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  2. Women in Russia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Russia

    Women of eighteenth-century Russia were luckier than their European counterparts in some ways; in others, the life of a Russian woman was more difficult. The eighteenth-century was a time of social and legal changes that began to affect women in a way that they had never before experienced.

  3. Siberian Ice Maiden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siberian_Ice_Maiden

    The Siberian Ice Maiden, known locally as the Princess of Ukok (Russian: Принце́сса Уко́ка), the Altai Princess (Russian: Алтайская принцесса), Devochka ("Girl") and Ochy-bala (Russian: Очы-бала, the heroine of the Altaic epic), is a mummy of a woman from the 5th century BC, discovered in 1993 in a kurgan belonging to one of the Pazyryk burials, from ...

  4. Evens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evens

    The Evens /əˈvɛn/ (Even: эвэн; pl. эвэсэл, evesel in Even and эвены, eveny in Russian; formerly called Lamuts) are a people in Siberia and the Russian Far East. They live in regions of the Magadan Oblast and Kamchatka Krai and northern parts of Sakha east of the Lena River, although they are a nomadic people.

  5. Indigenous peoples of Siberia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_peoples_of_Siberia

    Siberia is a vast region spanning the northern part of the Asian continent and forming the Asiatic portion of Russia.As a result of the Russian conquest of Siberia (16th to 19th centuries) and of the subsequent population movements during the Soviet era (1917–1991), the modern-day demographics of Siberia is dominated by ethnic Russians and other Slavs.

  6. Women in the Russian and Soviet military - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_the_Russian_and...

    However, the socioeconomic conditions for women in Russia were worsening ('women who are pushed out of paid work into unpaid housework, irregular occupation, and unemployment constitute an urgent social problem in Russia' [8]), and thus 'seriously complicate[d] their integration into the military community'. [7]

  7. Shamanism in Siberia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shamanism_in_Siberia

    Maria Czaplicka points out that Siberian languages use words for male shamans from diverse roots, but the words for female shaman are almost all from the same root. She connects this with the theory that women's practice of shamanism was established earlier than men's, that "shamans were originally female." [6]

  8. Agafia Lykova - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agafia_Lykova

    Agafia Karpovna Lykova (Russian: Агафья Карповна Лыкова; born 17 April 1944) is a Russian Old Believer, part of the Lykov family, who has lived alone in the taiga for most of her life. As of 2016, she resides in the Western Sayan mountains, in the Republic of Khakassia.

  9. Natalia Polosmak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natalia_Polosmak

    Natalia Viktorovna Polosmak (Russian: Наталья Викторовна Полосьмак; born 12 September 1956) is a Russian archaeologist specialising in the study of early Metal Age Eurasian nomads, especially those known as the Pazyryk Culture, an ancient people, often glossed as "Scythian", who lived in the Altay Mountains in Siberian Russia.