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Baltic Finnic peoples

The Baltic Finnic or Balto-Finnic peoples, also referred to as the Baltic Sea Finns, Baltic Finns, sometimes Western Finnic and often simply as the Finnic peoples, are the peoples inhabiting the Baltic Sea region in Northern and Eastern Europe who speak Finnic languages. They include the Finns, Estonians (including Võros and Setos), Karelians (including Ludes and Livvi), Veps, Izhorians, Votes, and Livonians. In some cases the Kvens, Ingrians, Tornedalians and speakers of Meänkieli are considered separate from the Finns.

Baltic Finnic peoples
Total population
c. 7.4–8.2 million
Regions with significant populations
Finns[a]c. 6.2–7 million
Estoniansc. 1.1 million
Kareliansc. 75,000
Vepsiansc. 6,000
Izhoriansc. 1,000
Livoniansc. 200
Votesc. 100
Languages
Finnic languages
Religion
Predominantly Christianity (either Lutheranism or Eastern Orthodoxy);[1] minority Uralic Neopaganism
Related ethnic groups
Other Finnic peoples

a Tornedalians, Ingrians, Kvens and Forest Finns are subsumed under Finns, as they are most commonly described as being subgroups of Finns proper rather than separate ethnic groups altogether.

The bulk of the Finnic peoples (more than 98%) are ethnic Finns and Estonians, who reside in the only two independent Finnic nation statesFinland and Estonia.[2]

Finnic peoples are also significant minority groups in neighbouring countries of Sweden, Norway and especially Russia.

Theories of origin

According to the "Migration Theory" that was based primarily on comparative linguistics, the proto-Finns migrated from an ancient homeland somewhere in north-western Siberia or western Russia to the shores of the Baltic Sea around 1000 BC, at which time Finns and Estonians separated. The Migration Theory has been called into question since 1980 based on genealogy, craniometry and archaeology. Recently, a modified form of the Migration Theory has gained new support among the younger generation of linguists, who consider that archaeology, genes and craniometric data cannot supply evidence of prehistoric languages.[3]

During the last 30 years, scientific research in physical anthropology, craniometric analyses, and mitochondrial and Y-chromosomal DNA frequencies have reduced the likelihood of the Migration Theory—a major westward migration as recently as 3,000 years ago. The Settlement Continuity Theory asserts that at least the genetic ancestors of the Finnic peoples were among the earliest indigenous peoples of Europe.[4][5]

The origin of the people who lived around the Baltic Sea area during the Mesolithic Era continues to be debated by scientists. From the middle of the Neolithic onward, there is a certain extent of agreement among scholars: it has been suggested that Finnic tribes arrived in the Baltic region from the east or south-east around the period 4000–3000 BC and merged with the original inhabitants, who then adopted the proto-Finno-Ugric language and the Pit–Comb Ware culture of the newcomers. The members of this new Finno-Ugric-speaking ethnicity are thought to be the ancestors of modern-day Estonians.[5] The Y-chromosomal data has also revealed a common Finnic ancestry for the males of the neighbouring Balts, speakers of the Indo-European Baltic languages. According to the studies, Baltic males are most closely related to the Volga Finns such as the Mari, rather than to Baltic Finns.[6] The results suggest that the territories of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have been settled by Finnic-speaking tribes since the early Mesolithic period.[5]

On the other hand, some linguists do not consider it likely that a Baltic Finnic language form could have existed at such an early date. According to these views, the Finnic languages appeared in Finland and the Baltic region only during the Early Bronze Age (ca. 1800 BC), if not later.[3]

Finnic oral poetry

The Finnic peoples share a common cultural heritage: the art of ancient "rune" (poem) singing in the Kalevala meter, estimated to be 2,500–3,000 years old. The Finnish and Estonian national epics, Kalevala and Kalevipoeg, are both written in this meter.[7] The Veps are the only Baltic Finnish people with no significant corpus of Kalevala meter oral poetry. The poetic tradition has included epic poems (known mostly in Karelia and Ingria, perhaps as survivals from an earlier, wider distribution), lyric poems and magic chants.

