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THE KURDISH PEOPLES

The following chart summarizes an extensive survey and evaluation of the Kurdish peoples and the languages they speak.

I have followed the classification of languages and dialects used by the Summer Institute of Linguistics, as published in the Ethnologue, 13th Edition, 1996.  (This was the current edition at the time of the research.  Editions 14 (2000), 15 (2005) and 16 (2009) maintain the same dialect and language designations as Edition 13.)

The Ethnologue listings represents a revision of names and dialect groupings among the Kurds, based on later research than other sources used.  This appears to be the most recent schema summarizing research on the Kurdish languages.  Previous sources were not consistent, so accounting for some variations from this presentation.

Observations and Findings with Conclusions follow the chart.  This report has been updated several times since the original research, but the chart remains the same.

Dr. Orville Boyd Jenkins
researchguy@iname.com
 
 
PEOPLE NAME
COUNTRY
LANGUAGE BRANCH
LANGUAGE
DIALECTS
ALTERNATE NAMES FOR THIS PEOPLE OR LANGUAGE
OTHER ETHNIC NAMES (TRIBES, CLANS)
PLACE NAMES ASSOCIATED 
WITH THIS 
PEOPLE
RELIGIOUS SECTS ASSOCIATED WITH THIS PEOPLE
ROPAL
(FROM THE ETHNO-
LOGUE)
PEOPLE POPULATION 
IN THIS COUNTRY
PEOPLE POPULATION 
IN THE WORLD
SPEAKERS OF THIS LANG IN THE WORLD
Bajelan Iraq ZAZA-GORANI BAJELAN Shabak, Gurani Barzinji, Gergeri, Gorani, Hamawand, Hariri, Jaf, Mawsili, Manusi, Sarli, Yarsan Arbil, Eski Kaiak, 
Mosul, Tobzawa
Bajelan, Shabaki, Sarli, Kakai, Qizilbashi, Ibrahimi, 
Bektashi
BJM00
20,000
20,000
20,000
Behdini Germany KURDISH BEHDINI BDF00
Behdini Iraq KURDISH BEHDINI BDF00
Dimli Turkey ZAZA-GORANI DIMLI Sivereki, Kori, Hazzu, Motki, Shabak, Dumbuli Zaza, Dimli Lolan, Xormak, Shamlu, Shaykhawand, Shadlu, Khajawand, Zafranlu, Stajlu, Quvanlu Elazig, Bingol, 
Diyarbakir
Alevi (Alawi), Shabaki ZZZ00
980,000
1,010,000
1,010,000
Dimli Syria ZAZA-GORANI DIMLI Zaza, Dimli Jezirah, Syria ZZZ00
20,000
1,010,000
1,010,000
Dimli Germany ZAZA-GORANI DIMLI Zaza, Dimli ZZZ00
10,000
1,010,000
1,010,000
Hawrami Iran ZAZA-GORANI HAWRAMI Gurani, Bajalani Guran, Hawraman Ahl-i-Haqq (Yaresan) HAC00
18,000
40,000
40,000
Hawrami Iraq ZAZA-GORANI HAWRAMI Gurani. Kakai, Macho Awaspi, 
Eski Taiak, Tobzawa 
Ahl-i-Haqq (Kakai), Shabaki, Sunni HAC00
22,000
40,000
40,000
Herki Iran KURDISH HERKI associated with Kurmanji HEK00
*71,000
71,000
Herki Iraq KURDISH HERKI associated with Kurmanji HEK00
*71,000
71,000
Herki Turkey KURDISH HERKI associated with Kurmanji HEK00
31,000
*71,000
71,000
PEOPLE NAME
COUNTRY
LANGUAGE BRANCH
LANGUAGE
DIALECTS
ALTERNATE NAMES FOR THIS PEOPLE OR LANGUAGE
OTHER ETHNIC NAMES (TRIBES, CLANS)
PLACE NAMES ASSOCIATED 
WITH THIS 
PEOPLE
RELIGIOUS SECTS ASSOCIATED WITH THIS PEOPLE
ROPAL
(FROM THE ETHNO-
LOGUE)
PEOPLE POPULATION 
IN THIS COUNTRY
PEOPLE POPULATION 
IN THE WORLD
SPEAKERS OF THIS LANG IN THE WORLD
Kirmandz Armenia ZAZA-GORANI KIRMANJKI Zaza, Dimli, Dimilki QKV00
59,000
1,500,000
1,500,000
Kirmandz Georgia ZAZA-GORANI KIRMANJKI Zaza, Dimli, Dimilki QKV00
35,000
1,500,000
