User:Chrysophylax/Verse:Sorqu: Difference between revisions

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The Sorqu people ([Sorqu gab|Sorqu language]]: Sorqu cin, Old Sorqu: ú Sorәq ceng ssuk, traditional Chinese: 鐵族) were a people who inhabited the region of what is today eastern Mongolia and Northeast China. They established their own dynasty in 289 CE, the rather short-lived [[Verse:i Sesә dynasty]] which reigned over the Sorqu state for 49 years.
The Sorqu people ([[Sorqu gab|Sorqu language]]: Sorqu cin, Old Sorqu: ú Sorәq ceng ssuk, traditional Chinese: 鐵族) were a people who inhabited the region of what is today eastern Mongolia and Northeast China. They established their own dynasty in 309 CE on the vast plains of northeast China with the rather short-lived [[Verse:i Sesә dynasty|i Sesә dynasty]], which reigned over the Sorqu state for 49 years before being destroyed by the [[wikipedia:Jie people|Jie]].


== Language
== Language ==
The Sorqu spoke a language isolate which has come down to us in two layers, the earlier [[ú Sorәq kiap|Old Sorqu]], primarily attested through one book and coins and the younger [[Sorqu gab]] attested approximately two hundred years later.
The Sorqu spoke a language isolate which has come down to us in two layers, the earlier [[ú Sorәq kiap|Old Sorqu]], primarily attested through one book and coins and the younger [[Sorqu gab]] attested approximately two hundred years later.


== History
== History ==
== See also
== See also ==

Latest revision as of 22:48, 11 February 2018

The Sorqu people (Sorqu language: Sorqu cin, Old Sorqu: ú Sorәq ceng ssuk, traditional Chinese: 鐵族) were a people who inhabited the region of what is today eastern Mongolia and Northeast China. They established their own dynasty in 309 CE on the vast plains of northeast China with the rather short-lived i Sesә dynasty, which reigned over the Sorqu state for 49 years before being destroyed by the Jie.

Language

The Sorqu spoke a language isolate which has come down to us in two layers, the earlier Old Sorqu, primarily attested through one book and coins and the younger Sorqu gab attested approximately two hundred years later.

History

See also