The ancient rune singing has inspired the creation of the national epic of Finland, Kalevala compiled by Elias Lönnrot, and the music of Arvo Pärt, the best-known Estonian composer in the classical field.[8]

J. R. R. Tolkien has highlighted the importance of Kalevala as a source for his legendarium, including The Silmarillion and The Lord of the Rings.[9]

History of the Finnic peoples

 
Finnic peoples in The Races of Europe by William Z. Ripley in 1899.

The Mesolithic Period

The region has been populated since the end of the last glacial era, about 10,000 BC. The earliest traces of human settlement are connected with Suomusjärvi culture and Kunda culture. The Early Mesolithic Pulli settlement is located by the Pärnu River. It has been dated to the beginning of the 9th millennium BC. The Kunda Culture received its name from the Lammasmäe settlement site in northern Estonia, which dates from earlier than 8500.[10] Bone and stone artefacts similar to those found at Kunda have been discovered elsewhere in Estonia, as well as in Latvia, northern Lithuania and southern Finland.

The Neolithic Period

Around 5300 BCE pottery and agriculture entered Finland.[11] The earliest representatives belong to the Pit–Comb Ware culture, known for their distinctive decorating patterns. This marks the beginning of the Neolithic,

Pit–Comb Ware culture

 
Neolithic period

Until the early 1980s, the arrival of Finnic peoples, the ancestors of the Estonians, Finns, and Livonians on the shores of the Baltic Sea around 3000 BC, was associated with the Pit–Comb Ware culture However, such a linking of archaeologically defined cultural entities with linguistic ones cannot be proven and it has been suggested that the increase of settlement finds in the period is more likely to have been associated with an economic boom related to the warming of climate. Some researchers have even argued that a form of Uralic languages may have been spoken in Estonia and Finland since the end of the last glaciation.[12] Through archaeogenetics the population has been shown to derive the bulk of its ancestry from Eastern Hunter-Gatherers of Russia.[13]

Bronze Age

The beginning of the Bronze Age in Estonia is dated to approximately 1800 BC, in present-day Finland some time after 1500 BCE. The coastal regions of Finland were a part of the Nordic Bronze Culture, whereas in the inland regions the influences came from the bronze-using cultures of Northern Russia. The first fortified settlements, Asva and Ridala on the island of Saaremaa and Iru in the Northern Estonia, began to be built. The development of shipbuilding facilitated the spread of bronze. Changes took place in burial customs, a new type of burial ground spread from Germanic to Estonian areas, stone cist graves and cremation burials became increasingly common beside small numbers of boat-shaped stone graves.[14] In terms of genetics, the Bronze Age population of the East Baltic derives most of their ancestry from the Corded Ware culture with an elevated amount of Mesolithic Hunter-Gatherer ancestry, but showing no prevalence of Siberian related ancestry.[15]

The Iron Age

 
Northern Europe in 814.

The Pre-Roman Iron Age began in about 500 BC and lasted until the middle of the 1st century. The oldest iron items were imported, although since the 1st century iron was smelted from local marsh and lake ore. Settlement sites were located mostly in places that offered natural protection. Fortresses were built, although used temporarily. The appearance of square Celtic fields surrounded by enclosures in Estonia date from the Pre-Roman Iron Age. The majority of stones with man-made indents, which presumably were connected with magic designed to increase crop fertility, date from this period. A new type of grave, quadrangular burial mounds, began to develop. Burial traditions show the clear beginning of social stratification. The first reported individuals with the y-DNA haplotype N-M231 in the Baltic are from the Iron Age, alongside Siberian ancestry.[15]

The Roman Iron Age is roughly dated to between AD 50 and 450, the era that was affected by the influence of the Roman Empire. In material culture this is reflected by a few Roman coins, some jewellery and artefacts. The abundance of iron artefacts in Southern Estonia speaks of closer mainland ties with southern areas, while coastal Finland and the islands of western and northern Estonia communicated with their neighbours mainly by sea.