1,500,000
Kirmandz Turkey ZAZA-GORANI KIRMANJKI Tunceli, Varto Zaza, Dimli, Dimilki, Alevi Tunceli, Erzincan, 
Cayirli, Elazig, 
Sivas, Varto, 
Also in Austria, 
Denmark, France, Netherlands, UK, 
Sweden, Switzerland
Alevi (Alawi) QKV00
140,000
1,500,000
(Country totals not itemized in sources)
1,500,000
Kirmandz Germany ZAZA-GORANI KIRMANJKI Zaza, Dimli, Dimilki, Alevi QKV00
1,500,000
1,500,000
Carduchi Iran KURDISH KURDI Southern Kurd KDB03
2,760,000
2,760,000
7,329,500
Kurd Iran KURDISH KURDI Jafi, Kirmanshahi Southern Kurd, Sorani Barzinji, Jaf, Bosikan, Kurian, Musi, Sarmi, Talabani, Zekiri, Zubari Kermanshah (Bakhtaran), Khorasan, Kordestan, Sanandaj, West Azerbaijan Yezidi, Shabaki, Ahl-i-Haqq (Yaresan), Sarli KDB00
605,000
4,197,500
7,329,500
Kurd Iran KURDISH KURDI Mukri Central Kurd, Mukri Yezidi, Shabaki, Ahl-i-Haqq (Yaresan), Sarli KDB02
604,000
1,052,000
7,329,500
Kurd Iraq KURDISH KURDI Mukri Sorani Kurd Yezidi, Shabaki, Ahl-i-Haqq (Kakai), Sarli KDB02
448,000
1,052,000
7,329,500
Kurd Iraq KURDISH KURDI Arbili, Adaiani (Sanandaji), Khushnaw, Sulaymani, Pizhdar, Mukri, Warmawa, Garmiyani, Garrusi (Bijari), Kolya'i, Zangana, Kirmanshahi Sorani Kurd, Southern Kurd Arbil, Halabja, Kirkuk, Mosul, Sinjar, Soran, Sulamanya, Zengana Yezidi, Shabaki, Ahl-i-Haqq (Kakai), Sarli KDB00
2,785,500
4,197,500
7,329,500
PEOPLE NAME
COUNTRY
LANGUAGE BRANCH
LANGUAGE
DIALECTS
ALTERNATE NAMES FOR THIS PEOPLE OR LANGUAGE
OTHER ETHNIC NAMES (TRIBES, CLANS)
PLACE NAMES ASSOCIATED 
WITH THIS 
PEOPLE
RELIGIOUS SECTS ASSOCIATED WITH THIS PEOPLE
ROPAL
(FROM THE ETHNO-
LOGUE)
PEOPLE POPULATION 
IN THIS COUNTRY
PEOPLE POPULATION 
IN THE WORLD
SPEAKERS OF THIS LANG IN THE WORLD
Kurd Kuwait KURDISH KURDI Sorani Kurds KDB00
127,000
4,197,500
7,329,500
Kurd Netherlands KURDISH KURDI Sorani Kurds KDB00 4,197,500 7,329,500
Kurd United Kingdon KURDISH KURDI Sorani Kurds KDB00 4,197,500 7,329,500
Kurd Armenia KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji, Northern Kurd KUR00
58,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Azerbaijan KURDISH KURMANJI Kurmanji KUR00
20,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Bahrain KURDISH KURMANJI KUR00
25,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Belgium KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji KUR00
22,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd France KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji, Northern Kurd KUR00
74,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Georgia KURDISH KURMANJI Kurmanji KUR00
33,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Germany KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji KUR00
480,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Iran KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji Sunni KUR00
200,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Hakari Iraq KURDISH KURMANJI Hakkari KUR01  
7,661,000
Kurd Iraq KURDISH KURMANJI Jezire (Botan) Kermanji, Northern Kurd Jazira, Mosul, Rwandiz, Sinjar, Zakhu KUR00
1,457,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Jordan KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji KUR00
