Caucasus
1598. albogachieva, M. Blood feud in Ingushetia: differences in adat and sharia. State and legal practice in the Caucasus: anthropological perspectives on law and politics. Ed. Stephane Voell, Iwona Kaliszewska. Farnham etc.: Ashgate, 2015, pp. 51-57.
1599. bobrovnikov, Vladimir. Mythologizing Sharia courts in the postSoviet North Caucasus. ISIM Newsletter, 5 (2000) pp. 25.
1600. comins-richmond, Walter. Legal pluralism in the North-West Caucasus: the role of Sharia courts. Religion, State & Society, 32 i (2004) pp. 59-73.
1601. musaev, Makhach. The prohibition of alcohol in Islam: religious imperatives and practices in seventeenth to nineteenth-century Dagestan. State, Religion, and Church, 4 i (2017) pp. 4-25.
More on the topic Caucasus:
- The Origins of “The Caucasus”
- War in the Caucasus
- Critical Assessments of Shevchenko and “The Caucasus”
- CHAPTER FIVE Shamil, Shevchenko, and the Chef-d'oeuvre, “The Caucasus”: A Poem as Seen from Afar
- Minns E.H.. Scythians and Greeks. A survey of ancient history and archaeology on the north coast of the Euxine from the Danube to the Caucasus. Cambridge: University Press,1913. — 720 p., 1913
- AMONG UKRAINIAN LITERARY HISTORIANS AND SPECIALISTS, there is absolutely no doubt that the 1845 poem “The Caucasus” (Kavkaz) holds a central place in the so-called political, philosophical, or ideological writings of the country's national poet, Taras Shevchenko (1814-1861) (Plate 11), and in the history of Ukraine.
- Vasilii Kliuchevsky, the dean of Russian historiography at the turn of the twentieth century, defined Russian history from the early seventeenth to the mid-nineteenth century as an 'all-Russian' period, in opposition to the earlier age, which he called Great Russian and Muscovite.
- Imperial Borderlands in Russian Literature
- PREFACE
- CHAPTER I. PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY AND NATURAL PRODUCTIONS.
- CHAPTER II. SEAS AND COASTLINE.
- The Fur Trade