Diferencia entre revisiones de «Tribu Kayı»
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Como un grupo '''Kayitag''' (rusificado a ''Kaitag'') (''Montaña Kayi'') la tribu Kayi desempeñó un papel destacado en la historia del [[Cáucaso]], y ahora el idioma Kayitag está clasificado como uno de los cinco dialectos de la lengua [[Kumyk]], que durante diez siglos (10-19 cc) fue ''lingua franca'' en el norte del Cáucaso. El principado de Kayitag fue un componente principal del estado [[Shamkhalate de Kazi-Kumukh]] en el litoral occidental del Caspio que en diferentes formas duró desde el siglo VIII hasta el siglo XIX. Los [[textiles Kaitag]], eliminados bajo la dominación soviética, siguen siendo distintos en su arte y mano de obra.
Según la tradición otomana, [[Osmán I]], fundador del [[Imperio Otomano]], descendía de la tribu Kayı.<ref>"Some Ottoman genealogies claim, perhaps fancifully, descent from Kayı.", Carter Vaughn Findley, ''The Turks in World History'', pp. 50, 2005, Oxford University Press; Shaw, Stanford Jay. ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=UVmsI0P9RDUC&pg=PA306&dq=ottomans+kayi+tribe&hl=tr&sig=ScJp-U0gA_K6RAr1pXENeSrYRhM History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey]''. [[Cambridge University Press]], 1976, p. 306</ref><ref>{{
{{Cite book |last=Kafadar |first=Cemal |title=Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State |date=1995 |page=122 |quote=That they hailed from the Kayı branch of the Oğuz confederacy seems to be a creative "rediscovery" in the genealogical concoction of the fifteenth century. It is missing not only in Ahmedi but also, and more importantly, in the Yahşi Fakih-Aşıkpaşazade narrative, which gives its own version of an elaborate genealogical family tree going back to Noah. If there was a particularly significant claim to Kayı lineage, it is hard to imagine that Yahşi Fakih would not have heard of it. }}
* {{Cite book |last=Lowry |first=Heath |title=The Nature of the Early Ottoman State |publisher=SUNY Press |date=2003 |page=78 |isbn=0-7914-5636-6 |quote=Based on these charters, all of which were drawn up between 1324 and 1360 (almost one hundred fifty years prior to the emergence of the Ottoman dynastic myth identifying them as members of the Kayı branch of the Oguz federation of Turkish tribes), we may posit that...}}
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==Notas==
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==Referencias==
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