Let Our Fame Be Great (72 page)

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Authors: Oliver Bullough

BOOK: Let Our Fame Be Great
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Thanks to Helen Conford at Penguin, for agreeing that this book might be a good idea and for being a thoughtful editor and a patient listener, and thanks too to Abbie for introducing me to her. Thanks to Mike Morrogh and David Gee for being bright lights in a dark place, and to Geoffrey Ellis for the encouragement and help.
This book has involved lots of travelling, and I am very grateful to the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust for paying for so much of that. I recommend that anyone reading this who is keen to travel the world should look into asking WCMT for help (
www.wcmt.org.uk
). Thanks also to staff members at the British Library and at the National Archives in Kew.
I have shamelessly exploited the hospitality of people I met while travelling. I have been bought drinks, snacks and meals, and have been taken to weddings, meetings, commemorations and parties despite my travel-stained appearance. Thanks to everyone who helped me, and thanks to those who shared their recollections with me too.
In Moscow, thanks to German Tom for his hospitality, his good company, his inspiring photos and his financial assistance, without which I would have been ruined. In Grozny, thanks to Aslanbek, Arbi and Asya for many good times, and for all your help. In Almaty, thanks to Marusya for fun and a long walk. Thanks also to everyone in Krasnaya Polyana, and above all to Atlan. In Bishkek, thanks to Ivar and Elina for letting me come to your wedding; I wish you happiness together. In Turkey, thanks to Zeynel Besleney, for introducing me to the Circassians. Thanks to Emma for making me feel at home in Istanbul, and thanks also to Aytek in Kayseri, to Ergun, Okan and Setanay in Istanbul, and to Murat in Ankara. In
Jordan, thanks to Zaina for introducing me to everyone I could have hoped to meet, and to Amjad Jaimoukha for his help. In Israel, thanks to Kujan for showing me around, and to everyone in Kfar-Kama. Thanks also to Mark Mackinnon in Jerusalem for teaching me how to play the guitar. In the Czech Republic, thanks to Andrei Babitsky for taking time off to help me out, and for allowing me to see his video. In Dagestan, thanks to Abu-Talib, for being brilliant. In Austria, thanks to Joachim for putting me up. In Belgrade, thanks to Ellie for being great.
Some of my material dates back to the time I worked as a journalist in Moscow, when I was blessed with my colleagues.
At Reuters, thanks to Maria Golovnina, Meg Clothier, Tom Miles, Tom Peter, Ron Popeski, Richard Balmforth, Olga Petrova, Kolya Pavlov, Dima Madorsky, Nino Ivanishvili, Sog Afdjei, Viktor Korotayev, Sergei Karpukhin, Eduard Korniyenko, Kazbek Basayev, Maka Antidze and Niko Mchledishvili. And, outside Reuters, thanks above all to Yana Dlugy and Simon Ostrovsky. I wish all competitors could be like them.
This book is for Adlan Khasanov, who deserved to live for ever. Rest in Peace, my friend.
Index
Page numbers in
italics
refer to maps.
Abadzekhs
Abayeff family
Abazi, Selim
Abdulaziz, Sultan
Abdulkhadzhiev, Aslambek
Abdurakhman (son-in-law and chronicler of Imam Shamil)
Abkhaz language
Abkhazia
Abkhazians
abreks
(outlaws)
Abubakarov, Magomed
Achkhoi-Martan
Adapazari
Adler
Adygea
Afghanistan
Agumba, Jihan
Aguzarov, Tamerlan (judge)
Aideboloff family
Akchakale
Akhtougan
Akhulgo
Akmola
al-Gilani, Suleiman
al-Sadoun, Nasser
Alazani river
Aldridge, Ira
Aldy
Alexander I, Tsar
Alexander II, Tsar
Alexander III, Tsar
Ali bin al-Hussein, Prince
Alimkhadzhiyev, Sultan
Alkhan Yurt
Alkhankala
Almaty
Alps
Altan, Afitap
‘aluminium wars'
Aminat (wife of Imam Shamil)
Amman
Anapa
Anatolia
Andalal
Annenkov, Ivan
Appayev, Taubi
Applebaum, Anne,
Gulag
Arab Legion
Argonauts
Argun
Argun river
Arkhipo-Osipovka
Armenia
Armenian genocide (1915)
Ascherson, Neal,
Black Sea
Assyrians
Astana
asylum seekers, Chechen
Ataturk, Mustafa Kemal
Austria, Chechen population
Austro-Hungarian Empire
Avar language
Avars
Avturi
Aytek (Circassian in Kayseri)
Azerbaijan
Azeris
Azov Sea
Babitsky, Andrei
Baddeley, John F.
The Rugged Flanks of the Caucasus
The Russian Conquest of the Caucasus
Baisiev, Mukhadin
Baisungur (lieutenant of Imam Shamil)
Baksan valley
Baku
Balballi
Balkarokoff family
Balkars
Cherek massacre
culture and folklore
deportation of
discrimination against
ethnicity
excised from reference books
exile in central Asia
government and social organization
homeland
Islam
language
return to Caucasus
uprisings against Soviet collectivization
Westerners' first encounters with
Balkashino
Bammate, Haidar
Baranov, Alexander
Barozzi (Ottoman medical inspector)
Baryatinsky, Prince Alexander
Basayev, Shamil
