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Talk:Iranian peoples/Archive 5

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6364:
sources believe the Azeris to be an Iranian people due to purported ancestry, culture etc. and I (and most of the other editors) were okay with that. THEN he wants more sources to again say that the Azeris are often considered an Iranian people which is, honestly ridiculous. Nearly every major reference, books written, SPECIFICALLY refer to the Azeris as a Turkic people. Not my words, but theirs. those references I put are a response to this unreasonable insistence that the Azeris be counted entirely as an Iranian people even though, AGAIN, this article is not about Iran. It includes most of the people of Iran, but its parameters are far beyond its borders. You know this as well, but I'm merely explaining this for context. As such, the Azeris simply do not qualify, whereas the Azaris do, the Talysh do, the Tat do. I think I've been pretty reasonable throughout, listening to and responding to people, but we had some nationalist zealot come in and try to put in some garbage about 'pure' Kurds, taking out any mention of Arabs, and tried to promote what no academic would support that the Persians are of some pure ancestry derived solely from the ancient Persians or Aryans and the other ancients magically disappeared apparently. And he this without a shred of evidence or a reference. Now you tell me, am I being unreasonable here? I wrote this article because as a whole the Iranian peoples are interesting and many of the interesting things they did involved the now gone northern Iranians and the Muslim Iranians who took Islam and made it uniquely their own etc. These are all important aspects to discuss. And look at this article's mentioning of the Azeris. We're talking more about them, then the Pashtuns who are a major group (40 million which is more than the population of Persians in Iran) or even the Kurds. I think it was a good move to discuss the Turko-Iranian situation and to mention the Azeris and others as closely linked to the Iranian peoples, but their first language is Turkic and mutually intelligible with Turkish and Turkmen. all of these aspects are what I wanted to convey in a neutral manner. Surely I didn't do a disservice to the Iranian peoples by writing the article and with Khoikhoi getting it up to speed and featured as the 1000th FA. That was good press and lots of people dropped me and Khoikhoi messages saying they learned a lot from the article. Without neutral academic writing this article would not have made it as a FA as other editors would have torn it apart (and rightly so) for its extremist POV positions. I'm not saying I should be the one to decide what goes in the article by myself, but I am saying that credibility only comes with citations. If I have more references, then I believe my position is stronger, particularly when the opposing has either a few or none at all. That's my general position with any article and not just this one. Peace.
3295:
is Haitians who speak French. So your rule is not absolute. There is a difference between "Turkic speaking people" (Azarbaijanis and Yaquts) and Turkic people (Yaquts and Kirghiz). Look around all neighboring people and you will see Azarbaijanis are closest to Talysh, Persians,.. and other Iranian people in culture. But you agreed that Iranians scholars and some Caucasian Azarbaijani scholars agree that modern Azarbaijanis are turkic speaking Iranians. I think the point of view of these scholars should also be mentioned and deserves recognition. Specially how a group defines itself is very important as well. For example Professor. Eghraq/Ighrar Aliyev was the top scholar of the Azarbaijan republic and his works are quoted frequently by Iranian , Russian and Western Scholars. Why shouldn't his opinion count as well. I can assure you that (god bless his soul) Prof. Aliyev was 100 more knowledgeable than the nameless author of the Encyclopedia Britannica entery. I say in matters that are not necessarily scientific (the concept of identity is definitely not scientific), both ideas should be mentioned. There are some other Academics that I can not recall, but I can find their names. Lets remember that we Eastern people give a lot of respect to Western Academics, but I can assure you that some of them have ulterior motives. Why do you think they spend so much time studying every single group and language and sub-dialect and sub-sub-dialect. The reason is that they can make "Khalq" and "Nations" out of groups that have been nations and integrated for a long time. A good example is Yugoslavia where the West deliberately broke it up because it threatened their interest. Else why the double standard I mentioned. Similarly they want to create ethnic "democratic" mosaics, where some economic lobbies will control the democratic processes of these countries and some weak leader is put in place. A good example is the Azerbaijani and Armenian republics. One is controlled by the Western oil lobbies and the othr by the Russians. If Azarbaijanis are a Turkic people than African Americans are a Germanic people. The correct thing would be to say that African Americans are a Germanic speaking people. We know hunderds of thousands of Iranians from Esfahan and Tehran and Arak..during the Qajar era migrated to Azarbaijan (Tabriz was the main city then) and became Turkic speaking and similarly much more people from Azarbaijan have settled in Tehran for example and became Persian speaking. Most people in Caucasian Azarbaijan have the last name "zadeh" virtually the same in Iran. (Of course the Russians changed a lot of it to "off"(yev), but why didn't they do that for the Armenians but did it to Tajiks and Azarbaijanis)? Read this link:
1305:
by other factors. Language groups, formed prior to the age of globalization and showing a long common history, are perfectly viable as a grouping as well. Also, common academic practice refers to people who speak certain languages as a group, thus the MANY references to Iranian peoples throughout academia that are sourced in this article. Just saying that the usage of Germanic peoples is plain wrong and is original research is not valid since I've seen it used on numerous occassions, including when I took German classes and the Germanic languages were discussed. Historically, the tribes that went out, known as Germanic tribes, spread their languages and the peoples who adopted them (such as the Anglo-Saxons) were included. Ultimately, I think the POV problem is that you want the Azeris to be included on the list and are looking for reasons as to how to include them. By your criteria then, the French could be a Germanic people since many might be the descendents of Franks and share cultural ties etc. That's not how things are done and we've made a lot of compromises here. The Azeris are discussed, the Azaris are discussed as is the Caucasus, Turko-Iranian culture is brought up and the Azeri situation is listed in the Iranian peoples list as well so that a reader can't miss it. Basically, rather than making some sort of compromise, you simply want your way, in-spite of all of the references and sources now listed in this article. The Azeris are connected to 3 different groups, Iranian, Turkic, and Caucasian. They speak a Turkic language, have a culture that is close to the Persians, and genetically are closest (at least in the north) to other Caucasian peoples such as the Armenians. This situation is not unlike the French example that I made earlier. You might want to think of a compromise rather than putting forth what you interpret to be correct as a lot of the supporters for the inclusion of Azeris, Kash and Tajik, have agreed to the current compromise.
2606:
celtic. Yes I agree Azarbaijanis, with the exception of those that are in Tehran and speak Persian as their first language, are not Iranian speakers by linguistic definition. But the article is not solely about linguistic definition is it? It encompasses history, religion (former Zoroastrians who are now mainly Shi'i Muslims which is ingrained with Iranian culture) as well. It is about those that have shared in the Iranian experience for a long time. For example Hazaras in Afghanistan speak Persian, but are considered Turko-Mongols and not Persian by history. Turkomans in Iran do not celebrate Nowruz by the way. And the Azarbaijani Nowruz celebration in Iran is the same as other Iranians and unlike the Uzbeks or Khirkhiz of Central Asia. For example Charshamba Soori, Reading Qu'ran on the exact time Nowruz, Sizdah bedar and Haft sin are all part of the Nowruz celebrate not found say amongst Uzbeks. As per Dede-Qorqod the work was discovered fairly recently (oldest manuscript is not even 200 years old) and up to 50 years ago, no one knew in Azarbaijan. But everyone in Iranian Azarbaijan knows for example the story of Rostam o Sohrab. And as per Kuroglu while the story has central Asian origins, even the Iranian Tajiks have a Persian version of it. Now while I respect your point of view, there are many Azarbaijanis in Iran and some in the republic of Azerbaijan (including Prof. Eghrar Alioff) who consider themselves descendants of the ancient Medes. Specially there are many in Iran. Furthermore when you add the name Azarbaijan (which is Iranian), the fire-temples, Babak Khorramdin, Nizami Ganjavi, Mahasti, Khaghan (none of these figures were Turkomans/Oghuz), they you either have an Iranian people or a people that were strongly influenced by Iranian culture. The former seems more true from a genetic point of view. --
2523:
Azarbaijan is closer to Armenians genetically than to Turkomens or even Turkish speakers of Anatolia. since genetics does not necessarily make an impression on culture and identity, we can not use it as proof like some of my fellow Iranians want. At the same time language does not necessarily make the final decision. What makes the final decision really depends on what todays Azarbaijanis think. Both strands and train of thoughts are currently present within Azarbaijanis of Iran. Of course it is not like the Irish who speak English, but consider themselves absolutely Irish. But at the same time, it is not like Turkomanestan, where everyone considers themselves Turks. For example Ataturk was not a Turk, and was an Albanian/Macedonian. But culturally he was a Turk and more importantly he considered himself Turk. So the important thing is the complete perspective on history, language, genetics.. from the individuals point of view. Since I am from Iran, I know both strands are present. So to be fair, both ideas must be stated and both ideas can be supported by evidence. There does not exist any absoluteness here. Also culturally, the Azarbaijanis of Iran are no different than the Talysh, Persian,.. speakers. There is a lot of intermarriage and fusion due to the the same culture. So to conclude and make everyone reasonably happy, one can describe several view points (Turkified Iranians/Turks or Iranians that speak Turkish). I am sure this is not the only place that this issue has comeup and probably Mexicans as well as other groups with a long history who experienced a recent linguistic shift, have similar questions. So lets be fair and include both viewpoints. --
6409:, came to an agreement and now it's been disrupted with absurd inserts like "some sources say..." I'm okay with removing the second sentence if we can simply render it in a neutral manner: Azeris are, due to historical ties with various ancient Iranians and their cultural ties with Persians, sometimes included as an Iranian people, although the modern Azerbaijani language is a Turkic language and the issue remains debated. Two sources for each view and AND the dispute over the opening gets settled. That's a more than fair resolution given the circumstances since realistically it's rare in academia that the Azeris are considered an Iranian people and the preponderance of sources say otherwise, but for the sake of settling this dispute I think this rendering should be okay after all the inordinate amount of attention the Azeris have been given in an article that isn't really about them. If this can't be resolved in this manner, then I see no alternative but to seek neutral arbitration and watch this article lose its featured article status, which would be a real shame. I realize some of you guys are into nationalist views, but I'm not at all and I wrote the article to discuss all the Iranian peoples and not just the Persians. I wrote it with the best of intentions and I was more than a little annoyed when some new guy waltzed in and decided that the article had to reflect his views without any citations and the funny thing is he wanted me to come up with citations and then felt it was fishy that I had citations. I'm the guy who wrote the article and I know exactly what academics have said about the Iranian peoples, in particular 2738:
substantial info. one way or another, it makes sense to classify the Azeris as a Turkic people. The modern Irish are increasingly speaking Gaelic as well and their linguistic shift is known to have taken place only a few centuries ago and thus their Gaelic origins are more of a certainty (although those along coastal areas show some Scandanavian ancestry as well). Contrast this with the English who received a much larger influx of Germanic immigrants and their language shift took place nearly 1500 years ago. These may seem like gray areas to some, but I think one that that academica relies upon is a preponderance of evidence, rather than conjecture and of course the other major factor here is nationalism. The Hazara are included in the article, while the Uzbeks and Turkmen rarely abandon their mother tongues in Afghanistan so much as speak other languages in order to communicate with others. I met Uzbeks in Pakistan and they still speak Uzbek in their homes for example. Obviously language shifts take place, but the groups are still discernable enough that we can categorize them based upon some known history, anthropology, morphology, and increasingly genetics to confirm various claims. The case of the Azeris is explained ad nauseum and I think the article is just fine the way it is as I haven't heard any constructive ways to change it as yet.
2808:. So here is a western scholars, with no bias, who is stating a fact. As I said, if someone wants to count Azarbaijanis as ethnic Turks, it is up to them. But for many groups of people in the world, they speak languages that are not related to their history and culture. For example many parts of Africa, India, American continent speak languages that are not related to their original language. The area of Azarbaijan was Iranian speaking at least from the times of the Medes up to the transition from Ilkhanids (where the fist samples of Turkic from the courts were produced) to the Safavids. We have a good amount of Pahlavi based written material from Shaykh Safi Ad-din Ardabili. Most of the important historical cities and places of Azarbaijan and the Caucasian country of Azarbaijan have Iranian names: Baku, Shirvan, Darband, Nakhchivan, Ganjah.. and in Iranian Azarbaijan: Ardabil, Zangan, Maku, Tabriz and of course the name Azarbaijan itself. Most importantly a good portion Turcophone Azarbaijanis identify themselves as Iranians who speak Turkish. How a group or a portion of a group feels about their heritage is very important. -- 469:. So here is a western scholars, with no bias, who is stating a fact. As I said, if someone wants to count Azarbaijanis as ethnic Turks, it is up to them. But for many groups of people in the world, they speak languages that are not related to their history and culture. For example many parts of Africa, India, American continent speak languages that are not related to their original language. The area of Azarbaijan was Iranian speaking at least from the times of the Medes up to the transition from Ilkhanids (where the fist samples of Turkic from the courts were produced) to the Safavids. We have a good amount of Pahlavi based written material from Shaykh Safi Ad-din Ardabili. Most of the important historical cities and places of Azarbaijan and the Caucasian country of Azarbaijan have Iranian names: Baku, Shirvan, Darband, Nakhchivan, Ganjah.. and in Iranian Azarbaijan: Ardabil, Zangan, Maku, Tabriz and of course the name Azarbaijan itself. Most importantly a good portion Turcophone Azarbaijanis identify themselves as Iranians who speak Turkish. So lets be fair and allow both sides to state their point of view. -- 3083:. Similarly the terms Hispanic and Latinos have a large gray area (see the same reference). So Azarbaijanis can be a Turkic people (definited strictly as linguistic phenomenon) but be Iranian (in terms of heritage and history). But just like the majority of people in the USA are not anglo-saxons or Germanic, even though they speak English, one should not use the term Turkic people (instead of Turkic langage) for Azarbaijanis. Of course we are going back and forth here. But the term Turkic people means the modern Azarbaijanis history starts from the time when Seljuq Turks and Oghuz tribes set foot in the area. Even the Khazar jews were kept at bay in Darband by both Iranians and later Caliphates. They might have inflitrated, but did no have a foothold. I see ulterior motives in reducing the history of Azarbaijanis and strictly defining them as culture descendants of Oghuz and Seljuqs and other Turkic groups. We should not necessarily use classifications by some Western Academics that have ulterior motives. For example why shouldn't the idea of Prof. Ighrar Alioff be given any weight? Or Ahmad Kasravi?-- 131:
peoples. But we do not have such a thing in established academic texts. So they borrowed a term, which already has a meaning by itself, i.e. "Iranian peoples" and used it. I am not sure what else they could use. But definitely, not "Iranian peoples" which means not the same. We can not invent a meaning here for a term. We really have to look into known university textbooks and see what they use for this grouping of people. Or else, we have to define the way "Iranian peoples" is understood by all. That includes Iranian Turks. I am still waiting for the opposing parties to inclusion of Azeris to come up with some reliable university references where exact term of "Iranian peoples", and not anciant Iranian peoples and no debatable indications, as we are talking about anciant and contemporary people here. None has been provided yet. I shall be convince as well as other Iranian Azeris if we have a number of those texts presented to us using the exact terminology as defined here. No internet back links as it seems that a trend of many interenet info pages using Knowledge and that will be self referencing.
6285:"The Kurds, an Iranian ethno-linguistic group--like Persians, Lurs, Baluch and Bakhtiari" isn't clear? Encyclopedia of the Ukraine: "Iranian peoples. The east Aryan group of peoples of the Indo-European family that today inhabit Iran, Soviet Central Asia and Transcaucasia, Afghanistan, and parts of Pakistan, Turkey, and Iraq. In ancient times they also inhabited southeastern Europe. During the 1st millennia BC and AD Ukraine was inhabited consecutively by the Iranian-speaking Cimmerians, Scythians, Sarmatians, Alans, and Irano-Turkic Khazars. These peoples interacted with the indigenous proto-Slavs and influenced their cultural development." And then we have a list of said group. And you're pushing your own POV with the Azeris. I put up mainstream encyclopedias and you have one editorial. How is that many sources whereas mine are some? Come on. It's not even slightly even. We're talking the overwhelming view in academia vs. one or two. I reworded to reflect just that, that they are an ethnolinguistic group both modern and ancient. What's wrong with that? 2496:
According to the most widely accepted etymology, the name "Azerbaijan" is derived from Atropates, the name of a Persian satrap of the late fourth century b.c. Another theory traces the origin of the name to the Persian word azar ("fire"') - hence Azerbaijan, "the Land of Fire", because of Zoroastrian temples, with their fires fueled by plentiful supplies of oil. Azerbaijan maintained its national character after its conquest by the Arabs in the mid-seventh century a.d. and its subsequent conversion to Islam. At this time it became a province in the early Muslim empire. Only in the 11th century, when Oghuz Turkic tribes under the Seljuk dynasty entered the country, did Azerbaijan acquire a significant number of Turkic inhabitants. The original Persian population became fused with the Turks, and gradually the Persian language was supplanted by a Turkic dialect that evolved into the distinct Azerbaijani language. The process of Turkification was long and complex, sustained by successive waves of incoming nomads from Central Asia.
6474:
Azeris put in. This article is not about Iran. The Scythians are discussed as are the Kurds, Pashtuns, and others. This is about all of them. My sound judgment is based upon my references that back me up. Where are yours? Kasravi's a writer from decades back so I fail to see what bearing he has, since there are modern academics today. It is true that MOST sources do classify them as Turkic. The only place they don't is in Iran and let's face it there's probably a little nationalist bias there so not a lot of objectivity in the matter, which is not unique to Iran as most countries have the same problem. Well, I'll bet I know more about the Iranians of the steppes than you do. Or the Pashtuns, Ossetians, etc. I know enough to write an article obviously. I'm not having fun. I'm irritated that one guy can create so many problems though and act so stubborn when most people think he's being unreasonable. I take it you don't support the compromise or has there been a change of heart?
5755:
faith and also the fact that the modern Persians (and some others) are Shia has also given it a unique variation. There are lots of factors here, but the simple fact is that Islam was also adopted by the Iranian peoples just as Zoroastrianism once was. I only put the Faravahar there as an ancient symbol, not the end all. I'm frankly a bit disappointed in you Kash. You felt I was being unfair to the editor who was deleting anything pertaining to the Arabs and wanted to talk about the 'purity' of the Kurds, whereas a Pashtun user comes in and wants to show how his people are religious Muslims (and Pashtuns have uniquely taken their pre-Islamic Pashtunwali code and fused it with Islamic traits) and you think he's in the wrong and you revert his changes. I do the same with sources and I'm somehow in the wrong? Sorry, but I see a double-standard here and one that is wrong given that sources trump mere opinions on wikipedia.
5811:
stub, no 1000th FA, and not much of an article at all. If that's how you want it, then okay. This article was written to discuss the northern Iranians, an interesting group that is largely gone, the situation with the other Iranian peoples etc. as a whole and instead, it's been mired in debates about putting in specific Persian things or debating how to incorporate the Azeris. That's hardly academic and I've actually put up references to back-up my claims. What are you putting up instead? It's real easy to edit and take out what you don't like and then claim neutrality I guess. And its largely these types of POV style views that make the Kurdish and other Iranian peoples annoyed that this article even exists as they wouldn't have a problem with neutral writing and their inclusion as long as it is given with academic reasoning behind it. So much for that or neutrality.
3299:. Iranian people is not necessarily about speaking indo-Iranian languages (this is modern definition and I can assure you for example that some indo-Iranian speakers like Ossetians never identified with historical Iran since at least the time of Scythians) and it relates to having common cultural and historical connections. So Azarbaijanis by history, culture.. are Iranians whereas Ossetians are only Iranians today by language. Azarbaijanis helped create Iran (Medes), have greatly intermarried with other Iranians, were a main component of the Babak rebellion, the great Sassanid commander Rostam Farrokhzad was from the area, there about 1200+ Persian poets in the area just mentioned in several books. In the end I think a compromise would be to allow both opinions be stated and uses will make their own judgement. Just like you might not agree with Prof. Aliyev. 5884:
symbols for a change. Thing with Ocean Wave is that Pashtuns reject any sign of Iranianism, its got nothing to do with anything still. If we really don't want to offend them, we should even remove them from the list because most Pashtuns hate being called Iranian at all. In any case, Norouz is possibly the most important festival shared by all Iranian people and it originates in Zoroastrianism thats one reason to show Farvahar is still very much our symbol. If we think everything is too nationalist then maybe we should also change the name of Iranian people because Iran originates from the word Aryans and it might be too nationalist! and we don't wanna offend people now do we!! As you see, going down that approach is not the way. p.s. I think the German wikipedia has gone for Derafsh kaviyani but I am not sure if its a recognizable symbol for many Iranians. --
599:. So, at this point, your opinion has really lost a lot of credibility and the vote stacking makes your votes null and void. The article has made all the concessions necessary at this point, as the Azeris are mentioned in various sections and I will add discussion of the ancient Azaris myself and leave it at that. The simple reality is that the Azeris can't be proven, without a doubt, to be mostly the descedents of an Iranian people because it's also possible that they are a Caucasian people and there is a small element of Turkic admixture as well that is unknown in terms of size. Or they could be a combination, but we don't know for certain. And nitpicking my sources doesn't make a difference really. Professor Carole A. O'Leary Scholar-in-Residence, Center for Global Peace Adjunct Professor, School of International Service at American University's article 1224:
have to have have this argument continuously without compromise? Encyclopedia Americana calls them a Turkic people based on their language. In fact, most references do the same. Now, there may indeed be a large component of the Azeris that is Iranian (not necessarily Persian, but other Iranians such as Central Asian Iranian) as well as Caucasian etc., but the simple reality is that we can't get past the current classification. The Azeris are discussed on numerous occassions and their unique situation will convey to readers that sometimes they are considered an Iranian people, which is accurate enough. We painstakingly went through all of the subterfuge to come to a compromise and this is really as far as we can go. There is nothing wrong with the intro as it complies with the other similar articles and conforms to most usages.
3215:
Azarbaijanis as well as other Iranians identify with Khosrow o Shirin and Haft Paykar. Azarbaijanis have even made operas and etc. Or Azarbaijanis identify with Babak Khorramdin. They know the name Azarbaijan is Zoroastrian and Zoroaster could have been from the area. They (but they I mean many Azarbaijanis and I am not speaking on behalf of everyone) are proud of the large Zoroastrian temples and their Iranian heritage. For some people it could be language. So that is why both views Azarbaijanis as Iranian people and Azarbaijanis as a Turkic people should be explained by evidence and then people can judge. This question hasn't been settled definitely in Academia, and in the Azarbaijan of Iran as well as the Caucus. So in Knowledge, both views should be heared as well. --
5424:
then without any question it should be Islam. If you say no, that symbol is for their history, then move it down to the history section. If you say no, it is for their contemporary culture, then I regret to inform you that it has no significant place in these peoples culture anymore. As you see these peoples are muslim, and their everything is islam: They have Islamic culture. Even claiming that Majusi mark as their cultural symbol is an offensive insult to them. Look what this people did in 1979 against that Shah who had a Zoroastriansit feelings. Look if there was no USA, there was no TV in Afghanistan, people are so muslim. If in afghanistan say to a person your cultural symbol is that mark, he may kill you. Yes. and how you say it is so important in their culture?
