Its members claim descent from ancient Cossack families that inhabited regions associated with the Don, Kuban, and Terek Rivers. |
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They were so impressed that they presented him with a Cossack uniform, which he wore proudly when he had his portrait painted. |
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Six men in Cossack hats, coats and boots dance a march, pivoting to all six corners of the large kiosk. |
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Each Cossack force had its own ataman and there was an ataman of all Cossack forces who, from 1827, was the heir to the imperial throne. |
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The collection contains studies by government officials, scholars, and Cossack movement leaders. |
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Hundreds of wooden luggers once plied the northern coast from Cossack to Cairns. |
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Fedor Vasilevich Tokarev was the epitome of a Cossack from the Don River Basin of Russia. |
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I had no thermals, but cut a dash with pyjama bottoms under my jeans and a borrowed Cossack hat. |
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The Russians gradually colonized the north, establishing Cossack settlements in the lowlands. |
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Two hundred years ago King Karl XII of Sweden fought together with the Cossack hetman Ivan Mazepa for the independence of Ukraine from Russia. |
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In fact, the Cossack regards the Russian peasant as a foreign, outlandish, despicable creature. |
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The hopak was first danced by the Cossack of the Zaporhizian Sich in the sixteenth century and spread to the rest of Ukraine. |
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The second was the Cossack period, lasting from the middle of the seventeenth century to the end of the eighteenth century. |
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I was on an adrenaline high from the day's activities, and wheeled out my Cossack dancing. |
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Beaded hats from Nizhni Novogorod and dolls of the golden-hued Cossack girls from the Ural region are key attractions. |
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A Cossack, rather than the cavalry, appeared on the horizon to save the day. |
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Even when his bike wobbled, his barnet didn't thanks to gallons of Cossack hairspray. |
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His seed variety is Don 95, named for a river that nurtured his Cossack ancestors. |
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He passed along the streets just as revolutionary and Cossack search parties were rushing out in search of him. |
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Indeed, it has been wrestled over so often by the Cossack and the Turk that little of the old city remains. |
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They chuck Arabic and Cossack riffs and countless other musical flavours at the sweat-soaked walls in the hope that some of them will stick. |
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Also, as a distinction of rank, she wore her ammo belts criss-crossed over her chest, Cossack style. |
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After dying, the witch returns to her true form, that of a beautiful young woman who turns out to be the daughter of one of the Cossack chiefs. |
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On Saturday night I made a passable first attempt at Cossack dancing. |
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The decision maker turned out to be a gray-haired Cossack ataman, or commander, in a traditional sheepskin hat. |
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A woman who answered the telephone at the Arkhangelsk institute said no one was available to comment on the theft, and the Cossack organization could not be reached by phone. |
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But in the current crisis, appropriately enough, the nature of a Cossack remains hard to pin down. |
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The archetype of the disobedient Cossack who will not stoop to intimidation remains an important part of Ukrainian identity. |
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Zaporozhian Cossack autonomy declined as the Russian Empire grew in power and reach, imposing its might over the Tatars. |
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Soon a Cossack captain came out waving a white silk handkerchief. |
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Historically, the Cossack way of living was one of disorder and adaption, of individualism and egalitarianism. |
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Secondly he used his light and mobile forces, irregular Cossack and Kalmuck light cavalry, Russian dragoons and mounted infantry to harass the Swedish advance. |
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Subject has military bearing, short haircut, brought a military uniform or wears the Cossack chevron insignia. |
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Yet this was not enough for the Tsars, who saw a risk of the Cossack worldview catching on. |
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Their defeat led the Cossack elite to accept government reforms in the hope of obtaining status in the nobility. |
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As a result, Cossack units were frequently broken up into small detachments for use as scouts, messengers or picturesque escorts. |
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Government officials expropriated grain and other produce from rural Cossack families, leaving them to starve and die. |
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In 1936, under pressure and appeals from Cossack communities, the Soviet government lifted the ban on Cossacks serving in the Red Army. |