Bashiev family
Bashkirs
Bedouins
Belarus
Belaya Rechka
Belgatoi
Belgium
Bell, James
Benoi/Benoy
Beria, Lavrenty
Berlin
Berzegov, Murat
Berzhe, Adolf
Beslan school siege (2004)
Kulayev's trials
Bestuzhev, Alexander (‘Alexander Marlinsky')
Ammalat Bek
Bestuzhev-Ryumin, Mikhail
Beybulat
Bezengi
Bibulatov, Khasan ‘Dedushka'
Bichegov-Begoshvili family
Bigaeva, Sveta
bin Laden, Osama
Birsanukayev, Lechi
Bishkek
Bisultanov, Apti
Black Sea
ferries
Blumenbach, Johann Friedrich
Bolsheviks
Borrell, Josep
Bran, Chen
bride-stealing
Britain
and Circassian genocide
claims to control in Caucasus
Crimean War
First World War
and slave trade
tourism in Caucasus
Buddhism
Budyonnovsk hospital siege (1995)
buffalo, Caucasus
Bulgaria
Bursa
Buturlin, Dmitry
Buynaksk
Byron, George, 6th Baron
Canning, Stratford (
later
1st Viscount Stratford de Redcliffe)
Cape Adler
Carinthia
Caspian Sea
Catherine II, the Great, Empress of Russia
Caucasus Cavalry Division
Caucasus Imamate
Caucasus Mountain Republic
Caucasus mountains
Cej, Musa
censorship
Chavchavadze, Prince David
Chavchavadze, Princess Anna
Chavchavadze, Princess Orbeliani
Chechen diaspora
in Austria
in France
in Jordan
in Norway
in Poland
in Turkey
Chechen flag
Chechen language
Chechen National Congress (1990)
Chechen war (1994 – 6)
ceasefire
death toll
destruction of Grozny
outbreak
savagery of
use of torture
Chechen war (1999 – )
announcement of ending of
‘cleansing' of Chechen villages
death toll
destruction of Grozny
effects on other Caucasus peoples
‘filtration camps'
human rights abuses
media coverage
outbreak
psychological effects on children
savagery of
terrorist tactics
use of torture
see also
Beslan school siege
Checheno-Ingushetia
Chechens
blood feuds
criminal gangs
deportation of
exile in Central Asia
folklore and culture
historic conflicts with Russians
independence aims
Islam
Kavkaz (nationalist movement)
lone wolf symbol
migrants and asylum seekers
murdered in Europe
national reawakening
polygamy
refugees
reputation for brutality
return to Caucasus
terrorism
traditional government and social organization
zikr
(prayer ritual)
Chechnya
blackmarket
inter-Chechen wars government
Islamic law
oil wells
Ramzan Kadyrov government
Russian forts
Russian and Soviet expansion into
status as autonomous region
television station
topography
Chegem river
Chegem valley
Cherek massacre (1942)
death toll
investigations, reports and accounts of
memorials to
Cherek river
Cherek valley
Cherkessk
Chernokozovo (‘filtration camp')
Chernomyrdin, Viktor
Chichagova, Maria
Chimkent
Circassia
ancient history
and Crimean War
in mythology
nineteenth-century British travellers' accounts
remaining Circassian population
Russian coastal forts
Russian expansion into
topography
Circassian Congress
Circassian diaspora
International Circassian Congress (1991)
in Iraq
in Israel
in Jordan
in Kosovo
objections to Sochi Winter Olympics
radio and television stations
repatriation to Caucasus
in Syria
in Turkey
in Western Europe and United States
Circassian flag
Circassian genocide (1864)
Circassians' commemoration of
death toll
ill-remembered and unrecognized
Circassian language dialects 36
Circassians
appearance
bride-stealing
criminal clans
folklore
governance and social organization
habze
(code of conduct)
hospitality
Islam
law enforcement
military reputation
Pushkin's descriptions of
remaining in Caucasus
slave trade
slavery
songs
traditional dress
wedding rituals
Clarke, Roger
Clauson, Sir Gerard
climate, Caucasus
CNN (television channel)
Cold War
collectivization, agricultural
Communist Party
10th Congress
20th Congress
Caucasus local divisions
Central Committee
Conquest, Robert,
The Nation Killers
Cossacks
Circassian wars
in Dagestan and Chechnya
Council of Europe
Crimea
Crimean Tatars
Crimean War
Curtiss, John Shelton,
The Russian Army under Nicholas I
Cyprus
Dadi-Yurt
Dagestan
Basayev's invasion
Bestuzhev/Marlinksy's exile in
and Chechen war
opposition to Russian head of tax department
Persian control of
Soviet control of
status as autonomous region
topography
Western travellers to
Dagestanis
blood feuds
emigration
ethnic groups
exiled in Russia
folklore
in Grozny
historic conflicts with Russians
Islam
languages
traditional government and social organization
Daghistani, Gazi-Muhammad
Daghistani, Muhammad Fazil
Daghistani, Tamara
Daniel-Sultan (lieutenant of Imam Shamil)
Dargins
Dargo
Dashayev, Umalt
Day (Chechnya village)
de Fonvielle, Arthur
Debak detention centre
Decembrist uprising (1825)
‘Dedushka'
see
Bibulatov, Khasan
Denisultanov, Khozhbaudi
Derbent
Ditson, George Leighton
Diyner, Sebahattin
Dnepropetrovsk
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor
Dostum, Abdul Rashid
Drancey, Anne
dress, Caucasus national
Dubai
Dubze
Dudayev, Dzhokhar
Dudiyeva, Susanna

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