaya in 1859.
  • Ingush town Ildir-Ghala was renamed to Stanitsa Karabulakskaya in 1859.
  • Ingush village Alkhaste was renamed to Stanitsa Feldmarshalskaya in 1860.
  • Ingush village Tauzen-Yurt was renamed to Stanitsa Vorontsov-Dashkov in 1861.
  • Ingush village Sholkhi was renamed to Khutor Tarski in 1867.[41]

After multiple losses of Imam Shamil at the end of Caucasian War, Russians and Chechens unify their forces. Former Chechen rebels and their men join Russian ranks. 3 November 1858 General Evdokimov ordered (order N1896) a former rebel commander naib Saib-Dulla Gekhinski (Saadulla Ospanov) of Chechnya to attack and destroy Ingush settlements near Assa and Fortanga rivers: Dattikh, Meredzhi, Aseri, Shagot-Koch and others.[42] After the losses, the remaining Ingush clans resorted mostly to underground resistance.[43]

The Russians built the fortress Vladikavkaz («ruler of the Caucasus») on the place of Ingush village of Zaur.[44] Russian General Aleksey Petrovich Yermolov wrote in a letter to the Tsar of Russia, «It would be a grave mistake for Russia to alienate such a militaristic nation as the Ingush.» He suggested the separation of the Ingush and Chechens in order for Russia to win the war in the Caucasus. In another letter from General Ermolov to Lanski (dated 12 January 1827) on the impossibility of forceful Christianization of the Ingush, Yermolov wrote: «This nation, the most courageous and militaristic among all the highlanders, cannot be allowed to be alienated …»

The last organized rebellion (the so-called «Nazran insurrection») in Ingushetia occurred in 1858 when 5,000 Ingush started a fight but lost to superior Russian forces. The rebellion signaled the end of the First Russo-Caucasian War. In the same year, the Russian Tsar encouraged the emigration of Ingush and Chechens to Turkey and the Middle East by claiming that «Muslims need to live under Muslim rulers». It seems that he wanted to liberate the land for Ossetians and Cossacks.[43] Some Ingush became exiled to deserted territory in the Middle East where many of them died. The remainder were assimilated. It was estimated that 80% of the Ingush left Ingushetia for the Middle East in 1865.[45][46]

After the Russian Revolution of 1917, the Soviets promised the Ingush that the villages and towns annexed during the colonization would be returned to the Ingush. Ingushetia becomes a major battleground between the old archenemies: general Denikin and Ingush resistance fighters. In his memoirs, general Denikin writes:[47]

Ingush people are the least numerous, most welded, and strongly martial organization. They were, in essence, the supreme arbiter of the North Caucasus. The moral of the appearance was defined long ago in Russian text-books of geography, «the chief occupation – animal husbandry and robbery  …» The last one of the two reached special art in the society. Political aspirations came from the same trend. The Ingush are mercenaries of the Soviet regime, they support it but don’t let the spread of it in their province. At the same time, they tried to strike up relations with Turkey and sought the assistance from the Turks from Elisavetpol, and Germany – from Tiflis. In August, when the Cossacks and Ossetians captured Vladikavkaz, the Ingush intervened and saved the Soviet Board of Commissioners of Terek, but sacked the city and captured the state bank and mint. They robbed all the neighbors: the Cossacks and Ossetians in the name of «correcting historical errors» for a shortage of land, the Bolsheviks – in return for their services, Vladikavkaz citizens – for their helplessness, and the Kabardins – just out of habit. They were hated by everyone, and they did their «craft» in unison, well organized, in a big way, becoming the richest tribe in the Caucasus.

— Anton Denikin, Essays on the Russian Troubles (1925)

As part of the Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus[edit]

On December 21, 1917 Ingushetia, Chechnya, and Dagestan declared independence from Russia and formed a single state called the «United Mountain Dwellers of the North Caucasus» (also known as Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus), which was recognized by Central Powers (Germany, Austro-Hungary and Turkey), Georgia, and Azerbaijan (which declared their independence from Russia in 1918) as an independent state.[48] For example, Anna Zelkina writes that in May 1918 the first country to recognize independence was Turkey:[49]

The First Congress of the North Caucasus formed a Provisional Government of the North Caucasian Free State (SeveroKavkazskoye Svobodnoye Gosudarstvo) and in May 1918 declared the establishment of the North Caucasian Republic. The only country to recognize it was Turkey.

Later Germany and others followed the recognition. According to P. Kosok:[50]

Azerbaidzhan and Armenia (May 28, 1918). All three states then concluded independent treaties with Turkey, which similarly acknowledged the independence of the Northern Caucasus and concluded a treaty of friendship with it on June 8, 1918. An exchange of diplomatic notes then took place between the head of the German Extraordinary Delegation, General von Lossov, and the North Caucasian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Bammat, resulting in the de facto recognition by Germany of the independence of the Northern Caucasus.

According to British War Office, Germans tried to establish the military base in Ingushetia.[51][52]

…the German Command with the object of securing the presence of German regiments within Ingush territory. The Ingushi declare that all attempts of any foreign armed force to enter into the Terek region will be regarded by the Ingushi as an attack upon themselves, and the Ingushi will oppose all their forces to such attempts.

The capital of the new state was moved to Temir-Khan-Shura (Dagestan).[53][54][55] The first prime minister of the state was elected Tapa Chermoyev, a Chechen prominent statesman; the second prime minister was Ingush statesman Vassan-Girey Dzhabagiev who also was the author of the Constitution of the land in 1917. In 1920 he was reelected for a third term. In 1921 Russians attacked and occupied the country and forcefully merged it with the Soviet state. The Caucasian war for independence continued and the government went into exile.[56]

As part of Chechen-Ingush ASSR[edit]

Cossack General Andrei Shkuro in his book writes:[57]

Ingushetia was the most unanimous and entirely Bolshevik. Ever since the conquest of the Caucasus, the brave and freedom-loving Ingush, who were desperately defending their independence, were partly exterminated and partly driven into barren mountains. The Terek Cossacks were settled on the fertile lands that had belonged to them, and Cossacks founded their villages on the wedge that had cut into Ingushetia. Deprived of the opportunity to earn their bread in an honest way, the Ingush lived by robbery and raids on the Cossack lands. Even in peacetime, the Terek Cossacks bordering Ingush did not go to the field without rifles. Not a day went by without shooting and bloodshed. Considering the Cossacks as oppressors, and the Cossack lands were still theirs, the Ingush mercilessly took revenge on them. The relationship was created completely irreconcilable; further cohabitation was unthinkable. It was necessary either to exterminate the Ingush completely, or to evict the Cossacks from the former Ingush lands, returning those to their former owners.

The Soviets confiscated the remaining Ingush properties by collectivization and dekulakization[58] and unified Chechnya and Ingushetia into Chechen-Ingush ASSR.

During World War II Ingush youth were drafted into the Russian army. In August 1942 Nazi German forces captured half of the North Caucasus within thirty-three days moving from Rostov-On-Don to Mozdok 560 km or almost 17 km per day (see Battle of the Caucasus). From Mozdok to Malgobek same thirty three days, 20 km the German forces moved roughly 600 meters per day and were stopped only at Ordzhonikidze (modern-day Vladikavkaz) and Malgobek which were mostly populated by Ingush before the genocide of 23 February 1944. The fighting for the Malgobek was so intense that the small town was captured and recaptured four times until the Germans finally retreated.

According to the Soviet military newspaper Red Star, after receiving the news about German brutality toward civilians in Kabardino-Balkaria, Ingush people declare Jihad(Gazavat) against Germans. Stalin planned the expansion of the USSR in the south through Turkey. Muslim Chechens and Ingush could become a threat to the expansion.[59] In February 1944 near the end of World War II, Russian Army and NKVD units flooded the Chechen-Ingush ASSR. The maneuvers were disguised as military exercises of the southern district.

Genocide of 1944[edit]

During World War II, in 1942 German forces entered the North Caucasus. For three weeks Germans captured over half of the North Caucasus. They were only stopped at two Chechen-Ingush cities: Malgobek and Ordzhonikidze (a.k.a. «Vladikavkaz») by heroic resistance of natives of Chechen-Ingush ASSR.[60] Soviet propaganda portrayed Chechens and Ingush as «traitors».
On 23 February 1944, Ingush and Chechens were falsely accused of collaborating with the Nazis, and the entire Ingush and Chechen populations were deported to Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Siberia in Operation Lentil, on the orders of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, while the majority of their men were fighting on the front. The initial phase of the deportation was carried out on American-supplied Studebaker trucks specifically modified with three submachine gun-nest compartments above the deported to prevent escapes. American historian Norman Naimark writes:

Troops assembled villagers and townspeople, loaded them onto trucks – many deportees remembered that they were Studebakers, fresh from Lend-Lease deliveries over the Iranian border – and delivered them at previously designated railheads. …Those who could not be moved were shot. …[A] few fighters aside, the entire Chechen and Ingush nations, 496,460 people, were deported from their homeland.[61]

The deportees were gathered on the railroad stations and during the second phase transferred to the cattle railroad carts. Up to 30% of the population perished during the journey or in the first year of the exile.[62][63][64] The Prague Watchdog claims that «in the early years of their exile about half of the Chechens and Ingush died from hunger, cold and disease».[65] The deportation was classified by the European Parliament in 2004 as genocide.[66] After the deportation Ingush resistance against Soviets rises again. Those who escaped the deportation, shepherds who were high in the mountains during the deportation combine forces and form rebel groups which constantly attack Russian forces in Ingushetia. Major rebel groups were led by Akhmed Khuchbarov, Tsitskiev brothers, and Ingush woman-sniper Laisat Baisarova. The last one of the male Ingush rebels was killed in 1977 by the KGB officers, while the female sniper Laisat Baisarova was never captured or killed.[67] American professor Johanna Nichols, who specializes in Chechen and Ingush philology, provided the theory behind the deportation:[68]}} {{quotation|In 1944 the nationalities themselves were abolished and their lands resettled when the Chechen and Ingush, together with the Karachay-Balkar, Crimean Tatars, and other nationalities were deported en masse to Kazakhstan and Siberia, losing at least one-quarter and perhaps half of their population in transit. (The reason, never clarified, seems to have been Stalin’s wish to clear all Muslims from the main invasion routes in a contemplated attack on Turkey.)

After return from Central Asia[edit]

After 13 years of exile, the Ingush were allowed to return to Chechen-Ingushetia (but not to Ordzhonikidze a.k.a. «Vladikavkaz» or the Prigorodny District). Most of Ingushetia’s territory had been settled by Ossetians and part of the region had been transferred to North Ossetia. The returning Ingush faced considerable animosity from the Ossetians. The Ingush were forced to buy their homes back from the Ossetians and Russians. These hardships and injustices led to a peaceful Ingush protest in Grozny on 16 January 1973, which was crushed by the Soviet troops[69] In 1989, the Ingush were officially rehabilitated along with other peoples that had been subjected to repressions.[70]

Post-Soviet period[edit]

In 1991, when the Chechens declared independence from the Soviet Union to form the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria, the Ingush chose to secede from the Chechen-Ingush Republic. Thus, in 1992 the Ingush joined the newly created Russian Federation to try to resolve the conflict with Ossetia peacefully, also in the hope that the Russians would return their land as a token of their loyalty.

