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Tien Shan mountain chain Panoramic view of the Tien Shan mountain chain in Kyrgyzstan. © Michal Knitl/Shutterstock.com To the southwest are two great hollows, the and another valley close to Mount Khan-Tengri.
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The latter valley is bounded by the westward-thrusting arms of the Kungey-Alatau and Terskey-Alatau ranges and contains (Issyk-Kul), whose clear deep waters are fed by the snow-covered peaks. The rugged mountain-and-basin structure of much of the country, and the high alpine plateau of the central and eastern regions, are separated from the Fergana Valley on the west by the, running southeast to northwest, which merges into the. The Chatkal Range is linked to the by a final enclosing range, the. The only other important lowlands in the country are the and Talas river valleys in the north, with the capital, Bishkek, located in the Chu. The country’s lowland areas, though occupying only one-seventh of the total area, are home to most of its people. Chu River The Chu River, in the Chu Valley, near Millyanfan, Kyrgyzstan.
Vladimir Menkov Climate Kyrgyzstan’s great distance from the oceans and the sharp change of elevation from plains strongly influence the country’s climate. Deserts and plains surround Kyrgyzstan on the north, west, and southeast, making the contrast with the climate and landscape of its mountainous interior all the more striking. The lower parts of its fringing ranges lie in belts of high temperature and receive hot, drying winds from the deserts beyond. The amount of precipitation the country’s westward- and northward-facing slopes receive increases with their height. The valleys have hot dry summers, with a mean July temperature of 82 °F (28 °C). In January the average temperature is −0.5 °F (−18 °C). Annual precipitation varies from 7 inches (180 mm) in the eastern Tien Shan to 30 to 40 inches (760 to 1,000 mm) in the Kyrgyz and Fergana ranges.
In the most populous valleys, rainfall ranges from 4 to 20 inches (100 to 500 mm) a year. Plant and animal life Woodlands run along the lower valleys and on slopes of the north-facing ranges.
Sementara, tuturnya, yang menbedakan honorer K-2 den- HONORER K-2 DIPERJUANGKAN H. Tapi kenapa pengangkatannya ha-rus dibedakan, ini tidak adil, katanya. Warman gan K-1 hanyalah pada segi pembayaran honor saja. Contoh telaahan staf kepada bupati karawang di.
These are coniferous forests, containing the striking Tien Shan white spruce and occupying 3 to 4 percent of the country’s area. The,, lynx,, and ermine live in the woodlands. Wooded ravines and the valleys of the mountainous steppe regions provide the of the argali, a, along with mountain goats, deer, and snow leopards. In the, yellow gophers, jerboas, hares, and a large-eared hedgehog are typical. Settlement patterns Between 1926 and 1989 the urban portion of the Kyrgyz population grew from almost nothing to more than one-fifth, though the remained a minority in most cities and towns. During this period fewer than one-fourth of the inhabitants of the capital, Frunze (now Bishkek), were Kyrgyz; Slavs made up more than half of the city’s population. Southern Kyrgyzstan tends to be rural and Islamic, but the more urbanized Western-oriented north has traditionally dominated the country.
Only about one-third of the total population is urban, however, while nearly two-thirds is rural. Aytmatov, Chingiz Chingiz Aytmatov, 2003. Bubamara State-sponsored troupes, a theatre of opera and ballet, and the Kyrgyzstan Philharmonic Orchestra perform in concert halls and theatre buildings erected during the Soviet period. The Museum of History and the Arts is located in Bishkek. Kyrgyz history can be traced at least to the 1st century bce. The probable abodes of the early were in the upper valley of central, and the Tashtyk (1st century bce–5th century ce), an amalgam of Asiatic and European peoples, may have been theirs. Chinese and Muslim sources of the 7th–12th century ce describe the Kyrgyz as red-haired with fair complexion and green (blue) eyes.
They were viewed as a forest-dwelling “northern” people who used skis and practiced. In the mid-9th century the Kyrgyz, by then certainly Turkic-speaking, overthrew the empire in but did not settle there; they essentially remained a people of the forest. According to the Persian geography Ḥudūd al-ʿĀlam (982), the Kyrgyz lived at the edge of the “Uninhabited Lands of the North”; the 11th-century grammarian Maḥmūd al-Kāshgharī mentions that their language was Turkic. Because of their secluded habitats, the Kyrgyz remained outside the mainstream of Inner Asian history, a fact that allowed them to survive the that completely altered the Inner Asian political landscape. In 1207 the Kyrgyz surrendered to son.