4,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Kazakhstan KURDISH KURMANJI Kurmanji KUR00
25,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Kuwait KURDISH KURMANJI Kurmanji KUR00
48,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Kyrghyzstan KURDISH KURMANJI Kurmanji KUR00
14,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Lebanon KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji, Northern Kurd KUR00
173,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Netherlands KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji KUR00
40,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Norway KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji KUR00
3,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Sweden KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji KUR00
10,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Switzerland KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji KUR00
53,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
PEOPLE NAME
COUNTRY
LANGUAGE BRANCH
LANGUAGE
DIALECTS
ALTERNATE NAMES FOR THIS PEOPLE OR LANGUAGE
OTHER ETHNIC NAMES (TRIBES, CLANS)
PLACE NAMES ASSOCIATED 
WITH THIS 
PEOPLE
RELIGIOUS SECTS ASSOCIATED WITH THIS PEOPLE
ROPAL
(FROM THE ETHNO-
LOGUE)
PEOPLE POPULATION 
IN THIS COUNTRY
PEOPLE POPULATION 
IN THE WORLD
SPEAKERS OF THIS LANG IN THE WORLD
Kurd Syria KURDISH KURMANJI Jezire Kermanji, 
Western Kurd
Arab Pinar, 
Jazirah (Hasakan), Kurdh-Dagh, Damascus,
west of Aleppo, 
Lake Khatun
KUR00
938,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Turkey KURDISH KURMANJI Guwii, Hakkari, Jezire (Botan), Urfi, Bayazidi, Surchi, Qochani, Birjandi, Alburz, Sanjari, Judkani Kurmanji, Bahdinani Doudjik, Jibran, Kizibakh, Subhan, Bokhti, Bakran, Tirigan, Karachul, Chol, Oghaz, Jambul, Devalu, Iva, Karaqich, Chichak Adiyaman, Agri, Ankara, Badinan, Bingol, Bitlis, Diyarbakir, Mus, 
also Elazig, Sivas, Tunceli, others
Alevi (Alawi), Yezidi,
Sufi orders
KUR00
3,950,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Turkmenistan KURDISH KURMANJI Kurmanji KUR00
3,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd UK KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji KUR00
6,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Kurd Uzbekistan KURDISH KURMANJI Kermanji, Northern Kurd KUR00
2,000
7,661,000
7,661,000
Feyli Iran LURI LURI Shia LRI02
Feyli Iraq LURI LURI near Baghdad Shia LRI02
Kurd Armenia SLAVIC, EAST RUSSIAN Kermanji, Northern Kurd RUS00
70,000
70,000
151,000,000
Shikaki Iran KURDISH SHIKAKI associated with Kurmanji SHF00
24,000
*64,000
64,000
Shikaki Iraq KURDISH SHIKAKI associated with Kurmanji SHF00
*64,000
64,000
Shikaki Turkey KURDISH SHIKAKI associated with Kurmanji SHF00
*64,000
64,000
Surchi Iraq KURDISH SURCHI associated with Kurmanji, 
different form Surchi dialect 
of Kurmanji
SUP00
11,000
11,000
11,000
   *  These totals are uncertain.  Populations reported here are from various sources available to me in 2000, but many were older. Thus these populations are presented only for relative comparisons.  Mehrdad Izady (The Kurds: A Concise Handbook) reports the total of Kurds of all tribes and languages worldwide in 1992 as 28 million.

