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Tyntchtykbek Tchoroev : ウィキペディア英語版
Tyntchtykbek Tchoroev

Tyntchtykbek Kadyrmambetovich Tchoroev (''Chorotegin'') (in Kyrgyz - Тынчтыкбек Чороев (Чоротегин), a Kyrgyz historian, publicist and journalist. President of the Kyrgyz History Society (elected on 11 February 2012), Doctor of History (1998), Professor of the Kyrgyz State National University (2002).
Dr. Tchoroev is currently an independent researcher. Recently, he has worked as a broadcaster of Radio Azattyk, i.e. Kyrgyz Service of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (he was Director of the Kyrgyz Service between 1 January 2003 and 30 September 2010).
== A short biography ==
He was born in the village of Echki-Bashy in the On-Archa village government in Naryn district of Naryn region in Northern Kyrgyzstan on 28 March 1959.
His grand father Choro (Choro-Hajji) Aity uulu was a wealthy person who made a pilgrimage to Mecca.
Choro-Hajji died a little bit earlier than the launch of the extradition campaign for the rich Kyrgyz people by the Stalinist regime in the last years of the 1920s. Choro Hajji's mausoleum built in the 1927-28, still exists near the village of Echki-Bashy.
Choro-Hajji's older son, Bekbolot, died during the Stalinist purge, due to his connection with a wealthy family.
Choro-Hajji's wife, Suyumkan Malay kyzy, was a daughter of a wealthy person from a neighboring Ming-Bulak village. She was educated before the Soviet regime, that is why she could read Koran in Arabic.
Kadyrmambet Tchoroev (or Choroev), the older son of Choro and Suyumkan, was married to his cousin, Aliya Kydyraaly kyzy, the daughter of Kydyraaly and Seidana Malay kyzy.
Seidana was also a well educated woman, who could read Koran and write in Arabic script.
However, the Arabic script was officially banned in Kyrgyzstan since 1928-29, when the Soviet Kyrgyz were transferred to the Latin script (until 1939-40), and, due to that, the grand mothers of Tyntchtykbek were officially recognized as "uneducated" women.
Kadyrmambet and Aliya had five sons and three daughters. Tyntchtykbek was the fourth in the family.
In the early years, he was brought up by both Suyumkan and Seidana, the grand mothers from father's and mother's side.
Tyntchtykbek used to go to the summer-time pasture of Solton-Sary together with the family until the autumn of 1966.
The older brothers and his older sister helped him to learn ABC even before he started to go to a primary school.
He started to go to the Echki-Bashy village school in September 1966.
After finishing the 8th class in the village, he went to the provincial town of Naryn to study the upper classes of the No 1 Toktogul Satylganov secondary school there.
He graduated the school with a silver medal in 1976.
Then he became a student of the history faculty at the Kyrgyz State University (now - the Kyrgyz National University named after Jusup Balasagyn).
During his student time, he was actively participating in the scholarly and literature circles in the capital city of Frunze (nowadays Bishkek).
He graduated the university in Bishkek with the so-called "Red diploma" in 1981.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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