Ethnic cleansing of 1992[edit]

However, ethnic tensions in North Ossetia which were orchestrated by Ossetian nationalists (per Helsinki Human Right Watch), led to an outbreak of violence in the Ossetian–Ingush conflict in October–November 1992, when another ethnic cleansing of the Ingush population started.[71] According to media reports, Ingush hostages were held in 1992 in Beslan high school gymnasium. The hostages were all kept in the same gymnasium, and deprived of food and water; at least one newborn, and several dozen male Ingush hostages were executed.[72][73][74][75]

In a possible retaliation in 2004, Chechen and Ingush militants took over 500 Osset hostages in Beslan high-school. (It was the same building where Ossetian militants had held hundreds of Ingush hostages in 1992). Over 60,000 Ingush civilians were forced from their homes in the Prigorodny District of North Ossetia.[43] As a result of the conflict, pro-Russian general Ruslan Aushev, a decorated war hero from the War in Afghanistan, was appointed by the Russian government as the first president of Ingushetia to stop the spread of the conflict. Partial stability returned under his rule.

First and Second Chechen Wars[edit]

In 1994, when the First Chechen War started, the number of refugees in Ingushetia from both conflicts doubled. According to the UN, for every citizen of Ingushetia, one refugee arrived from Ossetia or Chechnya. This influx was very problematic for the economy, which collapsed after Aushev’s success. The second Russo-Chechen war which started in 1999 brought more refugees (at some point there was one refugee for every Ingush citizen: 240,000 from Chechnya plus 60,000 from North Ossetia at the peak in 2000) and misery to Ingushetia. In 2001, Aushev was forced to leave his presidency and was succeeded by Murat Zyazikov, a former KGB general. The situation worsened under his rule. Many young Ingush men were abducted by Russian and Ossetian death squads.[76][77][78][79] according to Human rights watchdogs Memorial[80] and Mashr.[81] The Ingush mountains are closed for Ingush nationals.[82]

The number of rebel attacks in Ingushetia rose, especially after the number of Russian security forces was tripled. For example, according to a Russian news agency a murder of an ethnic-Russian school teacher in Ingushetia was committed by two ethnic-Russian and ethnic-Ossetian soldiers; Issa Merzhoev the Ingush Police detective who solved the crime was shot at and killed by «unknown» assailants shortly after he had identified the murderer.[83]
At least four people were injured when a vehicle exploded on 24 March 2008. An upsurge in violence in these months targeted local police officers and security forces. In January 2008, the Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation launched a «counter-terrorism» operation in Ingushetia after receiving information that insurgents had been preparing a series of attacks.[84]

Early in August 2008, the war between Georgia and South Ossetia broke out, in which the Russian Federation subsequently became involved.[85] After the outbreak of the war, there were virtually no more attacks or abductions of Ingush civilians by «unknown» forces. Most of the Russian forces were transferred to North and South Ossetia[86] 31 August 2008 Magomed Yevloyev, the head of Ingush opposition and the owner of the website ingushetiya.ru, was killed by Russian security forces[87] Shortly before the unrecognised opposition group People’s Parliament of Ingushetia Mekhk-Kkhel called for the recognition of the Russian semi-autonomous republic’s independence, opposition activist Magomed Khazbiyev proclaimed, «We must ask Europe or America to separate us from Russia.»[88][89]

On October 18, 2008, a Russian military convoy came under grenade attack and machine gun fire near Nazran. Official Russian reports of the ambush, which has been blamed on local Muslim separatists, said two soldiers were killed and at least seven injured. Reports from Ingush opposition sources suggested as many as forty to fifty Russian soldiers were killed.[90][91]

On October 30, 2008, Zyazikov was dismissed from his office (he himself claimed he resigned voluntarily). On the next day, Yunus-Bek Yevkurov was nominated by Dmitry Medvedev and approved as President by the People’s Assembly of Ingushetia (later the title President was renamed to Head). This move was endorsed by major Russian political parties and by the Ingush opposition.[92][93] Under the current rule of Yevkurov, Ingushetia seems much calmer, showing some semblance of the Russian government. Attacks on policemen have fallen by 40% and abductions by 80%.[94]

Military history[edit]

According to professor Johanna Nichols, in all the recorded history and reconstructable prehistory, the Ingush people have never undertaken battle except in defense.[43] In the 3rd and 2nd centuries BC Pharnavaz, his son Saurmag the Iberian kings, and the relatives of Ingush people per Leonti Mroveli, received military assistance from Ingush people in defense of Iberia against the Kartli occupation.[95]

During World War I, 500 cavalrymen from an Ingush regiment of the Wild Division attacked the German Iron Division. The Russian Emperor Nicholas II, assessing the performance of the Ingush and Chechen regiments during the Brusilov breakthrough on the Russian-German front in 1915 wrote in a telegram to the Governor-General of the Tersky region Fleisher:

The Ingush regiment pounced upon the German «Iron Division» like an avalanche. It was immediately supported by the Chechen regiment. The Russian history, including the history of our Preobrazhensky regiment, does not know a single instance of a horse cavalry attacking an enemy force armed with heavy artillery: 4.5 thousand killed, 3.5 thousand taken prisoner, 2.5 thousand wounded. Less than in an hour and a half the «Iron Division» ceased to exist, the division that had aroused fear in the best armies of our allies. On behalf of me, the royal court and the whole of the Russian army send our best regards to fathers, mothers, sisters, wives and brides of those brave sons of the Caucasus whose heroism paved the way for the destruction of German hordes. Russia bows low to the heroes and will never forget them. I extend my fraternal greetings, Nicholas II, August 25, 1915.[96]

In 1941, when Germans attacked the USSR, the whole Russian front was retreating 40 km a day. Out of 6,500 defenders of Brest Fortress, 6,000 Soviet troops capitulated. 500 troops were fresh conscripts of Ingush and Chechen origin. Defenders held the fortress for over a month against the Germans and even managed to stage several attacks from the Fortress. The last defender’s name has been unknown for a long time; his documents identified him as a man called Barkhanoyev. Decades later, official records revealed it was Umatgirei Barkhanoyev from the Ingush village of Yandare. Recently, the memoirs of Stankus Antanas, a Lithuanian national and former Waffen SS officer, were published in Ingushetia. He recalls that in July 1941, his regiment was ordered to «finish off» the remaining Soviet soldiers in the fortress. When the Nazis decided that no defenders had been left alive, an SS general lined up his soldiers on the parade ground to award them with decorations for capturing the fortress. Then, a Red Army officer came out from the fortress’s underground bunker:

He was blind because of his wounds and walked with his left arm extended forward. His right hand rested on a gun holster. He walked along the parade grounds wearing a ragged uniform, but his head was held high. The entire division was shocked at the sight. Approaching a shell-hole, he turned his face toward the west. The German general suddenly saluted this last defender of the Brest Fortress, and the rest of the officers followed suit. The Red Army officer drew a handgun and shot himself in the head. He fell on the ground facing Germany. A deep-drawn sigh aired over the parade grounds. We all stood «frozen» in awe of this brave man.[97]

In 1994–1996 Ingush volunteers fought alongside Chechens in the First Chechen War. Aside from a few incidents (including the killings of Ingush civilians by Russian soldiers), Ingushetia was largely kept out of the war by a determined policy of non-violence pursued by President Ruslan Aushev.[43]

This changed after the beginning of the Second Chechen War, and especially since Murat Zyazikov became the second Russian appointed president of Ingushetia in 2002. The first major rebel attack of the conflict, in which a military convoy was destroyed occurred in May 2000 and caused the deaths of 19 soldiers. In the June 2004 Nazran raid, Chechen and Ingush rebels attacked government buildings and military bases across Ingushetia, resulting in the deaths of at least 90 Ingush people and an unknown number of Russian troops. Among them the Republic’s acting interior minister Abukar Kostoyev, his deputy Zyaudin Kotiyev. In response to a sharp escalation in attacks by insurgents since the summer of 2007,[98] Moscow sent in an additional 25,000 MVD and FSB troops, tripling the number of special forces in Ingushetia.

Civil disorder[edit]

Famous Ingush rebels. Top left: Ingush sniper Laisat Baisarova. Lower left: Sulom-beck Sagopshinski. Right: Akhmed Khuchbarov.