Between 200 and 400 AD, a group of Baltic Sea Finns in southwestern Finland, who had traveled to Finland proper from the areas of nowadays Estonia, began moving inland towards Tavastia.

Between 200 and 400 AD, the Finns proper themselves became divided geographically in three parts:

  1. Tavastians: The tribes who went inland to Tavastia;
  2. Southwestern Finns: The tribes who stayed in the southern side of the Kokemäenjoki river delta;
  3. Southern Ostrobothnians: The tribes who stayed on the northern side of the river delta.

During the Migration Period in 400–600 AD, the Estonian influence gradually weakened. By the end of the period, clearly defined tribal dialectical areas – Finns, Tavastians, Karelians, Northern Estonians, Southern Estonians, and Western Estonians including the islanders—had emerged, the population of each having formed its own understanding of identity.[16]

Early Middle Ages

Finnic peoples in chronicles

The word Finn is first mentioned in the form Fenni in the 1st century AD by Roman historian Tacitus. However, it is possible that he was referring to the people of northern Europe in general, particularly the Lappic or Sami people. After that the name Finni is used by Claudius Ptolemaeus (around 150) and the Eastern Roman writer Jordanes in his Getica (551). References to Finnic tribes become much more numerous from the Viking Age (800–1050). It was not until about 1171 that the word Finni was employed to mean the Finns.

The term Aestii, the name of the Estonians, occurs first again in Tacitus; however, it might have indicated Balts. In Northern sagas (13th century), the term[which?] started to be used to indicate the Estonians.

In a Norwegian text (11th–12th century)[which?], the name Kiriali, referring to Karelians, and the term cornuti Finni, interpreted as referring to the Lapps or Sami people, first appear.

The opening chapter of the Old East Slavic Primary Chronicle (early 12th century) lists the following peoples living "in the share of Japheth" among others: Chud, Merya, Muroma, Ves, Cheremis, Mordvin, Chud Zavolochskaya ('beyond the portages'), Perm, Pechera, Sum (possibly meaning Suomi), Yam (Häme), Yugra and Liv.[17][18]

The Chudes, as mentioned in the earliest East Slavic chronicles, are in a 12th-century context usually considered to be Estonians, although the name sometimes referred to all Finnic peoples in north-western Rus.[19] According to the Primary Chronicle, the Chudes' lands were bounded by the Varangian Sea (Baltic Sea).[17] In 1030 Yaroslav I the Wise invaded the country of the Chudes and laid the foundations of Yuriev (the historical Russian name of Tartu, Estonia).[19] They remained until 1061 when, according to chronicles, Yuryev was burned down by the Chudes. According to Old East Slavic chronicles,[which?] the Chudes were one of the founders of the Rus' state.[20]

The northern (or eastern) Chudes were also a mythical people in folklore among Northern Russians and their neighbours. In Komi mythology, the Northern Chudes represent the mythic ancestors of the Komi people.[21]

