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Kabardian

Kabardian, the easternmost Circassian language, originated in and still has hundreds of thousands of speakers in what is today the Kabardino-Balkaria Republic within the Russian Federation, centered on its capital of Nalchik, though large numbers are now in diaspora in Turkey and elsewhere.
Circassian Customs - Kabardian
Majida Hilma at International Mother Language Day - Kabardian
The Circassian People and Their Language (Majdoline Hilmi)
Jonty Yamisha - Circassian

The largest and easternmost of the languages spoken by ethnic Circassians (or Adyghe), Kabardian (sometimes called Beslenei or East Circassian) originated in and still has hundreds of thousands of speakers in what is today the Kabardino-Balkaria Republic within the Russian Federation, centered on its capital of Nalchik. Particularly since the 19th century, as a result of bitter conflicts with Russian troops, large number of Circassians fled into diaspora communities, principally in Turkey (where the Kabardian language is probably strongest, with a few hundred thousand speakers) as well as Jordan, Syria, Israel, and the United States.

Affiliation

Kabardian is classified by linguists as being a Northwest Caucasian language, in the Circassian branch. To a considerable extent, it is mutually intelligible with Adyghe (or West Circassian), and ideas differ about the relative status of those two varieties, though other Circassian varieties such as Abaza, Abkhaz, and Ubykh are somewhat more distantly related. Some linguists have spoken of a Circassian dialect continuum which once linked these varieties geographically.

Endangerment

Kabardian is still a vigorous language spoken by people of all ages, particularly in the Kabardino-Balkaria Republic, where it has an official status and is apparently a language of education, as well as in Turkey, where a large and active diaspora population exists. Still, the longterm future of the language is difficult to gauge given the pressures of assimilation wherever Circassians live–in Jordan and Syria, where community circumstances are difficult, the language is said to be particularly under threat. There are many different dialects of Kabardian–eight are mentioned by the Ethnologue database–and the situation is complicated by the emergent differences in Kabardian speech in the diaspora, Turkey for instance, and the close ties between Kabardian and varieties of Adyghe. Despite a written tradition using the Arabic script and a Latin-based orthography which has existed since 1923, Kabardian today makes use of a Cyrillic writing system, although many are not literate in the language.