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Buryats

The Buryats (Buryat: Буряад, romanized: Buryaad, ᠪᠣᠷᠢᠶᠠᠳ; Mongolian: Буриад, romanized: Buriad; Russian: Буряты, romanizedBuryaty) are a Mongolic ethnic group native to southeastern Siberia who speak the Buryat language. They are one of the two largest indigenous groups in Siberia, the other being the Yakuts. The majority of the Buryats today live in their titular homeland, the Republic of Buryatia, a federal subject of Russia which sprawls along the southern coast and partially straddles Lake Baikal. Smaller groups of Buryats also inhabit Ust-Orda Buryat Okrug (Irkutsk Oblast) and the Agin-Buryat Okrug (Zabaykalsky Krai) which are to the west and east of Buryatia respectively as well as northeastern Mongolia and Inner Mongolia, China.[5] They traditionally formed the major northern subgroup of the Mongols.[9]

Buryat (Buryatian)
ᠪᠤᠷᠢᠶᠠᠳ
Буряад
Buryaad
Flag of Buryatia
A Buryat wrestling match during the Altargana Festival
Total population
556,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Russia460,053[2]
     Buryatia295,273
     Irkutsk Oblast74,746
     Zabaykalsky Krai65,590
 Mongolia43,661[3]
 China10,000[4]–70,000[1]
Languages
Native: Buryat
Regional: Russian, Mongolian and Standard Chinese
Religion
Buddhism,[5][6] Orthodox Christianity,[5] Mongolian shamanism[7][8]
Related ethnic groups
Other Mongolic peoples

Buryats share many customs with other Mongols, including nomadic herding, and erecting gers for shelter. Today the majority of Buryats live in and around Ulan-Ude, the capital of the Buryat Republic, although many still follow a more traditional lifestyle in the countryside. They speak a central Mongolic language called Buryat.[10] UNESCO's 2010 edition of the Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger classifies the Buryat language as "severely endangered".[11]

History Edit

 
Mongol Empire circa 1207

It is most likely that the ancestors of modern Buryats are Bayyrku and Kurykans who were part of the tribal union of the Tiele. The Tiele, in turn, came from the Dingling. The first information about Dingling appeared in sources from the 2nd century BC.[12] The name "Buriyad" is mentioned as one of the forest people for the first time in The Secret History of the Mongols (possibly 1240).[13] It says Jochi, the eldest son of Genghis Khan, marched north to subjugate the Buryats in 1207.[14] the Buryats lived along the Angara River and its tributaries at this time. Meanwhile, their component, Barga, appeared both west of Baikal and in northern Buryatia's Barguzin valley. Linked also to the Bargas were the Khori-Tumed along the Arig River in eastern Khövsgöl Province and the Angara.[15] A Tumad rebellion broke out in 1217, when Genghis Khan allowed his viceroy to seize 30 Tumad maidens. Genghis Khan's commander Dorbei the Fierce of the Dörbeds smashed them in response. The Buryats joined the Oirats challenging the imperial rule of the Eastern Mongols during the Northern Yuan period in the late 14th century.[16]

Historically, the territories around Lake Baikal belonged to Mongolia, Buryats were subject to Tüsheet Khan and Setsen Khan of Khalkha Mongolia. When the Russians expanded into Transbaikalia (eastern Siberia) in 1609, the Cossacks found only a small core of tribal groups speaking a Mongol dialect called Buryat and paying tribute to the Khalkha.[17] However, they were powerful enough to compel the Ket and Samoyed peoples on the Kan and the Evenks on the lower Angara to pay tribute. The ancestors of most modern Buryats were speaking a variety of Turkic-Tungusic dialects at that time.[18] In addition to genuine Buryat-Mongol tribes (Bulagad, Khori, Ekhired, Khongoodor) that merged with the Buryats, the Buryats also assimilated other groups, including some Oirats, the Khalkha, Tungus (Evenks) and others. The Khori-Barga had migrated out of the Barguzin eastward to the lands between the Greater Khingan and the Argun. Around 1594, most of them fled back to the Aga and Nerchinsk in order to escape subjection by the Daurs.

