Tatarei

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The Great Tartary in North and Central Asia (1754)
Carte de la Petite Tartarie from 1785 (essentially the Khanate of Crimea )
The map Tartaria, sive magni Chami Imperium (Amsterdam 1705) published by Nicolaas Witsen
a Tatar flag with a silant on a yellow background

Tatarei (also: Tartarei ) was the name for a large region in Central Asia , North Asia and parts of Eastern Europe until the end of the 18th century . This country was the homeland of the Tatars , as the Mongols and the Turkic peoples were generally referred to by the Europeans. The rulership of the Mongolian Empire and its successor states covered large parts of the Tatar region.

The historical name Tatarei was used by Europeans from the Middle Ages to the 19th century , but is no longer in use today. The Tatarei gradually lost its importance, as the political and ethnic conditions changed with the expansion of the Russian Empire and the Russian settlement and the process of assimilation by the Russian Empire was completed with the dissolution of Free Tartary at the beginning of the 19th century.

The Tatarei was divided into different parts, which were named as follows:

supporting documents

  1. Volume III, MZ - Encyclopaedia Britannica; or, A dictionary of arts and sciences, compiled upon a new plan… - Encyclopaedia Britannica - National Library of Scotland. Retrieved March 15, 2019 .
  2. Laurence Echard: Diccionario geografico universal: que comprehende la descripcion de las quatro partes del mundo; y de las naciones, imperios, reynos, repúblicas, y otros estados ... & que se encuentran en el globo terraqueo . en la Imprenta de Don Joseph Doblado, 1795 ( google.com [accessed March 15, 2019]).
  3. Denis PETAU: The History of the World; Or, an Account of Time. Compiled by the Learned D. Petavius, and Continued by Others, to the Year ... 1659. Together with a Geographical Description of Europe, Asia, Africa and America. [Edited by RP] 1659 ( google.fi [accessed March 15, 2019]).