6083:
ancient tribes. That pretty much says it all. In essence, everything on wikipedia is original research anyway as it may compile info. to put into one article rather than several that plagirize word for word. In addition, I see that in addition to your complaint about the definition you keep putting in your own personal view of the Azeris. The sources I put in are encyclopedias, whereas even CAIS thinks the issue of the Azeris is debatable as they only talk about them in an editorial and list the ancient Azaris instead. That isn't some sources, just some views as opposed to the mainstream view of the Azeris. You pushing your own POV and hey I'm sure your fellow Iranian editors will be glad to see the article de-listed because of your solitary protests.
209:. It is a metter of identity. If you go back to Nader Shah Afshar and ask him if he was a Turk, he would definitely say yes. But if you also asked him if he was Iranian, he would definitely say yes. If you and ask the a Western king and asked him at that time who Nader Shah was, he would also say, Nader Shah was a Persian King. I believe the same would be in acadmeic texts as well. So I am asking people if they know reliable reference saying otherwise, i.e. defining the term exactly and solely on "Speakers of Iranian languages", repeatedly and in reliable university text books and well established academic records, then be it. But if not, then why so much insisting on borrowing a term from known lexicon of English language and confuse people. 5778:
understand the root of anti-Iranianism which is so apparent above where he says "If in afghanistan say to a person your cultural symbol is that mark, he may kill you.", and you are telling me what? That this is to inform of us what exactly? Is it funny to you? Do you think I am happy after reading those religious and possibly racial hateful comments? or how about comments such as Farvahar is a nationalist symbol and others are not? Do you think I am happy that I see Iranians being ashamed of their own symbols because it connects them to their past? No, and I don't frankly care whether you are dissapointed by me, I don't work for you and as mentioned before, this article does not belong to you JD, but thanks for sharing your opinion. --
2791:
Albanians. But Iranian Azarbaijan was Iranian. After the Arab invasion, there was an influx of Arabs to mainly Khorasan and Azarbaijan. But these were absorbed as well. The linguistic shift of Azarbaijanis (in Iran at least) is well known. For example the city of Astara in Iran used to speak Talysh up to 50 years ago, but today the majority of inhabitants still consider themselves Talysh, but speak Azari-Turkish. Tabriz used to be Persian speaking up until the Safavids. (both statements can be backedup by evidence). Even if the modern Irish might be going to back to Gaelic due to nationalistic reasons, (and at least all the Irish I know do not speak it), there used to be several hundred period where English was predominant.
452:
Albanians. But Iranian Azarbaijan was Iranian. After the Arab invasion, there was an influx of Arabs to mainly Khorasan and Azarbaijan. But these were absorbed as well. The linguistic shift of Azarbaijanis (in Iran at least) is well known. For example the city of Astara in Iran used to speak Talysh up to 50 years ago, but today the majority of inhabitants still consider themselves Talysh, but speak Azari-Turkish. Tabriz used to be Persian speaking up until the Safavids. (both statements can be backedup by evidence). Even if the modern Irish might be going to back to Gaelic due to nationalistic reasons, (and at least all the Irish I know do not speak it), there used to be several hundred period where English was predominant.
1976:
What I am talking about is the intro and the language-based definition, not the Azeri issue. It is you people who have written and are defending the intro, so it is up to you to provide a source defining Iranian peoples in that way. The article claims to be about an ethno-linguistic group, and yet uses merely/primarily language as a definition. This is not logical and you should provide sources for it, i.e. sources defining ethnic/ethno-linguistic (not linguistic alone) groups based on language. Moreover, you have to provide a source for the specific case of Iranian peoples, which you have not so far. The sources in the intro right now are completely irrelevant and do not even mention anything related to their preceding sentence.
1057:. The picture collage, in my opinion is pointless as we have pictures that are more relevant in the various sections and it clashes with the intent of the article, which is not to depict an ethnic group. A symbol would help the article maintain an encyclopedic (rather than a people magazine) presentation. Just wanted to bring it up here first before doing it though. The Fravashi is good symbol of ancient Iranic culture (as many, if not most Iranic peoples have ancestors who were Zoroastrian, even among the fringes such as the Kurds and Pashtuns) and can't be misconstrued as solely 'Persian' since Zoroastrianism most likely developed in Afghanistan anyway. Just wanted to put that forward. Cheers. 2355:) and also there is also genetic and historical evidence that they share ethnic roots with other Iranian peoples, as well as that many of them live in Iran. "I dont know why" attitude won't help this discussion as there are valid points if not we are gonna go in circles. The first source of the article refers to Iranian people as an ethno-linguistical group (unmbrella group) and if Azeris were indeed both ethnically linguistically Iranian then they should be mentioned, looking at it from the Ancient Azeri people (Medes) and their descendants who are I believe Azeris and Kurds? but ofcourse they have intermarried with the rest of the population in the area (See 4862:
changes. Khouroush seems to think that any mention of changes from invasions is somehow 'wrong' or at least his edits seem to indicate something to that effect. That's what I have a problem with as I don't support notions of purity, his interpretation of the genetic article as there are articles that show strong and possibly huge variations. I don't revert changes by say Tajik, who gave me some good references, for example. Bottom-line, his changes need references since I've already put up mine. Oh and I got nothing in the mail still. Don't worry, I'm not taking offense at your comments or the desire to improve the article at all. No hard feelings.Ā :)
3587:(d) Mr. Mohammad Amin Rasulzadeh. A leading proponent of Arranā€™s name change was Mohammad Amin Rasulzadeh (1884-1955), the first leader of the newly created Republic of Azerbaijan (see photo below). Rasulzadeh was of Iranian origin from Baku, and was in fact heavily involved in the constitutional democratic movement of Iran during the early 1900s (see Sattar Khan in item 5). Rasulzadeh was in fact the editor of the newspaper Iran-e-Now (The New Iran). Russian influence and coercion finally forced the Iranian government to expel Rasulzadeh from Iran in 1909 (?); he was exiled to Ottoman Turkey, where the Young Turk movement had gained power. 3831:ā€œAround the third century B.C., groups speaking Turkish languagesā€¦threatened empires in China, Tibet, India, Central Asia, before eventually arriving in Turkeyā€¦genetic traces of their movement can sometimes be found, but they are often diluted, since the numbers of conquerors were always much smaller than the populations they conqueredā€¦(p.125)ā€¦Turksā€¦conquered Constantinople (Istanbul) in 1453..replacement of Greek with Turkish ..Genetic effects of invasion were modest in Turkey. Their armies had few soldiersā€¦invading Turkish populations would be small relative to the subject populations that had a long civilization and historyā€¦(p.152).ā€ 2941:. He also has another article that points to this issue, which I will find if I have the time. Again we went over the language argument and Azarbaijanis are Turcophones, but to say they are a Turkic people like Yaquts, Turkmens, Uzbeks, Kazakhs is not sound logically. Since Azarbaijanis existed before the Turkic invasion and the language shift and there is still a good imprint of that former culture in the region. For many groups in the world, history over-rides linguistic. One other example amongst many is the Parsi of India, who speak Gujarti today, but nevertheless consider themselves Iranian. (fixed some typos). -- 3331:ā€. And Azerbaijanis are not just Turkic-speaking people, they are Turkic people and described as such by most sources outside of Iran. If anything, sources like Britannica are more impartial than Iranian sources, who include Azeris in the list of Iranian people for political reasons. It is a way to prevent separatist tendencies among Azerbaijani people by making them believe that they have nothing to do with other Turkic people. In many ways thatā€™s similar to communist practice of denying Turkic connections of Azeri people. This article might be interesting as a source, describing communist approach to this issue. 2568:. And Turkic-speaking Azeris are Turkic people and they donā€™t belong to the list of Iranian speakers, since they speak a Turkic language. So far I have not seen a single authoritative source that included Azeris with Iranian people. This list should be arranged exactly the same way like other lists of peoples. And also, saying that Azeris culturally are no different from Iranian people is not accurate. We celebrate Novruz, like all people of Iran and Central Asia, but we also have Dede Gorgud and Koroglu in our literary tradition, which is Turkic and not Iranian. 6413:. Didn't the subject of the Iranian peoples get some attention as the 1000th FA (and will get more as a featured article on the Main Page)? I would think that would make people happy enough to leave the article as it is or, if they must add things then do so with neutral academic sources to back them up and try to add things about more than just the Persians and stop with the hostility towards the Arabs which is really POV. Like I said if this can't be resolved then we do have a problem, but if we can return to a neutral academic perspective then okay. Ciao. 4659:
record. Mani did start the article with a stub. I wrote just about the entire article and then my fellow editors helped with changes and additions over time. I never said I was the only author, but the record will show that I did write most of the article. No arrogance from me, just reality. And it's rude to delete things in a featured artcle that you frankly had nothing to do with. Kindly bring up your changes on this page before making them in the article as there is no agreement as to your changes. Or are you incapable of working through concensus?
5663:
to resemble one of the Pan-Iran sites and is veering away from neutral academia. This article is not just about Iran and it should reflect the other DISTINCT Iranians' views. And now we're returning to the incorporation of the Azeris, who are probably more of a Caucasian background and are Turkish speakers. Encyclopedia Americana denotes them under the Turkic people article as a Turkish people. We had a good compromise and now this article is taking on a nationalist bent. At this rate, this article won't remain a FA for much longer. Too bad.
6637:
explain anything either. The reference was to LANGUAGE. The groups, such as Germanic and Slavic people speak languages that are linked and there is NO assertion that they are necessarily all related etc. In fact, this article makes it clear that there is no specific ethnic criteria at all as it is langauge that is the main determinant as to who are members of the various Indo-European peoples. Unless you can provide some academic proof that what was in the article is Germanic and Slavic Aryanism I don't see how there is a problem here.
3767:
Turks of Central Asian stock in eastern Turkey, however a large proportion of modern Turks have Balkan, Persian, Greek, Armenian, Kurdish, Azeri, Georgian, Varangian, and even some Celtic ancestry. The latter seems surprising; however the term ā€œAnkaraā€ may be derived from the Celtic ā€œAnkyraā€. The Galatian Celts appear in Anatoliaā€™s interior after the Greeks defeated them in 230 BC. The original Turkic stock from Central Asia (some of whom live in northeast Iran today) have little or no connection to the European-type U5 cluster.
1931:
that dwarf the evidence presented for most other articles, while you have yet to prove that the definition is wrong. You are, at this point, in the minority as there was really no need to include the Azeris at all, except in the Cultural assimilation section, but we have mentioned them throughout the article and listed them as a special case to consider under the list of present Iranian peoples. I do believe you have most of what you wanted and this does constitute a compromise. If you want to make your case, then do it on the
6455:
article is not yours, nor does your background in creating it give you a right to simply reject others' concerns. If your personal satisfaction of having created a featured article overweighs your sound judgement, so be it. I don't have the intention of arguing with would-be specialists which are abundant on wikipedia and most often write about things they know little about. Go ahead and have fun. As for Azaris being classified as Turks by most sources, that is simply not true. Ever heard of Ahmad Kasravi's work for example?
4772:
population was at one time Greek or Hellenized (60,000 settlers according to W.W. Tarn). Plus, there were some Arab settlers that became an elite in the country, with the Khurasani Arabs in particular ultimately becoming Persianized themselves. Doesn't all of this constitute changes that most academics agree upon? Perhaps some rewording to explain that SOME Iranian traits remained, but with their religion replaced by Islam and Hellenic influences that, at the time, were substantial, this statement doesn't seem out of line.
2796:
feel about themselves. And so both sides should be told. By the way Prof. Eghraq Alioff was the greatest Azarbaijani Academican from the Caucus. Many well known Azarbaijanis from Iran including: Ahmad Kasravi, Prof. Taqi Arrani, Prof. Seyyed Mohammad Taqizadeh, Shahryar the poet, Ra'di Azarkhshi, Dr. Amin Riyahi Khoi, Prof. Manuchehr Mortazavi, Prof. Abdolali Karang.. (and I can keep on going) considered themselves Iranians and the Turkic language to just be a linguistic shift. Here is another from Prof. Gernot Windfuhr
457:
feel about themselves. And so both sides should be told. By the way Prof. Eghraq Alioff was the greatest Azarbaijani Academican from the Caucus. Many well known Azarbaijanis from Iran including: Ahmad Kasravi, Prof. Taqi Arrani, Prof. Seyyed Mohammad Taqizadeh, Shahryar the poet, Ra'di Azarkhshi, Dr. Amin Riyahi Khoi, Prof. Manuchehr Mortazavi, Prof. Abdolali Karang.. (and I can keep on going) considered themselves Iranians and the Turkic language to just be a linguistic shift. Here is another from Prof. Gernot Windfuhr
3918:
migrants, in which case genetic relationships of Armenians and Azerbaijanians based on the Y-chromosome should more closely reflect their linguistic relationships. We therefore analyzed 11 bi-allelic Y-chromosome markers in 389 males from eight populations, representing all major linguistic groups in the Caucasus. As with the mtDNA study, based on the Y-chromosome Armenians and Azerbaijanians are more closely-related genetically to their geographic neighbors in the Caucasus than to their linguistic neighbors elsewhere.
205:
different stages of history and those who are greatly associated with Persian and Iranian identity and culture. That definitely includes great many Iranians of modern Iran as well as members of Iranian community for the past melleniums. Well Azeris and Iranian Turkic people are members of both historical Iranian peoples and modern Iranian peoples. That is why I thought it was not acceptable to exclude them in the article by such name. As repeated by myself and many above, it is not only
31: 2019:
other articles (I realize that you think Germanic, Slavic, etc. is different, but I don't agree at all that they are different), altered to placate dissenting views, and thus is now in its current form. The sources, such as Carol O'Leary's definition of Iranian peoples as an ethnolinguist group and the Encyclopedia of the Ukraine definition plus the Circle of Ancient Iranian Studies (which includes the ancient Azaris, but not necessarily the modern Azeris as C.E. Bosworth explains.
6677:
article is out of place. It is important to point out how the term Iranian here in linguistics has nothing to do with the Islamic republic of Iran. It is important because the use of the term Iranian in western media is widely used as a reference to a person with roots in Iran or a citizen of that counry. To ease any reswervations, the slavic example was also added. Hopefully, you'll read the article in its proper context and refrain from any further edits fueled by your POVs.
3748:
Iranian Aryan migrations onto the Iranian plateau and eastern Anatolia (many areas of western Iran and modern Kurdistan was already settled by Assyrian peoples). Arab settlers also arrived during Sassanian and post-Sassanian eras (a number of their descendants survive in Khorrassan and Tajikestan)ā€“ these are then eclipsed by subsequent Turkic and Mongol arrivals. The very overall sketch just outlined highlights how complex definitions such as ā€œraceā€ and ā€œlanguageā€ are.
1331:-linguistic group, as is often done here? 3. The more common definition of Iranian peoples, as far as I know, is those people living in Greater Iran, with a major influence (linguistic or otherwise) from Iranian culture. In that way, Azeris certainly are Iranian, in addition to being (obviously) linguistically Turkic. There is nothing wrong with including them in both groups, because they belong to both. Excluding them from any of the two would be a mistake, however. 4505:
Europeans. And I'm the one who put in the genetic study as well. I've read other studies that show variations and further testing may contradict the results so we're not holding up the preliminary results as the end of the discussion. The current wording does not require any further reiteration in the article as that merely leads to useless redundancy. As for your deletion of parts of the article, they are back and with citations from where they are discussed.
3014:, etc. Btw, Mexicans, to whom you were referring, are included with Latin peoples, same as the rest of Latin America. It is known that Spanish is not their original language and it replaced native languages, but still all those people are Latin because of the language they speak now. I suggest we ask the opinion of the whole Wiki community, because if we are going to redefine who Iranian people are, then we should do the same for Latin and other peoples. 4693:
doing a POV push when I have references and he's just got his opinion? I think it's the other way around frankly. You of all people should remember how it was with this article and how people kept fighting over the wording until we arrived at a neutral solution. Talk about jeopardizing its FA status. This will merely bring back the same problems and, like I said, let's see his references before we let him add and delete whatever he feels like.
5867:
been 1400 years of Iranian history, and somewhat more glorious than the past. It might be due to the fact that in West people tend to disregard that we are not Arabs. I do not blame them. We use Arabic alphabet, our scientists of the past wrote in Arabic and had turbans, etc. Also I do not know much about Korean history or Chinese, for example. I never knew that saying "North Korea" might offend some Koreans from South until I met one.
4382:
articles and others were inserted by a user who insisted on having as many pictures of people as possible. The map is a bit crude, but very informative. If it can be given a more slick presentation all the better. Also, I just noticed that Pakistan doesn't include its line of control in Kashmir which is odd since most maps denote its line of control. Otherwise though, the distribution of languages in the map are pretty good. Cheers.
2818:
Azerbaijan republic everyone speaks Azeri, but not all speakers of the language are ethnic Azeris. You see, the list of people are formed on the basis of the language they speak, see above my references to other peoples groups, and no one can deny that modern Azerbaijani is a Turkic language. Therefore Azerbaijani people should be included in the list of Turkic people, but not here, because Azerbaijani language is not Iranian.
2692:
So they do have a place here. And if you a need source, I can find some Western as well as Iranian Azarbaijani authors who also point to a linguist shift and not necessarily a different people altogether! If the article is just about Iranian speaking people, then we would have to include also Hazaras, Uzbeks, Turkomans who also speak Iranian languages sometimes as their first language. Specially in Afghanistan. --
4989: 3626:
the Turkish migrants became absorbed into mainstream Persia, and they greatly patronized Persian, arts, culture and literature. Turks as whole have been tremendously influenced by Iranian culture ā€“ a prime example is the Moghul Dynasty of India, of Turkmen-Mongol descent. The Moghuls promoted Persian culture in India, a legacy which lasts to this day in modern India, Pakistan and Bangladesh.
2023:
to the language use (note that they don't list other possibly related peoples at all). I'd say this is an impasse and unless you want to bring in someone to arbitrate, I'm not going along with any more changes as we seem to be talking in circles with you making demands (and I believe it has to do with the Azeris as I believe that if we added them this argument would end without protest).
5735:
nationalist and should not be used? Give me a break. Your name is Persian Magi as you reminded everyone. The only reason that Farvahar might be seen as "nationalist" is that because its pretty much the most important Iranian symbol if we have lost our identity so much that Farvahar is too nationalist for us, do me a favour and change it to Allah, I don't know what is Iranian anymore. --
1534:. (Another article on Iranian languages exists on WP already). There are up to now still no sources whatsoever which support your claim that an ethno-linguistic group is defined based primarily on language, neither generally nor in the special case of Iranian peoples. If you have any sources saying that, present them so we can see. If you don't, then the article should be changed. 1185:
previous mistake at the intro we would have no problem incorporating them here. Anyhow, not complying with the contents of a WP article is not a criterion for exclusion. WP articles are based on external sources, not on themselves. If there is disagreement between the intro and the external established sources, it is the intro which should be changed, and that is the case here.
5132:
vast all over the empire, and it influenced culture of almost all Iranian people. The article itself recognises it to have reached almost all Iranian people, it has definately influenced a lot more than just their religion or their empires. Unless you can provide an argument on why it is NOT the single most important symbol of Iranian people, it stays there. --
4648:. Stop reverting other people just because your POV disagrees. And please stop spreading nonsense like you are the ONLY author of this article. Everyone knows that is not true and MANY MANY others have been involved here. Unfortunately only two people receive credit, and one of them (YOU) likes to shove this fact in other peoples faces. Very, very rude and bad. 5853:
symbol. As Kash mentioned, it might be too nationalistic in a sense. It just something came to my mind as an speculative suggestion. If someone has a good idea about this, please bring it forward. I thought pictures of people were good. But that did not seem to go well with all. We can have no symbol there at all. If it is creating too much of a problem.
1327:. What is true for one group of peoples is not necessarily true for another, however. 1. How many sources can you bring up which directly define Iranian peoples exactly in this same manner? 2. What type of classification would that be? Wouldn't it be a linguistic group then? Wouldn't it be wrong to call a group formed based on merely linguistics an 4834:
further but I would never ever say its nonsense to think culture of old Iranian people and the modern are linked, atleast in a certain way and infact I believe its again, common sense as Iranians only gradually started to adopt Islam when they were introduced by Islamic ideas that were close to Iranian ideas which may have given birth to
427:"Buddhism among Iranian Peoples" in The Cambridge History of Iran, vol. 3.2: The Seleucid, Parthian and Sasanian Periods, Ehsan Yarshater (ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983, 949-964. This refers to mostly the people of Afghanistan and Central Asia who are not, obviously, from the area of modern Iran. 516:
avoid confusion with the term Iranian peoples, which many misconstrue as a reference only to Iran, when it really is a reference to the Iranic peoples including the Persians, Kurds, Pashtuns, etc. So aside from the Azaris, we really can't discuss any other groups without significantly veering away from common usage.
4814:
to link ancient people CULTURALLY to modern people anyway. Remember the Nazis tried that and most of their academics thought it was nonsense (Max Muller for one). Plus, what Old Iranian culture has really survived other than Nouruz? I can't think of much other than the language, which has also changed quite a bit.
