Fanuza Nadrshina
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Fanuza Nadrshina
Fanuza Nadrshina () (February 7, 1936) is a Bashkir people, Bashkir folklorist, scholar and professor. Early life and education Fanuza Nadrshina was born on February 7, 1936, in the village of Muradym, Staro-Muradymovo, Aurgazinsky District of Bashkortostan. In 1959, she graduated from the Faculty of Philology of the Pedagogical Academy in the city of Sterlitamak (from 2022 Sterlitamak branch of the Ufa University of Science and Technology). Career Since 1962, she has been a researcher at the Institute of History, Language and Literature of the Bashkir Branch of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union. Since 2005, she has been appointed a chef scientific officer at the Department of Folkloristics of the Institute of Linguistics of the Urals Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences. In 1960–89, she took part in folklore expeditions to the regions of Bashkortostan, as well as to the Kurgan Oblast, Kurgan, Orenburg Oblast, Orenburg, Perm Oblast, Perm, Sverdlovsk Oblast, Sver ...
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Bashkir People
The Bashkirs ( , ) or Bashkorts (, ; , ) are a Turkic ethnic group indigenous to Russia. They are concentrated in Bashkortostan, a republic of the Russian Federation and in the broader historical region of Badzhgard, which spans both sides of the Ural Mountains, where Eastern Europe meets North Asia. Smaller communities of Bashkirs also live in the Republic of Tatarstan, Perm Krai the oblasts of Chelyabinsk, Orenburg, Tyumen, Sverdlovsk, Kurgan and other regions in Russia; sizeable minorities exist in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. Most Bashkirs speak the Bashkir language, which is similar to the Tatar, Kazakh and Kyrgyz languages.The Bashkir language belongs to the Kipchak branch of Turkic languages; they share historical and cultural affinities with the broader Turkic peoples. Bashkirs are mainly Sunni Muslims of the Hanafi school madhhab, or school of jurisprudence, and follow the Jadid doctrine. Previously nomadic and fiercely independent, the Bashkirs gradually cam ...
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