Summary of the Kurdish Peoples and their Speech Forms

The following comments summarize research on the Kurdish peoples, supplementing the conclusions presented in the chart.  The purpose of the research was to clarify the names of the various Kurdish groups, and approximate populations, correlated as possible with religious sects and place names.

After observations and findings, I will present some conclusions as very basic considerations for communication strategy.
 

Observations and Findings
=================

Names

1.  The various Kurdish people are commonly identified by the language they speak.  Kurmanji is the most widely spoken Kurdish language.

2.  Many names referring to various Kurdish people also are names of places.  Even the "names" of many of the speech forms are place names, applied to the people and the speech of people in that area.

3.  I have followed the classification of languages and dialects used by the Summer Institute of Linguistics, as published in the Ethnologue, 13th Edition, 1996, online.  This represents a revision of names and dialect groupings among the Kurds, based on later research than other sources used.  This appears to be the most recent schema summarizing research on the Kurdish languages.

4.  Many sources available on the Internet were posted in 1997 or later, but were dated from 1992 to 1996, thus using older classifications and terminology, similar to what appeared in the 1992 (12th Edition) of the Ethnologue.  I have correlated all available database figures to get a reasonable update, favoring most recent research.

5.  Further,  there was considerable discrepancy between various authors in older literature.  The SIL terminology and classification, therefore, represents an update that is useful as a standard reference point.

6.  The summary chart presents a correlation of selected place names, tribal or clan ethnic names, religious sects and alternative names for the peoples or speech forms.

7.  The use of the various names is inconsistent, often in the same author.  The various literature and authors use sect name, location name, tribe, language or ethnic name interchangeably.  Identities are strong around religious sects.  Sects may be associated with some ethnic names, but cut across strictly ethnic lines.

8.  Religious affiliation, however, does affect speech forms somewhat, as the terminology specific to a certain Sufi or Shia (or "heretical") sect may be specialized, thus affecting certain vocabulary and thought-forms.  Thus some writers have referred to the speech of some of the Yazdani (Cult of Angels) sects as dialects.

9.  Shabak and Bajelan are vaguely referred to as separate religious or ethnic groups.  No discrete figures or descriptions are available in sources.  The terms Goran, Shabak and Bajelan are used interchangeably by some authors.  Hawrami is more distinctly used, but is also associated with Shabak and Bajelan.  Leezburg says the Shabak, strictly speaking, have never been a tribe.

10.  It appears that each sect has a somewhat distinct subgroup identity within whichever broader language and ethnic group they belong to.

11.  Various authors note that the term "Zaza" is considered derogatory for the Dimili peoples. Yet I see this term used commonly and positively as an identifier and self-name in literature and web sites by the Dimili people.
 

Languages

1.  The Kurdish peoples speak 12 languages among them, as indicated on the chart.  One source also showed Kurds in Iran speaking Eastern Farsi, but later data did not indicate that.  I could not confirm that this language is spoken by any Kurdish group.  There may be some Kurds with native language Arabic, but I found no information on this.  Sources indicate Kurds with Turkish mother tongue.

2.  A group of 70,000 Kurds in Russia speak Russian as a mother tongue.  It is not clear if they also still speak one of the original Kurdish languages.  Virtually all Kurds in Russia and the former USSR have Russian mother tongue.  Many of these claim Russian ethnicity.  Many sources report no Kurdish ethnicity in Russia.

3.  Some peoples show no population, indicating some uncertainty in reported data.  Global totals for those peoples are likewise uncertain, but are taken from a 1996 database, but repeated in later materials.  Some of the figures were suspect, with identical country figures and global totals for several groups.

4.  Kurmanji (Kurmanci) is the most widely spoken language of the Kurds.  This language was commonly referred to in earlier literature as Northern Kurmanji.  Most speakers of Kurmanji are found in Turkey.  They are also the most dispersed into other countries outside "Kurdistan."