The Russians reached Lake Baikal in 1643 but the Buryats resisted them and their forces. The Buryats were defeated, though they attempted to revolt a few times. These revolts were suppressed.[5] The territory and people were formally annexed to the Russian state by treaties in 1689 and 1727, when the territories on both the sides of Lake Baikal were separated from Mongolia.

Consolidation of modern Buryat tribes and groups took place under the conditions of the Russian state. From the middle of the 17th century to the beginning of the 20th century, the Buryat population increased from 77,000[19] (27,700[20]–60,000[21]) to 300,000. Another estimate of the rapid growth in people referring to themselves as Buryat is based on the clan list names paying tribute in the form of a sable-skin tax. This indicates a population of about 77,000 in 1640 rising to 157,000 in 1823 and more than a million by 1950.[22]

The historical roots of the Buryat culture are related to the Mongolic peoples. After Buryatia was incorporated into Russia, it was exposed to two traditions – Buddhism and Orthodox Christianity. Buryats west of Lake Baikal and Olkhon (Irkut Buryats), are more "Russified", and they soon abandoned nomadism for agriculture, whereas the eastern (Transbaikal) Buryats are closer to the Khalkha, may live in yurts and are mostly Buddhists. In 1741, the Tibetan branch of Buddhism was recognized as one of the official religions in Russia, and the first Buryat datsan (Buddhist monastery) was built.

The second half of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century was a time of growth for the Buryat Buddhist religion (48 datsans in Buryatia in 1914). Buddhism became an important factor in the cultural development of Buryatia. Because of their skills in horsemanship and mounted combat, many were enlisted into the Amur Cossacks host. During the Russian Civil War most of the Buryats sided with the White forces of Baron Ungern-Sternberg and Ataman Semenov. They formed a sizable portion of Ungern's forces and often received favorable treatment when compared with other ethnic groups in the Baron's army. After the Revolution, most of the lamas were loyal to Soviet power. In 1925, a battle against religion and clergy in Buryatia began. Datsans were gradually closed down and the activity of the clergy was curtailed. Consequently, in the late 1930s the Buddhist clergy ceased to exist and thousands of cultural treasures were destroyed. Attempts to revive Buddhism started during World War II, and it was officially re-established in 1946. A revival of Buddhism has taken place since the late 1980s as an important factor in the national consolidation.

In the 1930s, Buryat-Mongolia was one of the sites of Soviet studies aimed to disprove Nazi race theories. Among other things, Soviet physicians studied the "endurance and fatigue levels" of Russian, Buryat-Mongol, and Russian-Buryat-Mongol workers to prove that all three groups were equally able.[23]

In 1923, the Buryat-Mongol Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was formed and included Baikal province (Pribaykalskaya guberniya) with Russian population. The Buryats rebelled against the communist rule and collectivization of their herds in 1929. The rebellion was quickly crushed by the Red Army with loss of 35,000 Buryats.[24] The Buryat refugees fled to Mongolia and resettled, however, only a few of them joined the Shambala rebellion there. In 1937, in an effort to disperse Buryats, Stalin's government separated a number of counties (raions) from the Buryat-Mongol Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic and formed Ust-Orda Buryat Autonomous Okrug and Agin-Buryat Autonomous Okrug; at the same time, some raions with Buryat populations were left out. Fearing Buryat nationalism, Joseph Stalin had more than 10,000 Buryats killed.[25] Moreover, Stalinist purge of Buryats spread into Mongolia, known as the incident of L'humbee.

In 1958, the name "Mongol" was removed from the name of the republic (Buryat ASSR). Also around 1958, the Mongolian script was banned and replaced by Cyrillic.[5] BASSR declared its sovereignty in 1990 and adopted the name Republic of Buryatia in 1992. The constitution of the Republic was adopted by the People's Khural in 1994, and a bilateral treaty with the Russian Federation was signed in 1995.

