Research Institute For Jochi Ulus Studies 1
1. The Kipchak Ethnic Component in the Composition of the Peoples of Afghanistan.
2. THE JARLYK ON APPOINTMENT OF AMIR-E TUMAN FROM THE “DASTUR AL-KHATIB” AND STATUS OF TEMNIK IN THE ULUSES OF HULAGU, JOCHI AND CHAGATAY
3. “TOLL ROADS” IN THE CHINGGISID STATES OF 13th—14th CC.
4. FIREARMS IN THE NOGHAIC-KAZAKH HEROIC EPOS
5. LONG-BLADED WEAPON IN KAZAKH HEROIC EPIC
6. LONG-BLADED WEAPON IN KAZAKH HEROIC EPIC
7. The Body Defensive Arms of Nomads in Noghaic-Kazakh Heroic Epos
8. Genetic polymorphism of 27 Y-STR loci in Kazakh populations from Central Kazakhstan
9. Genetic polymorphism of 27 Y-STR loci in Kazakh populations from Eastern Kazakhstan
10. Genetic Polymorphism of 27 Y-STR Loci in the Western Kazakh Tribes from Kazakhstan and Karakalpakstan, Uzbekistan
11. Genetic polymorphism of Y-chromosome in Kazakh populations from Southern Kazakhstan
12. Kazakh-Bashkir Military-Political Interaction during the Expansion of the Western Oirats (Kalmyks) and Bashkir Uprisings of the 17th century
13. The Bashkir Uprising of 1735–1740. Through the Prusm of Bashkir-Kazakh Relations
14. Qonaevstalgia: various images of Dinmukhammed Qonaev in post-Nazarbayev Kazakhstan
15. A MOGHUL OR EARLY KAZAKH HELMET OF THE 15th — EARLY 17th CENTURY FROM THE COLLECTION OF ZAISAN REGIONAL MUSEUM OF LOCAL HISTORY
16. MAIL COIF OF THE SECOND HALF OF THE 16th — MID 19th CENTURIES FROM THE COLLECTION OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF THE REPUBLIC OF KAZAKHSTAN
17. Solid-Forged Helmet with Silver Ornamentation of the Second Half of the 17th – the Middle of the 18th сenturies from the Collection of the National Museum of the Republic of Kazakhstan
18. Population dataset for 23 Y-STR in the Merkit clan form Kazakh population
19. TERRITORIES UNDER SPECIAL RULE IN THE MEDIEVAL TURKIC-MOGOL STATES
20. Long shared haplotypes identify the southern Urals as a primary source for the 10th-century Hungarians
21. Population data of 23 Y chromosome STR loci for Kyrgyz population from Kyrgyzstan
22. Breaking the glass ceiling in Kazakhstani science: Government grants and gender representation trends
23. Breaking the glass ceiling in Kazakhstani science: Government grants and gender representation trends
24. The Territory of Kazakhstan on Guillaume Delisle’s “Map of Persia”: Historical and Geographical Analysis
25. Kazakh Shibanids (XVIII-XIX cc.) in Pre-Revolutionary Sources
26. Making the Golden Horde great Again: Historians as Memory Actors and Reinterpretation of the Historical Narratives in Independent Kazakhstan
27. Negotiating science funding: The interplay of merit, bias, and administrative discretion in grant allocation in Kazakhstan
28. Transformation of public consciousness in the context of societal digitalization: A bibliometric study
29. Eastern and Western Hungarians in the Uluses of Chagatai and Jochi
30. A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF JUCHID GENEALOGIES ACCORDING TO FIVE LISTS IN THE “MUIZZ AL-ANSAB”
31. EPICS ABOUT IDEGEI AND HIS RELATIVES IN THE EPIC CYCLE “FORTY HEROES OF CRIMEA
32. Radiocarbon Chronology of Medieval Archaeological Sites from the Forest-Steppe
33. Ancient Components and Recent Expansion in the Eurasian Heartland: Insights into the Revised Phylogeny of Y-Chromosomes from Central Asia
34. Genetic Polymorphism of Y-Chromosome in Turkmen Population from Turkmenistan
35. Y-Chromosomal insights into the paternal genealogy of the Kerey tribe have called into question their descent from the Stepfather of Genghis Khan
36. Depoliticizing National Identity Formation in Kazakhstan: Street Re-/naming in Astana as a Pragmatic Reinterpretation of the Soviet Past
37. From colonial to national narrative: Alikhan Bokeikhan’s views on the Kazakh past and present (1889–1910)
38. Islam and the Nation: Debates on Religion in the Early 20th-Century Kazakh National Movement in Sources and Historiography
39. Genetic genealogy of Y-chromosome in the Zhetiru tribe of the Kazakh population from Kazakhstan
1