The Kang-chü, Kao-che, Gaoche or Kao-chü Ting-ling (chin. 高車, „high chariot/cart“) were an ancient Turkic people in East Asia in the 3rd century AD. Only known under the Chinese name Kao-che, they are usually equated with the ancient Dingling (丁零) and Kang and medieval Kipchaks. The semantic association of "carts" with Turkic nomads appears in the Gaoche ("high cart"), one of the Chinese names used for the Tiele(鐵勒) and later the Uyghurs. In Georgian and Latin sources Cumans, Kipchaks, and Qanglï are seen identical or at least “related”, while also perhaps being connected with the Kengeres/Kan
高車(こうしゃ、拼音:Gāochē)は、4世紀から6世紀の中国の五胡十六国時代・南北朝時代にモンゴル高原の北に存在したテュルク系遊牧民の中国での呼び名。または、(あふくしら、āfúzhìluó)が自立して建てた阿伏至羅国(阿伏至羅)を指す。
Abstract from DBpedia / Wikipedia · CC BY-SA
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).