List Of Buryats
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List Of Buryats
{{short description, None This is a list of notable ethnic Buryats, sorted by field and last name regardless of citizenship / nationality. Buryat ethnicity is associated with one's father's ethnicity alone. In case mother is of another ethnicity it is not specifically expressed. Buryats are also sorted in :Buryat people. Territorially related are List of Mongolians, :People from Buryatia, :People from Zabaykalsky Krai. Scientists * Byambyn Rinchen (1905–1977) — Mongolian linguist and historian, also fiction writer and poet * Gombojab Tsybikov (1873–1930) — early photographer of Tibet, ethnographer and historian * Tsyben Zhamtsarano (1881–1942) — ethnographer and historian, Corresponding Member of the Academy of the Soviet Union, also a politician in Russia and Mongolia, pan-mongolist Writers * Sengiin Erdene (1929–2000) — novelist from Mongolia Actors * Valéry Inkijinoff (1895–1973) — film and theatre actor in the Soviet Union and France * Irina Pant ...
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Buryats
The Buryats ( bua, Буряад, Buryaad; mn, Буриад, Buriad) are a Mongolic peoples, Mongolic ethnic group native to southeastern Siberia who speak the Buryat language. They are one of the two largest indigenous groups in Siberia, the other being the Yakuts. The majority of the Buryats today live in their titular homeland, the Republic of Buryatia, a Federal subjects of Russia, federal subject of Russia which sprawls along the southern coast and partially straddles the Lake Baikal. Smaller groups of Buryats also inhabit Ust-Orda Buryat Okrug (Irkutsk Oblast) and the Agin-Buryat Okrug (Zabaykalsky Krai) which are to the west and east of Buryatia respectively as well as northeastern Mongolia and Inner Mongolia, Inner Mongolia, China. They traditionally formed the major northern subgroup of the Mongols. Buryats share many customs with other Mongols, including nomadic herding, and erecting Yurt, gers for shelter. Today the majority of Buryats live in and around Ulan-Ude, the ...
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