5014:
so heavily from one another. Your claim that "99.99%" of modern Iranians are Muslims is simply a falsehood. The reason the Zoroastrian icon is appropriate for the top of the page and a Muslim one would not be is the same reason an image of a Greek sculpture of Zeus would probably be fine for the top of the
6273:
My question could not be any clearer: Tell me exactly where in O'leary's article the Iranian peoples are defined in that way. Give me a quote. The article's subject and emphasis is entirely different. It defines Kurds as an Iranian ethno-linguistic group. It says nothing whatsoever about a definition
5507:
to declare 2006 the "year of Zoroastrism". Poems in honor of Zoroastrian priests were written by Daqiqi, Hafiz, or Rumi (for example Rumi's "Gone to the Unseen") ... and there is still a community of more than 150.000 Zoroastrians in Iran, India, and elsewhere. Until today, millions of people in Asia
5236:
Farvahar is still recognised as the most important symbol of Iranian people, ancient and Modern, very much modern infact 27 years ago it was part of the monarch symbol of Iran and today many Iranians wear the symbol around their neck, not because they are Zoroastrian but because its the symbol of the
5013:
Have you not noticed that almost all of this article is historical? This is deliberate: the concept of "Iranian peoples" is only coherent from a long-term, historical perspective. From a purely modern one, it is necessary to analyze the individual groups derived from the Iranians, as they've diverged
4771:
The social organization of Iran was completely changed by the Arabs and Islam. Surely we can all agree to that? In addition, Hellenism left a strong legacy, brief in Iran although the Parthians continued their architectural influences, in particular in Afghanistan (Bactria) as an estimated 10% of the
4604:
He's saying I'm risking the FA status of the article when I freakin' nominated the article in the first place! Freakin' johnny come lately. You can revert his changes too as he's playing the nationalist game. I'm going to add citations tomorrow though to keep him from messing with the article that he
4536:
Me? You claim that I'm jeopardizing the article I wrote most of the article and nominated it and worked with others to fix it. You, on the other hand, are acting alone. You want to make changes to the article, you discuss them here first and we'll see if the people who worked on this article agree or
4504:
We have a concensus view on this page that I mostly wrote myself. Your indignation aside, we've all agreed to render the article from a neutral point of view and those who have helped with the editing and criticism of this article included Iranians, Americans, 1 Afghan, some Kurds, and probably a few
4361:
sections under a single "History" header, and then simply create more specific subsections for the various historical topics that are discussed? (This would not only integrate the article better, but would also make it a lot easier to read through the history section than is currently the case, since
3726:
Likewise, being a Turcophone does not mean that one is automatically Turkish or Turkic by race. National identity is based on a number of domains, only one of which is defined by language. Nevertheless, this simplistic logic (language = race) is being used to attack the Iranian heritage of the people
3634:
By the early 16th century (see Safavids item 4), Azerbaijani Turkish had largely replaced the indigenous Iranian Azeri in Azerbaijan and had also spread to Arran. The Turkish language however, did not alter the thousands year long Iranian character and legacy of Arran and Azerbaijan. As noted in item
3294:
Thanks for the link. As I said there is loopholes in your argument. One example was the Irish. Another example is the multitude of people in the USA who now only speak English. For example have you ever seen anyone call Black Africans as a Germanic people because of their tongue? Another example
3148:
And also, if you look at genetic tests, Azerbaijanis of the North are most likely the descendants of Caucasian Albanians, same as many Armenians, so if you base the ethnicity on genetics only, you canā€™t say that all Azerbaijanis are of Iranian origin, they are a mixture of many ethnic components. And
2605:
But Latin people is just a linguistic definition, and Mexicans are very aware of their pre-Spanish heritage and do not consider themselves Spanish. But you are considering Turkic speaking Azarbaijanis as a Turkic people. This is like considering the Irish as a Germanic/English people while they are
2429:
Why, because you don't like it? Everyone seems to understand what this specific reference is about except you. Do you really think it's at all logical for you to play the Aucaman role and demand changes even when it's understood by everyone else? And changes are not needed and if there are changes it
1852:
I agree with the latter suggestion of Kashk. Iranian peoples in general has a broader meaning than just language. Thus, we could have pages on Linguistically Iranian people (Speakers of Iranian languages) and the more general group encompassing cultural and other aspects which would be called Iranian
1632:
I agree with Shervink, this would be an endless argument if we can not have a proper sourced definition of Iranian peoples, whether its just the speakers of the Iranian languages or whether they are indeed an ethno-linguistic group in any case this needs to be clear and non-disputed so we can further
1304:
I'm not making a mistake here. I think you need to realize that this is largely your opinion that this article's intro is a mistake as that's just your interpretation which is different from most usages of the term. I didn't say it was necessarily only language, but that is the main criteria FOLLOWED
515:
refer to Iranian peoples and their definition corresponds to language usage. For example, I have the issues that discuss the Amazons (as a Sarmatian Iranian people) and issues discussing the Scythians, again an Iranian people. Also, the term Iranic is often used by academics as an alternative just to
157:
with at least one example with full sentence that indicate the definition explained in this article and in this context, i.e. in a linguistic terms, from academia here. Please only list from univeristy text books and well established encyclopedias like Britanica. I am sure you will have plenty as you
6454:
It seems that some editors (notably Tombseye) are more concerned about keeping the article's featured status rather than improving it. From your previous posts, Tombseye, it seems that you have developed a sense of ownership of this article. While your contributions have been outstanding, still this
6428:
I edited the relevant section in the list of Iranian peoples as per above talk with Tombseye. I hope that is a fair compromise for everyone. Please discuss it here if you still think the dispute is not over. If no one complains in a day or two, we can safely assume the dispute is over and remove the
6002:
Excuse me, is this article which includes several distinct ethnic groups about the Irano-Median (or Mittano-Aryan, If I'm not mistaken in spelling) people groups? We have an Iranian languages but it is solly a language group not their people. Not necessarily in all cases people groups are classified
5443:
Above is exactly why most Iranian people only see Pashtuns as those who have adoped an Iranian language. Total lack of respect for any other religion, ethnicity and culture. Oh and please don't hide it behind the title of "Afghan", thats exactly why Tajiks call themselves Tajiks instead of "Afghan".
4920:
I must say, I am perplexed how this article could have become featured sporting the Zoroastrian Faravahar symbol at the top. Most Iranian speakers today are Muslims, not Zoroastrians, so if you're going to feature religious symbolism in such a prominent location, it will have to be Muslim symbolism.
4813:
nationalist began to shape how people thought with the Pahlavi period onward. Plus, this article is not just about Iran, but about all the other Iranic peoples so as a collective view, let's face it, Pashtun society was most likely pagan whereas today it is vastly different. I think it's unrealistic
4692:
Okay, BUT his changes were arbitrary and are also POV since he didn't bother to explain HIS references that would be counter to mine. And remember we all agreed to what was in the article. Plus the Kurdish issue was a huge debate and the compromise was reached after a lot of discussion. And how am I
4422:
I didn't add anything about Iraqi Kurds. Ever since this article became a featured article and then was put on the main page, a lot of people (often anon) are making arbitrary edits with nationalist sentiments and without citations as well. It's a shame since I think the article was pretty much okay
4365:
Also, as pfctdayelise mentioned above, the images are a huge deal; I'm very surprised, too, that this got through FAC without more rigorous evaluation of the images. People used to be so good at that. Also, as a slightly longer-term goal, if this page is going to be getting a lot of attention we may
4348:
There seems to still be a lot left to improve in this article. The history sections are vey thorough (though a bit confusing as a narrative, partly due to the complexity and broadness), but the culture, religion, and demographics section are relatively disappointing in their shortness; it looks like
3766:
The genetic ancestry of modern Turks is highly varied, mainly as a result of multiple migrations, wars and empires. While modern Turks (and a growing number of Hungarians) stress their genetic connection to Central Asia, scientific evidence fails to corroborate their beliefs. True, there are Turkmen
3732:
National identity is multi-faceted. A Belgian could be either a Francophone (Walloon) or Dutch dialect speaker (Flemish). A Frenchman can be Basque (Eskuri) or speak an Italian dialect (e.g. Provencal, Corsican, etc.). In northern France, many of the inhabitants lay claim to a proud Celtic tradition
3625:
c) Linguistic Turkification. The process of linguistic Turkification was reinforced with the arrival of the Mongols in the 1200s, and their Il-Khanid dynasty in Persia. Tamerlaneā€™s descendants, the Qara/Kara-Qoyunlu (Black Sheep) and Ak/Aq-Qoyunlu (White Sheep) also ruled Iran. It must be noted that
3253:
In my opinion, only Iranian scholars are disputing the fact that Azerbaijanis are Turkic people. Igrar Aliyev (with whom I agree for the most part) was the supporter of the view that modern Azeris are descendants of ancient Iranian people, who inhabited the area prior to Oguz migration, but he never
2795:
I have no problem with Azarbaijanis being classified as a Turkic speaking people (Turcophones). But the problem is when they are defined as a Turkic people, while a good portion in Iran actually consider themselves Iranian turkic speakers. What is most important as I said, is how a group of people
2691:
I agree and disagree. Now if the ancient Azarbaijanis are Iranic people, then why are their descendants considered a Turkic people. Why is there a double standard while the Irish are not considered a Germanic people? So the more correct term would be to say tht they are Turkic speaking Iranians.
2325:
The same with all other groups. I donā€™t understand why Azeris are even mentioned in this article, they donā€™t even speak an Iranian language and are Turkic people. The list of Slavic people donā€™t mention Germans, for example. I think Azeris should not be mentioned here at all, because I donā€™t see any
2022:
The other references use the term Iranian peoples or Iranic peoples and talk about the Scythians, Persians, Pashtuns, Baluchis, Kurds, etc. and that defines the group, largely due to their language usage you'll notice. The references are not irrelevant as they explain things just fine and correspond
1939:
page even makes clear that they have diverse origins including links to the Caucasus (at least with the northerners) that supercedes links to the Iranian peoples and then there is a minority genetic contribution from the Turkmen, who were themselves largely Central Asian Iranians who were turkified.
1223:
It's not absolutely wrong, check the MANY references. Even the Circle of Ancient Iranian Studies goes by it and only lists Azaris (as the ancient group) and modern Azeris are discussed in a largely argumentative article and, unlike other articles they have, is not written by an academic. Look, do we
1203:
Iranian peoples are defined only by language as all the other ethnolinguistic group. Term Iranic has been suggested as the substitute to alleviate controversy. This is what article is about. The sources that define Azeris as iranian people have in mind a ethnocultural definition that is NOT what the
456:
I have no problem with Azarbaijanis being classified as a Turkic speaking people (Turcophones). But the problem is when they are defined as a Turkic people, while a good portion in Iran actually consider themselves Iranian turkic speakers. What is most important as I said, is how a group of people
397:
All I am asking is for proof for the way "Iranian peoples" is used in the way in this article describes as on "ethno-linguistic" and primarily linguistic. If no such reference exist, we should move the contents of this article to an article by a name such as "speakers of Iranian languages" and link
355:
Agree completely. With your definition other Iranian (Iranic) peoples like Alans, Ossetians should not be mentioned because they do not belong to Persian civilizatin neither Hazaras should not be because they are Mongolian. Don't you think that Ossetians will feel dejected by not being included into
339:
Iranic by language - the most important factor. Therefore, there is no need to mention them in this article. Of course, this does not count for the historical "Azaris" who spoke the Iranic language known as "Azari". I think that these historical "Azaris" should be mentioned, along with other extinct
114:
I am an Iranian and I know very well the importance of Azeri contribution to Iranian history and culture but I donā€™t think it is unfair that they are not included in this article as it is not about nation of Iran rather about Iranian speakers. Azeris might not be Turks, I personally think of them as
6676:
It's Ironic you shouting racism! and decrying supremacists!. I checked you user page and it is very unfortunate that you would refer to people in other nations as freaks and indulge in racism regarding other nations as well. That is your position however. And one not of wikipedia. Your edit in this
6636:
Not sure what you mean here. The Indo-European language theory was all that was discussed. We aren't backing or rendering an Aryanist theory. The Indo-European theory is backed by academic departments including at UCLA and Harvard. I don't understand your complaints and the link you provide doesn't
6374:
Tombseye, What I, and I am guessing others, do not agree is that you are saying Azeris are not Iranian people because they are Turkic. No one has any doubts that Azeris are are Turkic, because they do talk Turkic. Most of your sources also indicate that. But that does not meant they are not Iranian
6027:
You removed it? I explained it clearly for you. These peoples you are talking about are called Irano-Median. Themselves are divided into about 10 branches one of them Iranian (also synonymously called Persian group). Not averywhere you can name people groups as their respective language groups, for
5662:
I don't see why there can't also be a Muslim symbol here along with the ancient symbol of Iranians in the past. I detect that everytime the Arabs are mentioned there is a great deal of resistance. The whole social changes they brought was debated and should be included. Now the article is beginning
5423:
Zoroastrianism or Majusi is a religion founded by an Afghan (self proclaimed) prophet and that was one of its symbols. 1400 years ago all of his followers converted to Islam. and they forgot that previous religion. If this article which discusses modern Iranics, is going to have a religious symbol,
5131:
Whats created by certain Iranians? Was Zarathustra from a "certain" ethnic group of Iranians? Not as far as I know. You have to realise that this symbol is the single most important symbol of Iranian peoples. It shows their greatest contribution to man kind. The influence of Zoroastrianism has been
4949:
I personally disagree with having the Zoroastrian symbol in the beginning of the article. However the reason behind it was not to indicate that Iranian people follow this religion. It was put there because this religious was CREATED by Iranian people and is one of their greatest achievements. Islam
4861:
Yes, those are all things I completely agree with. The problem stems from the Iranian purity thing which is I think nonsense. At the same time we can see discernable traits in language, culture etc. from the Old Iranians (same goes for Indians and Indo-Aryans etc.), we also see some differences and
4381:
Hmm, I like your suggestions with regards to reorganizing History and Roots. I initially wrote it with different things to be discussed in each section, but I realize that they do somewhat run together. I will change it and if you can add sub-sections. As for the pictures, they were in use in other
3929:
So, both the mtDNA (female line) and the Y-chromosomes (from father to son) seem to prove the fact, that modern Azeris are predominantly Turkic-speaking Armenians and Iranians. Their DNA has Europeana and Middle Eastern traces, but not Eastern Asian ones , which one would assume if they really were
3738:
Many modern Turks hail from Bosnian, Georgian, Iranian (Persian, Kurdish, Azeri) Greek, Arab, Venetian, Slavic and Armenian backgrounds. Arabs are just as diverse ā€“ in the eastern Arab world, many have Iranian ancestry (Persian and Kurdish) ā€“ the Levant has seen multitudes of Hittite, Mittani, etc.
3681:ā€œThe oldest outside influence in Trans-Caucasia is that of Persia (p.203)ā€¦many of its populations, including Armenians and Georgians, as well as Persians and Kurds, the Transcaucasus had much closer ties with the former Sassanian world to its south and east than with the world to the west (p.204)ā€.. 3648:
SafavidsThe aforementioned Nader Shah was an ethnic Turcomen and adhered to the Sunni branch of Islam. Karim Khan Zand (1705-1779) (see illustration below) and his partisans spoke Luri, a west Iranian language distinct from Persian and Kurdish. The Zands (like Nader Shah before them) were essential
3610:
Rasulzadeh had betrayed his Iranian heritage in two ways. First, he failed to fulfill his promises to Iranian Azerbaijanis to rectify the name change he had bought for Arran (at pan-Turanian behest). Second, Rasulzadeh adopted a false, divisive, and racist ideology. Rasulzadehā€™s legacy continues to
3523:
In Iran (the majority of the worlds Azaris) say AZARI not AZERI. He is trying to supress this fact. Azaris are ethnically Iran. I have genetic evidence and it is even cited throughout wikepeida in various articles on genetics. Turks are Asiatic not Caucasian. Please read the full discussion between
2817:
Your citation is not a proof that Azerbaijani people are Iranian people. The author just refers to the fact that Azerbaijani language is spoken by other ethnicities as well, such as Kurds and Talysh. Therefore not all Azerbaijani speakers are Turks, same as not all Persian speakers are Persians. In
1856:
Grandmaster, I am aware of all those groups you mentioned. What I was asking for was a quotation of a credible source describing the ethno-linguistic (not only linguistic) group of Iranians (the subject of this article) in the way presented in the current version. Thus, a source which firstly deals
1613:
Azeris are already included in the article as I see it, although probably not in the best form possible. What we are talking about here is the intro and the definition of the Iranian peoples, not the Azeris. The current intro which you are supoorting lacks sources and needs to be changed, since its
1159:
Okay, the last version that did not name the Azaris or Azeris by name in the list, but discussed their unique situation was the last version we agreed to. It discusses that many consider the modern Azeris as the descendents of the Azaris and other Iranic tribes, but that the issue is debated still.
744:
I am myself, Persian Magi, who did not start the voting, but added a deadline in voting, and has been quiet due to being busy for the last week or two. Not sure, how, who an if one or more people are sharing the same IP addresses as mine. I work for a big company and quiet a few Iranians, Turks and
544:
Note how similar this rhetoric is to the demands of including the Azeris as an Iranian people. I would like to make clear that none of us who don't want the Azeris included are interested in separatism (at least not that I know of) in the national sense. It is however highly dubious that the Azeris
6473:
Lol, look around you and see how many people think you're being reasonable here. I'm not rejecting other peoples concerns, nor am I acting alone as many people have been reverting your edits whereas you're in the minority of people who think the article needs clarifications and your own POV on the
5810:
said is pretty much dead-on, whom I am defending instead. In fact, I may have been wrong to use the Farvahar as it is still a religious symbol, which is why I see no reason not to include other religious symbols OR simply have none. I'm not the owner of this article no, but without me you'd have a
5707:
Unless I am mistaken, this article is about Iranian peoples and not (just) only anciant Iranian peoples, right? The symbol somehow insinuate ancient and history. By the way, what is your definition of modern. Ferdowsi lived a thousand years ago.Furthermore, his book is about Iranian legends which
4885:
A common mistake is that when someone joins wikipedia and notices something silly and suddenly gets all angry. Sadly there is probably as much incorrect statements in Knowledge as there are correct ones (if not more).. best way is to discuss them here. I just hope Koroush can go step by step about
4623:
And for your accusation that I am trying to "mess up the article" I am only removing your POV and those parts which have NO references. I have not attempted to ruin the article (and I would never do such a thing as I am Iranian) and I resent these slanderous accusations of yours. If you think that
4613:
I am amazed at this persons arrogance that he thinks he can attack me this way and that he claims ownership of the article. If you think, Tombseye, that you OWN THE ARTICLE, then you are mistaken. Very mistaken. If you think you can get away with pushing your POV that Iranians are mixed with every
3917:
Azerbaijanians were more closely related genetically to other Caucasus populations (who speak Caucasian languages) than to other Indo-European or Turkic groups, respectively. Armenian and Azerbaijanian therefore represent language replacements, possibly via elite dominance involving primarily male
3815:
In general, the Turks did not arrive peacefully but as conquering elites who imposed their languages upon indigenous populations (Azeris, Arranis, etc.). Conquering elites provide very modest genetic changes to the indigenous populations that they conquer. However, they can alter the populationā€™s
3713:
By no means is the discussion in this item attempting to simplistically outline the complex (and anthropolically interwoven) Iranian and Turkish national, ethnic, and linguistic identities. Such a Herculean task would require volumes of text. Instead, we are clearly confining the discussion to the
3581:
Before discussing these items, an important point must be revisited. Pan-Turanian claims to Azerbaijan are supported by a very powerful western lobby in the form of multinational and geopolitical petroleum interests. These hope to access and dominate the lucrative oil bonanza looming in the energy
2938:
One may add that the overlay of a strong superstrate by a dialect from the eastern parts of Iran does not imply the conclusion that ethnically all Kurdish speakers are from the east, just as one would hesitate to identify the majority of Azarbayjani speakers as ethnic Turks. The majority of those
2805:
One may add that the overlay of a strong superstrate by a dialect from the eastern parts of Iran does not imply the conclusion that ethnically all Kurdish speakers are from the east, just as one would hesitate to identify the majority of Azarbayjani speakers as ethnic Turks. The majority of those
1975:
It seems you are misunderstanding my point repeatedly. Why have you got stuck on the issue of Azeris? I have already declared that I find the way that they are included is more or less fine. Although I think it can be improved, that is not at all what I have been talking about in my last comments.
1930:
raises a good point that you haven't cited any credible sources and as GM pointed out, it's your responsibility to come up with something with some credibility to include the Azeris as an Iranian people. We already have numerous sources on this page. 37 citations, numerous books and internet links
1184:
The problem is the intro. We are starting from an absolutely wrong definition and thus are getting wrong results. Iranian peoples are not commonly or mainly defined by language, and the intro should be changed accordingly. Azeris are commonly included as Iranian peoples, and if we had not made the
569:
By the way, thanks for the sources mentioned above. Speaking of references is more acadmeic approach, I believe rather than side issues such as Kurdish pages, tec. So lets do that. Will go throught them one by one and discuss them later and hopefully we all come to the similar understanding.I will
466:
One may add that the overlay of a strong superstrate by a dialect from the eastern parts of Iran does not imply the conclusion that ethnically all Kurdish speakers are from the east, just as one would hesitate to identify the majority of Azarbayjani speakers as ethnic Turks. The majority of those
204:
has a much broader meaning. It seems to me that editors were looking for a term such as Turkic or Germanic and they opted this term as they did find or could not come up with similar words to Turkic or Germanic. I think, Iranian peoples are who have lived in Iran and have been known as Iranians at
6686:
No offence to true heirs of the Indo-Aryans in India and Iran, but I don't need you to define me. These theories should not pollute the minds of young and impressionable students, whom know little of the neoimperialist connections with "Indo-European" caste racism across the globe. I understand
5866:
Also I am not ashamed of Faravahar or any Zoroastian symbol. My login name says it all as you rightly pointed out. However, like it or not, there is a tendency among us Iranians to distance ourselves from our immidiate past and trying to magnify our pride in pre-Islamic Iran, forgetting that has
5754:
Well actually it's A symbol, not the symbol. Many Kurds and Pashtuns were never Zoroastrian so it's just a symbol as the many other Iranian tribes adapted the religion from the Avestan speakers. The Iranian peoples of the south also took Islam and made it their own. Many sufis made it a spiritual
5734:
Haha excuse me? So Farvahar is a nationalist symbol and Ferdowsi is not? Ferdowsi wrote Shahnameh to save Parsi after the Arab invasion! it was Ferdowsi who wrote the most nationalist stories of Rostam! it was Ferdowsi who wrote about the Derafsh Kaviyani!, and you are telling me that Farvahar is
5556:
Please don't attack and insult other people and stay culturized and civil, (lol). But what I said? Did I say do not use a Nawruz mark instead? or spand or Simurg or anything like that? Use them as these can be cultural symbols, but using a dead religions mark for this majority muslim people is an
4833:
You have to remember that Zoroastrianism did more than just effect people's religion, almost all Iranian etiquette and culture was influenced by it, and the most important thing is that it also influenced Islam a lot, especially when practiced by Iranian people. No doubt this needs to be explored
4658:
I'm only reverting your work as you keep deleting what is referenced and what contradicts YOUR unsubstantiated beliefs. There is no Iranian purity and for you to push that garbage IS POV. And yeah I am offended when someone says I'm jeopardizing the article I mostly wrote and nominated. Check the
3747:
The Iranian ethnic mosaic is far too complex to even begin attempting to define it in the confines of this commentary. If we extend timelines back to pre-Aryan arrivals, we witness proto-Elamites in the Southwest and Southeast, and Hurrian arrivals from the Caucasus. We then have a long period of
3675:
The Caucasus is one of the oldest cradles of human civilization ā€“ a prime example being the proto-Kartvelian Hurrian empire (2500-1270 BC) which at one time ruled much of northwest Iran and contemporary Kurdistan. The Hurrian legacy is still evident among the Kurds who use the ergative feature in
3619:
After his arrest and expulsion from Russia, Rasulzadeh settled in Turkey, where he died in 1954 (see his funeral in Turkey below). Rasulzadeh established the ā€œAzerbaijan National Centreā€ in Turkey, a movement which at the time was organized for the purpose of opposing Soviet rule in Arran (modern
3489:
I also think that all reasonable compromises were made to make account of the point of view you are supporting. I suggest we keep the article the way it is, itā€™s still different from the way major academic sources deal with this issue, but for the sake of compromise we agreed to have it this way.
3410:
any member of a Turkic people living chiefly in the Republic of Azerbaijan and in the region of Azerbaijan in northwestern Iran. At the turn of the 21st century there were some 7,500,000 Azerbaijani in the republic and neighbouring areas and more than 15,000,000 in Iran. They are mainly sedentary
2123:
Basically, the sources listed denote Iranian peoples by language as well as other factors. That's all the article is doing as well. We can't include Turkic peoples for that very reason as encyclopedias define Turkic peoples by language. I added the Circle of Ancient Iranian studies as a reference
982:
The maps provided in the article only shows geographical extent of Iranic languages but has a wrong impression that the only languages spoken in this geographical area were/are Iranic. It is in no way true. Both in ancient times and even now there have been/are many non-Iranic languages spoken by
957:
Okay, now that we've got the Azeris mentioned as a group that is sometimes referred to as culturally Iranian AND the Azaris and others are mentioned and the Azeris are discussed in the cultural assimilation section, can we agree that the matter is closed? Mentioned on 3 separate occassions in the
821:
How can you even argue over not including them? i would like to know if anyone here has ever been to either east or west azarbaijan? not every azari is turkish, let alone speaks turkish. my whole family is from east azarbaijan, and we are all azari's yet not turks. we speak persian. azari in Iran
555:
Lets not bring discussions on other pages here and limit ourselves to academic sources. We can not sacrifice the facts for discussions and rhetorics going elsewhere. You also make the same assumptions again. Azeris claims to be Iranian has nothing to do with their current citizenship. (Some might
356:
your arbitrary definition. The bast solution is either to work on Turko-Iranian article or Peoples influenced by Iranian civilization article. Remember, that it is Iranian Peoples (plural) we are talking about NOT Iranian people (nation). This has gone for too long, and people still are confused.