In the context of the Russian invasion of Ukraine since 2022, the Buryats have been reported as one of Russia's ethnic minority groups suffering from a disproportionally large casualty rate among Russian forces, reinforcing the processes of assimilation and Russification.[26][27][28] Ethnic Buryats often enlist in the army because of financial reasons.[29]

Culture and traditions Edit

 
Two men of Buryatia carrying load on pole between their shoulders
 
Traditional wooden hut of Buryatia
 
Traditional Buryat dress

Relationship with nature Edit

The Buryat national tradition is ecological by origin in that the religious and mythological ideas of the Buryat people have been based on a theology of nature. The environment has traditionally been deeply respected by Buryats due to the nomadic way of life and religious culture. The harsh climatic conditions of the region have in turn created a fragile balance between humans, society and the environment itself. This has led to a delicate approach to nature, oriented not towards its conquest but rather towards a harmonious interaction and equal partnership with it. A synthesis of Buddhism and traditional beliefs that formed a system of ecological traditions has thus constituted a major attribute of Buryat eco-culture.[30]

Kinship and marriage Edit

Prior to the arrival of the Russians, Buryats lived in semi-nomadic groups scattered across the steppes. Kinship was immensely important in Buryat society, both in spiritual and social terms. All Buryats traced their lineage to a single mythical individual, with the particular ancestor varying based upon geographical region.[7] Kinship also determined proximity, as neighbours were nearly always related.[7] Groups of relatives that inhabited the same grazing land organized themselves into clans based on genealogy. While coalitions between clans did occur, they were infrequent and often relied on looser interpretations of kinship and relations.[7]

Marriage was arranged by the family, at times occurring as early as one to two years old.[31] A unique aspect of traditional Buryat marriage was the kalym, an exchange that combined both bride wealth and a dowry.[31] Kalym involved a husband exchanging an agreed number of head of cattle for his bride, while the bride's family would provide dowry in the form of a yurt and other essential household goods.[31] If a husband did not have enough cattle, a period of bride service would be arranged. Polygamy was permitted, however only men of extreme wealth could afford the price of multiple wives. Marriage ceremonies involved rituals such as the bride stoking the fire in the grooms tent with three pieces of fat, and sprinkling fat upon the clothing of the groom's father.[7]

The arrival of the Russians saw drastic changes to the way kalym system worked. Money became a significant part of the exchange. Over time, the price of a bride significantly increased to the point where "in the 1890s, bride price involved '400 to 600 rubles' in addition to 86–107 head of livestock, when 70 years earlier only the wealthiest Western Buryats gave 100 heads (of cattle)."[32] As the situation worsened, many men engaged in multi-year work contracts with wealthy herd-owners under the promise their employer would aid them in gaining a wife.[31] Later on, the kalym system fell out of favour, and was replaced by marriages arrangements based upon courtship and romantic feelings.

Religion Edit

Religion today in the Republic of Buryatia is primarily divided between Russian Orthodoxy, Buddhism, and irreligious.[33] Shamanism has undergone a revival in rural areas since Soviet repression, however it is still small. Those involved practise either Yellow shamanism, Black shamanism, or a mixture of the two.[34]

Shamanism (Tengrism) Edit

 
Buryat shaman of Olkhon, Lake Baikal

Buryats traditionally practised shamanism, also called Tengrism, with a focus on worship of nature. A core concept of Buryat shamanism is the "triple division" of the physical and spiritual world.[8][7] There are three divisions within the spirit world: the tengeri, the bōxoldoy, and lower spirits.[7] These spirits are the supreme rulers of mankind, the spirits of commoners, and the spirits of slaves respectively. In parallel to this is the concept that man is divided into three parts: the body (beye), the "breath and life" of a man, and the soul.[7] The soul is further divided into three parts: first, second, and third. The first soul is contained within the entirety of the physical skeleton, and that damage to it damages the soul. Rituals involving the sacrifice of animals involve great care not to damage the bones, lest the deity receiving the offering reject it.[7] The second soul is believed to have the power to leave the body, transform into other beings, and is stored in the organs. The third soul is similar to the second, differing only in that its passing marks the end of one's life.[7]

The number three and multiples of it are deeply sacred to the Buryat. Examples of this numerology include three major yearly sacrifices, shamans prolonging the lives of the sick by three or nine years, the total number of tengeri being 99, and countless other examples.

