Talk:Gilan province: Difference between revisions
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There is nothing about the Gilani dynesties in this article, such as Ale-Eshaq and Ale-Saluk,which were ruling in gilan for |
There is nothing about the Gilani dynesties in this article, such as Ale-Eshaq and Ale-Saluk,which were ruling in gilan for |
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sevsral centuries. Besides, There is nothing about long-tem bloody resistance of Gilanis against the invasion of Qizilbash |
sevsral centuries. Besides, There is nothing about the long-tem bloody resistance of Gilanis against the invasion of Qizilbash |
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tribes (including Safavid, Afshar and Qajar) which lasted more than three centuries. |
tribes (including Safavid, Afshar and Qajar) which lasted more than three centuries. |
Revision as of 20:35, 14 November 2007
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Giliki(Gileki) is neither a dialect of Farsi nor a branch of Pahlavi. It has a separate grammer from both languages. Over the past decades,there were extensive restrictions regarding teaching, using in mass media and officially using it. Therefore, Gilaki language has been gradually disolved in official languae (so-called Persian). That is why it is currently dying off.
- Dehkhoda specifically says: "lahjeye mardom e gilan" for the entry "gilaki".--Zereshk 03:03, 13 January 2006 (UTC)
Tijaneghorban! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gileki_language 216.175.76.251 04:47, 20 March 2007 (UTC)Mr.Rashti ..
I am aware of the existence of Kalhors in Gilan. I have no evidences whether they still speak it, Some accounts speak also of Kurdish migrations to Gilan. This should also be checked, and seen whether by this the Kurds proper (Sorani/ Kurmanji-speakers) were meant or Gorani or Laki speakers. This is important for idenitifying the language.
Babakexorramdin 16:56, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
There is nothing about the Gilani dynesties in this article, such as Ale-Eshaq and Ale-Saluk,which were ruling in gilan for sevsral centuries. Besides, There is nothing about the long-tem bloody resistance of Gilanis against the invasion of Qizilbash tribes (including Safavid, Afshar and Qajar) which lasted more than three centuries.