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The genetic structure and admixture of Manchus and Koreans in northeast China
Published 2023-01-01“…Background The fine-scale genetic profiles and population history of Manchus and Koreans remain unclear. Aim To infer a fine-scale genetic structure and admixture of Manchu and Korean populations. …”
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A Preliminary Analysis of the Oral Shamanistic Songs of the Manchus
Published 2001-05-01Get full text
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Missionary Writings during the Canton Exile (1666–1671): Crisis in the Manchu-Christian Relationship
Published 2024-02-01Subjects: Get full text
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Blacksmith and Blacksmithing Attributes in Folklore of Tungus-Manchurian Peoples of Russian Far East
Published 2023-01-01Subjects: Get full text
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“Genghis Khans” of the 17th-18th centuries: between politics and religion
Published 2023-12-01Subjects: Get full text
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Toponymic Space of the Written Monument True Records of the Mongols of the Qing Empire
Published 2022-07-01Subjects: Get full text
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Xiyu wenjian lu by Qishiyi: Materials on the History of Central Asian Peoples in Mid-to-Late 18th Century Revisited
Published 2022-07-01Subjects: Get full text
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Shelter for the Afflicted: Migration from Xinjiang to Russia in the 1860s-1880s
Published 2023-03-01Subjects: Get full text
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Association between depressive symptoms and poor sleep quality among Han and Manchu ethnicities in a large, rural, Chinese population.
Published 2019-01-01“…<h4>Results</h4>The prevalence of poor sleep quality and depression in the Manchus (20.74% and 22.65%) was significantly lower than that in the Hans (29.57% and 26.25%), respectively. …”
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The easter semiotics of the “albazin pie”
Published 2021-12-01“…This study is devoted to one of the episodes of the Russian-Manchu conflict of the 17th century, when the head of the garrison of the Albazin fortress, which had been blocked by the Manchus for a long time, sent a pie to the camp of his enemies. …”
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Genomic Insights Into the Admixture History of Mongolic- and Tungusic-Speaking Populations From Southwestern East Asia
Published 2021-06-01“…Here, we generated genome-wide data at nearly 700,000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 26 Mongolians and 55 Manchus collected from Guizhou province in southwestern China. …”
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Deconstruction of the Trance Model: Historical, Ethnographic, and Contextual Studies of Manchu Shamanism
Published 2023-04-01“…This study deconstructs the trance model and demonstrates that shamanism among Manchus has a dynamic, reactive, constitutive, and unstable historical process.…”
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Eketankire or hidden time in the calendars of the Siberian peoples
Published 2017-12-01“…The difference in insertion procedures for solons (equine Evenks), borrowed the name of the insertable month (anaga) from the Manchus, and other Tungus-speaking peoples is shown. …”
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On Dunganskaya Street. Vernyi Town as a “Plural Society”
Published 2019“…Located close to the Chinese frontier, Semirech’e saw significant in-migration of different ethnic and religious groups from China — Manchus, Qalmyqs, Dungans and Taranchis — as well as Muslims from other parts of Russian Turkestan such as Ferghana and Tashkent. …”
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Genomic insight into the population admixture history of Tungusic-speaking Manchu people in Northeast China
Published 2022“…We found that Liaoning Manchus have a close genetic relationship and significant admixture signal with northern Han Chinese, which is in line with the cluster patterns in the haplotype-based results. …”
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Daurian Monuments of the Amur Region
Published 2022-06-01“…It was noted that the Daurians had towns and fortresses, and a military-administrative system under the control of local princes. Unlike the Tungus-Manchus, the Daurians were not the indigenous inhabitants of the Amur region. …”
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and the Changing Political Order of Northeastern Asia in the 17th Century
Published 2018-02-01“…For decades, historians defined the ukanju, also known as taoren (逃人) in the Chinese-language archives of the Qing Dynasty (1644–1911A.C.), as the Manchu’s ethnic Han-Chinese slaves or escapees. However, this definition fails to explain why ukanju served as the catalyst for the Manchu invasions of Chosŏn in 1627 and 1636 and why so many ukanju with considerable ethnic diversity emerged in the first half of the 17th century. …”
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