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The Cossack National Movement of Liberation hoped to gain an independent Cossack state, to be called Cossackia, after the war. |
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Both Cossack divisions were made part of the XV Cossack Cavalry Corps, totalling some 25,000 men. |
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As part of Operation Keelhaul, the British returned Cossack prisoners of war to Russia. |
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Following the war, Cossack units, along with cavalry in general, were rendered obsolete and released from the Soviet Army. |
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War brides brought from distant lands were also common in Cossack families. |
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The writer Leo Tolstoy described such Cossack female chauvinism in his Cossacks novel. |
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Others adopt Cossack clothing to try to take on some of their mythic status. |
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In the late 1570s, the Stroganovs recruited Cossack fighters to invade Asia on behalf of the tsar. |
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However, these descriptions may be attributable to the stereotypical characteristics of a Cossack. |
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Yermak, the embodiment of Cossack freewill, bravery, and brutality, grew famous for his exploits on the Volga. |
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The Don Cossack warrior Yermak Timofeyevich was born by the Chusovaya River on the eastern fringes of the Muscovite lands. |
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They elected the Cossack chieftain Yermak Timofeyevich as the leader of the Cossack brigades. |
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Furthermore, this realignment was not without criticism, however, and some saw Yermak as a traitor to the Cossack name. |
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His decision to conduct a raid on the Stroganov trading posts resulted in an expedition led by the Cossack Yermak against the Khanate of Sibir. |
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It was this and other minor raids which prompted the Tsar of Russia to support a Cossack invasion of Siberia. |
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In 1582, the Siberia Khanate was attacked by the Cossack ataman Yermak, who defeated Kuchum's forces and captured the capital Qashliq. |
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Later Pyanda's name was once mentioned in the Cossack documents, however his further life is unknown. |
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Baida was a title of a Ruthenian nobleman and Cossack leader Dmytro Vyshnevetsky. |
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Following the Treaty of Aigun in 1858 a new Amur Cossack stanitsa appeared on the site. |
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In 1764 the Cossack Sergeant Stepan Andreyev claimed to have sighted this island. |
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The ghoul that keeps Putin awake at night is a Ukrainian Cossack. |
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Among the styles sported by children at Levendale Primary, Yarm were a cowboy hat, several flat caps and a Cossack hat. |
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Pugachev began envisioning a Cossack tsardom, similar to Razin's vision of a united Cossack republic. |
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While Yermak had succeeded in taking Qashliq, the battle had reduced his Cossack force to 500 men. |
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The Tatars struck a decisive blow on December 20, when a Cossack party of twenty men were discovered and slain. |
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The Cossacks sought representation in the Polish Sejm, recognition of Orthodox traditions, and the gradual expansion of the Cossack Registry. |
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On 29 June, the Cossack forces were attacked by the Tatars but again repelled them. |
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On 1 October, a Cossack attempt to storm the Tatar fort at Mount Chyuvash was held off. |
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The Qajar dynasty was subsequently overthrown, and Reza Khan, the former general of the Cossack Brigade, became the new Prime Minister of Iran. |
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Around 1577, the Stroganovs engaged the Cossack leader Yermak Timofeyevich to protect their lands from attacks of the Siberian Khan Kuchum. |
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In 1648 Cossack Semyon Dezhnyov opened the passage between America and Asia. |
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Since the khanate was established, Tatar Cossack troops defended the khanate from the Nogais. |
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The Don Cossack Host, which had been established by the 16th century, allied with the Tsardom of Russia. |
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Cossack communities had developed along the latter two rivers well before the arrival of the Don Cossacks. |
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By the 18th century, Cossack hosts in the Russian Empire occupied effective buffer zones on its borders. |
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There are Cossack organizations in Russia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Belarus, and the United States. |
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Sometime in the 16th century there appeared the old Ukrainian Ballad of Cossack Holota about a Cossack near Kiliya. |
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The Zaporozhian Host adopted a lifestyle that combined the ancient Cossack order and habits with those of the Knights Hospitaller. |
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To prevent further defection of Cossacks, the Russian government restored the special Cossack status of the majority of Zaporozhian Cossacks. |
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Around the end of the 16th century, relations between the Commonwealth and the Ottoman Empire were strained by increasing Cossack aggression. |