Shamans are divided into two classes: "great" shamans of arctic regions and "little" shamans from the taiga. Shamans often are associated with nervous disorders, and in some cases are prone to seizure.[7] Shamans can also be divided into "White" shamans that summon good spirits and "Black" shamans that summon malicious ones. Yellow shamanism refers to shamanistic practices that have been heavily influenced by Buddhism. Shamans exist to heal, especially in regards to psychological illnesses.[35] Buryat shamanism is not necessarily hereditary, and other members of the kinship-group can receive the calling (however, shamans do keep records of their lineage, and a descendant is preferred).[7] Shamans could both control and be controlled by spirits.

There are variations in belief between different traditional groups, so there is no consensus on beliefs and practices. For example, Western Buryats along the Kuda river believe in reincarnation of the third soul, likely a result of their exposure to Buddhism.

Buddhism Edit

 
Ivolginsky Datsan is a monastery complex consisting of seven Buddhist temples

A majority of the Buryats are followers of Buddhism.[5][6] The Buryats converted to Tibetan Buddhism in the early eighteenth century under the influence of Tibetan and Mongolian missionaries.[5][6]

Other religions Edit

A small minority of Buryats are converts to Christianity. The earliest Orthodox mission was established in Irkutsk in 1731. Some Buryats converted to Christianity for material incentives while others were forcefully converted.[5] Despite its presence in the area, Christianity is not perceived as a "Buryat" religion.[36]

Subsistence Edit

Traditionally, the Buryats were semi-nomadic pastoralists. Buryat nomads tended herds of cattle, sheep, goats, and camels.[7] Buryats also relied greatly on local resources to supplement their diets. Following colonization by Russia, pastoralism was gradually replaced by agriculture. The Buryat of today are largely agrarian but most in rural areas still focus on raising livestock as their main way of surviving.

The Buryats located in Siberia are still largely focused on raising livestock due to the shortness of the growing season. They focus on the raising of dairy cattle and the growing of berries to sustain most of their diet. There are also some communities that farm various types of trees and cash crops such as wheat and rye.[37] On the slopes of the Sayan and Altai Mountains, there are communities whose way of life is breeding reindeer.[7]

Mongolian Buryats are farmers as well but are typically semi-settled. They build sheds and fences to keep livestock contained and use hay as their main source of food for the livestock.[38] However, the Buryats located in Buryatia are more focused on the agriculture aspect of farming and not the livestock raising aspect.

Traditional medicine Edit

Buryat healing practices incorporates folk shamanic traditions and Tibeto-Mongolian medicine. Before the adoption of Buddhism, the Buryats relied on shamanic rituals to stop or cure pain and illness which was said to be caused by evil spirits. With the conversion to Tibetan Buddhism, Buryats incorporated Tibetan medical practices to their healing practices. Medical schools were soon established and Buryats studying in these schools learned about medical and prescription techniques. Training in treatment and diagnostics was also given in these schools. Buryats soon contributed to expanding the Tibeto-Mongolian medical literature.[39]

Traditional Buryat medicine emphasises the use of mineral and thermal springs for healing. A balanced diet (of meat, offal, plants and herbs) and proper nutrition were recommended to cure illness. The use of herbs for medical purposes was minimal because of the lack of vegetation in the semi-deserts and dry steppes. However, Buryat healers were considered skilled in healing wounds, treating head trauma, midwifery and bone-setting. In the modern age, some practices derived from Buryat folk medicine has been incorporated into contemporary settings.[39]

Cuisine Edit

 
Buuz, a steamed meat dumpling, is probably the most iconic dish of Buryat cuisine

Buryat cuisine is very similar to Mongolian cuisine and share many dishes like buuz and khuushuur. Dairy products are an important part of the cuisine, and traditional dishes are often hearty and simple. Most main courses are usually meat based, but fish like omul is common especially around Lake Baikal.

