@irikinattyy:

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Saturday 30 May 2026 19:30:19 GMT
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#freeuyghur #уйгуры #uyghur #centralasia #myculture   The Uyghurs are one of the oldest and most deep-rooted peoples of the Turkic world, with documented history stretching back to the 3rd century. With the great Uyghur Khaganate they established in Ötüken between 744–840, they reached the pinnacle of urban life, literacy, art, science, medicine and astronomy. After migrating to East Turkistan they became one of the brightest centres of Buddhist culture and continued their scientific tradition. The magnificent wall paintings in the Bezeklik, Kızıl, and Kumtura caves remain masterpieces of world art history. They developed woodblock printing 400–500 years before the Chinese and, by translating thousands of Buddhist, Manichaean, and medical-astronomical texts into Turkish, created the richest written period of the Turkish language. In medicine, Uyghur scholars translated and expanded upon Indian, Persian, Greek and Chinese medical knowledge; the famous physician Yusuf Has Hajib (11th century) and later Turfan-region doctors) wrote important works on pharmacology, surgery and pulse diagnosis that influenced both Islamic and Central Asian medicine. In astronomy, the Uyghurs produced detailed star catalogues, calendars and astronomical tables as early as the 8th–10th centuries. The Turfan region observatories and the surviving Uyghur astronomical manuscripts (some kept in Berlin and London collections) show highly accurate calculations of planetary motions and eclipses, centuries before similar European works. With the Twelve Muqam system they produced the most sophisticated examples of classical Turkic music; this tradition was inscribed on UNESCO’s List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2005. Throughout history the Uyghurs established their own states (Idiqut, Yarkent Khanate, etc.) and lived under their own flags and culture. Today, more than 12 million Uyghurs living in East Turkistan continue to preserve the spirit of independence they have carried for centuries, along with their profound civilisational and scientific heritage. This strong historical identity remains vibrantly alive in their language, music, literature, art, medicine and astronomy.
#freeuyghur #уйгуры #uyghur #centralasia #myculture The Uyghurs are one of the oldest and most deep-rooted peoples of the Turkic world, with documented history stretching back to the 3rd century. With the great Uyghur Khaganate they established in Ötüken between 744–840, they reached the pinnacle of urban life, literacy, art, science, medicine and astronomy. After migrating to East Turkistan they became one of the brightest centres of Buddhist culture and continued their scientific tradition. The magnificent wall paintings in the Bezeklik, Kızıl, and Kumtura caves remain masterpieces of world art history. They developed woodblock printing 400–500 years before the Chinese and, by translating thousands of Buddhist, Manichaean, and medical-astronomical texts into Turkish, created the richest written period of the Turkish language. In medicine, Uyghur scholars translated and expanded upon Indian, Persian, Greek and Chinese medical knowledge; the famous physician Yusuf Has Hajib (11th century) and later Turfan-region doctors) wrote important works on pharmacology, surgery and pulse diagnosis that influenced both Islamic and Central Asian medicine. In astronomy, the Uyghurs produced detailed star catalogues, calendars and astronomical tables as early as the 8th–10th centuries. The Turfan region observatories and the surviving Uyghur astronomical manuscripts (some kept in Berlin and London collections) show highly accurate calculations of planetary motions and eclipses, centuries before similar European works. With the Twelve Muqam system they produced the most sophisticated examples of classical Turkic music; this tradition was inscribed on UNESCO’s List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2005. Throughout history the Uyghurs established their own states (Idiqut, Yarkent Khanate, etc.) and lived under their own flags and culture. Today, more than 12 million Uyghurs living in East Turkistan continue to preserve the spirit of independence they have carried for centuries, along with their profound civilisational and scientific heritage. This strong historical identity remains vibrantly alive in their language, music, literature, art, medicine and astronomy.

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