130:
Well, Dear Gol, firstly, welcome back. Secondly, Most of the Iranian Azeris voted above have both academic and Iranian concerns about the wrong use of the term "Iranian peoples" as in this article. The editors, wanted to create something of a linguistic importance, the same as Germanic and Turkic
6363:
Well, I was going to leave the article as is, but Shervink has been demanding (and he's the only one mind you) that there be a more exact definition and it turns out the only reason he has been pushing for one is to find a way to include the Azeris. Now our previous version simply said that some
6082:
Well it is curious that you're the only one complaining about this issue though. I'm not sure the views of one guy amount to a viable critique of the article. O'Leary says ethno-lingusitic group, the CAIS gives a list of said group, and the Encyclopedia of the Ukraine uses the term to define the
5852:
I do not think Allah is a good symbol there. That is good for an article about Islam and not about people speaking Iranian languages. For the same reason, Faravahar on its own is not a good symbol as it only represents Zoroastian and Pre-Islam history. Again, I am not saying, Ferdowsi is a good
5777:
to his last (all above). A user who posts offensive messages such as Zoroastrianism was "wrongly followed" and Farvahar is a spider mark, did not come here to provide us with the interesting information that Pashtuns are Muslims my friend. Perhaps you should study the Tajik-Pashtun relations and
4405:
Moreover, the Iraqi Kurds are an eclectic Iranian people who, although displaying numerous ethnolinguistic ties to other Iranian peoples (particular in their Iranian language, and some cultural traits), are believed to have mixed with Caucasian and Semitic peoples, while the Iranian Kurds are of
3430:
The Azerbaijani are of mixed ethnic origin, the oldest element deriving from the indigenous population of eastern Transcaucasia and possibly from the Medians of northern Persia. This population was Persianized during the period of the Sasanian dynasty of Iran (3rdā€“7th century AD), but, after the
2018:
No, I understand your point and think you are nitpicking and I believe it has to do with the Azeris since you still think it can be improved and yet have not explained how that improvement would take place and what sources YOU have to make changes. This article has been written to conform to the
6695:
responsible, just as I do those who implemented that way of life onto my society. I will not allow your ethnocentrism to supplant my Roman Christian ways of life. Regardless, the issue was about editing from a racist POV and this is what you do. You have co-opted social science to serve your
4370:
image; as-is, it's the most crudely-drawn map I've ever seen on Knowledge, and I know there are some amazing map-creators on Knowledge who could make it more neat, readable, and professional-looking. But that's not as important as the other issues, of course; the map, at least, has no copyright
5883:
In my opinion, if you actually read all the comments here you will realize that Zoroastrianism is more than just religion of ancient Iranians, its all over our culture, all our symbols. There is no reason to ignore our past just like our present. It's not "too nationalist" to recognize our own
4808:
I have no problem with reduced emphasis. Old Iranian culture is not very well known and has many commonalities with Indo-Iranian and even early Indo-European cultures. I mean we don't see ritual sacrifice or a pantheon of deities or their social hierarchy. What has happened is that in the 20th
4518:
Put away your pride and indignation. We all appreciate that you helped the article achieve FA but many others have been involved here, but only two people receive credit. That said I have removed your POV sentence once again since it is too convenient for you to add refs when you did not do so
3701:
The notion of Azeris being Turkish because of language is based on the late Ziya Gokalp (1876-1924) who equated language with racial and ethnic membership: you are racially Turkish if you speak Turkish. This is a standard argument of characters like Mr. Chehreganli and his western geopolitical
3534:
The pan-Turanian theories discussed in Part I represent only a part of the picture. There is a whole set of beliefs being narrated about Iranian Azerbaijan in both the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Turkish Republic. They are using the Turkish language as an instrument to differentiate Iranian
2495:
What is now the Azerbaijan Republic was known as Caucasian Albania in the pre-Islamic period, and later as Arran. From the time of ancient Media (ninth to seventh centuries b.c.) and the Persian Empire (sixth to fourth centuries b.c.), Azerbaijan usually shared the history of what is now Iran.
1252:
has a much broader meaning than only language. Iranian peoples are commonly defined as a cultural group rather than a linguistic one, and the linguistic-alone interpretation seems to be a WP invention based on a comparison to Germanic peoples, which is firstly plain wrong and secondly original
408:
Well regarding the academic sources that discuss the Iranian peoples they are varied and often go hand in hand with discussion of Iranian languages. Besides the various sources listed in the article there are these, which do not mention the Azeris as an Iranian people, but one does mention the
110:
I think the article is fine and defines the group clearly. It does mention on top that it is about speakers of Iranian languages. Therefore I donā€™ think Azeri people are left out. It is mentioned in the top section how this group is primary defined by their usage of Iranian languages. Also the
4488:
since you cannot say that they are both the same people. We all know that is not true since Kurds are like Persians and not a single group, but many different tribes calling themselves "Kurds". You want to talk about nationalism? Lets talk about nationalism. Lets talk about the nationalism of
3756:
Gokalp was not entirely wrong about Iran ā€“ there are a plethora of Turkic settlers who can trace their ancestry to the original Oghuzz (the aforementioned Nader Shah was a Turkmen). But even the identity of the Turkmen (meaning ā€œvery Turkā€) is hotly disputed. There are claims of strong Iranic
3459:
Again we are going back and forth here. I am emphasizing history of Azarbaijanis in Iran as well their cultural affinity as inseperable part of Iranian people. Linguistic shift in my opinion is not sufficient to make them a Turkic people. The statement Turkic people could mean two things.
2462:
I am coming late into this discussion. But are Mexicans who speak Spanish, a Spanish people? What about the Irish who the majority of them speaks English? As far as I know, despite speaking Turkic, Azarbaijanis have Iranian culture and culturally they are closer to other Iranians than even
5721:
By the way, I am not saying Ferdowsi and Simorgh are the best symbols to represent the topic in this article. I do not have anything in mind right now, in fact. But would be nice if someone could come up with something more inclusive than Faravahar which is only anciant and represents a more
3214:
I agree genetic is not the only factor. We are talking about history as well. History, Genetics, Religion, Myths, Language, Culture... and many other factors define a group. think the most important thing is the common history. For example in the other thread we were discussing Nizami and
2790:
Well, if you are going back to the genetic angle, then Caucasians did not have heavy present in Iran at least from the time of the Medes. Urartuians did extent to areas up to West Azarbaijan, but that area now speaks more Kurdish. But in the Caucas there used to exist Caucasian tribes like
2737:
Well, the main problem is that we don't know for a fact that all or most Azeris are solely or predominantly descended from Iranic tribes. It's just conjectural evidence and there is a lot of support for connections with Caucasian groups as well as the Turkmen. As a result, due to the lack of
1243:
as you put it, is the basis of defining a linguistic group, not an ethnic, ethno-linguistic, or ethno-cultural (as you suggested) group. Each term implies very clearly what is and what is not included, and a group based on language is obviously a linguistic group, since its only criterion of
451:
Well, if you are going back to the genetic angle, then Caucasians did not have heavy present in Iran at least from the time of the Medes. Urartuians did extent to areas up to West Azarbaijan, but that area now speaks more Kurdish. But in the Caucas there used to exist Caucasian tribes like
3848:
It is here were the barbaric aspects of ā€œrace criteriaā€ break down. In Afghanistan we have the Mongol descended ā€œHazaraā€ (lit. ā€œThe Thousandā€ in Persian) who now speak Persian, or the many people of Khazar Turkish-Jewish descent in Dagestan (next to Chechniya) who speak Persian. Conversely,
3666:
If anything, it is the Persian and (to a lesser extent), the Greco-Roman legacies that remain in the Caucasus. The Turks, like the Russians and Ukrainians certainly have their legacy in the Caucasus. The issue in question is the exaggeration of the Turkish role, now proposed by pan-Turanian
2522:
So the question is that are Azarbaijanis, "Turkified" Iranians or Iranians that speak Turkish? This question can not be answered scientifically. Even if there is genetic testing and we all know that original Turks are of Altaic and Mongolian stock and the modern person from the republic of
2072:
and accuse me of not being honest, it means you are not assuming good faith. Anyhow, I have made very clear what I'm talking about here. It is not the Azeris, and if you read it again you'll see that I declared that I do in general agree with the way they are included. My point is this: The
6296:
Tombseye, I think the article is almost good enough if we do not mention "most of sources" there. You have done a great deal to include Azaris, for the sake of the name of the article as opposed to what the article was representing before, i.e. the "speakers of Iranian languages" only.
3739:
settlers in its history. In the Western Arab world one finds a plethora of Christians (Greek Orthodox, Coptic, etc.). One can also trace much of the ancestry of modern Arabs to the earlier Semitic peoples such as the Akkadians, Babylonians, Assyrians (Aramaic-speakers), Syriacs, etc.
2167:
Ethnic Germans and Germanic peoples are completely different things. The latter is a group of people, speaking the language of a certain group. German is not necessarily Germanic, English People are Germanic as well, while French are not. It is based on the language they speak. See
5862:
Kash, by the way, I did not intend to support Ocean Wave in anyway. He said a lot of wrong stuff. But for me, I only looked at his remarks in a positive way, ignoring his incentives. I should have realized that his comments had hurt feelings and apologies for not realizing that.
4758:
This is not true. I have to get this verified. The Iranian culture has been effected definately, however the traits of pre-Islamic culture of Iran is still very apparent in the culture of Iran today. Therefore this has to be removed or reworded or it may give the wrong impression
3842:
How can a single index (Turkish language) be used to virtually erase Azerbaijanā€™s mighty civilizational identity in Persia? Azerbaijan has been of vital importance in the development of Persian civilization, just as Hungary has been a vital element in the development of European
5586:
is not really a religious symbol) but instead use another religious symbol, like Espand (the highest angel of Zoroastrian belief) or the Simurgh (the guardian of Ahura Mazda's creations)?! Either you have no idea what you are talking about or you are just here to provocate.
3079:
Again the term latinos has a large problem. And it is a geographical term to a large extent. For example Spainairds(sp?) people are not considered Latinos by the true definition. If you look at www.dictionary.com, under Iranian, Azarbaijanis definitely fit as an Iranian
4519:
before. Provide proof that those sources say what you want to say. And do not remove my sentence from the genetics. It seems as though you have a POV that the Iranian peoples are only "modern" and have no connection to the past but history and genetics disagree with you.
5870:
However, in this article, that is supposed to be academic, we are trying to press for facts. I have no problem personally with either Allah or Faravahar. But if we can come up with something more inclusive, the better. if not, maybe no symbol would do. Like other pages.
5672:
I do not have a problem with a Faravahar so to speak (My login name is plural for Persian Magus). But Ocean Wave might have a point here. The symbol reminds everyone of anciant Iran and might fit an article named as such. Not sure, what you could use instead, maybe a
5612:
LOL, thank god I'm not Majusi; But if there is going to a religious mark be used, it should be Islam OR dont use religious symbol as this peoples symbol at all. BTW, even if Simurgh or spand are also religious marks related to this same sect, then should not be used.
4080:
Not only did everyone help in making this article a Featured Article, it is the milestone in the featured articles! I want to say congrats to all the people who contributed to this article and hope you guys continue your great work! Go wikipedians! Go Iranian People!
3849:
Azerbaijanis are an essentially Iranic people who mainly speak Turkish. A branch of the Turcophone Azeris are believed to have been settled in Iranā€™s Fars province by the Safavidsā€“ they are today known as the Qashqaiā€™s (note photo of Qashaqi girl by Shahyar Mahabadi).
6198:
Persians were ancient Iranian people and also modern Iranian people, thats what it has to do with it. I am asking, are they totally different groups? were the old Persians, who were ancient Iranian people extinct? Yes? If so how did this new Persian people emerge?
4672:
Tombseye I have to agree to Kouroush to a certain extent. You reverting him seems like just another POV push to me. You have done a great job no doubt, but just because something can be referenced it doesn't mean its necessary NPOV or should not be disputed ever.
5209:
1)Farhvar is a symbole of ANCIENT Iranians; It belongs to history, then it should go to the history section not intro. The intro should contrain a common symbole of these peoples who the article is talking about: Pashtun, Tajik, Hazara, Balooch, Farsi, such as
6174:
I said AND. What does this have to do with the Persians again? The opening explains that we're talking about both the modern Iranians and the extinct groups known as the ancient Iranian peoples. Plus adding ethnolinguistic groups so that Shervink has no case.
2430:
will be to Iranic peoples. Meantime, I suggest you convince people that Slavic people, Turkic people, etc. need to all be changed to speakers of said language group and see how that goes over. It's clear academic terminology and there's nothing wrong with it.
4614:
group on this planet, then you are also mistaken. And if you think that by calling me a NATIONALIST will get you anywhere, you are also wrong because that is a PERSONAL ATTACK for which you may be sanctioned. I should report you for this violation of policy.
3720:
The main weakness of Gokalpā€™s simplistic premise is his oversimplification of the complex interrelationships between ethnicity, nationality, language and historical migrations. His logic is that speakers of a language ā€œXā€ must also be racially members of
4909:
In the article some people want to claim that our Afghanistani and Tajikstani brethern are not muslims but Majusi this is while for 14 centuries we followed Islam. Please have a look at that; They remove the Islamic sign from the article. Its very bad.
4469:
I cited the info. in the article in 2 different sections already. It's just that people don't actually read the article, they read one part and decide to mess with it so the only solution is to put the references everywhere. I fixed the problem though.
539:
That's to say, Kurds are of Turkic origin who mixed with Iranian people.The only diffrence between Kurds and Azeris is that Kurds are a litte bit more mixed with Iranians.Turkish and Kurdish nations must live in peace at Anatolia as they have done for
6666:
Genomist is likely a neonazi or white supremacist who frequents such websites as Stormfront and the National Vanguard. His promoted theories are well in step with them, but not with the Knowledge. Knowledge is not a place to service these agendas.
6058:
the issue of Azeris). The article is, furthermore, not stable, and thus not even good enough to meet the GA criteria. The main point now is this: Present a source that gives us the same definition of Iranian peoples as this article. The sources do
530:
Many have argued for the inclusion of the Azeris, while not comprehending what Iranian peoples means and I argued that if this took place, the Kurds would be claimed by the Turks since there would no longer be any defineable criteria. Well check out
3339:
As for the point of view of late Igrar Aliyev, he never said that Azeris were not Turkic people, he just said that they were descendants of native Caucasian and Iranian people, but that does not mean they are not Turkic. People of Latin America are
4356:
sections actually cover "History and settlement"? I don't understand why the lengthy analysis of Sarmatian spread is considered part of "Roots and classification", whereas the other cultures go in "History and settlement". Shouldn't we really have
3460:
Turcophones and actual Turks. Many Azarbaijanis consider themselves Turkic speaking Iranian. And what a group thinks of itself has the primary importance. Either way the current state of the article is sufficiently reasonable in this aspect. --
1525:
Well, the intro currently says that language is the primary defining factor, but it fails to back that up with sources. the references 1 and 2 given after that sentence do not say anything like that. The links to Britannica are from the article on
2463:
Anatolian Turks. For example Nowruz is a major holiday for all Iranians. Another is Yalda. Or for example Azarbaijanis are proud of Nizami, Babak, Khaghani and etc (while these figures are Iranians and are not Turkic ethnically or culturally).
1160:
The discussion is listed in the modern Iranian peoples list, but the compromise (give and take people) was not to actually list them as they do not fit the main criteria of speaking an Iranian language. The intro was not to be changed. Thanks.
967:
I think you have done a great service - and the matter should be closed. all is mentioned, and mentioned in the article many times. I suggest if similar discussions arise in the future - they should be referred to the archivee of the talk page
5801:
Why are acting as if the Persians is what this article is about? Yes, I'm fully aware of the conflict, but what's that have to do with the issue of the Arabs' profound influence upon the Iranians? Or the mention of Islam? I'm not defending
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This paragraph is saying much of nothing. Its interesting that no one complained about this when it was up for FA status because it adds nothing to the article but does push the "Iranians are mixed with Arabs and Turks and Greeks" POV.
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living chiefly in the Republic of Azerbaijan and in the region of Azerbaijan in northwestern Iran. At the turn of the 21st century there were some 7,500,000 Azerbaijani in the republic and neighbouring areas and more than 15,000,000 in
5711:
Use of Faravahar is very popular among Iranians, specially nationalistic Iranians to emphasize their non Arab-ness. That to me is not necessary here and makes the article more like a nationalistic propaganda page rather than Academic.
4451:
If the information is to be kept, it needs a citation, and probably an NPOV rewording. Sonething like "relatively unmixed" or "less culturally integrated", or similar, is preferable to potentially offensive wordings like "more pure".
3676:
their speech ā€“ a phenomenon seen in modern Georgian. While the Caucasus has certainly seen its share of Persian, Greek, Turkish and Russian influence, she has in turn vigorously and profoundly influenced all of these cultures in turn.
983:
large populations in this area. For example in the modern map of Iranic languiages both Azeri and Arabic areas are shown as Iranic-speaking area. No mention of non-Iranics. It is highly misleading. It should be corrected or clarified.
1404:
I think itā€™s clear. Ethnolinguistic groups are formed on the basis of the language as the defining factor. All other factors are secondary. I canā€™t see any valid reason to redefine the criteria that is used by all academic sources.
545:
can be included without question as the evidence is conjectural. And if they are, then I see no reason as to why the Turks can't include the Kurds as a Turkic people who adopted an Iranian language since it will no longer matter.
6053:
I wonder how an article of this low quality became a FA. We never had a consensus on many points, and on those on which we had a consensus it is repeatedly being neglected (Azeri issue and the repeated attempts of Grandmaster to
3411:
farmers and herders, although some of those in the republic have found employment in various industries. Most Azerbaijani are Shi'ite Muslims. They speak Azeri, a language belonging to the southwestern branch of Turkic languages.
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Links are fine so long as they are links to reliable sources as above. Also, please not cite any internet encyclopedias as they mostly copy from Knowledge and it is self referencing to mention them. And Gee how many of them...
115:
100% Iranic, but their language is and this articleā€™s primary focus is on language. Also we can not merge this with Iranian languages since this article is not about those languages but the speakers of those languages. I think
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many reasons such as different backgrounds and assimilations. These peoples are divided into sevral groups according to their background. If you dont trust me, at least make a quote from this universal neutral project Joshua.
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This is not surprising as Turkic and Iranic peoples have been intertwined in Central Asia for thousands of years. Even the Mongols who invaded Persia are said to have had some Iranian (North Iranic?) ancestry (see Turnbull in
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Consequently one hesitates to identify the Kurdish band as 'Median/ dialects, not even geographically(rather one may call them 'Parthian' considering the time and fact that many non-Persian dialects in W Iran once were called
4493:
which claims that Kurds from Iran, Iraq, Turkey, and Syria are ALL the same people. Nonsense. There are differences between all these peoples. Read books about Kurds that ask the classic "Kurdish question" - "Who is a Kurd"?
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That is not my last posts answer. If this image is a symbole of this peoples history then add it to the history section. Morever if you were interesed you can also add an islamic sign to the religion section too. Tha's all.
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section takes care of the issue of culture and explains that there are groups whose language is not Iranian but everything else about them is. Also, I would love to know the opinion of Azeri Iranians on this issue. thanks
6391:
Just to tone down. We already say the issue remains debated. But saying above, it looks like we are somehow drawing our own conclusion that yes the debate is there but this article thinks Azeris are not Iranian peoples.
2645:
In this case I totally agree with Grandmaster. MODERN Azeris are not an "Iranic people", but a "Turkic people". Their ancestors, the historical Azaris, were an "Iranic people" and they are already included in the list of
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More than that, the Iranian peoples (not just today's Muslim Iranics) were identified with Zoroastrism and related beliefs. The picture does not have any religious meanings in this article, but onyla symbolic meaning.
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Also please see a more detailed article from Britannica. It mentions mixed ethnic origin of Azeris and Turkicization of the indigenous population, and still says that Azeris are Turkic people. One does not exclude the
3662:
This is at best, a grandiose exaggeration. The real influence of the Turks begins with the Seljuks and Ottomans, and even then, the Turks are only one more layer upon an ancient region that has seen a rich and varied
822:
means you are from the provinces of east and west azarbaijan. and before you respond, please let me know what part of azarbaijan you have been to, i would love to hear from people who know what they're talking about.
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with Iranian (not Slavic, Germanic, ...) peoples, and which secondly explicitly defines a more-than-linguistic group merely based on language. Such a source would be needed to back the claims of the current article.
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4, the Safavid dynasty, whose members spoke Turkish in court and introduced much Turkish vocabulary to Iran, considered themselves as the heirs of Persia and bitterly fought the Ottoman Turks throughout their reign.
1940:
In short, the Azeris are a very mixed lot with links to the Caucasus, Iranian peoples, and Turkmenistan. Out of this, they can't be included because they don't qualify in terms of the main criteria, their language.
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it is that those guys did sucketpuppeting!!! But I do not. My IP address belongs to a company of more than 800 people and there are a few Persians and Azeris around. To be honest with you, I only know one of them.
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Today, most of the Iranian peoples are Islamic, but their culture is built on the Zoroastrian, pre-Islamic culture of their forefathers, in strong contrast to Arabic culture which does not know Nowruz, Espand, or
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I agree with you completely that we must also avoid being too afraid of being seen as nationalists too. That is a great point. I was thinking on ways to improve. I have no problems with Faravahar, whatsoever.
5498:
I guess (funny, since the word did not even exist before the 15th century AD) ... You are totally wrong in claiming that "Zoroastrism has no place" in modern Iranian cultures. In fact, it was the government of
3279:
Iā€™ve never denied close cultural ties between Azeri and Persian people, but almost all major academic sources group people by languages they speak, and itā€™s done the same way in Knowledge for all other people.
1086:
Absolutely, whatever you can think of. Right now, with the picture replaced, the article will take on a cleaner and more encyclopedic look and avoid the controversy of the picture that inevitably will come up.
4246:
seems fishy, especially in light of the fact that the uploader's talk page is filled with no source/non commercial image warnings, though he does mention that he has a statement confirming the image's release.
1005:
I added the term empires so that a reader can understand that this is the extent of Iranian peoples (which is accurate as the map is pretty good) including empires so that should take care of that hopefully.
1170:
i thought the last edit was fine. it seemed to include everyone's concerns. it just looks really unorganized right now, i thought the other way where you name azari and add the note looks more professional.