Genetics Edit

Mitochondrial DNA haplogroups Edit

The Buryats have a diverse pool of mitochondrial DNA, with about 83.7% (247/295) belonging to haplogroups of Eastern Eurasian origin or affinity and about 16.3% (48/295) belonging to haplogroups of Western Eurasian origin or affinity. The most common Eastern Eurasian mtDNA haplogroups among present-day Buryats are D4 (approximately 29% of the total Buryat population), C (approximately 16.6%), and G2a (approximately 11%). The most common Western Eurasian mtDNA haplogroups among the Buryats are H (approximately 6.8%) and U (approximately 5.4%).[40]

Another mtDNA study of Buryats shows they have 24% (6/25) of West Eurasian maternal lineages.[41]

Y-chromosome DNA haplogroups Edit

Lell et al. (2002) tested a sample of thirteen Buryat males collected in Kushun village, Nizhneudinsk District, Irkutsk Region, representing the Buryats of the Sayan-Baikal upland. The Y-chromosomes of these individuals were assigned to the following haplogroups: 6/13 = 46.2% O-M119, 3/13 = 23.1% N-Tat, 2/13 = 15.4% N-DYS7Cdel(xTat), 1/13 = 7.7% C-M48, 1/13 = 7.7% F-M89(xK-M9).[42] This sample entirely lacks C-M407 and instead has a great proportion of O-M119; thus, it appears very different from published samples of Y-DNA collected from Buryats east of Lake Baikal.

Derenko et al. (2006) tested a sample of 238 Buryat males and found the following Y-DNA haplogroup distribution: 4/238 = 1.7% P*-92R7(xQ-DYS199/M3, R1-M173), 2/238 = 0.8% R1*-M173(xR1a-SRY1532b), 5/238 = 2.1% R1a1-M17, 3/238 = 1.3% N*-LLY22g(xTat), 45/238 = 18.9% N3-Tat, 152/238 = 63.9% C-RPS4Y/M130, 4/238 = 1.7% F*-M89(xG-M201, H-M52, I-M170, J-12f2, K-M9), 1/238 = 0.4% G-M201, 1/238 = 0.4% I-M170, 21/238 = 8.8% K*-M9(xL-M20, N-LLY22g, P-92R7).[43] Boris Malyarchuk, Miroslava Derenko, Galina Denisova, et al. (2010) retested 217 of these 238 Buryats and found that they were 148/217 (68.2%) haplogroup C-RPS4Y711/M130, including 117/217 (53.9%) C3d-M407, 18/217 (8.3%) C3∗-M217(xC3a-M93, C3b-P39, C3c-M77, C3d-M407, C3e-P53.1, C3f-P62), and 13/217 (6.0%) C3c-M77. Fourteen of the 217 Buryats (6.5%) had STR haplotypes belonging to the “star cluster" in C3*, from which it might be inferred that they most likely belonged to C2a1a3-P369/M504.[44]

Karafet et al. (2006) tested a sample of 81 Buryat males and found that they belonged to the following Y-DNA haplogroups: 45/81 = 55.6% C-M217(xM86), 4/81 = 4.9% C-M86, 1/81 = 1.2% G-M201, 1/81 = 1.2% J-12f2, 2/81 = 2.5% N-P43, 23/81 = 28.4% N-M178, 2/81 = 2.5% O-LINE, 3/81 = 3.7% R-M207.[45] Karafet et al. (2018) retested the same sample of Buryat males (minus the G-M201 singleton) and found that they belonged to the following haplogroups: 4/80 = 5.0% C2a1a2a-M86, 5/80 = 6.3% C2a1a3-P369, 40/80 = 50.0% C2b1a1a1a-M407, 1/80 = 1.3% J2a1-P354(xJ2a1a-L27), 2/80 = 2.5% N1a2b1-P63(xP362), 23/80 = 28.8% N1a1a1a1a3a-P89, 2/80 = 2.5% O2a1b-JST002611, 1/80 = 1.3% R2a-M124, 1/80 = 1.3% R1a1a1b1a-Z282, 1/80 = 1.3% R1b1a1b1a1a2-P312(xL21).[46]