Middle Ages and Modern period

In the 13th century the east Baltic world was transformed by military conquest: first the Livs and Estonians, then the Finns underwent defeat, baptism, military occupation and sometimes extermination by groups of Germans, Danes and Swedes.[22] Finland was governed as a part of Sweden, while Estonia was under a Baltic German knightly brotherhood before becoming parts of Russian Empire. Finland and Estonia became independent in 1917–1918 (see history of Finland and history of Estonia). The Karelians remained under Russian and then Soviet rule, and their absolute and relative numbers dwindled. When urbanization was peaking, less-numerous peoples rapidly lost capacity to maintain their village-based cultures and so were often assimilated to the mainstream society.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Population". Statistics Finland. Retrieved 3 May 2016.
  2. ^ "Finnic peoples". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved 6 February 2019.
  3. ^ a b Kallio, Petri 2006: Uralilaisen kantakielen absoluuttista kronologiaa. (With English summary: The absolute chronology of the Proto-Uralic language.). Virittäjä 2006
  4. ^ the early indigenous inhabitants of Europe by Richard, Lewis (2005). Finland, Cultural Lone Wolf. Intercultural Press. ISBN 978-1-931930-18-5.
  5. ^ a b c Laitinen, Virpi; Päivi Lahermo (24 August 2001). "Y-Chromosomal Diversity Suggests that Baltic Males Share Common Finno-Ugric-Speaking Forefathers" (PDF). Human Heredity. Department of Genetics, University of Turku, Turku, Finnish Genome Center, University of Helsinki. 53 (2): 68–78. doi:10.1159/000057985. PMID 12037406. S2CID 29863635. Retrieved 8 October 2008.
  6. ^ Siiri Rootsi (19 October 2004). "Human Y-Chromosomal Variation in European Populations" (PDF). Tartu University Press. Retrieved 8 October 2008.
  7. ^ Pentikäinen, Juha; Ritva Poom (1999). Kalevala Mythology. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-21352-5.
  8. ^ Nidel, Richard (2005). World Music. Routledge. pp. 160. ISBN 978-0-415-96801-0.
  9. ^ Chance, Jane (2004). Tolkien and the Invention of Myth. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131-2301-1.
  10. ^ Jean-Jacques Subrenat (2004). Estonia: Identity and Independence: Translated into English (On the Boundary of Two Worlds: Identity, Freedom, and Moral Imagination in the Baltics, 2) ... and Moral Imagination in the Baltics. Amsterdam: Rodopi. p. 24. ISBN 90-420-0890-3.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 July 2017. Retrieved 25 December 2013.
  12. ^ Helle, Knut (2003). The Cambridge history of Scandinavia. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 51. ISBN 0-521-47299-7.
  13. ^ Saag, Lehti; Varul, Liivi; Scheib, Christiana Lyn; Stenderup, Jesper; Allentoft, Morten E.; Saag, Lauri; Pagani, Luca; Reidla, Maere; Tambets, Kristiina; Metspalu, Ene; Kriiska, Aivar (2 March 2017). "Extensive farming in Estonia started through a sex-biased migration from the Steppe". Current Biology. 27 (14): 2185–2193.e6. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2017.06.022. PMID 28712569.
  14. ^ Jean-Jacques Subrenat (2004). Estonia: Identity and Independence. p. 26. ISBN 978-90-420-0890-8.
  15. ^ a b Saag, Lehti; Laneman, Margot; Varul, Liivi; Malve, Martin; Valk, Heiki; Razzak, Maria A.; Shirobokov, Ivan G.; Khartanovich, Valeri I.; Mikhaylova, Elena R.; Kushniarevich, Alena; Scheib, Christiana Lyn (May 2019). "The Arrival of Siberian Ancestry Connecting the Eastern Baltic to Uralic Speakers further East". Current Biology. 29 (10): 1701–1711.e16. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2019.04.026. ISSN 0960-9822. PMC 6544527. PMID 31080083.
  16. ^ Jean-Jacques Subrenat (2004). Estonia: Identity and Independence. pp. 28–31. ISBN 978-90-420-0890-8.
  17. ^ a b Samuel H. Cross (1968). Russian Primary Chronicle: Laurentian Text. Medieval Academy of Amer. p. 52. ISBN 0-910956-34-0.
  18. ^ Angela Marcantonio (2002). The Uralic Language Family: Facts, Myths and Statistics (Publications of the Philological Society). Blackwell Publishing Professional. pp. 21–3. ISBN 0-631-23170-6.
  19. ^ a b Tvauri, Andres (2012). The Migration Period, Pre-Viking Age, and Viking Age in Estonia. pp. 33, 59, 60. Retrieved 27 December 2016.
  20. ^ Pre- and Proto-historic Finns by John Abercromby p.141
  21. ^ FOREST MYTHS by Pavel F. Limerov at google.scholar
  22. ^ Christiansen, Eric (1997). The northern Crusades. Harmondsworth [Eng.]: Penguin. pp. 93. ISBN 0-14-026653-4.

