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{{Short description|Ancient nation in the Caucasus}} {{Short description|Ancient nation in the Caucasus}}
The '''Malkh''' were an ancient nation, living in the Western/Central North Caucasus. They are usually regarded as the westernmost ],<ref name="Jaimoukha" />and their name has a ] root (Malkh, the sun, attached to the main God, Deela's name as well, see ]). Little is known about them due to a loss of historical writings. Malkhi is one of the ] ]. The '''Malkh''' were an ancient nation, living in the Western/Central North Caucasus. They are usually regarded as the westernmost ],<ref name=Jaimoukha>Jaimoukha, Amjad. ''The Chechens: A Handbook''. Routledge Curzon: Oxon, 2005.</ref>and their name has a ] root (Malkh, the sun, attached to the main God, Deela's name as well, see ]). Little is known about them due to a loss of historical writings. Malkhi is one of the ] ].


== Mention in the source == == Mention in the source ==

Revision as of 03:06, 26 November 2023

Ancient nation in the Caucasus

The Malkh were an ancient nation, living in the Western/Central North Caucasus. They are usually regarded as the westernmost Nakh people,and their name has a Nakh root (Malkh, the sun, attached to the main God, Deela's name as well, see Vainakh mythology). Little is known about them due to a loss of historical writings. Malkhi is one of the Chechen tukkhums.

Mention in the source

Malkhi are mentioned by ancient Greco-Syrian writer Lucian and ancient Roman writer Claudius Aelianus. Despite Lucian's work having a literary and narrative nature, it shows what image the people living in Bosporan Kingdom had about the military-political union of the ancient Nakh peoples, which they knew as "Malkhi". As per the tradition, Malkh acted as one of the large state formations of Southeast Europe in the second half of the 1st millennium BC, having connections with Bosporus, as well as competing with it and with the Scythians, the Colchis.

Identity

Some historians consider them as Maeotian, while others consider them equivalent to the Durdzuks, an ethnonym mentioned primarily in Georgian sources. Some historians consider that the ethnonym was used to designate Nakh peoples.

See also

Notes

References

  1. Jaimoukha, Amjad. The Chechens: A Handbook. Routledge Curzon: Oxon, 2005.
  2. История Ингушетии 2013, p. 74 (referring to Латышевъ 1890, p. 608; Лукиан 1996, p. 307; Гумба 1988; Гумба 1990).
  3. Ахмадов et al. 2019, p. 284.
  4. Ростовцев 1925, p. 108.
  5. История Ингушетии 2013, p. 12.
  6. Ахмадов et al. 2019, pp. 263, 272.

Bibliography

English sources

Russian sources

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