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'''Qurbān-ʻAlī Khālidī''' ({{lang-ru|Курбангали Халиди}},<ref name=k1>Karmysheva, 100.</ref> 1846-1913) was a [[Kazakhs|Kazakh]] [[historian]], focusing mainly on the history of the eastern [[Kazakh steppe]]. His works are important sources for the history of [[Kazakhstan]] and [[Xinjiang]].<ref>Khālidī, Frank, Usmanov, ix.</ref>
'''Qurbān-ʻAlī Khālidī''' ({{lang-ru|Курбангали Халиди}},<ref name=k1>Karmysheva, 100.</ref> 1846-1913) was a [[Kazakhs|Kazakh]] [[historian]], focusing mainly on the history of the eastern [[Kazakh steppe]]. His works are important sources for the history of [[Kazakhstan]] and [[Xinjiang]].<ref>Khālidī, Frank, Usmanov, ix.</ref>


Khālidī was born in [[Ayagoz]], Kazakhstan, to a [[Chala Kazakh]] family, though he referred to himself as a "Noghay" - a Volga-Ural Muslim, or [[Tartar]],<ref>Khālidī, Frank, Usmanov, x.</ref> as his father was a native of the [[Kazan]] area. His mother was a native of Ayagoz.<ref name=k2>Karmysheva, 110.</ref> He studied in several [[madrasa]]s, first in his hometown of Ayagoz, then in [[Semipalatinsk]], Lepsi, and [[Bukhara]]. By 1871 he attained the rank of [[imam]], and by 1874 was the imam of a [[mosque]] in [[Tacheng]].<ref>Khālidī, Frank, Usmanov, xi.</ref>
Khālidī was born in [[Ayagoz]], Kazakhstan, to a [[Chala Kazakh]] family, though he referred to himself as a "Noghay" - a Volga-Ural Muslim, or [[Tatars|Tartar]],<ref>Khālidī, Frank, Usmanov, x.</ref> as his father was a native of the [[Kazan]] area. His mother was a native of Ayagoz.<ref name=k2>Karmysheva, 110.</ref> He studied in several [[madrasa]]s, first in his hometown of Ayagoz, then in [[Semipalatinsk]], Lepsi, and [[Bukhara]]. By 1871 he attained the rank of [[imam]], and by 1874 was the imam of a [[mosque]] in [[Tacheng]].<ref>Khālidī, Frank, Usmanov, xi.</ref>


Khālidī's writings utilize several Turkic languages, including [[Tatar]], [[Ottoman Turkish language|Ottoman Turkish]], [[Chagatai language|Chagatai]], and vernacular [[Kazak]].<ref name=k1/> As such, studying and translating his works can be difficult for even experienced scholars.<ref>Khalidi, Frank, Usmanov, and Nathan Light. "Book Reviews - Inner Asia - An Islamic Biographical Dictionary of the Eastern Kazakh Steppe, 1770-1912." The Journal of Asian Studies. 64. 4 (2005): p. 1021.</ref>
Khālidī's writings utilize several Turkic languages, including [[Tatar]], [[Ottoman Turkish language|Ottoman Turkish]], [[Chagatai language|Chagatai]], and vernacular [[Kazak]].<ref name=k1/> As such, studying and translating his works can be difficult for even experienced scholars.<ref>Khalidi, Frank, Usmanov, and Nathan Light. "Book Reviews - Inner Asia - An Islamic Biographical Dictionary of the Eastern Kazakh Steppe, 1770-1912." The Journal of Asian Studies. 64. 4 (2005): p. 1021.</ref>

Revision as of 01:17, 16 May 2013

Qurbān-ʻAlī Khālidī (Template:Lang-ru,[1] 1846-1913) was a Kazakh historian, focusing mainly on the history of the eastern Kazakh steppe. His works are important sources for the history of Kazakhstan and Xinjiang.[2]

Khālidī was born in Ayagoz, Kazakhstan, to a Chala Kazakh family, though he referred to himself as a "Noghay" - a Volga-Ural Muslim, or Tartar,[3] as his father was a native of the Kazan area. His mother was a native of Ayagoz.[4] He studied in several madrasas, first in his hometown of Ayagoz, then in Semipalatinsk, Lepsi, and Bukhara. By 1871 he attained the rank of imam, and by 1874 was the imam of a mosque in Tacheng.[5]

Khālidī's writings utilize several Turkic languages, including Tatar, Ottoman Turkish, Chagatai, and vernacular Kazak.[1] As such, studying and translating his works can be difficult for even experienced scholars.[6]

Published works

  • Tārīkh-i jarīda-yi jadīda, (New Historical Records).[1] Kazan, 1889.
  • Tawārīkh-i khamsa-yi sharqī (Essays on the History of Five Eastern Peoples).[1] Kazan, 1910. Now republished in abridged and modernized form in Kazakh as Tauarikh khamsa: bes tarikh by Kūrbanghali Khalid.
  • An Islamic Biographical Dictionary of the Eastern Kazakh Steppe, 1770-1912. Brill's Inner Asian library, v. 12. Leiden: Brill, 2004.
  • Materials for the Islamic history of Semipalatinsk: two manuscripts by Aḥmad-Walī al-Qazā and Qurbānʻali Khālidī. Berlin: Das Arabische Buch, 2001.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Karmysheva, 100.
  2. ^ Khālidī, Frank, Usmanov, ix.
  3. ^ Khālidī, Frank, Usmanov, x.
  4. ^ Karmysheva, 110.
  5. ^ Khālidī, Frank, Usmanov, xi.
  6. ^ Khalidi, Frank, Usmanov, and Nathan Light. "Book Reviews - Inner Asia - An Islamic Biographical Dictionary of the Eastern Kazakh Steppe, 1770-1912." The Journal of Asian Studies. 64. 4 (2005): p. 1021.

References

  • Karmysheva, Dzh. Kh. "Kazakhstanskii istorik-kraeved i etnograf Kurbangali Khalidi." Sovetskaia Etnografiia 1 (1971): 100-110.
  • Khālidī, Qurbanʻali, Allen J. Frank, and Mirkasym Abdulakhatovich Usmanov. An Islamic Biographical Dictionary of the Eastern Kazakh Steppe, 1770-1912. Brill's Inner Asian library, v. 12. Leiden: Brill, 2004.

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