5.  The next largest language group is Kurdi, also called Sorani, and formerly called Southern Kurmanji by some and Central Kurdish by others.  Most speakers of speech forms considered to be dialects of Kurdi live in Iran, though the term Sorani and the Kurdi language seem more associated in popular thought with Iraq.  (Soran is a place in Iraq.)

6.  The term Kurmanji was also formerly used as a general term for the broader grouping including the former Northern Kurmanji (now Kurmanji) and Southern Kurmanji (now Kurdi).  The term "Kurmanji" is applied now only to the northern forms of speech, as this is what those speakers call that language, while the Sorani Kurds call their language Kurdi ("Kurdish"), as do also some of the smaller Kurdish language groups.

7.  Most of the Kurds in Syria are Kurmanji speakers (also called Bahdinani by some writers), but some in Syria are Dimli Kurds.

8.  Most Kurmanji speakers are in Turkey.  Most of the Kurdi speakers are in Iran.  Almost all the Kurds in Iraq speak Kurdi, while most in Syria speak Kurmanji.

9.  Kirmanjki speakers similarly call themselves Kirmandz or Kirmanj.  (See Conclusion 8.)

10.  Figures from SIL indicate most Kirmandz (Kirmanjki) are in Germany.  This seemed a bit suspicious, but I found no information to contradict this indication.

11.  Speakers of various speech forms are interspersed in much of the area.  The chart indicates some key locations of each language group, where available in verified sources.

12.  Each language tends to borrow terms from the dominant language in their geopolitical sphere, thus Kurmanji in Turkey has borrowed more from Turkish, while Sorani speakers in Iran and Hawrami speakers have borrowed from Persian, while Sorani speakers in Iraq tend to borrow Arabic terms.  Likewise the Kurmanji and Dimli speakers in Syria have borrowed some Arabic terms.

13.  The larger languages further have several dialects.  The respective speech forms classified by SIL as dialects of the various languages, however, remain mutually intelligible among themselves, while the broader languages are characterized as not mutually intelligible.

14.  Many Kurds are fluent in more than one of the languages spoken among the Kurdish peoples.


Political or National Identity

1.  The Kurds are known for their resistance against ethnic, military and political oppression, desiring their own separate Kurdish political entity.  There has, however, been some ambiguity among the various peoples considered Kurd.

2.  The Kurdish people are of mixed origins, as are virtually every other ethnic group in the world.  Some of the clans have Turkish names, and there are various traditions of origin, as well as various historical testimonies concerning them for three thousand years of recorded history.  Some of the members of Yazdani sects are of Arabic origin.  In Syria, for instance, many Turkish Alevi (Alawi) are of Arab origin.  Likewise, some who now consider themselves Arab were originally of the Kurdish nation and language.

3.  While there is a level of common ethnic identity among most of the Kurdish peoples, particularly in terms of nationalistic aspirations, there is still notable animosity or suspicion between the various religious sects that divide the Kurds.  Also sects tend to follow family and clan lines, except among some of the smaller ethnic/religious groupings speaking the "smaller" languages.

4.  History indicates not all Kurdish ethnic groups have been actively involved in protest against the non-Kurdish governments in the region.  Indeed, some clans, tribes or other groupings have remained neutral, or been involvedin the military of the various governments, even in operations against other Kurds.

5.  There is a greater unity of identity now after the Anfal (Iraqi government campaigns against the Kurds 1987-89) and other recent persecutions, exercised against some uncommitted or marginal southern groups, who have now declared their identity as Kurds.

6.  The Shabaki/Kakai sect has some converts from Arab tribes.  Since the Anfal, these groups have more decisively identified with the Kurds.

7.  Southern peoples are mixed at an early stage in history with another early population called Gorani.  This is the source of the ethnic and place name, and language designation for some southern dialects of the Kurdish peoples.

