
Also known as Khanty, Ostyaks, Khanti, Khande, Kantek
thumb|200px|right|Khanty family standing in front of a chum (tent)|chum, their traditional tent thumb|200px|Most Khanty people live in the Khanty–Mansi Autonomous Okrug in western [[Siberia]] The Khanty (), also known in older literature as Ostyaks (), are a Ugric Indigenous people, living in Khanty–Mansi Autonomous Okrug, a region historically known as "Yugra" in Russia, together with the Mansi. In the autonomous okrug, the Khanty and Mansi languages are given co-official status with Russian. In the 2021 Census, 31,467 persons identified themselves as Khanty. Of those, 30,242 were resident in
The Khanty are an Indigenous people of western Siberia, primarily living in Russia's Khanty–Mansi Autonomous Okrug, where their language holds co-official status alongside Russian. With approximately 31,467 people identified as Khanty in the 2021 Census, they represent a distinct Ugric cultural and linguistic group whose traditional way of life, including practices like living in chum (traditional tents), reflects their historical presence in the region known as Yugra.
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Os khantys (ou ostíacos, na literatura mais antiga) são um povo indígena nativo da Khântia-Mânsia, uma região historicamente conhecida como , na Rússia, juntamente com os mansis. No okrug autônomo, as línguas ostíaca e mansi recebem o estatuto de cooficial com o russo. No censo de 2010, 30 943 pessoas se identificaram como khanty. Destes, 26 694 residiam no oblast de Tiumen, dos quais 17 128 viviam em Okrug Autônomo Khanty-Mansi e 8 760 na Iamália-Nenétsia. 873 eram residentes do vizinho oblast de Tomsk e 88 moravam na República Komi.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).