baltic, finnic, peoples, this, article, about, finnic, peoples, living, near, baltic, other, uses, finnic, peoples, baltic, finnic, balto, finnic, peoples, also, referred, baltic, finns, baltic, finns, sometimes, western, finnic, often, simply, finnic, peoples. This article is about the Finnic peoples living near the Baltic Sea For other uses see Finnic peoples The Baltic Finnic or Balto Finnic peoples also referred to as the Baltic Sea Finns Baltic Finns sometimes Western Finnic and often simply as the Finnic peoples are the peoples inhabiting the Baltic Sea region in Northern and Eastern Europe who speak Finnic languages They include the Finns Estonians including Voros and Setos Karelians including Ludes and Livvi Veps Izhorians Votes and Livonians In some cases the Kvens Ingrians Tornedalians and speakers of Meankieli are considered separate from the Finns Baltic Finnic peoplesFinnic language familyTotal populationc 7 4 8 2 millionRegions with significant populationsFinns a c 6 2 7 millionEstoniansc 1 1 millionKareliansc 75 000Vepsiansc 6 000Izhoriansc 1 000Livoniansc 200Votesc 100LanguagesFinnic languagesReligionPredominantly Christianity either Lutheranism or Eastern Orthodoxy 1 minority Uralic NeopaganismRelated ethnic groupsOther Finnic peoplesa Tornedalians Ingrians Kvens and Forest Finns are subsumed under Finns as they are most commonly described as being subgroups of Finns proper rather than separate ethnic groups altogether The bulk of the Finnic peoples more than 98 are ethnic Finns and Estonians who reside in the only two independent Finnic nation states Finland and Estonia 2 Finnic peoples are also significant minority groups in neighbouring countries of Sweden Norway and especially Russia Contents 1 Theories of origin 2 Finnic oral poetry 3 History of the Finnic peoples 3 1 The Mesolithic Period 3 2 The Neolithic Period 3 2 1 Pit Comb Ware culture 3 3 Bronze Age 3 4 The Iron Age 3 5 Early Middle Ages 3 5 1 Finnic peoples in chronicles 3 6 Middle Ages and Modern period 4 See also 5 ReferencesTheories of origin EditAccording to the Migration Theory that was based primarily on comparative linguistics the proto Finns migrated from an ancient homeland somewhere in north western Siberia or western Russia to the shores of the Baltic Sea around 1000 BC at which time Finns and Estonians separated The Migration Theory has been called into question since 1980 based on genealogy craniometry and archaeology Recently a modified form of the Migration Theory has gained new support among the younger generation of linguists who consider that archaeology genes and craniometric data cannot supply evidence of prehistoric languages 3 During the last 30 years scientific research in physical anthropology craniometric analyses and mitochondrial and Y chromosomal DNA frequencies have reduced the likelihood of the Migration Theory a major westward migration as recently as 3 000 years ago The Settlement Continuity Theory asserts that at least the genetic ancestors of the Finnic peoples were among the earliest indigenous peoples of Europe 4 5 The origin of the people who lived around the Baltic Sea area during the Mesolithic Era continues to be debated by scientists From the middle of the Neolithic onward there is a certain extent of agreement among scholars it has been suggested that Finnic tribes arrived in the Baltic region from the east or south east around the period 4000 3000 BC and merged with the original inhabitants who then adopted the proto Finno Ugric language and the Pit Comb Ware culture of the newcomers The members of this new Finno Ugric speaking ethnicity are thought to be the ancestors of modern day Estonians 5 The Y chromosomal data has also revealed a common Finnic ancestry for the males of the neighbouring Balts speakers of the Indo European Baltic languages According to the studies Baltic males are most closely related to the Volga Finns such as the Mari rather than to Baltic Finns 6 The results suggest that the territories of Estonia Latvia and Lithuania have been settled by Finnic speaking tribes since the early Mesolithic period 5 On the other hand some linguists do not consider it likely that