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During this time, the Habsburg Empire sometimes covertly hired Cossack raiders to go against the Ottomans to ease pressure on their own borders. |
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Cossack numbers expanded when the warriors were joined by peasants escaping serfdom in Russia and dependence in the Commonwealth. |
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During Cossack stay in Turkey, a new host was founded which by the end of 1778 numbered around 12,000 Cossacks. |
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In 1860, more Cossacks were resettled to the North Caucasus and merged into the Kuban Cossack Host. |
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The most popular weapons used by Cossack cavalrymen were usually sabres, or shashka, and long spears. |
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In 1648 the Russian Cossack Semyon Dezhnyov discovered a passage between North America and Asia. |
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Western Europeans had a lot of contacts with Cossacks during the Seven Years' War and had seen Cossack patrols in Berlin. |
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The Terek Cossack Host was a Cossack host created in 1577 from free Cossacks who resettled from the Volga to the Terek River. |
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In 1792 the Host was included in the Caucasus Line Cossack Host and separated from it again in 1860, with the capital of Vladikavkaz. |
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The Ural Cossack Host was formed from the Ural Cossacks, who had settled along the Ural River. |
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Stenka Razin was born into an elite Cossack family and had made many diplomatic visits to Moscow before organizing his rebellion. |
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Razin's rebellion marked the beginning of the end to traditional Cossack practices. |
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For the Cossack elite, a noble status within the empire came at the price of their old liberties in the 18th century. |
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Over the next fifty years, the central government responded to Cossack grievances with arrests, floggings, and exiles. |
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The changing government burdened the Cossacks as well, extending its reach to reform the Cossack traditions. |
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In September 1774, Pugachev's own Cossack lieutenants turned him over to the government troops. |
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On February 14, the destroyer, HMS Cossack was leading a flotilla of four other destroyers and the cruiser Arethusa on a sweep of Skagerrak looking for German iron-ore ships. |
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Even though the Zaysan region was recognized by both parties as part of the Qing empire, it had been annually used, by fishing expeditions sent by the Siberian Cossack Host. |
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Beklemishev began his construction project for a monument dedicated to Yermak in 1903 in the Cathedral Square of Novocherkassk, the capital of the Don Cossack country. |
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Based on legends and folk songs, for years, Yermak had been involved in robbing and plundering on the Volga with the hetman Ivan Kolzo and four other Cossack leaders. |
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Not everyone agrees that such initiates should be considered Cossack. |
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Cossack family values as expressed in 21st century Russia are simple, rigid, and seem very traditional compared to those of contemporary Western culture. |
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The Corps contained regiments of different Cossack groups, who were Don, Kuban, Terek and Siberian Cossacks who had been fighting Tito's guerrillas in the former Yugoslavia. |
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Oka Gorodovikov formed 49 Cossack cavalry divisions during the war. |
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While about a third of the regular Russian cavalry was dismounted in 1916 to serve as infantry, the Cossack arm remained essentially unaffected by modernization. |
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The actions of Yermak also redefined the meaning of the word Cossack. |
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Muscovy tried to gain support from the old Cossacks, asking the ataman, or Cossack chieftain, to prevent Razin from following through with his plans. |
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Most of the remaining Cossacks that stayed in the Danube delta returned to Russia in 1828 and created the Azov Cossack Host between Berdyansk and Mariupol. |
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Some Cossacks, including Polish schlahta, converted to Eastern Orthodox, divided the lands of Ruthenian szlachta in Ukraine, and became the Cossack szlachta. |
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In 1581 the Stroganov merchant family, interested in the fur trade, hired a Cossack leader, Yermak Timofeyevich, to lead an expedition into western Siberia. |
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In 1648, Bohdan Khmelnytsky and Petro Doroshenko led the largest of the Cossack uprisings against the Commonwealth and the Polish king John II Casimir. |
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In 1582 the troops of Cossack ataman Yermak seized and ruined Qashliq. |
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This Constitution also limited the executive authority of the hetman, and established a democratically elected Cossack parliament called the General Council. |
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Around 1577, Semyon Stroganov and other sons of Anikey Stroganov hired a Cossack leader called Yermak to protect their lands from the attacks of Siberian Khan Kuchum. |
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