6315:
The word 'like', when used in listing, does not mean there is no more in the list. For example, when I say European countries like France and Italy, I do not mean Germany is not a European country, do I?
4997:
A symbolic meaning for (some of) ancient Iranians in 14 centuries ago but it has no connection with todays 99,99% muslim soceity whom we are talking about in this article. Modern Iranians symbol is this
4147:." From where, exactly? Which image? I can't find one on en. If it's already been deleted, an admin should check that it was sourced correctly from there, and add that information to this Commons image. 1322:
Let me be more specific. I have a problem with your way of reasoning, which goes along these lines essentially: Since groups like Germanic peoples and others are defined mainly in terms of linguistics,
1135:
If you mean the Iranian model wearing traditional attire, yes it's a good one and relevant to the subject matter under the culture section so I'm in favor of it and hopefully everyone else will concur.
802:
What speculation? I'm not the one who investigated the matter. At any rate, the entire process is suspect and I believe we can come to some concensus now that some of the subterfuge has been uncovered.
3254:
said modern Azeris were not Turkic people. The doctrine dominating currently in academic circles bases ethnicity primarily on the language. See Britannica, itā€™s written by prominent Western scholars:
2326:
other list including different language speakers. If you are not happy with the way linguistic groups are arranged at Knowledge, I suggest you follow a dispute resolution procedure and start an RfC.
5039:
Not all of this article is about history, but if you think this symbole is for history issue, then add it to the history section but not at top of the article as it looks like the article is about
3344:, even though most of them are not descendants of Spanish people. If you check the articles about other groups at Knowledge, youā€™ll see that they are all formed only on the basis of the language. 343:
However, peoples like Hazaras or Chahar Aimaq should be mentioned in this article, because they are Iranic by language, though not necessairily Iranic by heritage (they're probably Turko-Mongols).
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The articles on Knowledge are not owned by anyone, including yourself. Everyone has a right to edit any page. And yes, Iā€™m not Iranian, Iā€™m an Azeri and this issue has a direct relevance to me.
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Islam is not the symbol of Iranian people, its the religion of many of them, however the Farvahar symbol is an Iranian symbol, created by Iranians, which is why its suitable for this article --
4950:
was not created by Iranian people. It is the achievement of Arabs not Iranians. But as I said, I personally disliked the symbol there, pictures of Iranian people would be much more appropriate.
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It may be 'created by Iranians', but that doesn't make it a symbol of all Iranian peoples. It is derived from an Egyptian hieroglyph, and is pertinent to the Achaemenid and Sassanid empires,
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of Iranian languages. If it does, then be it and we stick to the way the article is. No editor in Knowledge is here to do research or to push a POV, even a POV is supported by majority or all.
5237:
Iranian peoples. 2) Yeah sure. Perhaps with a short paragraph next to it explaining the forced conversions and mass killings done in order for many Iranian people to be converted to Islam --
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It's frustrating that one person can plaster that message on an article and it takes a long dispute (most of the time the arguement has already been done on the site) to settle it again. --
5313:
Faravahar is an appropriate choice as a common symbol (since article deals ethnically not religiously) but I have also a suggestion: use images of indo-Iranian mythological figures such as
363:
Well, guys, since there is no consensus, I thought, it would be better to stick to only acadmic sources rather than any opinionative speculations. So basically stick to Knowledge's policy,
3605:(b) He then rejected his previous writings and declared that Azerbaijan (both Arran and Azerbaijan in Iran) had always been ā€œTurkishā€ and was never historically an integral part of Persia 2378:
Modern Azeris cannot be included, they are Turkic speakers. I showed you how all other groups are arranged here, this article is no different. It deals with speakers of Iranian languages.
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Azerbaijanis are the same as Uzbeks, Kazakh, etc, i.e. Turkic people, since they speak a Turkic language, and not Iranian. I pointed out a number of times the lists of other peoples, see
520: 392:
We all know Azeris speak Turkic now and sometime did not. We all know sensitivities of the issue. Please refrain from treating each other with respect and avoid non academic discussions.
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axactly according to their language affiliation. Iranian languages may include some distinct languages but Iranian peoples as i've ever seen does include only Persian speaking family.
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Other Encyclopedias have similar definitions for Azerbaijani people. So it should mentioned in the article that Azerbaijani people are a Turkic-speaking people of Persian culture. --
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that you have your ways and culture, but they are not European ways anymore than Europeans are Asian. We are Mediterraneans. It is because of your secular theories that I endure
3826:
Renfrewā€™s studies have been corroborated by Professor Luigi Cavalli-Sforza (see photo below) and his colleagues, who have concluded the following after decades of genetic research:
5022:
probably would not, even though there is a far higher percentage of Greeks with membership in the Greek Orthodox Church (around 95%ā€“98%) than there are Iranians who are Muslims. -
4352:
I mainly made this post, though, because I'm confused about the distinction between the second section, "Roots and classification", and the third, "History and settlement". Don't
4789:
changed" during hundreds of years, not just in a certain short period of time, and was with influence of Islam as well as influence of old Iranian culture. Thats common sense. --
3600:(a) At first he admitted that ā€œAzerbaijanā€ (Arran and Azerbaijan in Iran?) was an ancient Iranian province that had been linguistically Turcified since at least the 13th century. 2650:. The current version, which explains that SOME sources count them among "Iranian peoples", but that the MAJORITY of sources consider Azeris "Turkic" is totally enough and good. 158:
are fighting so hard to keep the name of the article as is. To me it is simply wrong, Iranian peoples are not only speakers of Iranian languages and has a much broader meaning.
5951:
I think the present way (Note: Azeris are, ...) should be fine for both of us, since it still gives them a separate status apart from the rest of the groups on the list. As for
6578:
We have a Hazara, but an Ossetian wouldn't be bad. We have room in the genetics section if you can find a picture (without any copyright problems) that would be great. Thanks.
5295:
That was just an example to show that it was not just the symbol for ancient people but still in common use by some of Iranian people and today it is still regarded the same --
4423:
before all this attention and had citations and references for everything. Now it's become a tug of war as people act as if they can put in and delete whatever they feel like.
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In Persia, identity has never been delineated by singular, simplistic and narrow concepts such as ā€œraceā€, ā€œmother languageā€ or even ā€œreligionā€. Consider the following examples:
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Actually, it's very relevant simply because if people can be claimed based upon arbitrary interpretations of history then the articles are meaningless. By the way, you're a
149:
This is a friendly request in order, to at least convince myself, for all who think the article is defining the term right, please list all reliable references that use the
499: 6330:
groups means "Iranian peoples"? The earlier, for some people, means differently from the latter, unless proven. It is like trying to prove an axiom, using the same axiom.
3431:
region's conquest by the Seljuq Turks in the 11th century, the inhabitants were Turkicized, and further Turkicization of the population occurred in the ensuing centuries.
1599:
If you wish to add Azeris in the list of Iranian people, please be so kind as to present a reliable source, that includes them with Iranian peoples. Note that we need an
4436:
I totally agree with Heja Helweda. I had removed that sentence, but it was reverted into the article again. This parts HAS to be rewritten. Right now, it's clearly POV.
1614:
definition is incomplete and inconsistent with established use. I once again ask you to provide sources for the first sentence of the intro, specifically the claim that
318:
Please stop threats, and invent one convincing argument why we should redefine term Iranian Peoples from accepted scientific usage to what you just created in your head
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of Iranian peoples. You don't think so? Show me please which part of the article is saying what you are so fiercely defending. It is you who is pushing POV, not me!
4624:
these comments will help you and this article, you are wrong. I will, in fact, go to Farsi WP and reveal your attacks against me there. Then we'll see what happens.
4143:
this is incompletely sourced. (And weirdly, someone has tagged it as no source here, even though it's a Commons image...) The "source" is: "From the en:wikipedia by
1379:
Yes, exactly. All of this is common academic practice and I don't understand why we're still discussing this issue after all of the compromises that have been made!
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And hereā€™s another resource, the missionary Joshua Project, to which you were referring in the other article, they include Azeris as Turkic people and not Iranian.
2359:). Well, I proposed a solution above (which I believe was proposed before also), if there are any other suggestions lets hear it. Ps. we should archive this talk -- 987: 6151:
Yes, but Persians were also ancient Iranian people, so it doesn't make sense to say they are "extinct". Unless we are talking about two groups being different? --
4588:
Arnold Toynbee talks about the very thing, common historical currents. Many authors talk about various events shaping the region so it is very factual and stays.
6704: 6671: 6630: 4311: 4229: 4150: 1530:, so it is obvious that the emphasis there is on linguistic matters. It does not enable one to make conclusions pertaining to this article, however, which is on 6681: 4256: 4178: 574:: 1, 2, blah blah and no one else. And some talk about Iranian peoples in anciant times when Iranians did not speak Turkic at all. Iranian Turks emerged since 6624: 4557:
However, other common traits have been identified as well, and a stream of common historical events have often linked the southern Iranian peoples, including
1567:
Information on Knowledge must be reliable. Facts, viewpoints, theories, and arguments may only be included in articles if they have already been published by
962: 6382:
I understand the article is "primarily about Iranian language speakers". However, that is why we do not list Azeris among others and as a separate listing.
3517:
IF YOU ALL LOOK AT MY PRESENTATIONS, YOU WILL SEE THAT AZARIS ARE A GENUINE IRANIAN TURCOPHONE PEOPLE; I Have academic proof and verifications. PLease go to
3461: 3308: 3216: 3084: 2942: 2809: 2693: 2607: 2524: 1936: 972: 470: 4714:
Lol you have become too sensitive over this FA status. It is a great job but there is no reason why it can not be improved. By the way, check your email. --
5959:, my understanding of English is that they both have the same meaning, with the second being more formal and more suitable for a serious piece of writing. 3931: 3882: 3854: 852: 704: 688: 596: 579: 399: 276:
You are not Azari or Azeri! Azari is some one whose mother and father are Azarbaijani( the real Azarbaijan not fake Republic of Azerbaijan). You are arani.
216: 177: 132: 1244:
inclusion is language. If the basis of this article is only language, its title should say so, but it does not do so now. If the article had a title like
161:
If you have any comments or discussions, or like some you think the matter is too obvious (either way) for all but to me, please add an extra section and
3839:
In like manner, why are the Azerbaijanis (of Iran in particular) being forcibly re-defined as ā€œTuranianā€ simply because they speak Seljuk Oghuzz Turkish?
1172: 823: 3885: 2403:, and the problem is solved. One might still argue that most Azeris (at least those in Iran) are bilingual, but I will not be the one to bring that up. 6701: 6668: 6627: 4112: 3494: 3464: 3438: 3348: 3219: 3153: 3087: 3018: 2945: 2822: 2610: 2572: 1773:
Iranian peoples are formed by the same principle as all other groups. If you want to change it, youā€™ll have to change it for all other groups as well.
745:
even people of former Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan work here. We can organize a lezgi dance every Friday night here. Some are great arguers. Phew...
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get back to you on that later. I believe they great sources. But they do not claim this is the whole list of Iranian peoples and here is the list of
417: 412: 5806:, but I do detect a resistance to any mention of the important role the Arab Muslims played in shaping modern Iranian societies. In fact everything 5260:
You realize, of course, that this is not an article about Iran at all? You seem to confuse the Iranian (or Iranic) peoples with the people of Iran.
4921:
Of course it is not advisable to do this at all. It is a very bad idea to do this for an ethnic group (do you see a giant crucifix plastered on the
3924: 2812: 2742: 2527: 299: 4598: 2803:
in Hommages et Opera Minora, Monumentum H. S. Nyberg, Vol. 2., Acta Iranica 5. Tehran-LiĆØge: BibliothĆØque Pahlavi, 457-472. On pg 468, he writes:
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in Hommages et Opera Minora, Monumentum H. S. Nyberg, Vol. 2., Acta Iranica 5. Tehran-LiĆØge: BibliothĆØque Pahlavi, 457-472. On pg 468, he writes:
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It is the answer to your posts. Farvahar is the symbol of Iranian people. I have no interest at all to add a non-Iranian symbol to this article --
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cultural descendants of the Anglo-Saxons around the world, including large groups of English speakers in North America, Australia, and New Zealand
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peoples) are a group of more or less related peoples who speak related languages and share (more or less) a common history, heritage, and culture.
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It seems as though Tombseye would like to suggest that HE had some part in creating this article. That is some claim since in actuality it was
4332: 3870: 3859: 1825:, therefore we may need to split this page up in to two articles, one speakers of Iranian languages and the other Iranic people for example. -- 1712:
The Latin peoples are those linguistic-cultural groups that speak one of the Romance languages, which are languages descended from Vulgar Latin
564:, except two last ones and Zand dynasty. There is a huge difference between Kurds in Turkey and Turks in Iran. I do not see any parallel there. 6658: 6478: 6289: 6098: 6087: 5987: 5963: 5942: 4663: 4592: 4541: 4523: 4509: 3977: 2654: 2434: 2382: 2128: 2077: 2027: 1980: 1944: 1897: 1831: 1777: 1335: 1309: 1257: 1228: 894: 875: 862: 259: 135: 6011: 5646: 5617: 5591: 5473: 5450: 5373: 5164: 4484:
If I am not mistaken it seems that the genetic analysis is only about Kurds from Iraq and not from Iran. That means it must be said that the
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nationalist fantasies and I am severely offended. I do not edit racially. You should stop pretending to be professional whilst promoting
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Look I appreciate your attempt to mediate, but you need to understand that I did not disrupt the status quo. All of us, except one person
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Turkic peoples - any of various peoples whose members speak languages belonging to the Turkic subfamily of the Altaic family of languages.
349: 4416: 4157:. Are they the same person? Seems unlikely (judging from their Babel boxes, Kowloonese is Asian, not French). So what is the true source? 4070: 1595:
3. The obligation to provide a reputable source lies with the editors wishing to include the material, not on those seeking to remove it.
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Indeed and since this person was the one who initiated this 2nd round of contention and acted dishonestly, I see no reason humor to him.
6550: 6433: 6259: 6205: 6157: 5840: 5784: 5539: 5301: 5189: 5138: 4892: 4844: 578:. If this article only talks and assumes all Iranian people groups before then. Then ok. be it. But this article claims more than than. 409:
ancient Azaris and, as Tajik correctly commented, they can be discussed in the article and listed as an ancient Iranian people as well:
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as is since it's on Commons rather than here, though my guess is that someone was interpreting Bridgemann v Corel a bit too liberally.
1488:
Have you seen the quotes from Britannica? How do they form groups? Come on already, whatā€™s the point in arguing about obvious things?
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a lack of specific headers describing what each part of the historical account is about makes it difficult to ground the readers.)
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Grandmaster this discussion is not your business. you are not Iranian people you are a Turk or Arrani. Then get out of this page.
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The Map Image:Moderniranianlanguagesmap21.PNG which has been presented in this article as fact, is an original research work by
2124:
with a list of Iranian peoples who seem to adhere to the language requirement as well. That's pretty much all that can be done.
1024:, this article used BCE consistently. Please at least make an attempt to observe WP guidelines instead of making such a change. 5977:
Well, I guess that's fine with me. If you want to remain consistent you're probably also going to have to add something on the
5329: 4301: 4194: 4199: 3784:ā€œā€¦incoming minoritiesā€¦conquer other populations andā€¦impose their languages on them. The Altaic family spread in this fashionā€¦ā€ 3535:
Turcophones from the rest of Iran. Some of the pan-Turanian claims to Iranian Azerbaijan can be summarized into the following:
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2)Then due to this fact that almost all of this people are muslim, we can also add an islamic image to the religion section.
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medians, scythians, samartians, alans, etc... should be including in a list of iranian peoples who havent made it to today.
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discusses the Iranian peoples as well. At this point, the discussion is over as many concessions have been made. The end.
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I am not familiar with the FA process but I am surprised a more stringent image source-checking process is not in place.
224: 6278: 6075: 5317:(Sēnmurw), which would be a nice addition to article since it was a common symbol/deity for all of Iranian people (From 4886:
what the problems are just like I have done here so we can work them out without affecting the quality of the article --
3611:
haunt the Caucasus and Iran to this day. That legacy has also provided an excellent tool for geopolitical manipulation.
1887:
You keep saying "Iranian peoples in general has a broader meaning than just language", but you still haven't managed to
1446:? You have not yet provided any academic sources which back your claim. Can you provide at least one source saying that 6654:. I have no idea what he means by "Aryanisms". He has also threatened me on my talk page. Very rude and inconsiderate. 4279: 4232:'s uploader to confirm whether or not it's under the GFDL. If I don't get a response after a while, I'll put it on PUI. 4039: 1154: 6226:
The article explains about the Persians and others. It doesn't need clarification as the Persians are listed as both.
5916:
We've already discussed this Shervink, we're not including Azeris on the listā€”the first sentence in this article says
4582: 3915:
A previous analysis of mtDNA variation in the Caucasus found that Indo-European-speaking Armenians and Turkic-speaking
3881:
WEST ASIAN IS IRANO-CAUCASIAN. EAST ASIAN IS TURKIC/ORIENTAL. SOUTH ASIAN IS INDIC. AFRO-ASIATIC IS IS NOT MENTIONED.
2793:
Or for example we can take Haiti which speaks a dialect of French but the people there are primarily of African stock.
1049:
I wanted to replace the picture collage with something that is symbolic of the Iranian peoples such as something from
958:
article has given the Azeris quite a bit of coverage that some of the known Iranian peoples haven't received. Cheers.
454:
Or for example we can take Haiti which speaks a dialect of French but the people there are primarily of African stock.
124: 4635:
I'm going to add citations tomorrow though to keep him from messing with the article that he had no part in creating.
4101:
Everyone was banging on about putting some kind of plaque dedicating Knowledge at the site of the millionth article,
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a typical case of "more time spent on the higher sections than the lower ones", a common malady of longer articles.
304:
I see you threat me. Little GRANDMASTER if you are too brave why donā€™t you capture your occupied land from Armenian!
5930: 5775: 4392: 4017:. It needs to be specified that the map is not necessarily objective, and is instead a user-created illustration.-- 4005: 4765: 6609: 6423: 4751: 4645: 3925:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=12596050
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Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Inselstrasse 22, 04103, Leipzig, Germany. nasidze@eva.mpg.de
6094:
Oh and I've reworded so that it does reflect O'Leary's definition as well. Pretty sure the review will pass it.
5533:
is probably the best symbol for the Iranian peoples as a cultural union. I really do not understand your agenda.
4105:, but where is the plaque going to go this time? Maybe we can hang one around the neck of every Iranian person? 1590:
2. Editors adding new material to an article should cite a reputable source, or it may be removed by any editor.
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people. They can be Turkic as well as Iranian people. Unless if you want to limit Iranian peoples to specific
1248:, for example, we wouldn't have a problem. What the title implies now is more general however, since the term 1022: 4609: 4607: 3864: 1279: 3871:
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/AJHG/journal/issues/v74n5/40813/40813.html?erFrom=-1568565869309167708Guest
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Khoikoi! It is short now. There are some Iranians that donā€™t speak in Iranian languages. Donā€™t change it!
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203.48.45.194, I'm not banned from Iran-related articles. SouthernComfort and Aucaman are. Check again. ā€”
6253:
Ok? So please don't change the intro to say strange things you are not going to support then, thanks. --
1355:
Germanic peoples also called Teutonic Peoples - any of the Indo-European speakers of Germanic languages.
4747: 4102: 38: 6340:"Iranian peoples. The east Aryan group of peoples of the Indo-European family that today inhabit Iran" 5095:
Iranian peoples, including Scythians and what not, who have no connection with the symbol whatsoever.
4343: 713:
So what if he is? It does not change the fact that your IP was used by 3 different accounts to vote.
231:
It is masteries!!! The supreme leader of Iran is an Azeri but Azeri doesnā€™t list as Iranian people.(
6036:
Well, that's the first time I've seen it. Do you have any other sources? (Ones that are academic?) ā€”
5902:
I also agree that Derafsh is not a good idea. Iranians would hardly recognize it, let alone others.
3891:"Here is scientific proof that says Azeris are not Turks: You can argue with people but not science" 1891:. Until then, the definition stays. This article is not going to be come a nationalist playground. ā€” 4743: 4558: 4236: 4160: 4121:
I like your ironic interpretation Mr. Rwanda. I'm also aiming for the coveted 1003 spot myself.Ā ;)
3778:
Professor Colin Renfrew (see 1994 References) notes how Turkic languages spread by Elite Dominance:
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Simurgh should be used perhaps. However it won't make any difference to Farvahar, as it stays. --
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Since when the majority of Azarbayjani speakers are Kurds and Talysh? Actually the author says:
2647: 2560:, same as Spanish, because they speak one of the Latin languages. English-speaking Irish people ( 2226: 1822: 1560: 220: 6388:"However, most sources do not include Azeris as an Iranian people, but rather a Turkic people." 3515:
Azaris are culturally, ethnically and historically Iranian; that said here is acadmeic fact....
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and the Arabs, were religiously and socially different from those of the ancient Iranians (see
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definition given in the article is not specifically supported by solid sources. Fix it please.
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Square type collage or something more related to Iranain languages than Iranian religion(s).
3708:
He is one of a long line of non-Turks who helped build pan-Turanian ideology (Part I, item 1).
696:
By the way, the person who reported my IP address as suspected sucketpuppet, he himself is on
6492:. From what I see, Shervink is the only one trying to impose his will and support the tag. -- 6300:
Regarding the sources above, here is my interpretation of them in English. Your quote says:
6063:
do that. Nowhere in those articles, as far as I can see, it is said that Iranian peoples are
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I changed it because the section headings should stay short and simple. What's your reason? ā€”
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I donā€™t have to present any sources. In this case it's your responsibility. Check the rules:
6568:, as a matter of fact the article is Iranian "people", we better put more images of people. 5469:
Tajik and Hazara are respectively from Turkic and Mongoloid stock. Just look at their face.
4169:
Seems a bit suspect, but I guess someone has contacted the OTRS people to confirm it's fine?
3873:
It shows that the populations of Azarbaijan and Turkey are not Turkic. Notice the makeup is
2877:
just as one would hesitate to identify the majority of Azarbayjani speakers as ethnic Turks.
741:
Seems like a lot of speculations and Tombseye has already decided it was a confirmed case!!!
6743:
The Cambridge History of Iran: Volume 3, The Seleucid, Parthian and Sasanid Periods, Part 1
6692: 6007: 5997: 4642: 4111:. Good work everyone... hopefully I can get an FA myself sometime between 1000 and 2000... 3942: 3528: 1818: 1442:
parts. How can linguistics alone be the defining parameter for anything more than a merely
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Unverifiable claims? And this from someone who claims that the Medes were Turkic people!!!
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Testing hypotheses of language replacement in the Caucasus: evidence from the Y-chromosome
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Hungarians are considered to be Magyar speaking Europeans ā€“ not an Asiatic Turkic people.
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linear and (in my opinion) divisive concept of ā€œraceā€ ā€“ in the purely anthological sense.
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User_talk:SlimVirgin#New_editor_has_a_racial-revisionist.2C_Balkan-separatist_agenda...
6032:(For seeing Irano-median group choose it from the list and click the 'select' button). 4315: 4208: 4140: 3524:
me and user:Grandmaster. This user is also gaming the system and acting in bad faith.