a Baltic Finnic language form could have existed at such an early date According to these views the Finnic languages appeared in Finland and the Baltic region only during the Early Bronze Age ca 1800 BC if not later 3 Finnic oral poetry EditThe Finnic peoples share a common cultural heritage the art of ancient rune poem singing in the Kalevala meter estimated to be 2 500 3 000 years old The Finnish and Estonian national epics Kalevala and Kalevipoeg are both written in this meter 7 The Veps are the only Baltic Finnish people with no significant corpus of Kalevala meter oral poetry The poetic tradition has included epic poems known mostly in Karelia and Ingria perhaps as survivals from an earlier wider distribution lyric poems and magic chants The ancient rune singing has inspired the creation of the national epic of Finland Kalevala compiled by Elias Lonnrot and the music of Arvo Part the best known Estonian composer in the classical field 8 J R R Tolkien has highlighted the importance of Kalevala as a source for his legendarium including The Silmarillion and The Lord of the Rings 9 History of the Finnic peoples Edit Finnic peoples in The Races of Europe by William Z Ripley in 1899 The Mesolithic Period Edit The region has been populated since the end of the last glacial era about 10 000 BC The earliest traces of human settlement are connected with Suomusjarvi culture and Kunda culture The Early Mesolithic Pulli settlement is located by the Parnu River It has been dated to the beginning of the 9th millennium BC The Kunda Culture received its name from the Lammasmae settlement site in northern Estonia which dates from earlier than 8500 10 Bone and stone artefacts similar to those found at Kunda have been discovered elsewhere in Estonia as well as in Latvia northern Lithuania and southern Finland The Neolithic Period Edit Around 5300 BCE pottery and agriculture entered Finland 11 The earliest representatives belong to the Pit Comb Ware culture known for their distinctive decorating patterns This marks the beginning of the Neolithic Pit Comb Ware culture Edit Neolithic period Until the early 1980s the arrival of Finnic peoples the ancestors of the Estonians Finns and Livonians on the shores of the Baltic Sea around 3000 BC was associated with the Pit Comb Ware culture However such a linking of archaeologically defined cultural entities with linguistic ones cannot be proven and it has been suggested that the increase of settlement finds in the period is more likely to have been associated with an economic boom related to the warming of climate Some researchers have even argued that a form of Uralic languages may have been spoken in Estonia and Finland since the end of the last glaciation 12 Through archaeogenetics the population has been shown to derive the bulk of its ancestry from Eastern Hunter Gatherers of Russia 13 Bronze Age Edit The beginning of the Bronze Age in Estonia is dated to approximately 1800 BC in present day Finland some time after 1500 BCE The coastal regions of Finland were a part of the Nordic Bronze Culture whereas in the inland regions the influences came from the bronze using cultures of Northern Russia The first fortified settlements Asva and Ridala on the island of Saaremaa and Iru in the Northern Estonia began to be built The development of shipbuilding facilitated the spread of bronze Changes took place in burial customs a new type of burial ground spread from Germanic to Estonian areas stone cist graves and cremation burials became increasingly common beside small numbers of boat shaped stone graves 14 In terms of genetics the Bronze Age population of the East Baltic derives most of their ancestry from the Corded Ware culture with an elevated amount of Mesolithic Hunter Gatherer ancestry but showing no prevalence of Siberian related ancestry 15 The Iron Age Edit Main article Archaeology of Northern Europe Northern Europe in 814 The Pre Roman Iron Age began in about 500 BC and lasted until the middle of the 1st century The oldest iron items were imported although since the 1st century iron was smelted from local marsh and lake ore Settlement sites were located mostly in places that