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Definition of Mongol tatar
1. Noun. A member of the Mongolian people of central Asia who invaded Russia in the 13th century.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mongol Tatar
Literary usage of Mongol tatar
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Turkey and the Turks: Being the Present State of the Ottoman Empire by John Reid (1840)
"Osman, the founder of the present dynasty, is said to have been a pure Mongol
Tatar; but the late sultan was, and the present sultan is, pure Caucasian, ..."
2. The Historians' History of the World: A Comprehensive Narrative of the Rise by Henry Smith Williams (1904)
"... of peoples which had commenced in remote antiquity.1 This Mongol-Tatar horde
dominated Russia for 240 years and left enduring traces of its domination. ..."
3. The Historians' History of the World: A Comprehensive Narrative of the Rise by Henry Smith Williams (1907)
"-S^^\*jye of that migration of peoples ' ** - — ~ — - - rpj^ Mongol-Tatar
horde ^.:«::«::»::|: j; traces of its domination, and eastern Russia, ..."
4. The Russian Empire, Its People, Institutions and Resources by August Haxthausen, Robert Farie (1856)
"When the Mongol-Tatar empire was dissolved, the cities were destroyed, and the
Tatar settlers were no longer able to defend themselves against the attacks ..."
5. The Crimean Tatars by Alan W. Fisher (1978)
"According to early Nazi racist theory, "Mongol, Tatar, and Kirgiz were all
considered synonyms for subhumans. ..."