North Ossetia, North Caucasus, Russia



#iwtv#interview with the vampire#the vampire armand#assad zaman

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North Ossetia, North Caucasus, Russia

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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North Ossetia
ossetian beauty
For queer people worlwide
If you speak any of the languages listed below you would greatly help me out if you could teach me LGBT+ vocabulary, either through DMs or just in the replies/reblogs. I'm building a global LGBT+ dictionary but some languages are just harder to access in my side of the world.
The languages are the following (in no particular order):
Kashmiri
Caribbean Hindustani
Selk'nam
Ossetian
Bolze
Erromintxela
Petu/petuh
Huilliche
Hmong
Ialguzidze’s Ossetian religious books in Georgian Khutsuri alphabet.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Ossetian woman, Russia, by Alana Khugati
*Deh₂nu
*Deh₂nu- is a hypothetical goddess of water in Proto-Indo-European mythology, with connections to the names of rivers like the Danube, Don, Dnieper, and Dniester, as well as the Vedic deity Dānu, the Irish Danu, and the Welsh Dôn. Despite acknowledging a possible lexical connection, Mallory and Adams contend that there is not enough evidence to support the idea that a distinct river goddess existed in Proto-Indo-European beliefs. They primarily highlight the Indic tradition's understanding of river deification. Furthermore, Mallory and Adams suggest that a theory for a sea god called *Trih₂tōn—whose name is derived from the Greek Triton and the Old Irish word for sea, trïath—is unsupported by the lack of a corresponding sea god in Irish mythology and only minor lexical similarities. The Ossetian god Donbettyr is also mentioned in the story. Who is placated by gifts to keep the waterwheel turning, and who Donnán of Eigg proposes as a Christian equivilent of this figure.
Moreover, this deity and the Dan river in Centeral Asia may have similar etymologies.
She is frequently seen as the mother of a mythical tribe, the *Deh₂newyóes, in many Indo-European cultures; these tribes are deduced from the Vedic Danavas, the Irish Tuatha Dé Danann, the Greek Danaoi, and the Norse Danes. Under Bel's leadership, this tribe is said to have fought a hero called *H₂nḗrtos, which could connect them to characters like the Norse god Njord, the Nart from the Nart saga, and Indra's epithet nrtama.
Ethnic Diversity in the Former Eastern Bloc, Part 1:
Selection of Women Representing Native Ethnic Groups from Eastern Europe and European Russia
From left to right. Row 1: a) Romanian b) Circassian - Russia c) Lezgin - Russia Row 2: a) Crimean Tatar - Ukraine b) Don Kalmyk - Russia c) Chuvash - Russia Row 3: a) Moldovan b) Circassian (Kabardian) - Russia c) Chechen - Russia Row 4: a) Bulgarian b) Bashkir - Russia c) Ingush - Russia Row 5: a) Moksha - Russia b) Lithuanian c) Nogay (Steppe Ukraine and Crimea) Row 6: a) Abazin -Russia b) Vepsian - Russia c) Ossetian - Russia Row 7: a) Ashkenazi Jew - Russia b) Kalmyk (Proper) - Russia c) Udmurt - Russia Row 8: a) Volga Tatar - Russia b) Kumyk - Russia c) Russian Row 9: a) Nenet - Russia b) Mari - Russia c) Armenians of Ukraine Row 10 a) Abkhaz - Russia b) Ukrainian c) Serbian
Source: "Les Origines de la Beauté" project by Natalia Ivanova
Part 2 - Southern Caucaus Region, Central Asia, and Asian Russia