Kim et al. (2011) reported the following Y-DNA haplogroup distribution in a sample of "Mongolians (Buryats)":[47] 16/36 = 44.44% C2-M217, 1/36 = 2.78% D1a1a-M15, 1/36 = 2.78% F-M89(xK-M9), 9/36 = 25.00% N-M231, 1/36 = 2.78% O1b2-SRY465(x47z), 1/36 = 2.78% O2a-M324(xO2a1b-JST002611, O2a2-P201), 6/36 = 16.67% O2a2-P201, 1/36 = 2.78% R-M207.[48]

 
Buryat women

Kharkov et al. (2014) examined blood samples obtained from a total of 297 ethnic Buryats, separated into eight geographical groups according to the location of sample collection: Okinsky district (N = 53) (southwest of the Republic of Buryatia, ethnoterritorial group of Oka Buryats); Dzhida (N = 31) and Kyakhta (N = 27) (south, ethnoterritorial group of Selenga Buryats); the Kizhinga (N = 64) and Eravninsky (N = 30) regions (east, ethnoterritorial group of Khorin Buryats); Kurumkan village (N = 23) (north, ethnoterritorial group of Barguzin Buryats); Ulan-Ude and Khuramsha (30 km west of Ulan-Ude) (N = 26) (ethnoterritorial group of Kudarinsk Buryats); and Aginskoe village (N = 44) (Agin–Buryat Autonomous Region of Chita, Agin Buryats). For the statistical treatment, samples from Ulan-Ude and Khuramsha village were united into one group designated as “Ulan-Ude.” The authors found significant differences among eastern Buryats (Khorin Buryats from Kizhinga and Eravninsky districts of Buryatia plus Agin Buryats from Agin-Buryat Okrug of Zabaykalsky Krai), southern and central Buryats (Selenga Buryats from Dzhida and Kyakhta plus Kudarinsk Buryats from Ulan-Ude and Khuramsha), and southwestern and northern Buryats (Oka Buryats from Okinsky district of Buryatia plus Barguzin Buryats from Kurumkan village). Similar to the Buryat samples examined by Malyarchuk et al. (2010) and Karafet et al. (2018), the southwestern and northern Buryat samples of Kharkov et al. (2014) exhibited an extremely high frequency of haplogroup C2-M407: 48/76 = 63.2% C3d-M407, 14/76 = 18.4% N1c1-Tat, 4/76 = 5.3% O3a3c*-M134(xM117), 3/76 = 3.9% C3*-M217(xM77, M86, M407), 2/76 = 2.6% C3c-M77/M86, 2/76 = 2.6% O3a3c1-M117, 2/76 = 2.6% R1a1a-M17, 1/76 = 1.3% N1b-P43. In contrast, the eastern Buryat samples of Kharkov et al. (2014) exhibited an extremely high frequency of haplogroup N-Tat: 102/138 = 73.9% N1c1-Tat, 19/138 = 13.8% C3d-M407, 5/138 = 3.6% C3c-M77/M86, 4/138 = 2.9% E, 3/138 = 2.2% C3*-M217(xM77, M86, M407), 2/138 = 1.4% R1a1a-M17, 1/138 = 0.7% O3a*-M324(xM7, M134), 1/138 = 0.7% O3a3c1-M117, 1/138 = 0.7% R2a-M124. The southern and central Buryat samples of Kharkov et al. (2014) exhibited a significant proportion of C3*-M217(xM77, M86, M407), which may be related to Y-DNA subclades that often have been observed among Mongols in Mongolia, while also exhibiting both N-Tat and C-M407 with moderate frequency: 26/84 = 31.0% N1c1-Tat, 19/84 = 22.6% C3d-M407, 16/84 = 19.0% C3*-M217(xM77, M86, M407), 8/84 = 9.5% R1a1a-M17, 7/84 = 8.3% R2a-M124, 4/84 = 4.8% C3c-M77/M86, 4/84 = 4.8% O3a*-M324(xM7, M134).[49]

