The Uzbeks speak either of two dialects …

Years: 1996 - 2007

The Uzbeks speak either of two dialects of Uzbek, a Turkic language of the Ural-Altaic family of languages, and are Sunni Muslim in religion.

After the Turks, they represent the world's largest Turkic-speaking group.

Uzbek society is stratified, male-dominated, and authoritative.

The Uzbeks traditionally maintain bride-price, dowries, and close kin lineages.

Kinship, diet, and clothing reflect ancient relations with the Tajiks and regional dominance.

By the mid-1990s, about 16.5 million Uzbeks live in Uzbekistan, where they form about 71% of the population.

There are about 1.5 to 2 million Uzbeks living in the northern plains of Afghanistan, 1,380,000 in Tajikistan, 570,000 in Kyrgyzstan, and smaller numbers in Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Xinjiang (Sinkiang) in China.

Most Uzbeks today are cotton farmers, although in Afghanistan seminomadic traditions persist.

The least Russified of those Turkic peoples formerly ruled by the Soviet Union, virtually all Uzbeks still claim Uzbek as their first language.

The great majority of Uzbeks are Sunnite Muslims of the Hanafi rite, a group noted for the acceptance of personal opinion (ra'y) in the absence of Muslim precedent.

The Uzbeks, especially the urban Uzbeks, are regarded as the most religious Muslims of Central Asia; early marriages for young girls, bride-price, and religious marriages and burials are among the traditions still practiced.

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