offered natural protection Fortresses were built although used temporarily The appearance of square Celtic fields surrounded by enclosures in Estonia date from the Pre Roman Iron Age The majority of stones with man made indents which presumably were connected with magic designed to increase crop fertility date from this period A new type of grave quadrangular burial mounds began to develop Burial traditions show the clear beginning of social stratification The first reported individuals with the y DNA haplotype N M231 in the Baltic are from the Iron Age alongside Siberian ancestry 15 The Roman Iron Age is roughly dated to between AD 50 and 450 the era that was affected by the influence of the Roman Empire In material culture this is reflected by a few Roman coins some jewellery and artefacts The abundance of iron artefacts in Southern Estonia speaks of closer mainland ties with southern areas while coastal Finland and the islands of western and northern Estonia communicated with their neighbours mainly by sea Between 200 and 400 AD a group of Baltic Sea Finns in southwestern Finland who had traveled to Finland proper from the areas of nowadays Estonia began moving inland towards Tavastia Between 200 and 400 AD the Finns proper themselves became divided geographically in three parts Tavastians The tribes who went inland to Tavastia Southwestern Finns The tribes who stayed in the southern side of the Kokemaenjoki river delta Southern Ostrobothnians The tribes who stayed on the northern side of the river delta During the Migration Period in 400 600 AD the Estonian influence gradually weakened By the end of the period clearly defined tribal dialectical areas Finns Tavastians Karelians Northern Estonians Southern Estonians and Western Estonians including the islanders had emerged the population of each having formed its own understanding of identity 16 Early Middle Ages Edit Finnic peoples in chronicles Edit The word Finn is first mentioned in the form Fenni in the 1st century AD by Roman historian Tacitus However it is possible that he was referring to the people of northern Europe in general particularly the Lappic or Sami people After that the name Finni is used by Claudius Ptolemaeus around 150 and the Eastern Roman writer Jordanes in his Getica 551 References to Finnic tribes become much more numerous from the Viking Age 800 1050 It was not until about 1171 that the word Finni was employed to mean the Finns The term Aestii the name of the Estonians occurs first again in Tacitus however it might have indicated Balts In Northern sagas 13th century the term which started to be used to indicate the Estonians In a Norwegian text 11th 12th century which the name Kiriali referring to Karelians and the term cornuti Finni interpreted as referring to the Lapps or Sami people first appear The opening chapter of the Old East Slavic Primary Chronicle early 12th century lists the following peoples living in the share of Japheth among others Chud Merya Muroma Ves Cheremis Mordvin Chud Zavolochskaya beyond the portages Perm Pechera Sum possibly meaning Suomi Yam Hame Yugra and Liv 17 18 The Chudes as mentioned in the earliest East Slavic chronicles are in a 12th century context usually considered to be Estonians although the name sometimes referred to all Finnic peoples in north western Rus 19 According to the Primary Chronicle the Chudes lands were bounded by the Varangian Sea Baltic Sea 17 In 1030 Yaroslav I the Wise invaded the country of the Chudes and laid the foundations of Yuriev the historical Russian name of Tartu Estonia 19 They remained until 1061 when according to chronicles Yuryev was burned down by the Chudes According to Old East Slavic chronicles which the Chudes were one of the founders of the Rus state 20 The northern or eastern Chudes were also a mythical people in folklore among Northern Russians and their neighbours In Komi mythology the Northern Chudes represent the mythic ancestors of the Komi people 21 Middle Ages and Modern period Edit In the 13th century the east Baltic world was transformed by military conquest first the Livs and Estonians then the Finns underwent defeat baptism military