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Ingush

people

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Assorted References

  • resistance to Russian expansion
    • Russia
      In Russia: The Stalin era (1928–53)

      …such as the Chechen and Ingush, from 1944 onward. They were accused of collaborating with the Germans. The Volga Germans were deported in the autumn of 1941 lest they side with the advancing Wehrmacht. Altogether, more than 50 nationalities, embracing about 3.5 million people, were deported to various parts of…

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demography of

    • Chechnya
      • Chechnya
        In Chechnya: People

        …with minorities of Russians and Ingush. The Chechens and the Ingush are both Muslim and are two of the many Caucasian mountain peoples whose language belongs to the Nakh group. Fiercely independent, the Chechens and other Caucasian tribes mounted a prolonged resistance to Russian conquest from the 1830s through the…

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    • Ingushetia
      • Ingushetiya-Vovnushki
        In Ingushetiya

        …majority of the population is Ingush, one of the many Muslim mountain peoples in the Caucasus. Traditionally, the chief occupations were farming in the lowlands and cattle raising in the mountain areas. Mineral water is of economic importance, and the republic has a growing tourism sector.

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    Also spelled:
    Songhay or Sonrhai

    Songhai, ethnolinguistic group having more than three million members who inhabit the area of the great bend in the Niger River in Mali, extending from Lake Debo through Niger to the mouth of the Sokoto River in Nigeria. Some nomadic Songhai groups live in Mali, Niger, and southeastern Algeria. The Songhai are composed of many related groups, the most important of which are the Zarma, with more than two million speakers. It is widely assumed that their languages form a branch of the Nilo-Saharan language family.

    Songhai society traditionally was highly structured, comprising a king and nobility, free commoners, artisans, griots (bards and chroniclers), and slaves. Marriage could be polygynous, cross cousins being preferred partners. Descent and succession are patrilineal. Cultivation, largely of cereals, is practiced intensively only during the rainy season, from June to November. Cattle are raised on a small scale, and fishing is of some importance. As a result of their advantageous location at the crossroads of western and central Africa, the Songhai have traditionally prospered from caravan trade. Many young Songhai have left home for the coast, especially Ghana.

    The Songhai formed one of the great empires of Western Africa. See also Songhai empire.