Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. The Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, [a] abbreviated as Buryat ASSR, [b] was an autonomous republic of the Russian SFSR within the Soviet Union.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BuryatiaBuryatia - Wikipedia

    In 1958, the name "Mongol" was removed from the name of the republic and simply became the Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of Buryatia within the vast multi-ethnic, diverse Soviet Union. The Ivolginsky Datsan was opened in 1945 as the only Buddhist spiritual centre of the USSR, home to the Central Spiritual Board of Buddhists of the USSR ...

  3. An Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (ASSR, ‹See Tfd› Russian: автономная советская социалистическая республика, АССР, romanized: avtonomnaya sovetskaya sotsialisticheskaya respublika) was a type of administrative unit in the Soviet Union (USSR), created for certain ethnic groups to be the titular nations of.

  4. It was created in 1923 by the union of the Buryat-Mongol and Mongolo-Buryat autonomous oblasti (provinces) and was called the Buryat-Mongol Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic until 1958 and simply the Buryat A.S.S.R. from then until 1991.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. The Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, abbreviated as Buryat ASSR, was an autonomous republic of the Russian SFSR within the Soviet Union.

  6. Buriat Mongolia, now an Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of the Soviet Union, includes in its population less than 300,000 Buriats, roughly one-tenth of the total Mongolian population of the world.

  7. Sep 1, 2016 · The Buryat-Mongol and Kazakh (Alash) Indigenous intellectuals synthesized local ideas and the globally circulating notions of national self-determination, enlightenment and democracy when articulating political unity of Indigenous peoples in national terms.