Haplogroup N-M178 is found mainly among the indigenous peoples of northern Eurasia (e.g. Yakuts, Finns). Among Buryats, haplogroup N-M178 is more common toward the east (cf. 50/64 = 78.1% N1c1 in a sample of Buryat from Kizhinginsky District, 34/44 = 77.3% N1c1 in a sample of Buryat from Aga Buryatia, and 18/30 = 60.0% N1c1 in a sample of Buryat from Yeravninsky District, every one of which regions is located at a substantial distance east of the eastern shore of the southern half of Lake Baikal, versus 6/31 = 19.4% N1c1 in a sample of Buryat from Dzhidinsky District, which is slightly south of the southwestern end of the lake, and 2/23 = 8.7% N1c1 in a sample of Buryat from Kurumkansky District, which is slightly east of the northeastern end of the lake[49]), and it mostly belongs to a subclade (N-F4205) that reaches its maximal frequency among Buryats, but which also has been found in some other Mongolic peoples as well as in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkey, Ukraine, and Poland. N-F4205 is estimated to share a common ancestor with N-B202, which has been found in many present-day inhabitants of Chukotka, approximately 4,600 (95% CI 3,700 <-> 5,500) years before present.[50]

Haplogroup C3d (M407) is found mainly among the northern and southwestern Buryats, Barghuts, Hamnigans, Soyots, Kazakh Khongirad,[51] and Dörbet Kalmyks.

Nuclear DNA genetic history Edit

A large scale genetic study from 2021 shows that the Buryats, as well as other Mongolic ethnic groups, such as Mongols, have nearly exclusively East-Eurasian (East Asian-related) genetic ancestry (≈95% to 98%), which can be largely traced back to Neolithic millet agriculturalists of Northeast Asia, but also Paleo-Siberians, and "Yellow river farmers" from around the Yellow River region of Northern China. Genetic evidence shows that Northeast Asian like ancestry massively expanded westwards during the Bronze Age and Iron Age in several waves. Although Buryats are closer to their Mongolic and Tungusic-speaking neighbors, out of the major East Asian ethnic groups, they are genetically closest to the Koreans, followed by Northern Han, Japanese and Southern Han, in that order, according to FST genetic distance measurements.[52]

Subgroups Edit

 
Mongol states in the 14th to 17th centuries.

According to the Buryat creation myth, there were 11 Buryat tribes or clans. According to the myth, all 11 tribes are descendants of a man and a mysterious but beautiful creature that turns into a swan during the day and a woman during the night. After the two married, the man asked her to give him her wings so that she would not turn into a swan anymore. However, it is said that after some time the woman asked for her wings back and flew away never to return. Today there are a number of different Buryat tribes, or clans.

Major tribes Edit

  • Bulagad – Alagui, Gotol, Sharaldai, Bubai, Khogoi,Erkhidei, Kholtubai, Onkhotoi, Ongoy, Bulut, Barai, Yengut, Buin, Olzoy, Murui, Khulmenge, Khurkhut, Soyot, Noyot, Kharanut, Ashabagat, Abaganat, Buzgan, Dalakhai.
  • Khongodor – Ashkhai, Ashata, Kholsho, Uta-Baima, Dasha, Naidar, Nashan, Badarkhan, Boldoy, Terte, Shoshoolog.
  • Khori-Buryats – Galzut, Sharait, Khubduut, Gushit, Khuatsai, Khargana, Batanai, Bodonguut, Khudai, Sagaan, Khalbin.
  • Ekhirid – Shono, Khengelder, Abzay, Bayanday, Olzon, Segenut, Galzut, Kharbyat, Khaital.
  • Sartuul Buryats – Khorchin, Khirid, Khatagin, Saljiud, Batod, Atagan, Khorlid, Onkhod, Khoit, Uriankhai, Khereit.
  • Songol

