Details
Topical Term
Uighur (Turkic people)
Use for
Taranchi (Turkic people)
nne Uighurs
Uigur (Turkic people)
nne Uigurs
Uyghur (Turkic people)
Uyghurs
Uygur (Turkic people)
Weiwu'er (Turkic people)
nne Uighurs
Uigur (Turkic people)
nne Uigurs
Uyghur (Turkic people)
Uyghurs
Uygur (Turkic people)
Weiwu'er (Turkic people)
Broader Term
Related resource
Web. 3 (Uighur or Uigur)
Britannica Micro.: v. X: p. 238 (Uighurs, Turkic-speaking people of interior Asia who live for the most part in western China, in the Sinkiang Uighur Autonomous Region ... others in Soviet Union)
Voegelin lang.: p. 339 (Uighur)
Ethnologue: p. 232 (Uigur)
Russell-Smith, L. Uygur patronage in Dunhuang, 2005.
Britannica online, Jan. 4, 2005: under Uighur (Chinese (pinyin) Uygur)
Bovingdon, G. The Uyghurs, 2010: ECIP t.p. (Uyghurs)
The Uyghur community, 2018: table of contents (Uyghurs)
Britannica online, Feb. 20, 2019 (Uighur, Chinese (Pinyin) Weiwu'er, also spelled Uygur or Uyghur, a Turkic-speaking people of interior Asia. Uighurs live for the most part in northwestern China, in the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang; a small number live in the Central Asian republics. There were some 10,000,000 Uighurs in China and at least a combined total of 300,000 in Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan in the early 21st century)
Britannica Micro.: v. X: p. 238 (Uighurs, Turkic-speaking people of interior Asia who live for the most part in western China, in the Sinkiang Uighur Autonomous Region ... others in Soviet Union)
Voegelin lang.: p. 339 (Uighur)
Ethnologue: p. 232 (Uigur)
Russell-Smith, L. Uygur patronage in Dunhuang, 2005.
Britannica online, Jan. 4, 2005: under Uighur (Chinese (pinyin) Uygur)
Bovingdon, G. The Uyghurs, 2010: ECIP t.p. (Uyghurs)
The Uyghur community, 2018: table of contents (Uyghurs)
Britannica online, Feb. 20, 2019 (Uighur, Chinese (Pinyin) Weiwu'er, also spelled Uygur or Uyghur, a Turkic-speaking people of interior Asia. Uighurs live for the most part in northwestern China, in the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang; a small number live in the Central Asian republics. There were some 10,000,000 Uighurs in China and at least a combined total of 300,000 in Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan in the early 21st century)
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