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Chingiz Khan: Son and Warrior of Kazakh Steppes
Chingiz Khan: Son and Warrior of Kazakh Steppes
Chingiz Khan: Son and Warrior of Kazakh Steppes
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Chingiz Khan: Son and Warrior of Kazakh Steppes

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Eight hundred years ago since Chingiz Khans death, the precise place of his burial is still a mystery.

Hundreds of expeditions were set out to find Chengiz Khans grave.
However, there was no luck.

Could it be that the authors thirst to find the answers might help our curiosity get closer to the truth?

Read on and travel into the past where you unravel the clues and share evidence and facts from the point of topology, etymology, and topography that support the authors stories.

Learn more about missed or untold truths by people who sometimes consciously and other times unconsciously hide information which may lead us to the new road of evidence that still hold secrets.

We keep digging deeper in the search of hidden truth, and the humanity needs to know the truth, no matter how shocking or painful it could be.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherXlibris UK
Release dateApr 2, 2015
ISBN9781499096156
Chingiz Khan: Son and Warrior of Kazakh Steppes
Author

Beksultan Nurzhekeyev

Beksultan Nurzhekeyev is a writer and laureate of an international award, Alash. He was born in 1941 in Almaty County (Oblast) in the region of Panfiloff. In 1965, he graduated from the language and literature department of S. M. Kirov Kazakh State University and worked as a teacher and later as a head teacher in a local school in Usharal in the Panfilovsky region. In 1969, he became the first secretary of the Komsomol Committee (Labour Party’s Youth) and was an apparatchik of the Orgcommittee of Komsomol of the Republic of Kazakhstan. He then became the chairman of a monthly periodical called Zhuldyz (star) and deputy chief editor of Zhalyn (flame). Later, he became its editor-in-chief before moving to the same position with the magazine Parasat (intellect) until 1992. Since 1992, he has been the director of the publishing house Zhalyn in Almaty. As a novelist, his publications include Love to Blame, Waiting for Eternity, One Regret, To Live by Hope, and Spouses. All his books laud the role of women who fought with men on an equal basis to build the egalitarian society that is being enjoyed today. His other novel When the Enemy Grabbed by Collar is based on documented historical events where the actions of the Red Army in Zharkent led to a massive migration of Kazakhs to China, followed by years of hunger and fear, again highlighting the qualities of Kazakh women in those desperate times. He openly described how the ‘Soviet Russian revolutionist Golovatskii deliberately starved nations in Central Asia in the 1930s’. His book was based on documentaries and other facts gathered during his research with lots of evidence that had been recorded in those years but was not well received in the upper reaches of the local communist party. Chingiz Khan Son and Warrior of Kazakh Steppes, his latest work on the birthplace of Ghengis Khan is the culmination of many years of studying archives and official records and emanates from pride in the history of Kazakhstan and its people.

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    Chingiz Khan - Beksultan Nurzhekeyev

    Copyright © 2015 by Beksultan Nurzhekeyev.

    ISBN:      Softcover      978-1-4990-9614-9

                    eBook           978-1-4990-9615-6

    All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the copyright owner.

    The right of Beksultan Nurzhekeyev to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

    This work is based on true facts, places and events are based on true facts and documented in identified (bibliography) literature.

    Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.

    Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.

    Rev. date: 03/28/2015

    Xlibris

    800-056-3182

    www.Xlibrispublishing.co.uk

    649792

    Contents

    Acknowledgement

    About the Author

    Preface

    Chingiz Khan – a Warrior from the Ili Region

    Bibliography

    Acknowledgement

    I would like to thank Alan Lloyd for his editing work.

    This work is written not to deprive people of Mongolia from their heritage or history but is based on research of many years and on historical facts.

    – Author

    Anyone turning from the original Kazakh version of this book to this English edition will quickly realise that this very far from being a straightforward translation.

    I am not a historian or a writer; therefore, I apologise for any misinterpretations in my translation.

    Leyla Nurzhekeeva

    About the Author

    Beksultan Nurzhekeyev is a writer and laureate of an international award Alash. He was born in 1941 in Almaty County (Oblast) in the region of Panfiloff. In 1965, he graduated in language and literature from S. M. Kirov Kazakh State University and worked as a teacher and later as a head teacher in a local school of Usharal in Panfilovsky region. In 1969, he became the first secretary of the Komsomol Committee (Labour Party’s Youth) and was an apparatchik of the Orgcommittee of Komsomol of the republic of Kazakhstan. He then became the chairman of a monthly periodical called Zhuldyz (Star) and a deputy chief editor of Zhalyn (Flame). Later, he became its editor-in-chief before moving to the same position with the magazine Parasat (Intellect) until 1992. Since 1992, he has been the director of the publishing house Zhalyn in Almaty.

    As a novelist, his publications include Love to Blame, Waiting for Eternity, One Regret, To Live by Hope, Sinful Love, and Spouses. All his books laud the role of women who fought with men on an equal basis to build the egalitarian society that is being enjoyed today. His another novel When the Enemy Grabbed by Collar is based on documented historical events where the actions of the Red Army in Zharkent led to a massive migration of Kazakhs to China followed by years of hunger and fear, again highlighting the qualities of Kazakh women in those desperate times.

    He openly described how the ‘Soviet Russian revolutionist Golovatskii deliberately starved nations in Central Asia in the 1930s’. His book was based on documentaries and other facts gathered during his research with lots of evidence that had been recorded in those years but was not well received in the upper reaches of the local communist party.

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