3511:
Absolute Proof that the claims from the Republic Of Azarbaijan's Revisionists are FALSE
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OK, could you please answer my question? The following is from encyclopedia Britannica:
6650:
I think the person has a weird misunderstanding. He has also been talking nonsense at
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article?), and an even worse idea for an ethnic super-group like the Iranian peoples.
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1. Articles should contain only material that has been published by reputable sources.
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Thundering ZeusĀ : The Making of Hellenistic Bactria (Hellenistic Culture and Society)
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those parts which support this definition. Otherwise, we have to change the article.
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Ethnolinguistic groups are formed on the basis of the language as the defining factor
1069:
I totally agree ... maybe we should include quite a few typical "Iranic" symbols ...
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By the 1930s, Rasulzadehā€™s writings revealed his full conversion to pan-Turanianism:
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Right, so Farvahar is the symbol of ancient Iran and Ferdowsi and Allah are modern
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Absolutely. That was an obvious attempt to cheat and forge the results of voting.
6651: 4154: 4067: 4014: 3853:.....with all this criteria many of the Azari articles will have to refurbished. 3527:
Here are more sources that prove a lot of what you are saying is misinformation.
6029: 5519:, the highest angel of Zoroastrism. People read Hafiz' poems and believe in his 3433: 3337: 502:-Here the Scythians, Sarmatians, and Alans are referred to as Iranian peoples. 46:
If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the
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All maps are created by people. I'm not sure I understand your objection. --
3937:
the other iranian peoples, who have been assimilated into various other groups
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Genetic alteration can only occur as a result of one of more of the following:
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The Cambridge History of Iran: From the Arab Invasion to the Saljuqs, Vol. 4,
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I think we have consensus to remove the tag now. I am removing the tag now.
4175:
Why is it tagged copyrightedfreeuse? From NATO website: "Ā© NATO - OTAN 2006"
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in preserving Persiaā€™s territorial integrity after the fall of the Safavids.
1253:
research. The conclusion remains that the intro needs a substantial change.
6521: 6410: 5023: 4453: 4372: 4182: 4082: 4048: 4018: 1803: 1568: 1205: 969: 357: 319: 165:. However, if you think one listed is not as reliable, you could strike it 3865:
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/AJHG/journal/issues/v74n5/40813/fg1.h.jpg
2939:
who now speak Kurdish most likely were formerly speakers of Median dialect
2806:
who now speak Kurdish most likely were formerly speakers of Median dialect
1045:
Not to create any controversy, but I wanted to replace the picture collage
467:
who now speak Kurdish most likely were formerly speakers of Median dialect
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has been confirmed as free-use. Still waiting for word from Paradoxic on
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As I said in a few posts up, put an Allah there for all I care, boss. --
4838:(almost all most known Persian poets were Sufis) and also Shia Islam. -- 1575:
whenever possible. Any unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
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Well, thank God that the majority supports the current pictureĀ :) EOD.
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nationalistic aspect of Iranian culture or Zoroastianism at its best.
619:
So this IP voted 3 times? Thatā€™s a clear violation of the Wiki rules.
6107:
Persian people are not extinct, so I have reverted your last edit. --
5419:
and Iranian culture that is believed to be a depiction of a Fravashi.
5091:. This is not the article on the Persian Empire, it's the article on 4060: 4027: 3521:. User:Grandmaster is trying to even stop the use of the term AZARI. 1681:
The Slavic peoples are defined by their usage of the Slavic languages
335:
While Azeris are deffinitly Iranic by culture and heritage, they are
142:
Please list all references to the usage of the term "Iranian Peoples"
3993:
You simply don't know what the definition of "Iranian peoples" is. ā€”
3327:, youā€™ll see that it includes Anglo-Irish people. It also includes ā€œ 560:
long history and Shahs of Iran were all Turkic speaking in the past
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language as result of their elite military and political dominance.
3582:
deposits of the Caucasus and Central Asia (see Part VI, items 1-3).
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Discussions and Comments on the reference list on "Iranian peoples"
121: 6779: 6753: 6727: 5314: 5293:
When did I say anything about Iran? -- 14:05, 12 June 2006 (UTC)
4184:
which says " Copyright Ā© 2004. Hazara.net. All rights reserved".
4107: 3548:(2) Azerbaijanis have spoken Turkish since the advent of History. 2286: 2238: 2234: 1807: 6589:
What needs to be done in order to feature this on the main page?
3869:
Additionally...there is this genetic evidence under your noses.
3687:(7) Azerbaijanis and all who speak Turkish are Turkish by race.' 2801:
Isoglosses: A Sketch on Persians and Parthians, Kurds and Medes,
2477:
Here is a link which is reliable from historical point of view:
1108:
Two thumbs up but we can use the picture down below can't we? --
462:
Isoglosses: A Sketch on Persians and Parthians, Kurds and Medes,
6565: 5578:
So, you are saying that we should not use the religious symbol
5513: 5509: 5211: 4835: 4566: 3573:(7) Azerbaijanis and all who speak Turkish are Turkish by race. 2285:) refers to a group of related ethnic groups, viz. the settled 6560:
I'd suggest we add pictures of different Iranian people, from
4988: 3323:
I donā€™t see any serious loopholes. If you look at the list of
1034:
I fixed it so that it corresponds to the rest of the article.
512: 6599: 5936:
Why did you change "some sources" to "a number of sources"? ā€”
3543:(1) Greater Azerbaijan was divided between Russia and Persia. 2479:
http://www.kiffer.us/azeri_info/history_of_azerbaijan-emb.htm
111:
section when the groups are listed, clearly says ā€œlanguagesā€
768:
Very convincing. Iā€™m also waiting for your another account
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speak an Iranian language. So please kindly knock it off. ā€”
4785:
The social organization, religion and culture of Iran was "
4738:
The Iranian cultures that emerged, following conquests by
3568:(6) Babak Khorramdin was a Turk who fought against Persia. 6506:. I'm okay with it as it was before Shervink changed it. 5390:
Ocean Wave, why does it have to be a religious symbol?? ā€”
4366:
want to tidy it up a bit by upgrading the quality of the
4063:
and the hundreds of other users who made this a reality.
2879:. And this is a footnote on that page for the sentence: 978:
Maps and hidden ancient/contemporary non-Iranic languages
379:
grouping, then Iranian peoples should talk about Iranian
197:
Please add your detailed comments and discussions here.
6593:
Now that would be a dream come true... who's with me? --
5918:...primarily defined by their usage of Iranian languages 4397:
This paragraph is simply racist. What is meant by being
4225:'d, though I'll post a note on his talk page to confirm. 3654:(3) Turks have been in the Caucasus for over 5000 Years. 3553:(3) Turks have been in the Caucasus for over 5000 Years. 3529:
http://www.rozanehmagazine.com/NoveDec05/PARTIIAzar.html
6347:
Who inhabits Iran today? Can you tell me Azeris do not?
5504: 4401:?. It promotes racial purity which is totally absurd. 398:
this page to Iranian demographics or include Azeris.
5350:
Simurgh is not bad as it is cultural not religious.
2351:
Azeri people used to speak an Iranian language (See
6379:. But I think you did not want to do that, right? 4644:. Tombseye, I found an article you should look at: 772:to come up with a similar story. And what was this 295:Very nice. You invented a new ethnicity, congrats. 6067:. If you think the sources are sufficient, please 4153:says "by Pierre-EugĆØne-Emile HĆ©bert", uploaded by 3297:http://www.muslimsonline.com/babri/azerbaijan1.htm 6620:On the matter of Germanic and Slavic Aryanisms... 5774:Perhaps you would like to read his first comment 5335:Yes, I agree. How is this anti-Muslim behavior? ā€” 4051:on the English Knowledge. A special thank you to 3797:Sustained migrations across a long period of time 1289:Do you think Azeris belong to this group or not? 858:So? Itā€™s still Turkic-speaking people, isnā€™t it? 832:Columbia Encyclopedia entry on Azerbaijani people 5512:, and in Iran and Afghanistan people believe in 846:, make up about 90% of the republicā€™s population 3905:Nasidze I, Sarkisian T, Kerimov A, Stoneking M. 5413:LOL, how it is not. it is; read what it says: 3821:(d) The Cavalli-Sforza et al. Genetic Studies. 3563:(5) Sattar Khan was a pan-Turanian separatist. 340:Iranic peoples such as Skythians or Parthians. 6030:http://www.joshuaproject.net/affinitybloc.php 3895:Azeris are mixed of Armeno-Iranian heritage: 1618:groups are defined mainly based on language. 6736: 6308:--like Persians, Lurs, Baluch and Bakhtiari" 5415:Faravahar is a prominent guardian spirit in 4486:"Iraqi Kurds are an eclectic Iranian people" 3705:Gokalp was in fact a Kurd born in Diyarbakr. 842:The Azeri (Azerbaijani), a Turkic-speaking, 1755:(spoken during the final centuries BC, the 700:on Iranian and Persian related topics. See 6065:primarily defined based on their languages 4641:who started this article in December 2004 4295:Thanks a lot for your prompt response.Ā :) 2233:tribes who settled the area between lower 1325:we should do the same for Iranian peoples 685:Goodbye and hope you enjoy your arguments 169:, with a very short comment next to it. 6710: 5693:symbols of the Iranian people! I see. -- 4987: 4599:Tombseye comments against me to Khoikhoi 4561:conquests, the various empires based in 6762: 5557:insult and I recommend you to refrain. 4371:issues and serves its basic function. - 4181:totally no evidence this is free. from 3807:Dispersals forced by climactic changes. 3391:Britannica Concise Encyclopedia Article 3149:how should we classify Armenians then? 2229:family, are descended from a group of 1603:academic source to establish the fact. 844:Shiite Muslim people of Persian culture 683:. I will be leaving it to you guys... 163:do not mix this section with discussion 14: 3860:GENETIC PROOF THAT AZERIS ARE IRANIANS 1652:See the way other groups are arranged: 535:and the nonsense that was said there: 365:no research but source an explanation. 328:"Iranian peoples" (or more correctly: 44:Do not edit the contents of this page. 5523:, which is also a Zoroastrian belief. 4368:Image:Moderniranianlanguagesmap24.PNG 4228:I've left a note on the talk page of 4066:Let's see what #2000 will bring... -- 2936:Putting a footnote, the author says: 2221:), defined as speakers of one of the 556:mention it though, I do not). It has 4633:This part is also very interesting: 888:But it is already there. Please see 25: 4215:and the statement lost when it was 3558:(4) The Safavid Empire was Turkish. 413:The Iranian Peoples of the Caucasus 23: 3773:(c) The Analyses of Colin Renfrew. 3727:of Azerbaijan and Iran in general. 418:Indo-Iranian Languages and Peoples 24: 6797: 6691:on a regular basis. I hold your 6326:. Are you assuming Iranian ethno- 5708:also belongs to anciant people. 5494:So now Zarathustra has become an 4251:Image:President of tajikistan.jpg 4173:Image:President of tajikistan.jpg 3802:Population dispersals by farming, 2068:If you choose to think that I am 1935:page or other related pages. The 1747:peoples are the nations speaking 1021:Prior to Dbachmann's recent edit 911:It should be stated more boldly. 5508:are celebrating the Zoroastrian 4286:Cool, thanks for the help guys! 4106: 526:The Problems of including Azeris 117:Ethnic and cultural assimilation 29: 5018:article, and an image from the 4752:Islamic conquest of Afghanistan 4646:Knowledge:Ownership_of_articles 3263:EncyclopƦdia Britannica Article 1452:All other factors are secondary 6320:Iranian ethno-linguistic group 6306:Iranian ethno-linguistic group 1569:reliable and reputable sources 511:Various articles in issues of 200:I personally think, ther term 13: 1: 6377:speakers of Iranian languages 6353:Do you have any other quote? 4244:Image:Persian local woman.jpg 4167:Image:Persian local woman.jpg 2401:speakers of Iranian languages 1246:Speakers of Iranian languages 6336:Second quoting from above: 4537:not. That's how this works. 4211:was created and uploaded by 7: 4265:Thanks for the heads-upĀ :) 4083: 10: 6802: 4748:Islamic conquest of Persia 4103:Jordanhill railway station 4040:Featured article milestone 3968:Khoikhoi donā€™t change it! 2882:Pahlavi/Fahlavi-dialects). 1239:You are making a mistake. 1155:Regarding the editing wars 6583:23:04, 15 June 2006 (UTC) 6573:16:08, 15 June 2006 (UTC) 6551:11:09, 17 June 2006 (UTC) 6541:17:14, 17 June 2006 (UTC) 6525:04:19, 16 June 2006 (UTC) 6511:23:06, 15 June 2006 (UTC) 6497:16:14, 15 June 2006 (UTC) 6479:23:04, 15 June 2006 (UTC) 6460:15:32, 15 June 2006 (UTC) 6446:09:18, 15 June 2006 (UTC) 6434:04:53, 15 June 2006 (UTC) 6418:03:06, 15 June 2006 (UTC) 6400:01:16, 15 June 2006 (UTC) 6369:16:55, 14 June 2006 (UTC) 6358:06:43, 14 June 2006 (UTC) 6290:00:00, 14 June 2006 (UTC) 6279:23:48, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 6260:23:40, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 6231:23:38, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 6206:23:35, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 6180:23:33, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 6158:23:27, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 6137:23:20, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 6114:23:18, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 6099:16:39, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 6088:16:34, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 6076:16:19, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 6043:21:51, 14 June 2006 (UTC) 5988:16:16, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5964:15:55, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5943:15:17, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5931:15:11, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5907:11:30, 14 June 2006 (UTC) 5891:09:17, 14 June 2006 (UTC) 5876:07:15, 14 June 2006 (UTC) 5858:01:46, 14 June 2006 (UTC) 5841:23:32, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 5816:23:30, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 5785:23:13, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 5760:16:04, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 5742:12:23, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 5727:12:11, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 5717:11:35, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 5700:08:31, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 5682:08:19, 13 June 2006 (UTC) 5668:18:06, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5647:17:55, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5618:17:41, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5592:17:36, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5562:17:25, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5540:17:10, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5474:17:29, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5451:17:04, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5429:16:42, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5397:15:14, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5374:15:14, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5355:15:06, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5342:14:49, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5330:12:26, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5302:14:42, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5274:11:41, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5244:11:18, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5222:11:06, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5190:10:55, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5165:10:46, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5139:11:13, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5109:11:03, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5069:10:32, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5048:10:15, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5027:10:09, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 5005:09:54, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 4977:09:42, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 4955:09:18, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 4939:08:57, 12 June 2006 (UTC) 4915:23:58, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4893:21:06, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4867:20:39, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4845:20:23, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4819:20:16, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4796:20:08, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4777:20:04, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4766:19:58, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4721:20:17, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4698:20:11, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4680:20:05, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4664:17:12, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4653:14:28, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4629:13:26, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4619:13:23, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4593:17:08, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4583:13:15, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4542:17:07, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4524:13:08, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4510:09:44, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4499:08:36, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4475:17:33, 10 June 2006 (UTC) 4457:17:13, 10 June 2006 (UTC) 4441:17:04, 10 June 2006 (UTC) 4428:16:10, 10 June 2006 (UTC) 4417:15:52, 10 June 2006 (UTC) 4333:15:39, 11 June 2006 (UTC) 4307:05:11, 10 June 2006 (UTC) 4253:with the correct details. 