Armenian–Azerbaijani cultural relations (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Armenian–Azerbaijani cultural relations" in English language version.

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agos.com.tr

anl.az

archive.org

armeniadiscovery.com

armradio.am

en.armradio.am

books.google.com

  • "Classical Selections of EP Singles ...". Billboard. August 29, 1953. p. 29.

britannica.com

  • Britannica Encyclopedia. Kazakh-rugs.

    Kazakh rug — floor covering woven by villagers living in western Azerbaijan and in a number of towns and villages in northern Armenia and the adjacent southern part of Georgia. The weavers are probably mostly Azerbaijanian Turks, although it is clear that both Armenians and Georgians have taken part in the production of these rugs. Kazakh rugs are all wool, coarsely knotted in the symmetrical knot with a long, lustrous pile, and use strong red, blue, and ivory in bold combinations with relatively simple but dramatic designs. The rugs seldom exceed about 1,7 × 2 metres (5.5 × 7 feet), and many of the smaller pieces are in prayer rug designs. Many show three medallions of approximately equal size, while another common format involves a central square enclosing geometric figures with two smaller squares at each end.

caucasusedition.net

caucasuswatch.de

columbia.edu

academiccommons.columbia.edu

dergipark.org.tr

  • "TAT, AN ENDANGERED LANGUAGE OF AZERBAIJAN, AND ITS SPEAKERS A HISTORICAL AND SOCIOLINGUISTIC OVERVIEW".

dissercat.com

  • Челебиев, Фаик Ибрагим оглы (2009). Морфология дастгяха (доктор искусствоведения thesis) (in Russian). Санкт-Петербург.

doi.org

iranica.com

  • Encycclopaedia Iranica. Azerbaijan. XI. Music of Azerbaijan. Archived 2011-02-03 at the Wayback Machine: «The Iranian elements in the development of the Azeri tradition were numerous, as is shown by modern terminology (čahār meżrāb, bardāšt), as well as by certain pieces in the repertoire, recent gūša and maqām that have Iranian names (Bayāt-e Šīrāz, Šūštar, Delkaš, Šekasta-ye Fārs, Bayāt-e Qājār). Conversely, Azerbaijani elements are found in Iranian music, particularly in dance pieces (reng). (See also M. Rezvani, Le théâtre et la danse en Iran, Paris, 1962, p. 149.) Azeri art music is also played in other regions of the Caucasus, especially among the Armenians, who have adopted the system of maqām and the instruments kamāṇča and tār.»

musigi-dunya.az

atlas.musigi-dunya.az

nayiri.com

npr.org

nytimes.com

mobile.nytimes.com

omniglot.com

opendemocracy.net

prlib.ru

scorser.com

en.instr.scorser.com

socalfolkdance.org

tandfonline.com

unesco.org

ich.unesco.org

web.archive.org

  • Encycclopaedia Iranica. Azerbaijan. XI. Music of Azerbaijan. Archived 2011-02-03 at the Wayback Machine: «The Iranian elements in the development of the Azeri tradition were numerous, as is shown by modern terminology (čahār meżrāb, bardāšt), as well as by certain pieces in the repertoire, recent gūša and maqām that have Iranian names (Bayāt-e Šīrāz, Šūštar, Delkaš, Šekasta-ye Fārs, Bayāt-e Qājār). Conversely, Azerbaijani elements are found in Iranian music, particularly in dance pieces (reng). (See also M. Rezvani, Le théâtre et la danse en Iran, Paris, 1962, p. 149.) Azeri art music is also played in other regions of the Caucasus, especially among the Armenians, who have adopted the system of maqām and the instruments kamāṇča and tār.»
  • Huizenga, Tom (5 June 2003). "The 'Sabre Dance' Man". NPR. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016.