8.  There is a growing and vocal movement of Dimili/Zaza declaring they are not Kurds and wish to be politically and culturally independent.  See Zaza/Dimili links at the end.

9.  Many of the 70,000 or more Kurds in Russia are considered by scholars to be assimilated, and seem to claim Russian ethnicity.


Badinani~Kurmanji

A specific question investigated was the relationship between the terms Badinani and Kurmanji as a people/language name.

1.  The term Kurmanji is attested from ancient times as the name of a people and language.  It is reported that this is what the Kurmanji speakers call their language.

2.  The term Badinani (Bahdinani) is used in some older literature interchangeably with the name Kurmanji to refer to the Northern groups of Kurdish speech.  No source makes a distinction between two different peoples or languages with these two terms.  Some sources do not use this term at all, including Encyclopedia Britannica, which uses the same schema otherwise, with the term "Kurmanji."  Note that these are all used as language names.

3.  The word Bahdinani is given in the Ethnologue as an alternative name (one that has some time in the past been used for the speech of some portion of the speakers) in Turkey and Azerbaijan for the listing of Kurmanji language.

4.  Badinan is a place name in a heavy concentration of Kurds in Turkey who speak the Kurmanji language.  Soran and Badinan are two towns (the "i" ending makes it an adjective, thus "of Badinan," or "of Soran") whose names have been used by some as a shorthand for these two groups.  Sorani is more commonly used as the name of the group of Kurds speaking Kurdi.  Badinan(i) is not as common or consistent in the literature for northern speech forms.

5.  Badinan (Bahdinan) is a town in Southern Turkey, also found as Gürmese or Gürmeêe on some maps.  This is the source of the use of this word to refer to some speakers of Kurmanji.  Like Soran (Iraq) and Gorani (Iran), Badinani is a place name.  The town is a good bit north of a line from Mosul and Aleppo, and about half way between.  Some maps do not show Badinan or Gürmese, but show Batman, a nearby oilfield town.


Conclusions
========

General:  The people group name is Kurd.  They also have smaller groupings referred to as tribes, which also have a specific name.  But the most common way of relating among the Kurds is by what language they speak.  Then the religious sect seems to be a further differentiating or descriptive factor.  Many of the tribal names, and also many names of speech forms (languages/dialects) are place names, applied to the people who live in that area and to their form of speech.

1.  The vast majority of all Kurdish peoples live in Turkey (Kurmanji, Kirmanjki and Dimli) and Iran (Kurdi).

2.  Language will be a primary identifying factor among the Kurdish people, and thus a primary factor in considering communication strategy within the community.

3.  Religious affiliation is the next consideration for relationships and communication strategies.  That is, language groupings must be further segmented by religion.

4.  Because of the variety of sub-ethnic identities, religious sect divisions and uncertain political alignments, strategies must be varied for different groups, even among the same language group.  Likewise the same sect cuts across various languages.  This is most notable in the smaller languages and ethnic groups.

5.  For any communication dealing with worldview and identity-affecting decisions, separate strategies will likely be needed at the local level, based on sect and local unique characteristics, as would be expected in any multi-cultural people.  Thus a study of the larger religious sects will be of use and likely indispensable for clear communication of universal realities.

6.  The largest language group of all Kurds is Kurmanji. That language is also the one most spoken by Kurds in Europe.  Kurmanji is also the most common inter-language used among Kurds with different mother tongues.  These expatriate (diaspora) communities would be a likely point of access.  Thus Kurmanji would likely be the Kurdish people/language for accessing Kurds outside their "homeland."

7.  If SIL's figures are correct, Kirmanjki is the next most likely language for European access.  Few Kurdi speakers live outside Iran or Iraq.

8.  By those figures, the Kirmanj (Kirmanjki speakers) are the largest single expatriate group of Kurds.  They are mostly Alevi in faith.  Ethnologue figures for Kirmanjki speakers are much lower than other sources.  Ethnologue gives no specific populations for the European countries.  Edition 14 gave a world total of 1,500,000.  New Edition 15 gives no world total, and local Turkish populations only from the 1972 census.


