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The ethnonym 'Dingling' is regarded by modern scholars in the Western world as being interchangeable with the ethnonym 'Tiele', who are believed to be the descendants of the Dingling. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] Chinese historiographers believed that 'Tiele' was a mistaken transcription, related them to the ancient Red Di (狄翟), and recorded various names ...
The peoples mentioned in sources of the Han period that can be identified as Turkic were the Dingling (later Tiele, from whom the Uyghurs emerged), the Jiankun (later Kirghiz), the Xinli (later Sir/Xue), and possibly also the Hujie or Wujie, were all, at that period, north and west of the Xiongnu in general area where we find the Kirghiz at the ...
In 1921, Ding transferred to Yueyun Middle School and was a classmate with Yang Kaihui, Mao Zedong's second wife. In the summer of 1922, Ding's friend Wang Jianhong returned home from Shanghai and took Ding to Shanghai, where she entered the CCP-run People's Girls' School. During this time she took up the pen name Ding Ling.
The Tiele, [a] [b] also named Gaoche or Gaoju, [3] [4] [5] [c] were a tribal confederation of Turkic ethnic origins [6] living to the north of China proper and in Central Asia, emerging after the disintegration of the confederacy of the Xiongnu. [7] Chinese sources associate them with the earlier Dingling. [8] [9] [10] [d]
The Kang-chü, Kao-che, Gaoche or Kao-chü Ting-ling (chin.高車, „high chariot/cart“) were an ancient Turkic people in East Asia in the 3rd century AD. Only known under the Chinese name Kao-che, they are usually equated with the ancient Dingling (丁零) and Kang and medieval Kipchaks.
ICE said it takes eight times the personnel to make an arrest in the community versus at a jail. The American Immigration Council estimates each at-large arrest costs taxpayers $6,653.
WASHINGTON, Jan 15 (Reuters) - Chris Wright, President-elect Donald Trump's pick to head the U.S. Energy Department, told U.S. senators in his confirmation hearing on Wednesday his first priority ...
Zhai Liao, a royal family member of the West Ding Ling, followed the horde migrate from Kazakhstan into China, his cousin Zhai Bin (翟斌), khan of the horde, who wage war against Former Qin's emperor Fu Jiān in 383, supported Later Yan's [1] founding emperor Murong Chui when Murong Chui rebelled against Former Qin as well and established Later Yan.