4237:Image:PazyrikHorseman.JPG 4161:Image:PazyrikHorseman.JPG 4076:A job well done everyone! 2399:Then change its title to 679:and like arguments, then 6705:05:46, 7 July 2006 (UTC) 6682:23:18, 6 July 2006 (UTC) 6672:19:00, 6 July 2006 (UTC) 6659:17:38, 6 July 2006 (UTC) 6642:17:34, 6 July 2006 (UTC) 6631:17:29, 6 July 2006 (UTC) 6615:06:35, 5 July 2006 (UTC) 4744:Hellenistic civilization 4605:had no part in creating. 4393:Racial Purity? Again?!!! 4387:16:24, 9 June 2006 (UTC) 4376:07:30, 9 June 2006 (UTC) 4291:17:24, 9 June 2006 (UTC) 4280:16:59, 9 June 2006 (UTC) 4200:05:23, 9 June 2006 (UTC) 4126:20:45, 8 June 2006 (UTC) 4116:19:23, 8 June 2006 (UTC) 4092:15:58, 8 June 2006 (UTC) 4071:15:39, 8 June 2006 (UTC) 4035:15:00, 8 June 2006 (UTC) 4022:02:30, 5 June 2006 (UTC) 4006:Map is original research 4000:02:39, 5 June 2006 (UTC) 3978:01:40, 1 June 2006 (UTC) 3962:05:01, 22 May 2006 (UTC) 3946:04:10, 22 May 2006 (UTC) 3886:08:45, 16 May 2006 (UTC) 3620:Republic of Azerbaijan). 3495:07:35, 23 May 2006 (UTC) 3465:02:40, 23 May 2006 (UTC) 3439:10:44, 22 May 2006 (UTC) 3349:10:17, 22 May 2006 (UTC) 3312:08:19, 22 May 2006 (UTC) 3285:05:26, 22 May 2006 (UTC) 3220:01:10, 22 May 2006 (UTC) 3154:14:52, 21 May 2006 (UTC) 3088:01:10, 22 May 2006 (UTC) 3019:14:41, 21 May 2006 (UTC) 2946:09:09, 21 May 2006 (UTC) 2823:06:11, 21 May 2006 (UTC) 2813:05:30, 21 May 2006 (UTC) 2743:22:46, 20 May 2006 (UTC) 2697:22:17, 20 May 2006 (UTC) 2655:12:54, 20 May 2006 (UTC) 2611:22:17, 20 May 2006 (UTC) 2573:12:40, 20 May 2006 (UTC) 2528:07:20, 20 May 2006 (UTC) 2435:20:48, 19 May 2006 (UTC) 2408:12:39, 19 May 2006 (UTC) 2383:12:11, 19 May 2006 (UTC) 2366:17:07, 18 May 2006 (UTC) 2331:16:38, 18 May 2006 (UTC) 2129:01:32, 22 May 2006 (UTC) 2078:22:03, 20 May 2006 (UTC) 2028:20:44, 19 May 2006 (UTC) 1981:10:10, 19 May 2006 (UTC) 1945:01:46, 19 May 2006 (UTC) 1926: 1898:14:37, 18 May 2006 (UTC) 1862:14:18, 18 May 2006 (UTC) 1832:13:51, 18 May 2006 (UTC) 1821:, but Germans also have 1778:13:02, 18 May 2006 (UTC) 1751:, idioms descended from 1640:12:27, 18 May 2006 (UTC) 1623:12:22, 18 May 2006 (UTC) 1608:11:52, 18 May 2006 (UTC) 1539:11:38, 18 May 2006 (UTC) 1493:09:30, 18 May 2006 (UTC) 1459:08:02, 18 May 2006 (UTC) 1410:18:23, 17 May 2006 (UTC) 1384:13:21, 17 May 2006 (UTC) 1363:13:08, 17 May 2006 (UTC) 1336:14:22, 17 May 2006 (UTC) 1310:12:54, 17 May 2006 (UTC) 1294:12:42, 17 May 2006 (UTC) 1258:12:13, 17 May 2006 (UTC) 1229:12:13, 17 May 2006 (UTC) 1209:00:23, 17 May 2006 (UTC) 1190:07:39, 16 May 2006 (UTC) 1176:19:36, 15 May 2006 (UTC) 1165:16:18, 15 May 2006 (UTC) 1141:21:13, 14 May 2006 (UTC) 1115:19:10, 14 May 2006 (UTC) 1092:17:52, 14 May 2006 (UTC) 1074:15:41, 14 May 2006 (UTC) 1062:14:01, 14 May 2006 (UTC) 1039:16:21, 13 May 2006 (UTC) 1029:14:53, 13 May 2006 (UTC) 1011:14:50, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 998:13:33, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 988:12:38, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 973:00:23, 13 May 2006 (UTC) 963:14:48, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 944:10:35, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 916:10:06, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 895:07:14, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 876:07:09, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 863:07:03, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 853:06:59, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 827:08:09, 15 May 2006 (UTC) 808:14:46, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 780:11:47, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 750:07:09, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 729:06:07, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 718:05:48, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 708:05:21, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 692:05:11, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 654:04:39, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 645:04:32, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 624:04:16, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 607:03:46, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 595:and it's been confirmed 583:01:19, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 550:00:34, 12 May 2006 (UTC) 521:03:42, 11 May 2006 (UTC) 474:05:25, 21 May 2006 (UTC) 403:23:35, 10 May 2006 (UTC) 350:20:26, 10 May 2006 (UTC) 323:19:53, 10 May 2006 (UTC) 300:07:31, 10 May 2006 (UTC) 260:06:52, 10 May 2006 (UTC) 236:06:39, 10 May 2006 (UTC) 181:01:53, 10 May 2006 (UTC) 6424:Removing the dipute tag 6385:So how about removing: 6128:ancient Iranian peoples 6126:He's talking about the 3953:Ancient Iranian peoples 3519:talk:Azarbaijani people 2648:Ancient Iranian peoples 1823:Demographics of Germany 1561:Knowledge:Verifiability 500:From Scythia to Camelot 136:09:11, 9 May 2006 (UTC) 125:06:50, 9 May 2006 (UTC) 6745:, by Ehsan Yarshater, 6689:reverse discrimination 6395:Hope this would help. 5206:My comment is 2 parts: 4993: 4312:Image:AmazonBattle.JPG 4230:Image:AmazonBattle.JPG 4151:Image:AmazonBattle.JPG 3757:admixture within them. 2353:Ancient Azari language 2291:Balto-Finnic languages 2227:Indo-European language 4991: 4257:Image:Hazara Girl.jpg 4188:Heads up, guys!Ā :( -- 4179:Image:Hazara Girl.jpg 1794:Not necessarily. See 371:exist for the use of 227:) 02:22, 10 May 2006. 215:comment was added by 42:of past discussions. 6771:, by Frank L. Holt, 6693:institutional racism 4905:Anti-Muslim behavior 4809:century a return to 4097:Commemorative Plaque 1819:Demographics of Iran 1817:I know we also have 1759:of Northern Europe). 513:Archaeology Magazine 18:Talk:Iranian peoples 6719:, by Richard Frye, 4740:Alexander the Great 4316:Image:Faravahar.png 4209:Image:Faravahar.png 4163:Complete unsourced. 4141:Image:Faravahar.png 2799:. In the article: 1937:Azeribaijani people 675:If you do not like 533:Talk:Kurdish people 460:. In the article: 4994: 2294:(Finnic languages) 2225:, a branch of the 1853:or Iranic peoples. 1757:Pre-Roman Iron Age 1749:Germanic languages 1573:cite these sources 1571:. Articles should 681:Knowledge is yours 667:I am not sure how 576:thousand years ago 6698:scientific racism 6024: 6010:comment added by 5272: 5107: 5016:Culture of Greece 4937: 4344:History sections? 4335: 4305: 4282: 4207:It's likely that 4198: 4044:This page is the 1889:cite your sources 1633:the discussion -- 1528:Iranian languages 1204:article is about 677:civil discussions 228: 103: 102: 54: 53: 48:current talk page 6793: 6786: 6766: 6760: 6740: 6734: 6714: 6612: 6607: 6602: 6597: 6539: 6135: 6041: 6023: 6004: 5986: 5941: 5929: 5395: 5340: 5264: 5099: 5020:Church of Greece 4929: 4330: 4322: 4299: 4277: 4269: 4224: 4218: 4192: 4110: 4085: 4049:featured article 4032: 3998: 3976: 3960: 3698:(a) Ziya Gokalp. 3325:Germanic peoples 3268:any member of a 3008:Germanic peoples 2566:Germanic peoples 2223:Baltic languages 1928: 1896: 1812:Germanic peoples 1800:Imperial Germans 1728:Germanic peoples 1616:ethno-linguistic 1444:linguistic group 1436:ethno-linguistic 727: 562:half a mellenium 377:ethno-linguistic 210: 81: 56: 55: 33: 32: 26: 6801: 6800: 6796: 6795: 6794: 6792: 6791: 6790: 6789: 6767: 6763: 6741: 6737: 6715: 6711: 6652:Talk:Aryan race 6622: 6610: 6605: 6600: 6595: 6591: 6558: 6535: 6426: 6324:Iranian peoples 6318:Also, it says: 6304:"The Kurds, an 6131: 6051: 6037: 6005: 6000: 5982: 5937: 5925: 5914: 5503:that asked the 5391: 5336: 4907: 4735: 4601: 4554: 4395: 4346: 4329: 4320: 4276: 4267: 4222: 4216: 4155:User:Kowloonese 4134: 4099: 4078: 4042: 4028: 4015:User:Imperial78 4008: 3994: 3972: 3956: 3943:Iranian Patriot 3939: 3893: 3862: 3513: 1892: 1532:Iranian peoples 1157: 1047: 1026:SouthernComfort 1019: 980: 834: 770:Gharib Ghorbati 723: 572:Iranian peoples 528: 423:Iranian peoples 373:Iranian peoples 211:ā€”The preceding 202:Iranian peoples 195: 155:Iranian peoples 144: 108: 77: 30: 22: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 6799: 6788: 6787: 6761: 6735: 6708: 6664: 6663: 6662: 6661: 6645: 6644: 6621: 6618: 6590: 6587: 6586: 6585: 6557: 6556:A new addition 6554: 6544: 6543: 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2758: 2757: 2756: 2755: 2754: 2753: 2752: 2751: 2750: 2749: 2748: 2747: 2746: 2745: 2716: 2715: 2714: 2713: 2712: 2711: 2710: 2709: 2708: 2707: 2706: 2705: 2704: 2703: 2702: 2701: 2700: 2699: 2694:Ali doostzadeh 2672: 2671: 2670: 2669: 2668: 2667: 2666: 2665: 2664: 2663: 2662: 2661: 2660: 2659: 2658: 2657: 2628: 2627: 2626: 2625: 2624: 2623: 2622: 2621: 2620: 2619: 2618: 2617: 2616: 2615: 2614: 2613: 2608:Ali doostzadeh 2588: 2587: 2586: 2585: 2584: 2583: 2582: 2581: 2580: 2579: 2578: 2577: 2576: 2575: 2541: 2540: 2539: 2538: 2537: 2536: 2535: 2534: 2533: 2532: 2531: 2530: 2525:Ali doostzadeh 2509: 2508: 2507: 2506: 2505: 2504: 2503: 2502: 2501: 2500: 2499: 2498: 2475: 2474: 2473: 2472: 2471: 2470: 2469: 2468: 2467: 2466: 2465: 2464: 2448: 2446: 2445: 2444: 2443: 2442: 2441: 2440: 2439: 2438: 2437: 2418: 2417: 2416: 2415: 2414: 2413: 2412: 2411: 2390: 2389: 2388: 2387: 2386: 2385: 2371: 2370: 2369: 2368: 2357:Azeris#Origins 2346: 2345: 2344: 2343: 2342: 2341: 2340: 2339: 2338: 2337: 2336: 2335: 2334: 2333: 2310: 2309: 2308: 2307: 2306: 2305: 2304: 2303: 2302: 2301: 2300: 2299: 2298: 2297: 2275:Finnic peoples 2259: 2258: 2257: 2256: 2255: 2254: 2253: 2252: 2251: 2250: 2249: 2248: 2247: 2246: 2203:Baltic peoples 2182: 2181: 2180: 2179: 2178: 2177: 2176: 2175: 2174: 2173: 2172: 2171: 2170: 2169: 2152: 2151: 2150: 2149: 2148: 2147: 2146: 2145: 2144: 2143: 2142: 2141: 2140: 2139: 2138: 2137: 2136: 2135: 2134: 2133: 2132: 2131: 2100: 2099: 2098: 2097: 2096: 2095: 2094: 2093: 2092: 2091: 2090: 2089: 2088: 2087: 2086: 2085: 2084: 2083: 2082: 2081: 2047: 2046: 2045: 2044: 2043: 2042: 2041: 2040: 2039: 2038: 2037: 2036: 2035: 2034: 2033: 2032: 2031: 2030: 1999: 1998: 1997: 1996: 1995: 1994: 1993: 1992: 1991: 1990: 1989: 1988: 1987: 1986: 1985: 1984: 1958: 1957: 1956: 1955: 1954: 1953: 1952: 1951: 1950: 1949: 1948: 1947: 1911: 1910: 1909: 1908: 1907: 1906: 1905: 1904: 1903: 1902: 1901: 1900: 1874: 1873: 1872: 1871: 1870: 1869: 1868: 1867: 1866: 1865: 1854: 1841: 1840: 1839: 1838: 1837: 1836: 1835: 1834: 1815: 1785: 1784: 1783: 1782: 1781: 1780: 1766: 1765: 1764: 1763: 1762: 1761: 1753:Proto-Germanic 1735: 1734: 1733: 1732: 1731: 1730: 1720: 1719: 1718: 1717: 1716: 1715: 1704: 1703: 1702: 1701: 1700: 1699: 1689: 1688: 1687: 1686: 1685: 1684: 1673: 1672: 1671: 1670: 1669: 1668: 1666:Slavic peoples 1658: 1657: 1656: 1655: 1654: 1653: 1645: 1644: 1643: 1642: 1627: 1626: 1557: 1556: 1555: 1554: 1553: 1552: 1551: 1550: 1549: 1548: 1547: 1546: 1545: 1544: 1543: 1542: 1508: 1507: 1506: 1505: 1504: 1503: 1502: 1501: 1500: 1499: 1498: 1497: 1496: 1495: 1473: 1472: 1471: 1470: 1469: 1468: 1467: 1466: 1465: 1464: 1463: 1462: 1421: 1420: 1419: 1418: 1417: 1416: 1415: 1414: 1413: 1412: 1393: 1392: 1391: 1390: 1389: 1388: 1387: 1386: 1370: 1369: 1368: 1367: 1366: 1365: 1347: 1346: 1345: 1344: 1343: 1342: 1339: 1315: 1314: 1313: 1312: 1299: 1298: 1297: 1296: 1284: 1283: 1282: 1281: 1271: 1270: 1269: 1268: 1262: 1261: 1236: 1235: 1234: 1233: 1232: 1231: 1216: 1215: 1214: 1213: 1212: 1211: 1196: 1195: 1194: 1193: 1179: 1178: 1156: 1153: 1152: 1151: 1150: 1149: 1148: 1147: 1146: 1145: 1144: 1143: 1124: 1123: 1122: 1121: 1120: 1119: 1118: 1117: 1099: 1098: 1097: 1096: 1095: 1094: 1079: 1078: 1077: 1076: 1051:Zoroastrianism 1046: 1043: 1042: 1041: 1018: 1015: 1014: 1013: 1002: 1001: 979: 976: 955: 954: 953: 952: 951: 950: 949: 948: 947: 946: 926: 925: 924: 923: 922: 921: 920: 919: 902: 901: 900: 899: 898: 897: 881: 880: 879: 878: 866: 865: 833: 830: 819: 818: 817: 816: 815: 814: 813: 812: 811: 810: 791: 790: 789: 788: 787: 786: 785: 784: 783: 782: 757: 756: 755: 754: 753: 752: 742: 734: 733: 732: 731: 665: 664: 663: 662: 661: 660: 659: 658: 657: 656: 631: 630: 629: 628: 627: 626: 612: 611: 610: 609: 586: 585: 566: 565: 527: 524: 497: 496: 495: 494: 493: 492: 491: 490: 489: 488: 487: 486: 485: 484: 483: 482: 481: 480: 479: 478: 477: 476: 471:Ali doostzadeh 406: 405: 394: 393: 389: 388: 353: 352: 344: 341: 333: 316: 315: 314: 313: 312: 311: 310: 309: 308: 307: 306: 305: 284: 283: 282: 281: 280: 279: 278: 277: 267: 266: 265: 264: 263: 262: 248: 247: 246: 245: 194: 191: 190: 189: 185: 143: 140: 139: 138: 107: 106:Iranian people 104: 101: 100: 95: 92: 87: 82: 75: 70: 65: 62: 52: 51: 34: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 6798: 6784: 6781: 6777: 6774: 6770: 6765: 6758: 6755: 6751: 6748: 6744: 6739: 6732: 6729: 6725: 6722: 6718: 6713: 6709: 6707: 6706: 6703: 6699: 6694: 6690: 6684: 6683: 6680: 6674: 6673: 6670: 6660: 6657: 6653: 6649: 6648: 6647: 6646: 6643: 6640: 6635: 6634: 6633: 6632: 6629: 6626: 6617: 6616: 6613: 6608: 6603: 6598: 6584: 6581: 6577: 6576: 6575: 6574: 6571: 6567: 6563: 6553: 6552: 6549: 6542: 6538: 6533: 6530: 6529: 6526: 6523: 6519: 6516: 6515: 6512: 6509: 6505: 6502: 6501: 6498: 6495: 6491: 6488: 6487: 6480: 6477: 6472: 6471: 6470: 6469: 6468: 6467: 6461: 6458: 6453: 6452: 6451: 6450: 6447: 6444: 6441: 6438: 6437: 6436: 6435: 6432: 6419: 6416: 6412: 6408: 6404: 6403: 6402: 6401: 6398: 6393: 6389: 6386: 6383: 6380: 6378: 6370: 6367: 6362: 6361: 6360: 6359: 6356: 6346: 6345: 6344: 6343: 6339: 6338: 6337: 6329: 6325: 6321: 6317: 6314: 6313: 6312: 6311: 6307: 6303: 6302: 6301: 6298: 6291: 6288: 6284: 6283: 6282: 6280: 6277: 6261: 6258: 6257: 6252: 6251: 6250: 6249: 6248: 6247: 6246: 6245: 6244: 6243: 6232: 6229: 6225: 6224: 6223: 6222: 6221: 6220: 6219: 6218: 6217: 6216: 6207: 6204: 6203: 6197: 6196: 6195: 6194: 6193: 6192: 6191: 6190: 6181: 6178: 6173: 6172: 6171: 6170: 6169: 6168: 6167: 6166: 6159: 6156: 6155: 6150: 6149: 6148: 6147: 6146: 6145: 6138: 6134: 6129: 6125: 6124: 6123: 6122: 6121: 6120: 6115: 6112: 6111: 6106: 6105: 6104: 6103: 6100: 6097: 6093: 6092: 6089: 6086: 6081: 6080: 6079: 6077: 6074: 6070: 6066: 6062: 6057: 6044: 6040: 6035: 6034: 6033: 6031: 6025: 6021: 6017: 6013: 6009: 5989: 5985: 5980: 5976: 5975: 5974: 5973: 5972: 5971: 5965: 5962: 5958: 5954: 5950: 5949: 5948: 5947: 5944: 5940: 5935: 5934: 5933: 5932: 5928: 5923: 5920:. The Azeris 5919: 5909: 5908: 5905: 5900: 5892: 5889: 5888: 5882: 5881: 5880: 5879: 5878: 5877: 5874: 5868: 5864: 5860: 5859: 5856: 5842: 5839: 5838: 5833: 5832: 5831: 5830: 5829: 5828: 5827: 5826: 5817: 5814: 5809: 5805: 5800: 5799: 5798: 5797: 5796: 5795: 5794: 5793: 5786: 5783: 5782: 5776: 5773: 5772: 5771: 5770: 5769: 5768: 5761: 5758: 5753: 5752: 5751: 5750: 5749: 5748: 5743: 5740: 5739: 5733: 5732: 5731: 5730: 5729: 5728: 5725: 5719: 5718: 5715: 5709: 5701: 5698: 5697: 5692: 5688: 5687: 5686: 5685: 5684: 5683: 5680: 5676: 5670: 5669: 5666: 5648: 5645: 5641: 5640: 5639: 5638: 5637: 5636: 5635: 5634: 5633: 5632: 5631: 5630: 5619: 5616: 5611: 5610: 5609: 5608: 5607: 5606: 5605: 5604: 5603: 5602: 5593: 5590: 5585: 5581: 5577: 5576: 5575: 5574: 5573: 5572: 5571: 5570: 5563: 5560: 5555: 5554: 5553: 5552: 5551: 5550: 5541: 5538: 5535: 5532: 5529: 5525: 5522: 5518: 5515: 5511: 5506: 5502: 5497: 5493: 5492: 5491: 5490: 5489: 5488: 5487: 5486: 5475: 5472: 5468: 5467: 5466: 5465: 5464: 5463: 5462: 5461: 5460: 5459: 5452: 5449: 5448: 5442: 5441: 5440: 5439: 5438: 5437: 5430: 5427: 5422: 5420: 5418: 5412: 5411: 5410: 5409: 5408: 5407: 5398: 5394: 5389: 5388: 5387: 5386: 5385: 5384: 5383: 5382: 5375: 5372: 5371: 5366: 5365: 5364: 5363: 5362: 5361: 5356: 5353: 5349: 5348: 5347: 5346: 5343: 5339: 5334: 5333: 5332: 5331: 5328: 5324: 5320: 5316: 5303: 5300: 5299: 5294: 5291: 5290: 5289: 5288: 5287: 5286: 5285: 5284: 5275: 5271: 5269: 5263: 5259: 5258: 5257: 5256: 5255: 5254: 5253: 5252: 5245: 5242: 5241: 5235: 5234: 5233: 5232: 5231: 5230: 5223: 5220: 5216: 5213: 5208: 5205: 5204: 5203: 5202: 5201: 5200: 5191: 5188: 5187: 5182: 5181: 5180: 5179: 5178: 5177: 5176: 5175: 5166: 5163: 5158: 5157: 5156: 5155: 5154: 5153: 5152: 5151: 5140: 5137: 5136: 5130: 5129: 5128: 5127: 5126: 5125: 5124: 5123: 5122: 5121: 5110: 5106: 5104: 5098: 5094: 5090: 5086: 5085: 5084: 5083: 5082: 5081: 5080: 5079: 5078: 5077: 5070: 5067: 5066: 5061: 5060: 5059: 5058: 5057: 5056: 5049: 5046: 5042: 5038: 5037: 5036: 5035: 5034: 5033: 5028: 5025: 5021: 5017: 5012: 5011: 5010: 5009: 5006: 5003: 5000: 4996: 4995: 4990: 4978: 4975: 4970: 4969: 4968: 4967: 4966: 4965: 4964: 4963: 4956: 4953: 4948: 4947: 4946: 4945: 4944: 4943: 4940: 4936: 4934: 4928: 4924: 4919: 4918: 4917: 4916: 4913: 4894: 4891: 4890: 4884: 4883: 4882: 4881: 4880: 4879: 4878: 4877: 4868: 4865: 4860: 4859: 4858: 4857: 4856: 4855: 4854: 4853: 4846: 4843: 4842: 4837: 4832: 4831: 4830: 4829: 4828: 4827: 4820: 4817: 4812: 4807: 4806: 4805: 4804: 4803: 4802: 4797: 4794: 4793: 4788: 4784: 4783: 4782: 4781: 4778: 4775: 4770: 4769: 4768: 4767: 4764: 4763: 4756: 4755: 4753: 4749: 4745: 4741: 4722: 4719: 4718: 4713: 4712: 4711: 4710: 4709: 4708: 4707: 4706: 4699: 4696: 4691: 4690: 4689: 4688: 4687: 4686: 4681: 4678: 4677: 4671: 4670: 4669: 4668: 4665: 4662: 4657: 4656: 4655: 4654: 4651: 4647: 4643: 4640: 4636: 4631: 4630: 4627: 4621: 4620: 4617: 4611: 4610: 4608: 4606: 4594: 4591: 4587: 4586: 4585: 4584: 4581: 4575: 4574: 4572: 4568: 4564: 4560: 4543: 4540: 4535: 4534: 4533: 4532: 4531: 4530: 4525: 4522: 4517: 4516: 4515: 4514: 4511: 4508: 4503: 4502: 4501: 4500: 4497: 4492: 4487: 4476: 4473: 4468: 4467: 4466: 4465: 4464: 4463: 4458: 4455: 4450: 4449: 4448: 4447: 4442: 4439: 4435: 4434: 4433: 4432: 4429: 4426: 4421: 4420: 4419: 4418: 4415: 4411: 4409: 4402: 4400: 4388: 4385: 4380: 4379: 4378: 4377: 4374: 4369: 4363: 4360: 4355: 4350: 4334: 4328: 4323: 4317: 4313: 4310: 4309: 4308: 4303: 4298: 4294: 4293: 4292: 4289: 4285: 4284: 4283: 4281: 4275: 4270: 4258: 4255: 4252: 4249:I've updated 4248: 4245: 4242:I agree that 4241: 4238: 4234: 4231: 4227: 4221: 4214: 4210: 4206: 4205: 4204: 4203: 4202: 4201: 4196: 4191: 4183: 4180: 4177: 4174: 4171: 4168: 4165: 4162: 4159: 4156: 4152: 4149: 4146: 4142: 4139: 4138: 4137: 4132:Image sources 4127: 4124: 4120: 4119: 4118: 4117: 4114: 4109: 4104: 4094: 4093: 4090: 4086: 4073: 4072: 4069: 4064: 4062: 4058: 4054: 4050: 4047: 4037: 4036: 4033: 4031: 4024: 4023: 4020: 4016: 4011: 4001: 3997: 3992: 3991: 3990: 3979: 3975: 3970: 3969: 3967: 3966: 3965: 3964: 3963: 3959: 3954: 3950: 3949: 3948: 3947: 3944: 3934: 3933: 3932:72.57.230.179 3927: 3926: 3921: 3920: 3916: 3911: 3906: 3903: 3902: 3901: 3900: 3896: 3888: 3887: 3884: 3883:72.57.230.179 3880: 3876: 3875:WEST EURASIAN 3872: 3867: 3866: 3857: 3856: 3855:72.57.230.179 3851: 3850: 3845: 3844: 3843:civilization. 