occupation and sometimes extermination by groups of Germans Danes and Swedes 22 Finland was governed as a part of Sweden while Estonia was under a Baltic German knightly brotherhood before becoming parts of Russian Empire Finland and Estonia became independent in 1917 1918 see history of Finland and history of Estonia The Karelians remained under Russian and then Soviet rule and their absolute and relative numbers dwindled When urbanization was peaking less numerous peoples rapidly lost capacity to maintain their village based cultures and so were often assimilated to the mainstream society See also EditHaplogroup N M231 Volga FinnsReferences Edit Population Statistics Finland Retrieved 3 May 2016 Finnic peoples Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 6 February 2019 a b Kallio Petri 2006 Uralilaisen kantakielen absoluuttista kronologiaa With English summary The absolute chronology of the Proto Uralic language Virittaja 2006 the early indigenous inhabitants of Europe by Richard Lewis 2005 Finland Cultural Lone Wolf Intercultural Press ISBN 978 1 931930 18 5 a b c Laitinen Virpi Paivi Lahermo 24 August 2001 Y Chromosomal Diversity Suggests that Baltic Males Share Common Finno Ugric Speaking Forefathers PDF Human Heredity Department of Genetics University of Turku Turku Finnish Genome Center University of Helsinki 53 2 68 78 doi 10 1159 000057985 PMID 12037406 S2CID 29863635 Retrieved 8 October 2008 Siiri Rootsi 19 October 2004 Human Y Chromosomal Variation in European Populations PDF Tartu University Press Retrieved 8 October 2008 Pentikainen Juha Ritva Poom 1999 Kalevala Mythology Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 21352 5 Nidel Richard 2005 World Music Routledge pp 160 ISBN 978 0 415 96801 0 Chance Jane 2004 Tolkien and the Invention of Myth University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 2301 1 Jean Jacques Subrenat 2004 Estonia Identity and Independence Translated into English On the Boundary of Two Worlds Identity Freedom and Moral Imagination in the Baltics 2 and Moral Imagination in the Baltics Amsterdam Rodopi p 24 ISBN 90 420 0890 3 Maanviljely levisi Suomeen Ita Aasiasta jo 7000 vuotta sitten Ajankohtaista Tammikuu 2013 Humanistinen tiedekunta Helsingin yliopisto Archived from the original on 4 July 2017 Retrieved 25 December 2013 Helle Knut 2003 The Cambridge history of Scandinavia Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 51 ISBN 0 521 47299 7 Saag Lehti Varul Liivi Scheib Christiana Lyn Stenderup Jesper Allentoft Morten E Saag Lauri Pagani Luca Reidla Maere Tambets Kristiina Metspalu Ene Kriiska Aivar 2 March 2017 Extensive farming in Estonia started through a sex biased migration from the Steppe Current Biology 27 14 2185 2193 e6 doi 10 1016 j cub 2017 06 022 PMID 28712569 Jean Jacques Subrenat 2004 Estonia Identity and Independence p 26 ISBN 978 90 420 0890 8 a b Saag Lehti Laneman Margot Varul Liivi Malve Martin Valk Heiki Razzak Maria A Shirobokov Ivan G Khartanovich Valeri I Mikhaylova Elena R Kushniarevich Alena Scheib Christiana Lyn May 2019 The Arrival of Siberian Ancestry Connecting the Eastern Baltic to Uralic Speakers further East Current Biology 29 10 1701 1711 e16 doi 10 1016 j cub 2019 04 026 ISSN 0960 9822 PMC 6544527 PMID 31080083 Jean Jacques Subrenat 2004 Estonia Identity and Independence pp 28 31 ISBN 978 90 420 0890 8 a b Samuel H Cross 1968 Russian Primary Chronicle Laurentian Text Medieval Academy of Amer p 52 ISBN 0 910956 34 0 Angela Marcantonio 2002 The Uralic Language Family Facts Myths and Statistics Publications of the Philological Society Blackwell Publishing Professional pp 21 3 ISBN 0 631 23170 6 a b Tvauri Andres 2012 The Migration Period Pre Viking Age and Viking Age in Estonia pp 33 59 60 Retrieved 27 December 2016 Pre and Proto historic Finns by John Abercromby p 141 FOREST MYTHS by Pavel F Limerov at google scholar Christiansen Eric 1997 The northern Crusades Harmondsworth Eng Penguin pp 93 ISBN 0 14 026653 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baltic Finnic peoples amp oldid 1132827074, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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