Kizil Su

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See also: Kizilsu

English[edit]

English Wikipedia has an article on:
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Proper noun[edit]

Kizil Su

  1. Synonym of Kizilsu
    • 1972, Theodore Shabad, China's Changing Map National and Regional Development, 1949-71[1], Praeger Publishers, page 317:
      The Kirghiz chou lies along the south slopes of the Tien Shan, which here forms the frontier between Sinkiang and the Kirghiz S.S.R. of the Soviet Union. It is named for the Kizil Su, rendered phonetically in Chinese as K'o-tzu-le-su, the Kirghiz designation of the Kashgar River.
    • 1980, Sinkiang Uighur[2], Encyclopedia Britannica, page 795:
      There are five autonomous districts (tzu-chih-chou): Bayan Gol Mongol (Pa-yin-kuo-leng-meng-ku), Boro Tala Mongol (Po-erh-t'a-la-meng-ku), Ch'ang-chi Hui (Chang-chi-hui-tsu), Ili Kazakh (I-li-ha-sa-k'o), and Kizil Su Kirghiz (K'o-tzu-lo-su-k'o-erh-k'o-tzu).
    • 2001, Hermann Kreutzmann, “Yak keeping in Western High Asia: Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Southern Xinjiang Pakistan”, in Food and Agriculture Organization[3]:
      Administratively, the Kara Köl grazing zone forms part of the Aqto division, which is one of the four subunits of the Kizil Su Autonomous Oblast where the majority of China's 119 300 Kirghiz reside (data of 1994). The majority of the Kirghiz of Kizil Su has become sedentary agriculturists, while the inhabitants of the higher Pamirs continue to follow mobile livestock husbandry exclusively.
    • 2012, Hermann Kreutzmann, editor, Pastoral practices in High Asia: Agency of 'development' effected by modernisation, resettlement and transformation[4], Springer, →ISBN, page 110:
      In this case study, the changes that have occurred to the Kirghiz pastoralists living in Little Kara Köl of present Akto County (Fig. 6.1) within Kizil Su Kirghiz Autonomous Prefecture (Xinjiang, People's Republic of China) will be examined in the light of external interventions leading to recent modernisation processes with significant impact on their livelihoods.

Translations[edit]