  • 1800s–1860s: Insurgency against Russian conquest.
  • 1860s–1890s: Raids of Ingush abreks on the Georgian Military Highway and Mozdok.
  • 1890s–1917: Insurgency of Ingush resistance under Chechen abrek Zelimkhan Gushmazukaev and Ingush abrek Sulom-beck Sagopshinski, execution of Russian viceroy to Ingushetia colonel Mitnik by Ingush resistance fighter Buzurtanov.
  • 1917–1920s: Insurgency of Ingush resistance fighters against combined Russian White Guards, Cossacks, Ossetians, and general Denikin forces.
  • 1920s–1930s: Insurgency of Ingush people against Communists, executions of Communist leader of Ingushetia Chernoglaz by Ingush rebel Uzhakhov. Execution of Communist party leader of Ingushetia Ivanov by Ingush rebels.
  • 1944–1977: Ingush rebels avenging the deportation of the Ingush nation. Scores of Russian army units and NKVD, KGB officers killed.
  • 1992: Ossetian-Ingush conflict. In combat operations Ingush rebels capture armor which later transferred to Chechens or given back to Russian army after the conflict ended.
  • 1994: Nazran. Ingush civilians stop Russian army, flip armor, burn military trucks which were on the march to Chechnya in Russian-Chechen war. First Russian casualties reported from hands of Ingush rebels.
  • 1994–1996: Ingush rebels defend Grozny and participate in combat operations on Chechen side.
  • 1999–2006: Ingush rebels join Chechen rebels, the independence war turns into Jihad.
  • 13 July 2001: Ingush people protest «defiling and desecration» of historical Christian Ingush church Tkhaba-Yerdy after Russian troops made the church into a public toilet. Though Ingush are Muslims they highly respect their Christian past.[99]
  • 15 September 2003: Ingush rebels use bomb truck and attack FSB headquarters in Maghas. Several dozens of Russian FSB officers killed including the senior officer overseeing the FSB in Chechen republic. The several story HQ building is severely damaged.[100]
  • 6 April 2004: Ingush rebels attack Russian appointed president of Ingushetia Murat Zyazikov. He was wounded when a car bomb was rammed into his motorcade.
  • 22 June 2004: Chechen and Ingush rebels raid on Russian troops in Ingushetia. Hundreds of Russian troops killed.
  • 10 July 2006: In the night, Chechen politician and leader of the terrorists Shamil Basayev and other four militants were killed in the village of the Ekazhevo during a truck explosion.
  • 31 August 2008: Execution of Magomed Yevloyev Ingush dissident, journalist, lawyer, businessman, and the owner of the news website Ingushetiya.ru, known for being highly critical of Russian regime in Ingushetia. He was shot in the temple.[101] Awarded posthumously, and his name is engraved in stone on the monuments at the Journalists’ Memorials in Bayeux, France and Washington D.C., the United States.[102]
  • 30 September 2008: A suicide bomber attacked the motorcade of Ruslan Meiriyev, Ingushetia’s top police official.
  • 10 June 2009: Snipers killed Aza Gazgireyeva, deputy chief justice of the regional Supreme Court, as she dropped her children off at school. Russian news agencies also cited investigators as saying she was likely killed for her role in investigating the 2004 attack on Ingush police forces by Chechen fighters.[103]
  • 13 June 2009: Two gunmen sprayed former deputy prime minister Bashir Aushev with automatic-weapon fire as he got out of his car at the gate outside his home in the region’s main city, Nazran.[104]
  • 22 June 2009: Russian appointed president of Ingushetia Yunus-Bek Yevkurov was badly hurt when a suicide bomber detonated a car packed with explosives as the president’s convoy drove past. The attack killed three bodyguards.[105]
  • 12 August 2009: Gunmen killed construction minister Ruslan Amerkhanov in his office in the Ingush capital, Magas.[106]
  • 17 August 2009: A suicide bomber killed 21 Ingush police officers and unknown numbers of Russian Internal Ministry troops which were stationed in Nazran, after he drove a truck full of explosives into a MVD police base.
  • 25 October 2009: Execution of Maksharip Aushev, an Ingush businessman, dissident, and a vocal critic of Russian regime policies in Ingushetia. His body had over 60 bullet holes. Awarded posthumously by the U.S. Department of State in 2009.[107]
  • 2 March 2010: Another terrorist has been killed in the village of the Ekazhevo, his name is Said Buryatsky, but his real one is Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Tikhomirov, although he was born in Republic of Buryatia.
  • 5 April 2010: A suicide bomber injured three police officers in the town of Karabulak. Two officers died at the hospital as a result of their injuries. While investigators arrived on scene, another car bomb was set off by remote. Nobody was hurt in the second blast.[108]
  • 24 January 2011: A suicide bomber, Magomed Yevloyev (same first and last name as the slain Ingush opposition journalist Magomed Yevloyev), killed 37 people at Domodedovo airport, Moscow, Russia.
  • 2012: Ingush rebels participate in war against Assad, Iranian, and Russian advisors in Syria which is largely viewed by the Ingush rebels as war against Russia and the Iranian-speaking Ossetians. The rebel Ingush commanders are veterans of Ossetian-Ingush conflict, wars in Chechnya, Daud Khalukhayev from Ingush village of Palanazh (Katsa), and a descendant of Ingush deportees of 1860’s Syrian-born Ingush Walid Didigov.[109][110]
  • 6 June 2013: Accusation of Ingush rebel leader Ali «Maghas» Taziev in Rostov-On-Don regional Russian court, who was captured after he voluntarily given himself up in on 9 June 2010 to Russian forces in Ingushetia on the agreement that Russians will liberate his relatives held hostage on one of the Russian military bases.
  • 27 August 2013: Execution of the head of security of Ingushetia Akhmet Kotiev and his bodyguard by Ingush rebels. Kotiev was actively involved in the assassination of Magomed Yevloyev.
  • 10 December 2013: Ingush opposition leader Magomed Khazbiev, who was a close friend of assassinated Magomed Yevloyev, attends Euromaidan in Ukraine and participates in anti-Russian campaign there after which his parents were threatened and harassed in Russia. On his website he writes: «the fact that Putin’s slaves harass my parents do not make any sense, if you [Russians] want me to stop you have to kill me like Magomed Yevloyev and Makhsharip Aushev».[111]
  • 2 February 2014: Russian FSB officially confirms that in the middle of December 2013 four North Caucasian instructors operate in Ukraine, and prepare Ukrainians for street battles against Russian interests.[112]
  • 20 April 2014: Famous Ingush human rights defender Ibrgim Lyanov stated that Ingushetia wants to separate from Russia and become an independent state using the example of the Crimean separation from Ukraine.[113]
  • 24 May 2014: Ingush rebel leader Arthur Getagazhev, 4 rebels, and 2 civilians were killed in action in the village of Sagopshi by Russian forces.[114]
  • 2 July 2014: After several months of denial, pro-Russian president of Ingushetia finally recognizes that Ingush rebels are fighting in Ukraine against pro-Russia forces.[115]
  • 2 July 2014: Ingush rebels attack Russian armored military convoy killing 1 and wounding 7 soldiers.[116]
  • 6 July 2014: Russian special forces prepared an ambush near the morgue in Nazran hospital where the body of Arthur Getagazhev was located. The intelligence reported that Ingush rebels will try to recover the body of the slain leader. The intelligence was correct. Radio Free Europe (section specializing in the Caucasus), reports that in the middle of the day 2 Ingush rebels attacked the ambush, according to unofficial source two rebels killed 7 and wounded 4 Russian FSB and spetsnaz officers in less than 40 seconds, after which the rebels left the scene unharmed. The source in Ingush police who wanted to stay anonymous said that exact number of killed are known only by the FSB but nobody would dare to declare if officially.[117] According to pro-Kremlin LifeNews released video the attack lasted less than 19 seconds.[118]
  • 17 January 2015: Maghas. Rise of anti-Western sentiments. Over 20,000 Ingush citizens protest against European terrorism toward Muslims.[119][120]
  • 28 February 2015: Russian opposition leader Nemtsov’s death linked to Ingushetia by Russian police.[121]
  • 26 March 2019: Thousands of people in Ingushetia have protested against a controversial border deal with neighboring Chechnya, denouncing land swaps under the agreement and calling for Ingushetia head Yunus-Bek Yevkurov to step down.
  • 25 June 2019: Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, has announced his resignation after almost 11 years in the position. De-facto Ingushetia has no active leader. Civil protests continue, Ingush people boycotting the Russian appointed elections.

Politics[edit]

Up until the dissolution of the Soviet state, Ingushetia was part of the Chechen-Ingush ASSR of the Russian Soviet Socialist Republic. In the late 1920s – early 1930s the Soviet officials were eager to enforce the Chechen-Ingush merger as an «objective» and «natural» process. The Soviet linguist Nikolay Yakovlev, who was a supporter of the merger, suggested that an inclusive name of «Veinakh» («our people») had to be used for both the Chechens and Ingush. According to his views, the rapid urbanization and rapprochement of the Chechens and Ingush within one and the same republic might encourage the formation of a common culture and language and the establishment of a unified «Veinakh» people.

During the late 80’s, together with the separatist tendencies across the Soviet Union, the Second Congress of the Ingush People was held in Grozny on September 9–10, 1989. The gathering was directed at the top leadership of the Soviet Union, and included a request to «restore the Ingush people’s autonomy within their historical borders, the Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic with a capital in the right-bank part of the city of Ordzhonikidze». The Ingush Republic was to be organized out of six traditional Ingush districts (including the contested Prigorodny District). The rise of the Russian Federation gave the Ingushetians the independence they vowed for. During the 1990s, Ingushetia was ruled by its elected president Ruslan Aushev, a former Soviet general and hero of the war in Afghanistan.

The head of government and the highest executive post in Ingushetia is the Head.

Recent heads:

  • Ruslan Aushev: November 10, 1992 (Head of the Republic until March 7, 1993) – December 28, 2001
  • Akhmed Malsagov (interim): December 28, 2001 – May 23, 2002
  • Murat Zyazikov: May 23, 2002 – October 30, 2008[122]
  • Yunus-Bek Yevkurov: October 30, 2008 – June 26, 2019
  • Makhmud-Ali Kalimatov: June 26, 2019–present

Recent Chairmen of the Government:

  • Ruslan Tatiyev: March 24, 1993 – July 5, 1993
  • Tamerlan Didigov: July 5, 1993 – March 21, 1994
  • Mukharbek Didigov: March 21, 1994 – December 9, 1996
  • Belan Khamchiyev: December 10, 1996 – August 3, 1998
  • Magomed-Bashir Darsigov: August 3, 1998 – November 24, 1999
  • Akhmed Malsagov: November 24, 1999 – June 14, 2002
  • Viktor Aleksentsev: August 26, 2002 – June 3, 2003
  • Timur Mogushkov: June 3, 2003 – June 30, 2005
  • Ibragim Malsagov: June 30, 2005 – March 13, 2008
  • Kharun Dzeytov: March 14, 2008 – November 12, 2008
  • Rashid Gaysanov: November 13, 2008 – October 5, 2009
  • Aleksey Vorobyov: October 5, 2009 – March 10, 2010
  • Musa Chiliyev: March 21, 2011 – September 19, 2013
  • Abubakar Malsagov: September 19, 2013 – November 18, 2016
  • Ruslan Gagiyev: November 18, 2016 – September 9, 2018
  • Zyalimkhan Yevloyev: September 9, 2018 – September 8, 2019
  • Konstantin Surikov: September 9, 2019 – January 27, 2020
  • Vladimir Slastenin: March 26, 2020–present

The parliament of the Republic is the People’s Assembly, composed of 34 deputies elected for a four-year term. The People’s Assembly is headed by the Chairman. As of 2022, the Chairman of the People’s Assembly is Vladimir Slastenin.

The Constitution of Ingushetia was adopted on February 27, 1994.

Ingushetia is a member of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization.

The capital was moved from Nazran to Magas in December 2002.

The most recent election was held in 2013.

Administrative divisions[edit]

Administrative divisions of Ingushetia.

  • Cities under republic’s jurisdiction (as of 2016):
    •   Magas (Магас) (capital)

  • Districts:

Demographics[edit]

The Republic of Ingushetia (in green).

Population: 509,541 (2021 Census);[124] 412,529 (2010 Census);[125] 467,294 (2002 Census).[126]

Vital statistics[edit]

Source: Russian Federal State Statistics Service
Average population (× 1000) Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate (per 1000) Crude death rate (per 1000) Natural change (per 1000) Total fertility rate
1995 6,889 1,867 5,022 25.3 6.8 18.4
1996 5,980 1,958 4,022 20.9 6.8 14.0
1997 6,055 1,957 4,098 20.6 6.7 14.0
1998 5,929 2,064 3,865 19.8 6.9 12.9
1999 6,624 1,953 4,671 20.6 6.1 14.6
2000 8,463 2,117 6,346 21.5 5.4 16.2
2001 8,753 1,875 6,878 19.4 4.2 15.3
2002 7,578 1,874 5,704 16.4 4.1 12.4
2003 7,059 1,785 5,274 15.3 3.9 11.4
2004 6,794 1,751 5,043 15.0 3.9 11.1
2005 6,777 1,821 4,956 15.2 4.1 11.1
2006 7,391 1,830 5,561 16.9 4.2 12.7
2007 8,284 1,625 6,659 19.3 3.8 15.5
2008 9,215 1,561 7,654 21.8 3.7 18.1
2009 9,572 1,877 7,695 22.9 4.5 18.4 2.51
2010 11,178 1,857 9,321 27.1 4.5 22.6 2.99
2011 414 11,408 1,705 9,703 27.0 4.0 23.0 2.94
2012 430 9,350 1,595 7,755 21.4 3.7 17.7 2.27
2013 442 9,498 1,568 7,930 21.2 3.5 17.7 2.23
2014 453 9,858 1,586 8,272 21.5 3.5 18.0 2.28
2015 463 8,647 1,557 7,090 18.5 3.3 15.2 1.97
2016 472 7,750 1,555 6,195 16.3 3.3 13.0 1.75
2017 480 7,890 1,554 6,336 16.3 3.2 13.1 1.77
2018 488 8,048 1,548 6,500 16.3 3.1 13.2 1.79
2019 497 8,252 1,529 6,723 16.4 3.0 13.4 1.83
2020 507 8,463 1,891 6,572 16.6 3.7 12.9 1.85
2021 513 8,480 2,194 6,286 16.3 4.2 12.1 1.87

Note: Total fertility rate 2009, 2010, 2011 source:[127]

Life expectancy[edit]

Ingushetia has life expectancy noticeably higher than in any other federal subjects of the Russian Federation.[128][129] In such way, Ingushetia is a Russian «blue zone». In the pre-pandemic 2019, life expectancy in Ingushetia was the same as in Switzerland, according to estimation of WHO, — 83.4 years.

