Hatuqway
| Хьатыкъуайхэр, Хьатыкъоехэр | |
|---|---|
| Family symbols (tamigha) of some Hatuqway families | |
| Total population | |
| 5,650 (estimate) | |
| Regions with significant populations | |
| Turkey | ~5,000 | 
| Syria | ~200 | 
| Germany | ~200 (estimate) | 
| United States | ~100 (estimate) | 
| Jordan | ~100 | 
| Israel | ~50 | 
| Languages | |
| Adyghe, Turkish, Russian, English, Arabic, Hebrew, German | |
| Religion | |
| Islam | |
| Related ethnic groups | |
| Other Adyghe tribes | |
| Part of a series on the | 
| Circassians Адыгэхэр | 
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| List of notable Circassians Circassian genocide | 
| Circassian diaspora | 
| Circassian tribes | 
| Surviving Destroyed or barely existing | 
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| Languages and dialects | 
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The Hatuqway are one of the twelve major Circassian tribes, representing one of the twelve stars on the green-and-gold Circassian flag. They were known for their art of war as a warrior tribe. Their presence in the Caucasus was destroyed during the Circassian genocide following the Russo-Circassian War; their number was significantly reduced and today they exist only in small communities in various diasporas, and their names are not mentioned anymore in Circassian dialectology.