For More on Kurds and Relaetd Peoples

"Ethnic Differentiation among the Kurds: Kurmanci, Kizilbash and Zaza," Paul White
http://members.tripod.com/~zaza_kirmanc/research/paul.htm

"Exploring Kurdish Origins," Mehrdad R. Izady
http://www.xs4all.nl/~tank/kurdish/htdocs/his/orig.html

Language-Dialect Tree
(using pre-1996 names – easy to correlate with post-1996)
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Kurdish+language

Kurdpedia – Languages, Kurdistan Maps
http://www.nouruzi.itgo.com/kurd.html

Kurds and Kurdistans
http://www.cc.jyu.fi/~aphamala/pe/issue3/kurd-ale.htm

Religions in Kurdistan
http://kurdy_person.tripod.com/Pekhshan/id14.html

Several articles on Kurdish Languages
http://www.cogsci.ed.ac.uk/~siamakr/Kurdish/Papers/Leezenberg93/text.html

Standardizing the Modern Journalistic Language in Kurdish
http://www.cogsci.ed.ac.uk/~siamakr/Kurdish/Papers/chyet96.html

The Kurdish Question – Its History and Present Situation
http://members.aol.com/KHilfsvere/Kurds.html

The Ethnologue, 13th Edition
http://www.ethnologue.com/ (14th, 15th and 16th Editions Online)

Yezidi

My Article:  The Yezidis – An Angelic Sect
http://orvillejenkins.com/peoples/yezidi.html

http://altreligion.about.com/library/faqs/bl_yezidism.htm
Yezidism – About.com

Yezidi.org
http://www.yezidi.org/
Denge Ezidiyan – Yezidi Online Magazine

Yezidi Religion and Culture
http://www.lalish.org/en_index.html

Yezidis in Armenia
http://kurdistan.org/Current-Updates/yezidi.html

Zaza/Dimili and Alevism

Alevism
http://www.xs4all.nl/~tank/kurdish/htdocs/cult/alev.html
Alevism – Mehrdad R. Izady

Dimili or Zazaki People and Language
http://www.radiozaza.de/ENGLISH/English.htm
Many articles by various scholars

"Ethnic Differentiation among the Kurds: Kurmanci, Kizilbash and Zaza," Paul White
http://members.tripod.com/~zaza_kirmanc/research/paul.htm

Zazaki.Net
http://www.zazaki.net/haber/among-social-kurdish-groups-general-glance-at-zazas-503.htm

Print Resources consulted

"Kurdish Languages," Encyclopedia Britannica, 22:608.

Held, Colbert C.  Middle East Patterns.  Oxford: Westview Press, 1994.

Izady, Mehrdad R.  The Kurds:  A Concise Handbook.  Washington, DC:  Taylor and Francis, 1992.

Buckley, Richard, Ed.  The Kurds:  Caught Between Nations (Understanding Global Issues Series, 94/3).  Cheltenham, England, UK:  European Schoolbooks Publishing Ltd., 1994.

"Kurds of Iraq:  A People Profile."  File Paper, 1994. No author given.

Also related:
Models of Assimilation
Multi-Level Ethnicity:  Illustrating Different Views of the Same Ethnic Group at Different Levels
Our Genetic Journey - Reviewing The Journey of Man:  A Genetic Odyssey
The Rough Edges of Ethnicity
The Subtlety of Assimilation
What is a People Group?

Also view related PowerPoint Presentations:
Assimilation Models – How People Groups Develop and Change
Describing a People Group
Identifying a People Group
What is a People Group?

Originally compiled 14 September 2000
Posted to Thoughts and Resources 13 May 2001
Last edited 16 January 2013

Dr. Orville Boyd Jenkins

Copyright © 2000, 2005 Orville Boyd Jenkins
Permission granted for free download and transmission for personal or educational use.  Please give credit and link back.  Other rights reserved.

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