2019 2021
Average: 83.4 years 80.5 years
Male: 80.0 years 77.3 years
Female: 86.3 years 83.3 years
  • Life expectancy at birth in Ingushetia

    Life expectancy at birth in Ingushetia

  • Life expectancy with calculated differences

    Life expectancy with calculated differences

  • Life expectancy in Ingushetia in comparison with other regions of the North Caucasus

    Life expectancy in Ingushetia in comparison with other regions of the North Caucasus

  • Interactive chart of comparison of male and female life expectancy for 2021. Open the original svg-file in a separate window and hover over a bubble to highlight it.

    Interactive chart of comparison of male and female life expectancy for 2021. Open the original svg-file in a separate window and hover over a bubble to highlight it.

Ethnic groups[edit]

According to the 2021 Russian census,[4] ethnic Ingush make up 96.4% of the republic’s population. The Ingush, a nationality group indigenous to the Caucasus, mostly inhabit Ingushetia. They refer to themselves as Ghalghai (from Ingush: Ghala (‘fortress’ or ‘town’) and ghai (‘inhabitants’ or ‘citizens’). The Ingush speak the Ingush language, which has a very high degree of mutual intelligibility with neighboring Chechen.

Other groups include Chechens (2.5%), Russians (0.7%), and a host of smaller groups, each accounting for less than 0.5% of the total population.[130]

Ethnic
group
1926 Census 1939 Census 1959 Census 1970 Census 1979 Census 1989 Census 2002 Census 2010 Census 2021 Census1
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
Ingushes 47,280 61.6% 79,462 58.0% 44,634 40.6% 99,060 66.0% 113,889 74.2% 138,626 74.5% 361,057 77.3% 385,537 94.1% 473,440 96.4%
Chechens 2,553 3.3% 7,746 5.7% 5,643 5.1% 8,724 5.8% 9,182 6.0% 19,195 10.3% 95,403 20.4% 18,765 4.6% 12.240 2.5%
Russians 24,185 31.5% 43,389 31.7% 51,549 46.9% 37,258 24.8% 26,965 17.6% 24,641 13.2% 5,559 1.2% 3,321 0.8% 3,294 0.7%
Ukrainians 1,501 2.0% 1,921 1.4% 1,763 1.6% 1,068 0.7% 687 0.4% 753 0.4% 189 0.0% 91 0.0% 34 0.0%
Others 1,215 1.6% 4,549 3.3% 6,438 5.9% 3,978 2.7% 2,852 1.9% 2,781 1.5% 5,086 1.1% 1,918 0.5% 2,129 0.4%
1 18,404people were registered from administrative databases, and could not declare an ethnicity. It is estimated that the proportion of ethnicities in this group is the same as that of the declared group.[131]

Religion[edit]

Ingushetia is one of the most religious regions of Russia.[133] The Ingush are predominantly Shafi’i Madhhab of Sunni Islam[134] with strong influence of Sufism, which is often associated with one of two traditional Sufi orders: the Sufi tariqa Naqshbandi, represented in Ingushetia by the brotherhood of Deni Arsanov, and the tariqa Qadiriyyah, associated with Kunta-Haji Kishiev.[135][136]

Education[edit]

Ingush State University, the first institute of higher education in the history of Ingushetia, was founded in 1994 in Ordzhonikidzevskaya.[137]

Geography[edit]

Topographic map of the Caucasus. Ingushetia is located on the center right of the map.

Mountains in the Nazran Region

Ingushetia is situated on the northern slopes of the Caucasus. Its area is reported by various sources as either 2,000 square kilometers (770 sq mi)[138] or 3,600 square kilometers (1,400 sq mi);[139] the difference in reporting is mainly due to the inclusion or exclusion of parts of Sunzhensky Districts. The republic borders North Ossetia–Alania (SW/W/NW/N), the Chechnya (NE/E/SE), and the country of Georgia (Mtskheta-Mtianeti) (southwards). The highest point is the Gora Shan[140] (4451 m).

A 150-kilometer (93 mi) stretch of the Caucasus Mountains runs through the territory of the republic.

Rivers[edit]

Major rivers include:

  • Terek River
  • Assa River
  • Sunzha River

Natural resources[edit]

Ingushetia is rich in marble, timber, dolomite, plaster, limestone, gravel, granite, clay, thermal medical water, rare metals, mineral water, oil (over 60 billion tons), and natural gas reserves.

Climate[edit]

Ingushetia’s climate is mostly continental.

  • Average January temperature: −10 °C (14 °F)
  • Average July temperature: 21 °C (70 °F)
  • Average annual precipitation: 450–650 mm (18–26 in)
  • Average annual temperature: +10 °C (50 °F)

Economy[edit]

There are some natural resources in Ingushetia: mineral water in Achaluki, oil and natural gas in Malgobek, forests in Dzheirakh, metals in Galashki. The local government is considering the development of tourism; however, this is problematic due to the uneasy situation in the republic itself and the proximity of some conflict zones. However, Ingushetia continues to remain as one of Russia’s poorest republics, largely due to the ongoing conflict, corruption and civil disorders. Unemployment is estimated to be around 53%, and growing poverty is a major issue.[141]

Notable people[edit]

  • Musa Evloev, Greco-Roman wrestler. He is a two-time world champion, Olympic champion, and two-time national champion
  • Movsar Evloev, #10 Ranked UFC Featherweight[142]
  • Tamerlan Akhriev, inventor of a ceramic rotor engine.[143][144]
  • Idris Bazorkin, writer.[145]
  • Ruslan Aushev, infantry general, hero of USSR, first president of Ingushetia.
  • Rakhim Chakkhiev, boxer.[146]
  • Ismail Esmurziev, engineer.[147]
  • Issa Kodzoev, writer.[148]
  • Issa Kostoyev, policeman who captured serial killer Andrei Chikatilo.[149]
  • Nazyr Mankiev, wrestler.[150]
  • Murad Ozdoev, WWII ace.
  • Sulom-Beck Oskanov, Air Force general.
  • Magomet Sagov, PhD, academician (Academy of Sciences of the USSR).[151]
  • Islam Timurziev, boxer.
  • Sergej Garbariniev, boxer.
  • Amurhan Yandiev, detective who captured serial killer Andrei Chikatilo.[152][153]
  • Djemaldin Yandiev, poet.[154]
  • Tamara Yandieva, actress, singer.[155][156][157][158]

See also[edit]

  • Music in Ingushetia
  • War in Ingushetia

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Russian: Респу́блика Ингуше́тия, romanized: Respúblika Ingushétiya; Ingush: Гӏалгӏай Мохк, romanized: Ghalghay Moxk

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Sources[edit]

  • Конституционный закон №57-РЗ от 7 декабря 2010 г. «О государственном гимне Республики Ингушетия», в ред. Конституционного закона №2-РЗП от 4 июля 2011 г «О внесении изменений в некоторые законодательные акты Республики Ингушетия в связи с принятием Закона Республики Ингушетия от 11 октября 2010 года No. 3-РЗП «О поправке к Конституции»». Вступил в силу со дня официального опубликования. Опубликован: «Ингушетия», No.211–212, 18 декабря 2010 г. (Constitutional Law #57-RZ of December 7, 2010 On the State Anthem of the Republic of Ingushetia, as amended by the Constitutional Law #2-RZP of July 4, 2011 On Amending Various Legislative Acts of the Republic of Ingushetia Due to the Adoption of the Law of the Republic Ingushetia #3-RZP of October 11, 2010 «On the Amendment to the Constitution». Effective as of the day of the official publication.). (in Russian)
  • 27 февраля 1994 г. «Конституция Республики Ингушетия», в ред. Закона №1-РЗП от 8 мая 2013 г. «О поправке к Конституции Республики Ингушетия». Опубликован: Сборник Конституций субъектов Федерации «Конституции Республик в составе Российской Федерации», выпуск 1, 1995. (February 27, 1994 Constitution of the Republic of Ingushetia, as amended by the Law #1-RZP of May 8, 2013 On the Amendment to the Constitution of the Republic of Ingushetia. ). (in Russian)
  • Верховный Совет РСФСР. Закон от 4 июня 1992 г. «Об образовании Республики Ингушетия в составе РСФСР». (Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR. Law of June 4, 1992 On Establishing the Republic of Ingushetia Within the RSFSR. ). (in Russian)

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ingushetia.

  • News from Ingushetia
  • News and History of Ingushetia
  • Official website of Ingushetia (in Russian)
  • Unofficial website of Ingushetia (in Russian)
  • Ingush Music/Video/Literature website (in Russian)
  • Magas, Ingush youth website (in Russian)
  • Head of Ingushetia’s website (in Russian)
  • Ingushetia’s Republic News Portal (in Russian)
  • Ingushetia Videos (in Russian)
  • National Project: People of Ingushetia (in Russian)

Морфемный разбор слова:

Однокоренные слова к слову:

ингушетия

1 Ингушетия

2 Ингушетия

3 Ингушетия

4 Ингушетия

5 Ингушетия

6 Ингушетия

См. также в других словарях:

Ингушетия.Ru — Ингушетия.ORG (Ингушетия.Ru) http://www.ingushetia.org Тип сайта: интернет портал Владелец: Евлоев, Магомед Яхьяевич Текущий статус: Работает … Википедия

Ингушетия.ru — Ингушетия.ORG (Ингушетия.Ru) http://www.ingushetia.org Тип сайта: интернет портал Владелец: Евлоев, Магомед Яхьяевич Текущий статус: Работает … Википедия

Ингушетия.ру — Ингушетия.ORG (Ингушетия.Ru) http://www.ingushetia.org Тип сайта: интернет портал Владелец: Евлоев, Магомед Яхьяевич Текущий статус: Работает … Википедия

Ингушетия — Ингушетия. Окрестности аула Джейрах. ИНГУШЕТИЯ (Ингушская Республика), в России. Граница между Ингушетией и Чечней не демаркирована (1994). Население 315 тыс. человек. Временный административный центр Назрань. Расположена в центральной части… … Иллюстрированный энциклопедический словарь

ИНГУШЕТИЯ — ИНГУШЕТИЯ, Ингушская Республика, субъект Российской Федерации; расположена на юге Европейской части России. Входит в Северо Кавказский экономический район. Пл. 19,3 тыс. км2 (граница между Ингушетией и Чеченской Республикой не демаркирована,… … Русская история

ИНГУШЕТИЯ — Ингушская Республика, в Российской Федерации. 3,6 тыс. км&sup2. население 315 тыс. человек (1993); ингуши (215,5 тыс. человек), русские (14 тыс. человек), чеченцы (13 тыс. человек), турки (2,4 тыс. человек). 4 района, 2 города, 1 поселок… … Большой Энциклопедический словарь

ингушетия — сущ., кол во синонимов: 1 • республика (21) Словарь синонимов ASIS. В.Н. Тришин. 2013 … Словарь синонимов

Ингушетия — У этого термина существуют и другие значения, см. Ингушетия (значения). Координаты: 43°19′ с. ш. 45°00′ в. д. / 43.316667° с. ш. 45° в. д. … Википедия

ИНГУШЕТИЯ — [Республика Ингушетия офиц. название с 1992], субъект РФ. Территория 3,6 тыс. кв. км. Столица Магас (ингуш. город солнца). География. И. расположена на сев. склонах Б. Кавказского хребта, в центральной его части. Делится на 3 природные почвенно… … Православная энциклопедия

Ингушетия — (Ингушская Республика), в Российской Федерации. 19,3 тыс. км2 (граница между Ингушетией и Чечнёй не демаркирована, 1998). Население 313,3 тыс. человек (1998); ингуши (74,5%), русские (13,2%), чеченцы (10,3%). 4 района, 3 города, 1 посёлок… … Энциклопедический словарь

Источник

Субъекты Российской Федерации.