3840: 3837: 3833: 3832: 3828: 3827: 3823: 3822: 3818: 3817: 3812: 3809: 3808: 3804: 3803: 3799: 3798: 3794: 3793: 3789: 3786: 3785: 3780: 3779: 3775: 3774: 3769: 3768: 3763: 3762: 3758: 3753: 3750: 3749: 3744: 3741: 3740: 3735: 3734: 3729: 3728: 3723: 3722: 3716: 3715: 3710: 3709: 3706: 3703: 3699: 3695: 3692: 3691: 3688: 3683: 3682: 3678: 3677: 3672: 3669: 3668: 3664: 3659: 3658: 3655: 3651: 3650: 3645: 3644: 3640: 3637: 3636: 3631: 3628: 3627: 3622: 3621: 3616: 3613: 3612: 3607: 3606: 3602: 3601: 3597: 3594: 3593: 3589: 3588: 3584: 3583: 3578: 3575: 3574: 3570: 3569: 3565: 3564: 3560: 3559: 3555: 3554: 3550: 3549: 3545: 3544: 3540: 3537: 3536: 3531: 3530: 3525: 3522: 3520: 3496: 3493: 3488: 3487: 3486: 3485: 3484: 3483: 3482: 3481: 3480: 3479: 3478: 3477: 3466: 3463: 3458: 3457: 3456: 3455: 3454: 3453: 3452: 3451: 3450: 3449: 3440: 3437: 3434: 3432: 3428: 3427: 3426: 3425: 3424: 3423: 3422: 3421: 3412: 3408: 3407: 3406: 3405: 3404: 3403: 3402: 3401: 3392: 3389: 3387: 3384: 3383: 3382: 3381: 3380: 3379: 3378: 3377: 3366: 3365: 3364: 3363: 3362: 3361: 3360: 3359: 3350: 3347: 3343: 3342:Latin peoples 3338: 3336: 3333: 3330: 3326: 3322: 3321: 3320: 3319: 3318: 3317: 3316: 3315: 3314: 3313: 3310: 3298: 3293: 3292: 3291: 3290: 3289: 3288: 3287: 3286: 3283: 3277: 3276: 3274: 3271: 3270:Turkic people 3265: 3264: 3260: 3259: 3255: 3221: 3218: 3213: 3212: 3211: 3210: 3209: 3208: 3207: 3206: 3205: 3204: 3203: 3202: 3201: 3200: 3199: 3198: 3197: 3196: 3195: 3194: 3193: 3192: 3191: 3190: 3189: 3188: 3187: 3186: 3185: 3184: 3155: 3152: 3147: 3146: 3145: 3144: 3143: 3142: 3141: 3140: 3139: 3138: 3137: 3136: 3135: 3134: 3133: 3132: 3131: 3130: 3129: 3128: 3127: 3126: 3125: 3124: 3123: 3122: 3121: 3120: 3089: 3086: 3082: 3078: 3077: 3076: 3075: 3074: 3073: 3072: 3071: 3070: 3069: 3068: 3067: 3066: 3065: 3064: 3063: 3062: 3061: 3060: 3059: 3058: 3057: 3056: 3055: 3054: 3053: 3052: 3051: 3050: 3049: 3020: 3017: 3013: 3012:Latin peoples 3009: 3005: 3001: 3000: 2999: 2998: 2997: 2996: 2995: 2994: 2993: 2992: 2991: 2990: 2989: 2988: 2987: 2986: 2985: 2984: 2983: 2982: 2981: 2980: 2979: 2978: 2977: 2976: 2975: 2974: 2947: 2944: 2940: 2935: 2934: 2933: 2932: 2931: 2930: 2929: 2928: 2927: 2926: 2925: 2924: 2923: 2922: 2921: 2920: 2919: 2918: 2917: 2916: 2915: 2914: 2913: 2912: 2911: 2910: 2883: 2878: 2874: 2873: 2872: 2871: 2870: 2869: 2868: 2867: 2866: 2865: 2864: 2863: 2862: 2861: 2860: 2859: 2858: 2857: 2856: 2855: 2854: 2853: 2852: 2851: 2850: 2849: 2824: 2821: 2816: 2815: 2814: 2811: 2807: 2802: 2798: 2794: 2789: 2788: 2787: 2786: 2785: 2784: 2783: 2782: 2781: 2780: 2779: 2778: 2777: 2776: 2775: 2774: 2773: 2772: 2771: 2770: 2769: 2768: 2767: 2744: 2741: 2736: 2735: 2734: 2733: 2732: 2731: 2730: 2729: 2728: 2727: 2726: 2725: 2724: 2723: 2722: 2721: 2720: 2719: 2718: 2717: 2698: 2695: 2690: 2689: 2688: 2687: 2686: 2685: 2684: 2683: 2682: 2681: 2680: 2679: 2678: 2677: 2676: 2675: 2674: 2673: 2656: 2653: 2649: 2644: 2643: 2642: 2641: 2640: 2639: 2638: 2637: 2636: 2635: 2634: 2633: 2632: 2631: 2630: 2629: 2612: 2609: 2604: 2603: 2602: 2601: 2600: 2599: 2598: 2597: 2596: 2595: 2594: 2593: 2592: 2591: 2590: 2589: 2574: 2571: 2567: 2563: 2559: 2558:Latin peoples 2556:Mexicans are 2555: 2554: 2553: 2552: 2551: 2550: 2549: 2548: 2547: 2546: 2545: 2544: 2543: 2542: 2529: 2526: 2521: 2520: 2519: 2518: 2517: 2516: 2515: 2514: 2513: 2512: 2511: 2510: 2497: 2493: 2492: 2491: 2490: 2489: 2488: 2487: 2486: 2485: 2484: 2483: 2482: 2481: 2480: 2461: 2460: 2459: 2458: 2457: 2456: 2455: 2454: 2453: 2452: 2451: 2450: 2449: 2436: 2433: 2428: 2427: 2426: 2425: 2424: 2423: 2422: 2421: 2420: 2419: 2409: 2406: 2402: 2398: 2397: 2396: 2395: 2394: 2393: 2392: 2391: 2384: 2381: 2377: 2376: 2375: 2374: 2373: 2372: 2367: 2364: 2363: 2358: 2354: 2350: 2349: 2348: 2347: 2332: 2329: 2324: 2323: 2322: 2321: 2320: 2319: 2318: 2317: 2316: 2315: 2314: 2313: 2312: 2311: 2295: 2292: 2288: 2284: 2283:Baltic-Finnic 2280: 2276: 2273: 2272: 2271: 2270: 2269: 2268: 2267: 2266: 2265: 2264: 2263: 2262: 2261: 2260: 2244: 2240: 2236: 2232: 2231:Indo-European 2228: 2224: 2220: 2216: 2212: 2208: 2204: 2200: 2196: 2195: 2194: 2193: 2192: 2191: 2190: 2189: 2188: 2187: 2186: 2185: 2184: 2183: 2166: 2165: 2164: 2163: 2162: 2161: 2160: 2159: 2158: 2157: 2156: 2155: 2154: 2153: 2130: 2127: 2122: 2121: 2120: 2119: 2118: 2117: 2116: 2115: 2114: 2113: 2112: 2111: 2110: 2109: 2108: 2107: 2106: 2105: 2104: 2103: 2102: 2101: 2079: 2076: 2071: 2067: 2066: 2065: 2064: 2063: 2062: 2061: 2060: 2059: 2058: 2057: 2056: 2055: 2054: 2053: 2052: 2051: 2050: 2049: 2048: 2029: 2026: 2021: 2017: 2016: 2015: 2014: 2013: 2012: 2011: 2010: 2009: 2008: 2007: 2006: 2005: 2004: 2003: 2002: 2001: 2000: 1982: 1979: 1974: 1973: 1972: 1971: 1970: 1969: 1968: 1967: 1966: 1965: 1964: 1963: 1962: 1961: 1960: 1959: 1946: 1943: 1938: 1934: 1933:Turko-Iranian 1929: 1923: 1922: 1921: 1920: 1919: 1918: 1917: 1916: 1915: 1914: 1913: 1912: 1899: 1895: 1890: 1886: 1885: 1884: 1883: 1882: 1881: 1880: 1879: 1878: 1877: 1876: 1875: 1863: 1860: 1855: 1851: 1850: 1849: 1848: 1847: 1846: 1845: 1844: 1843: 1842: 1833: 1830: 1829: 1824: 1820: 1816: 1813: 1809: 1805: 1801: 1797: 1796:Ethnic German 1793: 1792: 1791: 1790: 1789: 1788: 1787: 1786: 1779: 1776: 1772: 1771: 1770: 1769: 1768: 1767: 1760: 1758: 1754: 1750: 1746: 1741: 1740: 1739: 1738: 1737: 1736: 1729: 1726: 1725: 1724: 1723: 1722: 1721: 1713: 1710: 1709: 1708: 1707: 1706: 1705: 1698: 1697:Latin peoples 1695: 1694: 1693: 1692: 1691: 1690: 1682: 1679: 1678: 1677: 1676: 1675: 1674: 1667: 1664: 1663: 1662: 1661: 1660: 1659: 1651: 1650: 1649: 1648: 1647: 1646: 1641: 1638: 1637: 1631: 1630: 1629: 1628: 1624: 1621: 1617: 1612: 1611: 1610: 1609: 1606: 1602: 1597: 1596: 1592: 1591: 1587: 1586: 1582: 1581: 1577: 1576: 1574: 1570: 1564: 1562: 1540: 1537: 1533: 1529: 1524: 1523: 1522: 1521: 1520: 1519: 1518: 1517: 1516: 1515: 1514: 1513: 1512: 1511: 1510: 1509: 1494: 1491: 1487: 1486: 1485: 1484: 1483: 1482: 1481: 1480: 1479: 1478: 1477: 1476: 1475: 1474: 1460: 1457: 1453: 1449: 1445: 1441: 1437: 1433: 1432: 1431: 1430: 1429: 1428: 1427: 1426: 1425: 1424: 1423: 1422: 1411: 1408: 1403: 1402: 1401: 1400: 1399: 1398: 1397: 1396: 1395: 1394: 1385: 1382: 1378: 1377: 1376: 1375: 1374: 1373: 1372: 1371: 1364: 1361: 1358: 1356: 1353: 1352: 1351: 1350: 1349: 1348: 1340: 1337: 1334: 1330: 1326: 1321: 1320: 1319: 1318: 1317: 1316: 1311: 1308: 1303: 1302: 1301: 1300: 1295: 1292: 1288: 1287: 1286: 1285: 1280: 1278: 1275: 1274: 1273: 1272: 1266: 1265: 1264: 1263: 1259: 1256: 1251: 1247: 1242: 1241:Only language 1238: 1237: 1230: 1227: 1222: 1221: 1220: 1219: 1218: 1217: 1210: 1207: 1202: 1201: 1200: 1199: 1198: 1197: 1191: 1188: 1183: 1182: 1181: 1180: 1177: 1174: 1169: 1168: 1167: 1166: 1163: 1142: 1139: 1134: 1133: 1132: 1131: 1130: 1129: 1128: 1127: 1126: 1125: 1116: 1113: 1112: 1107: 1106: 1105: 1104: 1103: 1102: 1101: 1100: 1093: 1090: 1085: 1084: 1083: 1082: 1081: 1080: 1075: 1072: 1068: 1067: 1066: 1065: 1064: 1063: 1060: 1056: 1052: 1040: 1037: 1033: 1032: 1031: 1030: 1027: 1023: 1012: 1009: 1004: 1003: 999: 996: 992: 991: 990: 989: 986: 975: 974: 971: 965: 964: 961: 945: 942: 941: 936: 935: 934: 933: 932: 931: 930: 929: 928: 927: 917: 914: 910: 909: 908: 907: 906: 905: 904: 903: 896: 893: 890: 887: 886: 885: 884: 883: 882: 877: 874: 870: 869: 868: 867: 864: 861: 857: 856: 855: 854: 851: 847: 845: 839: 829: 828: 825: 809: 806: 801: 800: 799: 798: 797: 796: 795: 794: 793: 792: 781: 778: 774: 771: 767: 766: 765: 764: 763: 762: 761: 760: 759: 758: 751: 748: 743: 740: 739: 738: 737: 736: 735: 730: 726: 721: 720: 719: 716: 712: 711: 710: 709: 706: 705:203.48.45.194 703: 699: 694: 693: 690: 689:203.48.45.194 686: 682: 678: 673: 670: 655: 652: 648: 647: 646: 643: 639: 638: 637: 636: 635: 634: 633: 632: 625: 622: 618: 617: 616: 615: 614: 613: 608: 605: 601: 598: 594: 590: 589: 588: 587: 584: 581: 580:203.48.45.194 577: 573: 568: 567: 563: 559: 554: 553: 552: 551: 548: 542: 541: 536: 534: 523: 522: 519: 514: 509: 507: 506:The Scythians 503: 501: 475: 472: 468: 463: 459: 455: 450: 449: 448: 447: 446: 445: 444: 443: 442: 441: 440: 439: 438: 437: 436: 435: 434: 433: 432: 431: 430: 429: 428: 425: 424: 420: 419: 415: 414: 410: 404: 401: 400:203.48.45.194 396: 395: 391: 390: 386: 382: 378: 374: 370: 366: 362: 361: 360: 359: 351: 348: 345: 342: 338: 334: 331: 327: 326: 325: 324: 321: 303: 302: 301: 298: 294: 293: 292: 291: 290: 289: 288: 287: 286: 285: 275: 274: 273: 272: 271: 270: 269: 268: 261: 258: 254: 253: 252: 251: 250: 249: 243: 242: 241: 240: 239: 237: 234: 229: 226: 222: 218: 217:203.48.45.194 214: 208: 203: 198: 188: 187: 186: 183: 182: 179: 178:203.48.45.194 174: 170: 168: 164: 159: 156: 152: 147: 137: 134: 133:203.48.45.194 129: 128: 127: 126: 123: 118: 112: 99: 96: 93: 91: 88: 86: 83: 80: 76: 74: 71: 69: 66: 63: 61: 58: 57: 49: 45: 41: 40: 35: 28: 27: 19: 6768: 6764: 6742: 6738: 6716: 6712: 6685: 6675: 6665: 6623: 6592: 6559: 6548:Persian Magi 6545: 6531: 6517: 6503: 6489: 6439: 6431:Persian Magi 6427: 6411:Richard Frye 6397:Persian Magi 6394: 6390: 6387: 6384: 6381: 6376: 6373: 6355:Persian Magi 6352: 6335: 6327: 6323: 6319: 6305: 6299: 6294: 6272: 6255: 6201: 6153: 6109: 6068: 6064: 6060: 6055: 6052: 6026: 6001: 5998:Irano-Median 5956: 5952: 5921: 5917: 5915: 5904:Persian Magi 5901: 5897: 5886: 5873:Persian Magi 5869: 5865: 5861: 5855:Persian Magi 5851: 5836: 5780: 5737: 5724:Persian Magi 5720: 5714:Persian Magi 5710: 5706: 5695: 5690: 5679:Persian Magi 5671: 5661: 5583: 5579: 5530: 5520: 5495: 5446: 5416: 5414: 5369: 5312: 5297: 5292: 5267: 5239: 5185: 5134: 5102: 5092: 5088: 5064: 4932: 4908: 4888: 4840: 4810: 4791: 4786: 4761: 4757: 4737: 4736: 4716: 4675: 4634: 4632: 4622: 4612: 4603: 4602: 4576: 4556: 4555: 4485: 4483: 4414:Heja Helweda 4407: 4404: 4403: 4398: 4396: 4364: 4358: 4353: 4351: 4347: 4297:pfctdayelise 4264: 4190:pfctdayelise 4187: 4135: 4100: 4079: 4065: 4043: 4029: 4025: 4012: 4009: 3988: 3940: 3928: 3922: 3919: 3914: 3912: 3909: 3904: 3898: 3897: 3894: 3878: 3874: 3868: 3863: 3852: 3847: 3846: 3841: 3838: 3835: 3834: 3830: 3829: 3825: 3824: 3820: 3819: 3814: 3813: 3810: 3806: 3805: 3801: 3800: 3796: 3795: 3791: 3790: 3787: 3783: 3781: 3777: 3776: 3772: 3770: 3765: 3764: 3761:references). 3759: 3755: 3754: 3751: 3746: 3745: 3742: 3737: 3736: 3731: 3730: 3725: 3724: 3719: 3717: 3712: 3711: 3707: 3704: 3700: 3697: 3696: 3693: 3689: 3686: 3684: 3680: 3679: 3674: 3673: 3670: 3665: 3661: 3660: 3656: 3653: 3652: 3647: 3646: 3642: 3641: 3638: 3633: 3632: 3629: 3624: 3623: 3618: 3617: 3614: 3609: 3608: 3604: 3603: 3599: 3598: 3595: 3591: 3590: 3586: 3585: 3580: 3579: 3576: 3572: 3571: 3567: 3566: 3562: 3561: 3557: 3556: 3552: 3551: 3547: 3546: 3542: 3541: 3538: 3533: 3532: 3526: 3516: 3514: 3429: 3409: 3390: 3385: 3328: 3306: 3278: 3269: 3267: 3266: 3262: 3261: 3257: 3256: 3252: 2937: 2880: 2876: 2804: 2800: 2792: 2765: 2494: 2476: 2447: 2400: 2362:- K a s h 2361: 2293: 2282: 2281:, sometimes 2278: 2274: 2218: 2210: 2202: 2198: 2069: 1828:- K a s h 1827: 1804:Volga German 1744: 1742: 1711: 1680: 1636:- K a s h 1635: 1615: 1600: 1598: 1594: 1593: 1589: 1588: 1584: 1583: 1579: 1578: 1566: 1565: 1558: 1531: 1527: 1451: 1447: 1443: 1439: 1438:consists of 1435: 1354: 1328: 1324: 1276: 1249: 1245: 1240: 1173:Rugsnotbombs 1158: 1111:- K a s h 1110: 1048: 1020: 981: 966: 956: 940:- K a s h 939: 843: 841: 835: 824:Rugsnotbombs 820: 747:Persian Magi 697: 695: 684: 680: 676: 674: 668: 666: 575: 571: 561: 557: 543: 538: 537: 529: 510: 508:-Same here. 504: 498: 465: 461: 453: 426: 421: 416: 411: 407: 384: 383:rather than 380: 376: 372: 368: 364: 354: 336: 329: 317: 230: 206: 201: 199: 196: 184: 175: 171: 166: 162: 160: 154: 150: 148: 145: 116: 113: 109: 78: 43: 37: 6778:(retrieved 6752:(retrieved 6726:(retrieved 6702:Lord Loxley 6669:Lord Loxley 6628:Lord Loxley 6049:Dispute tag 6006:ā€”Preceding 5957:A number of 4559:Hellenistic 4113:SteveRwanda 3879:EAST ASIAN. 3733:(Brittany). 3702:supporters. 3667:ideologues. 3492:Grandmaster 3436:Grandmaster 3386:Azerbaijani 3346:Grandmaster 3282:Grandmaster 3258:Azerbaijani 3151:Grandmaster 3016:Grandmaster 2820:Grandmaster 2570:Grandmaster 2562:Anglo-Irish 2380:Grandmaster 2328:Grandmaster 1810:as well as 1775:Grandmaster 1605:Grandmaster 1490:Grandmaster 1407:Grandmaster 1360:Grandmaster 1291:Grandmaster 892:Grandmaster 860:Grandmaster 777:Grandmaster 715:Grandmaster 651:Grandmaster 621:Grandmaster 558:a mellenium 297:Grandmaster 257:Grandmaster 207:nationality 36:This is an 6776:0520211405 6750:052120092X 6724:0521200938 6328:linguistic 5804:Ocean Wave 5615:Ocean Wave 5559:Ocean Wave 5527:Haft-Seen. 5501:Tajikistan 5471:Ocean Wave 5426:Ocean Wave 5352:Ocean Wave 5323:Bazrangids 5219:Ocean Wave 5162:Ocean Wave 5045:Ocean Wave 5002:Ocean Wave 4912:Ocean Wave 4787:completley 4639:User:Mani1 4573:invasions. 4567:Caliphates 4302:translate? 4235:I've left 4220:NowCommons 4195:translate? 4068:Slgrandson 4046:thousandth 2237:and upper 2215:Lithuanian 2070:nitpicking 1580:The policy 593:sockpuppet 540:centruies. 151:exact term 6679:Omerlives 6562:Ossetians 6281:shervink 6256:K a s h 6202:K a s h 6154:K a s h 6110:K a s h 6078:shervink 5887:K a s h 5837:K a s h 5781:K a s h 5738:K a s h 5696:K a s h 5580:Faravahar 5531:Faravahar 5447:K a s h 5370:K a s h 5319:Scythians 5298:K a s h 5240:K a s h 5186:K a s h 5135:K a s h 5089:that's it 5065:K a s h 4889:K a s h 4841:K a s h 4792:K a s h 4762:K a s h 4717:K a s h 4676:K a s h 4552:Diversity 4408:more pure 4213:Paradoxic 4145:Paradoxic 4030:Cydeā†”Weys 2289:speaking 1450:and that 1434:The word 1341:See also: 937:Agreed -- 698:probation 669:confirmed 375:for only 167:like this 146:Editors, 98:ArchiveĀ 9 90:ArchiveĀ 7 85:ArchiveĀ 6 79:ArchiveĀ 5 73:ArchiveĀ 4 68:ArchiveĀ 3 60:ArchiveĀ 1 6656:Genomist 6639:Tombseye 6580:Tombseye 6537:Khoikhoi 6508:Tombseye 6476:Tombseye 6462:shervink 6457:Shervink 6415:Tombseye 6407:Shervink 6366:Tombseye 6322:and not 6287:Tombseye 6276:Shervink 6228:Tombseye 6177:Tombseye 6133:Khoikhoi 6096:Tombseye 6085:Tombseye 6073:Shervink 6039:Khoikhoi 6020:contribs 6008:unsigned 5984:Khoikhoi 5966:shervink 5961:Shervink 5939:Khoikhoi 5927:Khoikhoi 5813:Tombseye 5757:Tombseye 5675:Ferdowsi 5665:Tombseye 5516:(sepand) 5393:Khoikhoi 5338:Khoikhoi 4923:Italians 4864:Tombseye 4816:Tombseye 4774:Tombseye 4733:Disputed 4695:Tombseye 4661:Tombseye 4650:Kouroush 4626:Kouroush 4616:Kouroush 4590:Tombseye 4580:Kouroush 4539:Tombseye 4521:Kouroush 4507:Tombseye 4496:Kouroush 4472:Tombseye 4425:Tombseye 4384:Tombseye 4318:though. 4288:Tombseye 4123:Tombseye 4057:Khoikhoi 4053:Tombseye 3996:Khoikhoi 3974:Khoikhoi 3958:Khoikhoi 3877:and not 2740:Tombseye 2432:Tombseye 2410:shervink 2405:Shervink 2126:Tombseye 2080:shervink 2075:Shervink 2025:Tombseye 1983:shervink 1978:Shervink 1942:Tombseye 1927:Khoikhoi 1894:Khoikhoi 1864:shervink 1859:Shervink 1745:Germanic 1625:shervink 1620:Shervink 1601:unbiased 1541:shervink 1536:Shervink 1461:shervink 1456:Shervink 1381:Tombseye 1338:shervink 1333:Shervink 1307:Tombseye 1260:shervink 1255:Shervink 1226:Tombseye 1192:shervink 1187:Shervink 1162:Tombseye 1138:Tombseye 1089:Tombseye 1059:Tombseye 1055:Fravashi 1036:Tombseye 1008:Tombseye 1000:shervink 995:Shervink 960:Tombseye 918:shervink 913:Shervink 805:Tombseye 725:Khoikhoi 642:Tombseye 604:Tombseye 547:Tombseye 518:Tombseye 385:speakers 369:no proof 225:contribs 213:unsigned 6780:11 June 6754:11 June 6728:11 June 6566:Hazaras 6532:Support 6522:Sean WI 6518:Support 6504:support 6490:support 6440:support 5981:page. ā€” 5315:Simurgh 5024:Silence 4998:symbol: 4565:, Arab 4454:Silence 4373:Silence 4084:Aytakin 4019:Zereshk 3930:Turks. 3663:legacy. 2287:nations 2235:Vistula 2207:Latvian 1808:Germans 1250:Iranian 1206:abdulnr 970:abdulnr 381:peoples 358:abdulnr 320:abdulnr 176:Thanks 39:archive 6570:Amir85 6012:Salios 5912:Azeris 5582:(btw: 5514:Espand 5510:Nowruz 5496:Afghan 5327:Amir85 5214:, etc. 5212:Nawruz 4836:Sufism 4571:Turkic 4569:, and 4563:Persia 3368:other. 3080:people 2564:) are 2279:Fennic 2243:Dneper 2219:baltai 1053:, the 1017:BC/BCE 985:Togrol 330:Iranic 6596:ĶĩřĪ²Č³ 6494:Aldux 6443:Tājik 6429:tag. 6069:quote 5922:don't 5644:Tajik 5589:Tajik 5537:Tajik 4992:Allah 4974:Tajik 4811:Aryan 4438:Tajik 4321:GeeJo 4268:GeeJo 4010:All, 3690:FALSE 3657:FALSE 3273:Iran. 2652:Tajik 2239:Dvina 2211:balti 2199:Balts 2168:also: 1924:Yes, 1329:ethno 1071:Tajik 873:ManiF 850:ManiF 347:Tajik 233:Sampa 16:< 6783:2006 6773:ISBN 6757:2006 6747:ISBN 6731:2006 6721:ISBN 6606:ŤÄÆɱƩ 6056:hide 6016:talk 5955:and 5953:Some 5691:Iran 4750:and 4399:pure 4359:both 4354:both 4089:Talk 4087:) | 4061:Zmmz 3951:See 3721:ā€œXā€. 2241:and 2197:The 1743:The 848:" -- 838:this 836:See 702:here 597:here 221:talk 6700:. 6564:to 6534:. ā€” 6130:. ā€” 6061:not 5808:dab 5584:Far 5521:Fāl 5325:). 5321:to 5262:dab 5097:dab 5093:all 4952:Gol 4927:dab 4327:(c) 4274:(c) 4081:--( 3955:. ā€” 2201:or 1440:two 840:: " 367:If 337:not 153:of 122:Gol 6199:-- 6022:) 6018:ā€¢ 5505:UN 5444:-- 5043:. 4759:-- 4754:). 4746:, 4673:-- 4331:ā€¢ 4278:ā€¢ 4223:}} 4217:{{ 4059:, 4055:, 3307:-- 3010:, 3006:, 2217:: 2213:, 2209:: 1806:, 1802:, 1798:, 1563:. 1454:? 775:? 687:. 238:) 223:ā€¢ 94:ā†’ 64:ā† 6785:) 6759:) 6733:) 6611:Ƙ 6601:ā™„ 6014:( 5270:) 5268:į› 5266:( 5105:) 5103:į› 5101:( 4935:) 4933:į› 4931:( 4452:- 4412:. 4324:ā„ 4304:) 4300:( 4271:ā„ 4197:) 4193:( 3685:' 2296:. 2277:( 2245:. 2205:( 1814:. 1714:. 1683:. 219:( 50:.

Index

Talk:Iranian peoples
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current talk page
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Gol
06:50, 9 May 2006 (UTC)
203.48.45.194
09:11, 9 May 2006 (UTC)
203.48.45.194
01:53, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
unsigned
203.48.45.194
talk
contribs
Sampa
06:39, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
Grandmaster
06:52, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
Grandmaster
07:31, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
abdulnr
19:53, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
Tajik
20:26, 10 May 2006 (UTC)

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