Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-30T01:55:20.418Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Caucasus: One or Many? A View from the Region

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Svetlana Akkieva*
Affiliation:
Institute of Humanities, Nal'chik, Republic of Kabardino-Balkaria, Russia. Email: [email protected]

Extract

For all its geographical, cultural and political uniqueness, the definition of the Caucasus as a region is problematic. Geographers, geologists, political scientists, anthropologists and historians—all have disagreements between themselves and each other about such issues as what constitutes its borders, and what are the features of both its homogeneity and heterogeneity. Often, the use by representatives of one discipline of the conclusions and terminology from other disciplines in order to substantiate their positions complicates the problem even further. In any case, in general geographical terms the Caucasus is the territory between the Black, Azov and Caspian Seas, extending from the Kuma-Manych depression in the north to Georgia's and Armenia's borders with Turkey, and Azerbaijan's borders with Iran in the south. In physical-geological terms the Caucasus is predominantly a mountainous region which is shaped by the trajectories of the two mountain ranges, namely the Greater and Lesser Caucasus. The trajectory of the Greater Caucasus represents a diagonal stretching from the north-west to the southeast, while the trajectory of the Lesser Caucasus forms an ellipsoidal bow. At the Suram Passage the Lesser and Greater Caucasus practically merge. The Caucasus mountain range is divided lengthwise into the western Caucasus which stretches to Elbrus; the central Caucasus, which is between the Elbrus and Kazbek mountains; and the eastern Caucasus, which is to the east of the Kazbek.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2008 Association for the Study of Nationalities 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abdulatinov, R. G. “Caucasian Civilization: Originality and Integrity.” Caucasian Scientific Thought, no. 1 (1995): 1827.Google Scholar
Avksentiev, V. A. “The Theoretical Dimension of Ethnic Processes in the North Caucasus.” In Ethnic Processes at the End of the XX Century. Stavropol, 1998.Google Scholar
Avksentiev, V. A. “Problems of Formation of New Forms of Conflict-Free Interethnic Relations in the North Caucasus.” Contemporary Ethnic Problems, no. 5 (1999).Google Scholar
Bubenok, O. “Multi-ethnic Conflicts in the Central Caucasus: Prerequisites, Development and Future Predictions.” Central Asia and the Caucasus, no. 3 (15) (2001): 108–10.Google Scholar
Bzhezhinsky, E. Large Chess Board. Moscow, 1999.Google Scholar
Coppiters, B.Introduction to Georgia and Abkhazia.” In Path to Reconciliation. Moscow: Kraft, 1998.Google Scholar
Cutler, R. “About Mutual Energy Security in the South Caucasus.” Caucasian Regional Research, no. 1 (1996).Google Scholar
Damenia, O. N. “Problems of Identification of Caucasian Culture.” Vestnik AGU, no. 1 (1998).Google Scholar
Damenia, O. N.The Revelation of Cultures.” In Sketches of Caucasian Culture. Maikop: AGU, 2001: 63127.Google Scholar
Damenia, O. N. “On Caucasian Cultural Entities: Myth or Reality?” Caucasian Scientific Thought, no. 1 (2002): 4556.Google Scholar
Dzidzoev, V. D. From the Union of the Mountain Peoples of the North Caucasus and Dagestan to the Mountain ASSR (1917–1924). Vladikavkaz, 2003.Google Scholar
Gadzhiev, K. S. Geopolitics of the Caucasus. Moscow: Mezhdunarodnye Otnoshenia, 2001.Google Scholar
Gatagova, L. S. “The Caucasus after the Caucasian Wars: The Ethno-confessional Aspect.” In Russia and the Caucasus through Two Centuries. St. Petersburg, 1991.Google Scholar
Geography of Russia. Encyclopaedia. Moscow: Nauka, 1998.Google Scholar
History of the Ancient East. Moscow: Nauka, 1983.Google Scholar
History of the Armenian People. Yerevan, 1951.Google Scholar
History of Azerbaijan. Vol. 2. Baku, 1960.Google Scholar
History of Georgia. Tbilisi, 1946.Google Scholar
History of the Peoples of the North Caucasus: From Antiquity to the End of the Seventeenth Century. Moscow: Nauka, 1988.Google Scholar
History of the Peoples of the North Caucasus from the End of the XVIII Century till 1917. Moscow: Nauka, 1988.Google Scholar
History of the USSR. Vol. 3. Moscow, 1986.Google Scholar
Ismailov, E. “The Geopolitical Premises of the Economic Integration of the Central Caucasus.” Proceedings of the Scientific-Practical Conference “Azerbaijan in the XXI Century.” Baku, 2004.Google Scholar
Ismailov, E., and Kengerly, E. About the Meaning of the “Caucasus”: Geopolitical Prerequisites for the Economic Integration of the Central Caucasus. Baku: Azerbaijani Institute of Strategic Research, 2002.Google Scholar
Levin, M., and Cheboksarov, N. “Hozyaistvenno-kul'turnye tipy i istoriko-etnograficheskie oblasti (K postanovke problemy).” Soviet Ethnography, no. 4 (1955).Google Scholar
Magomedov, M. G. History of Dagestan from Antiquity to the End of the XIX Century. Vol. 1. Makhachkala, 1997.Google Scholar
Nodiya, G.Conflict in Abkhazia: National Projects and Political Development.” In Path to Reconciliation. Moscow: Kraft, 1998.Google Scholar
Novoseltsev, A. P. “Caucasian Albania: Problems, Difficulties, Roads to Negotiation.” Vostok, no. 5 (1991).Google Scholar
Panarin, S. A. “Territorial and Historical Factors in Caucasian Politics.” Journal of Social Sciences and Modernity, no. 4 (2003).Google Scholar
Peoples of Russia. Encyclopaedia. Moscow: Nauka, 1994.Google Scholar
Political Map of the USSR. Moscow: Kartografia, 1976.Google Scholar
Remote Regions of the Russian Empire: Formation and Establishment of the System of Administration. Moscow: Vostochnaya Literatura, 1998.Google Scholar
Sampiev, I. M. “National Politics and Ethno-political Specifics of the Situation in the North Caucasus.” In Caucasian Regions: Paths to Stabilisation. Rostov-upon-Don, 1998.Google Scholar
Shadzhe, A. Y.The Phenomenon of the Caucasian Identity.” In Sketches of Caucasian Culture. Maikop: AGU, 2001: 128–12.Google Scholar
Shepotev, A. O. “On Disputed Territories.” News of the Academy of Sciences of Azerbaijan, no. 2 (1990): 4262.Google Scholar
Shnirelman, V. A. “Memory of War.” In Myths, Identities and Politics in Transcaucasia. Moscow, 2003.Google Scholar
Thagapsoev, H. G.Regarding Caucasian Cultural Societies.” Vestnik of the Russian Academy of Sciences 69, no. 2 (1999): 130–13.Google Scholar
Vinogradov, B. V. The Caucasus in the Politics of Paul I (1796–1801). Armavir, 1999.Google Scholar