Тетратека

НАЗВАНИЯ СУБЪЕКТОВ РОССИЙСКОЙ ФЕДЕРАЦИИ

Часто у переводчиков возникает вопрос, как правильно писать на английском языке названия субъектов Российской Федерации. На наш взгляд самым логичным было посмотреть перевод Конституции Российской Федерации, выложенный на каком-то из заслуживающих доверие сайтах, например, на www.constitution.ru.

Согласно переводу статьи 65 Конституции РФ на английском языке субъекты РФ имеют следующие названия:

Республика Адыгея (Адыгея) Republic of Adygeya Республика Алтай Republic of Altai Республика Башкортостан Republic of Bashkortostan Республика Бурятия Republic of Buryatia Республика Дагестан Republic of Daghestan Республика Ингушетия Republic of Ingushetia Кабардино-Балкарская Республика Kabardino-Balkarian Republic Республика Калмыкия Republic of Kalmykia Карачаево-Черкесская Республика Karachayevo-Circassian Republic Республика Карелия Republic of Karelia Республика Коми Komi Republic Республика Крым Republic of Crimea Республика Марий Эл Republic of Mari El Республика Мордовия Republic of Mordovia Республика Саха (Якутия) Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) Республика Северная Осетия – Алания Republic of North Ossetia – Alania Республика Татарстан (Татарстан) Republic of Tatarstan Республика Тыва Republic of Tuva Удмуртская Республика Udmurtian Republic Республика Хакасия Republic of Khakassia Чеченская Республика Chechen Republic Чувашская Республика – Чувашия Chuvash Republic

Territories Алтайский край Altai Territory Забайкальский край Trans-Baikal Territory Камчатский край Kamchatka Territory Краснодарский край Krasnodar Territory Красноярский край Krasnoyarsk Territory Пермский край Perm Territory Приморский край Primorye Territory Ставропольский край Stavropol Territory Хабаровский край Khabarovsk Territory

Амурская область Amur Region Архангельская область Arkhangelsk Region Астраханская область Astrakhan Region Белгородская область Belgorod Region Брянская область Bryansk Region Владимирская область Vladimir Region Волгоградская область Volgograd Region Вологодская область Vologda Region Воронежская область Voronezh Region Ивановская область Ivanovo Region Иркутская область Irkutsk Region Калининградская область Kaliningrad Region Калужская область Kaluga Region Кемеровская область Kemerovo Region Кировская область Kirov Region Костромская область Kostroma Region Курганская область Kurgan Region Курская область Kursk Region Ленинградская область Leningrad Region Липецкая область Lipetsk Region Магаданская область Magadan Region Московская область Moscow Region Мурманская область Murmansk Region Нижегородская область Nizhny Novgorod Region Новгородская область Novgorod Region Новосибирская область Novosibirsk Region Омская область Omsk Region Оренбургская область Orenburg Region Орловская область Orel Region Пензенская область Penza Region Псковская область Pskov Region Ростовская область Rostov Region Рязанская область Ryazan Region Самарская область Samara Region Саратовская область Saratov Region Сахалинская область Sakhalin Region Свердловская область Sverdlovsk Region Смоленская область Smolensk Region Тамбовская область Tambov Region Тверская область Tver Region Томская область Tomsk Region Тульская область Tula Region Тюменская область Tyumen Region Ульяновская область Ulyanovsk Region Челябинская область Chelyabinsk Region Ярославская область Yaroslavl Region

Города федерального значения

Cities o f Federal Importance

Москва Moscow Санкт-Петербург St. Petersburg Севастополь Sevastopol

Autonomous Region s

Еврейская автономная область Jewish Autonomous Region

Ненецкий автономный округ Nenets Autonomous Area Ханты-Мансийский автономный округ – Югра Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Area – Yugra Чукотский автономный округ Chukotka Autonomous Area Ямало-Ненецкий автономный округ Yamal-Nenets Autonomous Area

Мы в своей работе используем именно этот вариант.

Справедливости ради следует отметить, что перевод Конституции РФ, размещенный на сайте www.kremlin.ru, несколько отличается. Перевод названий субъектов в статье 65 полностью соответствует приведенной таблице, но вот в переводе статьи 66 мы видим следующую картину: «The status of a kray, oblast, city of federal significance, autonomous oblast, autonomous okrug shall be determined by the Constitution of the Russian Federation and the charter of the kray, oblast, city of federal significance, autonomous oblast and autonomous okrug which is adopted by the legislative (representative) body of the corresponding constituent entity of the Russian Federation.» – т.е. «Territory» превращается в «Kray», «Region» в «Oblast», «City of Federal Importance» в «City of Federal Significance», «Autonomous Region» в «Autonomous Oblast», а «Autonomous Area» в «Autonomous Okrug». Все, что можно было перевести по-другому, было переведено по-другому.

Но это, скорее всего, временное явление и в ближайшем будущем размещенный текст будет заменен, дабы устранить разночтение.

Источник

Субъекты Российской Федерации.

Тетратека

НАЗВАНИЯ СУБЪЕКТОВ РОССИЙСКОЙ ФЕДЕРАЦИИ

Часто у переводчиков возникает вопрос, как правильно писать на английском языке названия субъектов Российской Федерации. На наш взгляд самым логичным было посмотреть перевод Конституции Российской Федерации, выложенный на каком-то из заслуживающих доверие сайтах, например, на www.constitution.ru.

Согласно переводу статьи 65 Конституции РФ на английском языке субъекты РФ имеют следующие названия:

Республика Адыгея (Адыгея) Republic of Adygeya Республика Алтай Republic of Altai Республика Башкортостан Republic of Bashkortostan Республика Бурятия Republic of Buryatia Республика Дагестан Republic of Daghestan Республика Ингушетия Republic of Ingushetia Кабардино-Балкарская Республика Kabardino-Balkarian Republic Республика Калмыкия Republic of Kalmykia Карачаево-Черкесская Республика Karachayevo-Circassian Republic Республика Карелия Republic of Karelia Республика Коми Komi Republic Республика Крым Republic of Crimea Республика Марий Эл Republic of Mari El Республика Мордовия Republic of Mordovia Республика Саха (Якутия) Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) Республика Северная Осетия – Алания Republic of North Ossetia – Alania Республика Татарстан (Татарстан) Republic of Tatarstan Республика Тыва Republic of Tuva Удмуртская Республика Udmurtian Republic Республика Хакасия Republic of Khakassia Чеченская Республика Chechen Republic Чувашская Республика – Чувашия Chuvash Republic

Territories Алтайский край Altai Territory Забайкальский край Trans-Baikal Territory Камчатский край Kamchatka Territory Краснодарский край Krasnodar Territory Красноярский край Krasnoyarsk Territory Пермский край Perm Territory Приморский край Primorye Territory Ставропольский край Stavropol Territory Хабаровский край Khabarovsk Territory

Амурская область Amur Region Архангельская область Arkhangelsk Region Астраханская область Astrakhan Region Белгородская область Belgorod Region Брянская область Bryansk Region Владимирская область Vladimir Region Волгоградская область Volgograd Region Вологодская область Vologda Region Воронежская область Voronezh Region Ивановская область Ivanovo Region Иркутская область Irkutsk Region Калининградская область Kaliningrad Region Калужская область Kaluga Region Кемеровская область Kemerovo Region Кировская область Kirov Region Костромская область Kostroma Region Курганская область Kurgan Region Курская область Kursk Region Ленинградская область Leningrad Region Липецкая область Lipetsk Region Магаданская область Magadan Region Московская область Moscow Region Мурманская область Murmansk Region Нижегородская область Nizhny Novgorod Region Новгородская область Novgorod Region Новосибирская область Novosibirsk Region Омская область Omsk Region Оренбургская область Orenburg Region Орловская область Orel Region Пензенская область Penza Region Псковская область Pskov Region Ростовская область Rostov Region Рязанская область Ryazan Region Самарская область Samara Region Саратовская область Saratov Region Сахалинская область Sakhalin Region Свердловская область Sverdlovsk Region Смоленская область Smolensk Region Тамбовская область Tambov Region Тверская область Tver Region Томская область Tomsk Region Тульская область Tula Region Тюменская область Tyumen Region Ульяновская область Ulyanovsk Region Челябинская область Chelyabinsk Region Ярославская область Yaroslavl Region

Города федерального значения

Cities o f Federal Importance

Москва Moscow Санкт-Петербург St. Petersburg Севастополь Sevastopol

Autonomous Region s

Еврейская автономная область Jewish Autonomous Region

Ненецкий автономный округ Nenets Autonomous Area Ханты-Мансийский автономный округ – Югра Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Area – Yugra Чукотский автономный округ Chukotka Autonomous Area Ямало-Ненецкий автономный округ Yamal-Nenets Autonomous Area

Мы в своей работе используем именно этот вариант.

Справедливости ради следует отметить, что перевод Конституции РФ, размещенный на сайте www.kremlin.ru, несколько отличается. Перевод названий субъектов в статье 65 полностью соответствует приведенной таблице, но вот в переводе статьи 66 мы видим следующую картину: «The status of a kray, oblast, city of federal significance, autonomous oblast, autonomous okrug shall be determined by the Constitution of the Russian Federation and the charter of the kray, oblast, city of federal significance, autonomous oblast and autonomous okrug which is adopted by the legislative (representative) body of the corresponding constituent entity of the Russian Federation.» – т.е. «Territory» превращается в «Kray», «Region» в «Oblast», «City of Federal Importance» в «City of Federal Significance», «Autonomous Region» в «Autonomous Oblast», а «Autonomous Area» в «Autonomous Okrug». Все, что можно было перевести по-другому, было переведено по-другому.

Но это, скорее всего, временное явление и в ближайшем будущем размещенный текст будет заменен, дабы устранить разночтение.

Источник

Теперь вы знаете какие однокоренные слова подходят к слову Ингушетия на английском как пишется, а так же какой у него корень, приставка, суффикс и окончание. Вы можете дополнить список однокоренных слов к слову «Ингушетия на английском как пишется», предложив свой вариант в комментариях ниже, а также выразить свое несогласие проведенным с морфемным разбором.

  • 1
    Татьяна

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Татьяна

  • 2
    Татьяна

    Новый русско-английский словарь > Татьяна

  • 3
    Татьяна

    Tatyana

    рус.

    , Tatsiana

    бел.

    Дополнительный универсальный русско-английский словарь > Татьяна

  • 4
    Татьяна

    полицейская дубинка

    billy, bullshiner, rosewood, shill, weight

    a policeman’s club

    English-Russian dictionary of the underworld > Татьяна

  • 5
    Татьяна

    Русско-английский словарь по общей лексике > Татьяна

  • 6
    Татьяна

    Русско-английский синонимический словарь > Татьяна

  • 7
    Татьяна

    Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > Татьяна

  • 8
    Татьяна Догилева

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Татьяна Догилева

  • 9
    Татьяна Римская

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Татьяна Римская

  • 10
    А-16

    АЙ ДА…!

    coll
    Interj
    Invar
    foil. by NP

    fixed

    WO

    used to express approval, admiration

    (when

    foil. by

    an

    anim

    noun) what (a)…!

    good for you (her, him

    etc

    )!
    you are (he is

    etc

    ) (really) quite a…!
    atta boy (girl)!
    he (she

    etc

    ) is really something!
    ah, that…!
    good job (…)!
    well done (…)!
    (when

    foil. by

    an

    inanim

    noun) what (a)…!
    (now) thatis (herefc, therefe) (a)…(for you)!
    that’s (really) quite a…!
    (when used ironically only) some…!
    some…he (she, that

    etc

    ) is!

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > А-16

  • 11
    В-282

    ВОТ-ВОТ

    coll
    AdvP
    Invar
    adv

    (

    sth.

    will happen) very soon

    any minute (moment, day, time) (now)

    at any minute (moment)
    in no time at all

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > В-282

  • 12
    К-363

    ВО ВСЕЙ (СВОЕЙ) КРАСЕ

    PrepP

    these forms only

    usu. adv

    fixed

    WO

    with своей movable)

    1. showing, displaying all one’s or its grandeur, magnificence

    in all one’s (its) beauty (glory, splendor).

    2. (показать себя, проявить себя) —

    iron

    (of a person) (to display, show

    o.s.

    ) in an unappealing manner or light

    in all one’s splendor (glory)).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > К-363

  • 13
    Л-168

    ВЫХОДИТЬ/ВЫЙТИ (ВЫБИВАТЬСЯ/ВЫБИТЬСЯ) В ЛЮДИ

    VP
    subj

    : human
    more often

    pfv

    ) to achieve a prominent position in society, achieve success in life as a result of determined effort

    X вышел в люди = X rose (came up, moved up) in the world

    X made his way in the world
    X made his way up (in the world)
    X became somebody
    X got ahead in the world
    X made something of himself
    X made it
    (in limited contexts) X worked his way up from…
    X carved out a career for himself.

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > Л-168

  • 14
    П-479

    ЧТО ПРАВДА, TO ПРАВДА

    coll

    (sent

    Invar

    fixed

    WO

    (used to express agreement or to emphasize the accuracy of a statement) that really is so

    what’s true is true

    the truth is the truth
    that’s true
    there’s no denying it
    how very true.

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > П-479

  • 15
    С-359

    В КРАЙНЕМ СЛУЧАЕ

    PrepP
    Invar
    usu.

    sent

    adv

    (often

    parenth

    )
    fixed

    WO

    in case of extreme need, when there is no other option or solution

    if worst comes to worst

    if (the) worse comes to (the) worst
    at (the) worst
    as a last resort
    (in limited contexts) in a pinch.

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > С-359

  • 16
    ай да…!

    АЙ ДА…! coll

    [

    Interj

    ;

    Invar

    ;

    foll. by NP

    ; fixed

    WO

    ]

    =====

    used to express approval, admiration:

    — [when

    foll. by

    an

    anim

    noun] what (a)…!;

    good for you <her, him etc>!;

    you are <he is etc> (really) quite a…!;

    atta boy < girl>!;

    he <she etc> is really something!;

    ah, that…!;

    good job (…)!;

    well done (…)!;

    — [when

    foll. by

    an

    inanim

    noun] what (a)…!;

    (now) that’s <here’s, there’s> (a)…(for you)!;

    that’s (really) quite a…!;

    — [when used ironically only] some…!;

    some…he <she, that etc> is!

         ♦ «Поздравляю, господин исправник. Ай да бумага! По этим приметам немудрено будет вам отыскать Дубровского. Да кто же не среднего роста, у кого не русые волосы, не прямой нос да не карие глаза!.. Нечего сказать, умные головушки приказные» (Пушкин 1). «I congratulate you, Mr Chief of Police. What a document! It’ll be easy to trace Dubrovsky from such a description! Who is not of medium height? Who has not got fair hair or a straight nose, or brown eyes?….I must say, these officials are clever fellows!» (1b).

         ♦…Совершенно неожиданно было получено письмо за подписями начальника и политрука музыкальной команды военной части номер такой-то, в котором родителям ефрейтора Аркадия Мансурова от лица командования выражалась благодарность за хорошее воспитание сына… Ай да Аркашка! (Залыгин 1)….There came a completely unexpected letter signed by the C.O. and the political officer of the concert party of unit No. so-and-so, expressing official gratitude to the parents of Lance-corporal Arkady Mansurov for bringing him up so well….Good for you, Arkady! (la).

         ♦ «Она [моя барыня] разрядится, точно пава, и ходит так важно; а кабы кто посмотрел, какие юбки да какие чулки носит, так срам посмотреть!..»Все, кроме Захара, засмеялись. «Ай да Татьяна Ивановна, мимо не попадёт!» — говорили одобрительно голоса (Гончаров 1). «She [my mistress] gets all dressed up in her finery and parades around like a peacock, but if you ever got a look at the petticoats and stockings she wears — it’s a disgrace!…» Everyone except Zakhar laughed. «Ah, that Tatyana Ivanovna, she never misses!» they said approvingly (1b).

         ♦ Ай да герой! Собственной тени боится! Some hero! Afraid of his own shadow!

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > ай да…!

  • 17
    вот-вот

    =====

    (

    sth.

    will happen) very soon:

    any minute <moment, day, time> (now);

    at any minute < moment>;

    be about to…

         ♦ Близился полдень, и пахарь уже настораживал слух в сторону дома, что вот-вот жена его должна позвать обедать, да и быкам пора передохнуть (Искандер 4). It was getting near noon, and the plowman had an ear cocked toward the house: any minute now his wife would be calling him to dinner, and besides it was time to rest the oxen (4a).

         ♦ «Пощёчина общественному вкусу», к этому времени уже отпечатанная в Москве, вот-вот должна была поступить в продажу (Лившиц 1). A Slap in the Face of Public Taste had already been printed in Moscow and was due to go on sale any day (1a).

         ♦ «[Татьяна] ещё не приехала». — «Вот-вот будет». — «Теперь уж скоро» (Распутин 3). «She’s [Tatyana is] not here yet.» «Any time now.» «She won’t be long» (3a).

         ♦ Дождик шёл с утра, и казалось, что вот-вот он пройдёт и на небе расчистит, как вслед за непродолжительною остановкой припускал дождик ещё сильнее (Толстой 7). Rain had been falling since morning, and it seemed as if at any moment it might cease and the sky clear, but after a brief respite it began raining again harder than before (7a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > вот-вот

  • 18
    во всей красе

    [

    PrepP

    ; these forms only;

    usu. adv

    ; fixed

    WO

    with своей movable]

    =====

    1. showing, displaying all one’s or its grandeur, magnificence:

    in all one’s (its) beauty (glory, splendor).

         ♦ Весна, долго задерживаемая холодами, вдруг началась во всей красе своей, и жизнь заиграла повсюду (Гоголь 3). The spring which had been held back for a long time by frosts, suddenly arrived in all its beauty and everything came to life everywhere (3a).

         ♦ Перед Владимиром [Сканщиным]… стоял во всей красе совсем уже было утраченный объект — Максим Петрович Огородников! (Аксенов 12). There before Skanshchin stood the long-lost object in all his glory — Maxim Petrovich Ogorodnikov! (12a).

         ♦ Наконец павлин предстал перед ним во всей своей красе (Алешковский 1). Finally the peacock displayed itself in all its glory… (1a).

    2. (показать себя, проявить себя) во всей красе

    iron

    (of a person) (to display, show

    o.s.

    ) in an unappealing manner or light: in all one’s splendor (glory). [Валентина:]

    Мы только на секундочку! [Татьяна (шепотом): ] Только взглянуть на твоего… [Надя:]… Ну что ж, проходите… Знакомьтесь… вот он, во всей красе (Брагинский и Рязанов 1). [V.:] We’ve only dropped in for a second! [T. (in a whisper):] Just to have a peep at your… [N.:]… Well, come in… Let me introduce you… Here he is, in all his splendour (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > во всей красе

  • 19
    во всей своей красе

    [

    PrepP

    ; these forms only;

    usu. adv

    ; fixed

    WO

    with своей movable]

    =====

    1. showing, displaying all one’s or its grandeur, magnificence:

    in all one’s (its) beauty (glory, splendor).

         ♦ Весна, долго задерживаемая холодами, вдруг началась во всей красе своей, и жизнь заиграла повсюду (Гоголь 3). The spring which had been held back for a long time by frosts, suddenly arrived in all its beauty and everything came to life everywhere (3a).

         ♦ Перед Владимиром [Сканщиным]… стоял во всей красе совсем уже было утраченный объект — Максим Петрович Огородников! (Аксенов 12). There before Skanshchin stood the long-lost object in all his glory — Maxim Petrovich Ogorodnikov! (12a).

         ♦ Наконец павлин предстал перед ним во всей своей красе (Алешковский 1). Finally the peacock displayed itself in all its glory… (1a).

    2. (показать себя, проявить себя) во всей своей красе

    iron

    (of a person) (to display, show

    o.s.

    ) in an unappealing manner or light: in all one’s splendor (glory). [Валентина:]

    Мы только на секундочку! [Татьяна (шепотом): ] Только взглянуть на твоего… [Надя:]… Ну что ж, проходите… Знакомьтесь… вот он, во всей красе (Брагинский и Рязанов 1). [V.:] We’ve only dropped in for a second! [T. (in a whisper):] Just to have a peep at your… [N.:]… Well, come in… Let me introduce you… Here he is, in all his splendour (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > во всей своей красе

  • 20
    выбиваться в люди

    ВЫХОДИТЬ/ВЫЙТИ (ВЫБИВАТЬСЯ/ВЫБИТЬСЯ) В ЛЮДИ

    [

    VP

    ;

    subj

    : human; more often

    pfv

    ]

    =====

    to achieve a prominent position in society, achieve success in life as a result of determined effort:

    X вышел в люди X rose (came up, moved up) in the world;

    — [in limited contexts] X worked his way up from…;

    X carved out a career for himself.

         ♦ «Ну что, Евгений, выходишь в люди, — бодро сказал Силаев. — Скоро вообще большим человеком будешь» (Войнович 5). «Well, Evgeny, you’re moving up in the world,» said Silaev heartily. «Pretty soon you’ll be a big shot» (5a).

         ♦ «Вот уж эта [Татьяна] выбьется в люди» (Абрамов 1). «That one [Tatyana] will really make her way in the world» (1b).

         ♦ Про Алферова говорили, что он из захудалых казачьих офицеришек выбился в люди лишь благодаря своей жене — бабе энергичной и умной; говорили, что она тянула бездарного супруга за уши и до тех пор не давала ему дыхнуть, пока он, три раза срезавшись, на четвёртый все же выдержал экзамен в академию (Шолохов 3). Alferov was said to have made his way up from being a lowly Cossack officer only thanks to his energetic and intelligent wife; she had dragged her dull-witted spouse out of his rut and never let him rest until, after three failures, he had passed the Academy entrance examination (3a).

         ♦ [Анастасия Ефремовна:] Мы думаем о том, чтобы ты в люди вышел, и считаться с твоими капризами больше не намерены! (Розов 1). [А.Е.:]… We want you to be somebody-so we don’t intend to pay any attention to your whims (1a).

         ♦ Знаю я, как здесь фотографы десятилетиями вкалывают, выбиваясь в люди (Лимонов 1). I know how photographers knock themselves out for decades trying to make it here (1a).

         ♦ [authors usage] Из поаковых писарей вылез Емельян Константинович [Атепин] в люди, оттуда же принес в семью затхлый душок подхалимства, заискивания (Шолохов 2). Atyopin had worked his way up from regimental clerk, and from his humble beginnings he brought to his family the fusty atmosphere of bootlicking and ingratiation (2a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > выбиваться в люди

  • Англо-русские и русско-английские словари и энциклопедии. English-Russian and Russian-English dictionaries and translations

    Русско-английский перевод ИНГУШЕТИЯ

    Ingushetia


    Русско-Американский Английский словарь.

         Russian-American English dictionary .
    2012

    Яндекс на английском как пишется?

    Несложно запомнить как правильно писать яндекс на английском, стоит лишь вспомнить несложное правило, давайте разберемся вместе.

    Правильно пишется

    На английском «Яндекс» пишется – Yandex.

    Какое правило

    Yandex – это аббревиатура, которая расшифровывается как yet another indexer (еще один индексатор). Также можно объяснить такое написание с точки зрения английской транлитерации. Русская буква я представляется сочетанием ya в английском, а кс – как x. Соответвенно, получается из Яндекс – Yandex.

    Примеры предложений

    • Девиз компании Yandex – найдется все.
    • Я всегда пользуюсь поисковиком Yandex.

    Неправильно пишется

    Комментарии

    «Преобретать» или «приобретать» как пишется?
    Не уверены, как нужно писать «преобретать» или «приобретать»? Тогда следует обратиться к правилам правописания приставок. Воспользуемся ими вместе. Как правильно пишется Норме правописания соответствует глагол с буквой «и» в первом слоге – приобретать. Какое правило применяется Орфограмма находится в приставке глагола. Этот префикс… Читать дальше »

    Яндекс на английском как пишется?

    Несложно запомнить как правильно писать яндекс на английском, стоит лишь вспомнить несложное правило, давайте разберемся вместе.

    Правильно пишется

    На английском «Яндекс» пишется – Yandex.

    Какое правило

    Yandex – это аббревиатура, которая расшифровывается как yet another indexer (еще один индексатор). Также можно объяснить такое написание с точки зрения английской транлитерации. Русская буква я представляется сочетанием ya в английском, а кс – как x. Соответвенно, получается из Яндекс – Yandex.

    Как пишется Яндекс на английском языке

    Поисковая система Яндекс — самый популярный поисковик российского сегмента глобальной сети. Как и многие другие поисковые системы, она предоставляет своим пользователям большое количество интернет-сервисов: почта, облачное хранилище, онлайн-карты, видео, платежная система и многое другое. Исходя из этого, у многих пользователей возникает вопрос — как именно на английском языке пишется слово «Яндекс».

    Заставка Yandex

    Откуда взялось название Яндекс

    Фразу Yet Another indexer, что в переводе с английского языка звучит как «еще один индексатор», придумал будущий директор компании Яндекс Илья Сегалович и Аркадий Волож (гендиректор). В то время слово выглядело как «Яndex». Перед тем, как к нему прийти Илья выписывал различные варианты для названия своей новоиспеченной поисковой системы. Ему сразу же стало понятно, что англоязычное слово search (поиск) в произношении на русский манер звучит, мягко говоря, не очень. Поэтому ему достаточно быстро пришла на ум фраза «yet another index». Немного позже Яндекс в адресной строке записывали просто Yandex. Так система пишется на английском языке и сегодня.

    Дизайн и логотип Яндекс

    С самых ранних этапов появления компании и поисковой системы Yandex владельцы сотрудничали со студией Артемия Лебедева. Специалисты разрабатывали для Яндекс большую часть дизайна сайта. Больше всего для компании сделал Рома Воронежский — дизайнер студии. Дизайн разрабатывали и другие специалисты области, например, для проекта «Лето» от Яндекс дизайн был создан организацией «Болоtov.ru». Последнее время компания все чаще обходится без услуг Артемия Лебедева.

    Сервисы Яндекс

    Логотип Яндекса, который практически не изменился и сегодня, появился еще в 1996 году. Впервые он фигурировал в Яndex.CD и Яndex.Site. Это произошло еще од появления самого поисковика. Логотип также был разработан студией Лебедева. В 3.0 версии логотип отбросил первую букву кириллицы (Яndex) и стал выглядеть как Yandex. Видимо первая буква «Я» у разработчиков была как кость в горле, ведь практически любой язык программирования понимает только латиницу. На английском языке Яндекс пишется — Yandex.

    Нюансы при поиске в Яндекс

    В поисковой системе Яндекс есть возможность настраивать поиск. Эта функция реализуется за счет гибкости языка при запросе. При поиске можно задавать область действия, например, включив в строку запроса А

    Г. В этом случае система найдет все результаты, где присутствует первый оператор (А), но исключит все результаты со вторым (Г). Другой оператор & найдет список ключевых слов в тексте, а двойной амперсанд будет искать «ключи» во всем документе.

    Восклицательный знак в роли оператора поможет отключить морфологию определенного слова или фразы. Таким образом, если формы слова будут совпадать с другими, поисковая система выдаст дополнительные страницы. И наоборот, оператор «!!» уберет ненужные слова из результатов.

    Сайты, которые не проходят индексацию в Яндекс

    Есть несколько причин, по которым поисковая система Yandex не индексирует сайты и не показывает их в результаты в поиске.

    1. Сайты, которые крадут информацию или контент с других ресурсов.
    2. Редиректы — сайты, единственной целью которых является перенаправлять посетителей на другие ресурсы.
    3. Сайт, чей контент был сгенерирован программно, набор бессмысленного текста.
    4. И другие.

    Как писать Яндекс на английском в почтовом адресе

    Компания Яндекс предоставляет всем своим зарегистрированным пользователям бесплатный почтовый адрес. Более того, при входе в систему этот адрес по умолчанию является логином.

    Ваш текст переведен частично.
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    Войдите или зарегистрируйтесь бесплатно на PROMT.One и переводите еще больше!

    <>


    Ингушетия

    ж.р.
    существительное

    Склонение

    Ingushetia

    15 сентября 2003 года, Магас, Ингушетия, Российская Федерация

    15 September 2003, Magas, Ingushetia, Russian Federation

    Больше

    Контексты

    15 сентября 2003 года, Магас, Ингушетия, Российская Федерация
    15 September 2003, Magas, Ingushetia, Russian Federation

    Едва затяжная война Москвы против чеченских боевиков окончилась хрупким миром, местом боевых стычек стала Ингушетия.
    No sooner did Moscow’s long war against Chechen rebels achieve a fragile peace than Ingushetia became a rebel staging ground.

    «Все будет хорошо: Ингушетия за Путина», — заявил Урушкан Галаев, 20-летний студент, который явно наслаждался поездкой с друзьями.
    “Everything will be great; Ingushetia is for Putin,” said Uruskhan Galayev, a 20-year-old student, who was clearly enjoying the chance to have an outing with his friends.

    По ту сторону Кавказских гор от места проведения Зимних Олимпийских игр, в республиках Ингушетия и Дагестан, продолжают набирать обороты исламистские выступления.
    Just across the Caucasus from where the Games will be held, an Islamist insurgency continues to simmer in the republics of Ingushetia and Dagestan.

    Он смело заявил, что “наша серьезнейшая внутриполитическая проблема” — это Чечня, Ингушетия и другие кавказские республики, где “уровень коррупции, насилия и кумовства… беспрецедентны”.
    He boldly stated that «our most serious domestic political problem» lies in Chechnya, Ingushetia and other Caucasus republics, where «the level of corruption, violence and cronyism . . . is unprecedented.»

    Больше

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    русский

    арабский
    немецкий
    английский
    испанский
    французский
    иврит
    итальянский
    японский
    голландский
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    португальский
    румынский
    русский
    шведский
    турецкий
    украинский
    китайский


    английский

    Синонимы
    арабский
    немецкий
    английский
    испанский
    французский
    иврит
    итальянский
    японский
    голландский
    польский
    португальский
    румынский
    русский
    шведский
    турецкий
    украинский
    китайский
    украинский


    На основании Вашего запроса эти примеры могут содержать грубую лексику.


    На основании Вашего запроса эти примеры могут содержать разговорную лексику.


    Реализация мероприятий по их жилищному обустройству будет осуществляться Правительством Республики Ингушетия.



    Initiatives to house these persons will be carried out by the Government of the Republic of Ingushetia.


    В 2010 году был избран членом Совета федерации от народного собрания республики Ингушетия.



    In 2010 he was elected a member of the Federation Council of the People’s Assembly of the Republic of Ingushetia.


    Восемь других случаев касались лиц, исчезнувших, согласно сообщениям, в 1994 году в Республике Ингушетия.



    Eight other cases concerned persons who reportedly disappeared in 1994 in the Ingush Republic.


    Наибольшее количество уголовных дел поступило из Чеченской Республики, Республик Ингушетия и Дагестан.



    Most of the criminal cases were from the Chechen Republic, the Ingush Republic and Dagestan.


    2017 — Благодарность Главы Республики Ингушетия.



    2017 — Gratitude of the Head of the Republic of Ingushetia.


    Под «мудрым руководством» этого фатического назначенца Кремля Ингушетия фактически превратилась в один из проблемных районов Северного Кавказа.



    Under the «wise rule» of this factual Kremlin’s appointee Ingushetia has become a problem region in the North Caucasus.


    Представитель провел встречи в Москве, а также посетил Республику Ингушетия и Чеченскую Республику.



    The Representative had meetings in Moscow and also travelled to the Republic of Ingushetia and the Chechen Republic.


    Данная программа предусматривает целевое выделение субсидий из федерального бюджета в размере 4,2 млрд. рублей бюджету Республики Ингушетия на оказание социальной помощи вынужденным переселенцам.



    The programme calls for a targeted allocation of subsidies from the federal budget totalling 4.2 billion roubles to the budget of the Republic of Ingushetia to provide social assistance to displaced persons.


    Чечня, Ингушетия, Дагестан, Карачаево-Черкесия, Кабарда: Кремль проигрывает Кавказ



    Chechnya, Ingushetia, Dagestan, Karachaevo-Cherkesia, Kabarda: the Kremlin is losing the Caucasus


    Например, по инициативе Народного собрания Республики Ингушетия в Думу были внесены поправки в этот законопроект.



    Amendments were introduced to this bill in the Duma on the initiative of the People’s Assembly of the Republic of Ingushetia, for example.


    Карабулак (Республика Ингушетия) 87344499 Телефон



    Karabulak (Republic Of Ingushetia) 87344499 Phone


    Малгобек (Республика Ингушетия) 873462 Телефон



    Malgobek (Republic Of Ingushetia) 873462 Phone


    В результате заявитель был арестован в Республике Ингушетия (Российская Федерация) и экстрадирован в Казахстан 9 декабря 2008 года.



    As a result, he was arrested in the Republic of Ingushetia (Russian Federation) and extradited to Kazakhstan on 9 December 2008.


    Принятие положительного решения позволит значительно ускорить решение проблемы обустройства вынужденных переселенцев, в том числе и проживающих на территории Республики Ингушетия.



    The adoption of a positive decision will make it possible to speed up considerably the solution of the problem of settling forcibly displaced persons, including those residing in the territory of the Republic of Ingushetia.


    В августе 2002 года Представитель получил приглашение посетить Российскую Федерацию, в том числе Республику Ингушетия и Чеченскую Республику.



    In August 2002, the Representative received an invitation to visit the Russian Federation, including the Republic of Ingushetia and the Chechen Republic.


    Наталья Павловская. Евкуровы. Село Ольгети, Джейрахский район, Ингушетия. 2008



    Natalia Pavlovskaya. Evkurovs. Olgeti village, Dzheyrakhsky district, Ingushetia. 2008


    УВКБ направило две группы по чрезвычайным мерам и открыло отделения во Владикавказе (Северная Осетия), Назрани (Ингушетия) и Махачкале (Дагестан).



    UNHCR has deployed two emergency response teams and has offices in Vladikavkaz (North Ossetia), Nazran (Ingushetia) and Makhachkala (Dagestan).


    После окончания холодной войны и распада Советского Союза Ингушетия решила остаться в составе Российской Федерации, а Чечня 2 ноября 1991 года провозгласила суверенитет.



    After the end of the cold war and the collapse of the Soviet Union, Ingushetia opted to remain within the Russian Federation while Chechnya proclaimed sovereignty on 2 November 1991.


    Ингушетия, ранее рассматривавшаяся как сравнительно безопасное место для чеченских беженцев, с 2003 года также стала ареной творящихся нарушений прав человека.



    Ingushetia, previously regarded as a relatively safe haven for Chechen refugees has since 2003 also become prone to human rights abuses.


    В Северо-Кавказском федеральном округе дети, постоянно проживающие на территории Республики Ингушетия и Республики Дагестан, обеспечиваются путевками в детские оздоровительные лагеря бесплатно.



    In the Northern Caucasus federal area, children who live permanently in the Republic of Ingushetia or the Republic of Dagestan are given free holidays in children’s holiday camps.

    Ничего не найдено для этого значения.

    Результатов: 70. Точных совпадений: 70. Затраченное время: 57 мс

    Documents

    Корпоративные решения

    Спряжение

    Синонимы

    Корректор

    Справка и о нас

    Индекс слова: 1-300, 301-600, 601-900

    Индекс выражения: 1-400, 401-800, 801-1200

    Индекс фразы: 1-400, 401-800, 801-1200

    Произношение Ингушетия
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    Ингушетия – 6 результатов перевода

    Назрань

    Республика Ингушетия Российская федерация 35 километров до Чеченской границы

    — Здравствуйте!

    Nazran, Republic of Ingushetia, Russian federation.

    35 km from the Chechen border.

    — Hello! — Hi!

    Ладно, поехали.

    Мы выходим из поезда в Ингушетии, которая граничит с Чечней.

    Так, по плану мы должны встретится с местным который проведет нас через леса где мы сможем проникнуть в страну.

    Okay, here we go.

    We exit the train in Ingushetia, which borders Chechnya.

    Now, the plan is to meet a local asset who’ll guide us through the backwoods where we can sneak in country.

    Да пусть он подавится им.

    Ну а без Чечни и Ингушетии ещё меньше проблем было бы, да?

    Получается какая-то инструкция к пользованию нами, Россией, для любого террориста.

    But let it choke on them.

    Well, not Chechnya and Ingushetia even less of a problem it would be, huh?

    It turns out some kind of instruction to use us, Russia, for any terrorist.

    Назрань

    Республика Ингушетия Российская федерация 35 километров до Чеченской границы

    — Здравствуйте!

    Nazran, Republic of Ingushetia, Russian federation.

    35 km from the Chechen border.

    — Hello! — Hi!

    Ладно, поехали.

    Мы выходим из поезда в Ингушетии, которая граничит с Чечней.

    Так, по плану мы должны встретится с местным который проведет нас через леса где мы сможем проникнуть в страну.

    Okay, here we go.

    We exit the train in Ingushetia, which borders Chechnya.

    Now, the plan is to meet a local asset who’ll guide us through the backwoods where we can sneak in country.

    Да пусть он подавится им.

    Ну а без Чечни и Ингушетии ещё меньше проблем было бы, да?

    Получается какая-то инструкция к пользованию нами, Россией, для любого террориста.

    But let it choke on them.

    Well, not Chechnya and Ingushetia even less of a problem it would be, huh?

    It turns out some kind of instruction to use us, Russia, for any terrorist.

    Показать еще

    Хотите знать еще больше переводов Ингушетия?

    Мы используем только переведенные профессиональными переводчиками фразы Ингушетия для формирования нашей постоянно обновляющейся базы. Это позволяет максимально точно переводить не просто слова, но и целые фразы, учитывая контекст и особенности их использования.

    Перевести новое выражение

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    Ингушетия

    ж.р.
    существительное

    Склонение




    Ingushetia






    15 сентября 2003 года, Магас, Ингушетия, Российская Федерация

    15 September 2003, Magas, Ingushetia, Russian Federation

    Больше

    Контексты

    15 сентября 2003 года, Магас, Ингушетия, Российская Федерация
    15 September 2003, Magas, Ingushetia, Russian Federation

    Едва затяжная война Москвы против чеченских боевиков окончилась хрупким миром, местом боевых стычек стала Ингушетия.
    No sooner did Moscow’s long war against Chechen rebels achieve a fragile peace than Ingushetia became a rebel staging ground.

    «Все будет хорошо: Ингушетия за Путина», — заявил Урушкан Галаев, 20-летний студент, который явно наслаждался поездкой с друзьями.
    “Everything will be great; Ingushetia is for Putin,” said Uruskhan Galayev, a 20-year-old student, who was clearly enjoying the chance to have an outing with his friends.

    По ту сторону Кавказских гор от места проведения Зимних Олимпийских игр, в республиках Ингушетия и Дагестан, продолжают набирать обороты исламистские выступления.
    Just across the Caucasus from where the Games will be held, an Islamist insurgency continues to simmer in the republics of Ingushetia and Dagestan.

    Он смело заявил, что “наша серьезнейшая внутриполитическая проблема” — это Чечня, Ингушетия и другие кавказские республики, где “уровень коррупции, насилия и кумовства… беспрецедентны”.
    He boldly stated that «our most serious domestic political problem» lies in Chechnya, Ingushetia and other Caucasus republics, where «the level of corruption, violence and cronyism . . . is unprecedented.»

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    Перевод «Ингушетия» на английский

    Ingushetia

    Ingushetiya

    Ingush


    Допустим, Ингушетия провела свой референдум.



    Following this, Ingushetia is given a referendum on its status.


    Всех (односельчанка, Ингушетия).



    All of them (a fellow villager, Ingushetia).


    В 2000 году становится первым заместителем председателя правительства Республики Ингушетия — Председателем государственного комитета по инвестициям и строительству.



    In 2000, he became the first vice premier of the Ingush government and the chairman of the state committee for investments and construction.


    Восемь других случаев касались лиц, исчезнувших, согласно сообщениям, в 1994 году в Республике Ингушетия.



    Eight other cases concerned persons who reportedly disappeared in 1994 in the Ingush Republic.


    Глубину лояльности федеральному центру, которой всегда славилась Ингушетия, измерить довольно сложно.



    The depth of Ingushetia’s loyalty to the federal centre, something for which the republic has always been famed, is rather difficult to measure.


    Сегодня Ингушетия снова в центре внимания.



    Now Ingushetia has been reluctantly dragged into the spotlight again.


    А между ними втиснута несостоявшаяся как государство Ингушетия — земля политических убийств.



    Sandwiched in between: the failed state of Ingushetia, a land of political murders.


    Это уже восьмая гуманитарная акция, которую Ингушетия организует для братского сирийского народа.



    This is already the eighth humanitarian action that Ingushetia will organize for the brotherly Syrian people.


    Республика Ингушетия является одной из самых уязвимой к влиянию идеологии экстремизма.



    The Republic of Ingushetia is one of the most vulnerable to ideology of extremism region.


    Восхождение было приурочено к 20-летию Республики Ингушетия.



    The climb was timed to the 20th anniversary of the Republic of Ingushetia.


    Чечня и Ингушетия подписали соглашение о границах.



    The parliaments of Chechnya and Ingushetia approved the border agreement.


    Оказание бесплатной правовой и информационной помощи населению Республики Ингушетия и вынужденным переселенцам, находящимся на ее территории.



    Providing free legal and informational assistance to the population of the Republic of Ingushetia and internally displaced people who are on its territory.


    Ингушетия располагает необходимой инфраструктурой для проведения первенства Европы.



    Ingushetia has the necessary infrastructure for carrying out the superiority of Europe.


    В результате договоренности Ингушетия отказалась от десяти процентов своей территории в пользу Чечни.



    As a result of the agreement, Ingushetia renounced 10% of its territory to Chechnya.


    Несколько часов спустя ее безжизненное тело с несколькими огнестрельными ранениями было найдено в соседней Республике Ингушетия.



    Some hours later, her lifeless body, displaying several gunshot wounds, was found in the neighbouring Republic of Ingushetia.


    В отношении уроженца Республики Ингушетия возбуждено уголовное дело за незаконное хранение драгоценных металлов.



    A criminal case has been opened against a native of the Republic of Ingushetia for illegal storage of precious metals.


    Расположенная в северной части Кавказа, Ингушетия испытала усиление боевой активности за последние несколько лет.



    Located in the North Caucusus, Ingushetia has seen an increase in militant activity in the last few years.


    Федеральный закон О центре международного бизнеса Ингушетия далее в тексте называется настоящим Федеральным законом.



    Federal Act on international business center «Ingushetia» hereinafter referred to as the present Federal law.


    Восхождение состоялось в рамках празднования 20-тилетия образования Республики Ингушетия.



    The climb was timed to the 20th anniversary of the Republic of Ingushetia.


    Для такой небольшой республики, как Ингушетия, потери были очень существенными.



    For a small republic like Ingushetia such losses were staggering.

    Ничего не найдено для этого значения.

    Результатов: 647. Точных совпадений: 647. Затраченное время: 109 мс

    Documents

    Корпоративные решения

    Спряжение

    Синонимы

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    Справка и о нас

    Индекс слова: 1-300, 301-600, 601-900

    Индекс выражения: 1-400, 401-800, 801-1200

    Индекс фразы: 1-400, 401-800, 801-1200

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