Other tribes Edit

  • Dzungar origin – Galzut, Segenut, Ikinat, Bukot, Zamot, Khaital, Zungar, Khuramsha.
  • Atagan
  • Khamnigan Buryats
  • Darkhat
  • Khangin
  • Khorchin

Notable people Edit

Also see List of Buryats

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "Buryat | Mongolia, Siberia, Shamanism | Britannica".
  2. ^ "Национальный состав населения". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
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Further reading Edit

  • Shimamura, Ippei. The Roots Seekers: Shamanism and Ethnicity Among the Mongol Buryats. Kanagawa, Japan: Shumpusha Publishing, 2014. ISBN 978-4-86110-397-1.
  • J.G. Gruelin, Siberia.
  • Pierre Simon Pallas, Sammlungen historischer Nachrichten über die mongolischen Volkerschaften (St Petersburg, 1776–1802).
  • M.A. Castrén, Versuch einer buriatischen Sprachlehre (1857).
  • Sir H.H. Howorth, History of the Mongols (1876–1888).
  • The film A Pearl in the Forest (МОЙЛХОН) illustrates the heavy price paid by the Buryats in the 1930s during the Stalinist purges.
  • Murphy, Dervla (2007) "Silverland: A Winter Journey Beyond the Urals", London, John Murray
  • Natalia Zhukovskaia (Ed.) Buryaty. Moskva: Nauka, 2004 (a classic general description).
  • Buryat Supermodel identifies herself as Siberian Eskimo
  • Derenko, MV; Malyarchuk, BA; Dambueva, IK; Shaikhaev, GO; Dorzhu, CM; Nimaev, DD; Zakharov, IA (December 2000). "Mitochondrial DNA variation in two South Siberian Aboriginal populations: implications for the genetic history of North Asia". Human Biology. 72 (6): 945–73. PMID 11236866.
  • Anthology of Buryat folklore, Pushkinskiĭ dom, 2000 (CD)

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Buryat people at Wikimedia Commons

buryats, buryat, Буряад, romanized, buryaad, ᠪᠣᠷᠢᠶᠠᠳ, mongolian, Буриад, romanized, buriad, russian, Буряты, romanized, buryaty, mongolic, ethnic, group, native, southeastern, siberia, speak, buryat, language, they, largest, indigenous, groups, siberia, other,. The Buryats Buryat Buryaad romanized Buryaad ᠪᠣᠷᠢᠶᠠᠳ Mongolian Buriad romanized Buriad Russian Buryaty romanized Buryaty are a Mongolic ethnic group native to southeastern Siberia who speak the Buryat language They are one of the two largest indigenous groups in Siberia the other being the Yakuts The majority of the Buryats today live in their titular homeland the Republic of Buryatia a federal subject of Russia which sprawls along the southern coast and partially straddles Lake Baikal Smaller groups of Buryats also inhabit Ust Orda Buryat Okrug Irkutsk Oblast and the Agin Buryat Okrug Zabaykalsky Krai which are to the west and east of Buryatia respectively as well as northeastern Mongolia and Inner Mongolia China 5 They traditionally formed the major northern subgroup of the Mongols 9 Buryat Buryatian ᠪᠤᠷᠢᠶᠠᠳ BuryaadBuryaadFlag of BuryatiaA Buryat wrestling match during the Altargana FestivalTotal population556 000 1 Regions with significant populations Russia460 053 2 Buryatia295 273 Irkutsk Oblast74 746 Zabaykalsky Krai65 590 Mongolia43 661 3 China10 000 4 70 000 1 LanguagesNative Buryat Regional Russian Mongolian and Standard ChineseReligionBuddhism 5 6 Orthodox Christianity 5 Mongolian shamanism 7 8 Related ethnic groupsOther Mongolic peoplesBuryats share many customs with other Mongols including nomadic herding and erecting gers for shelter Today the majority of Buryats live in and around Ulan Ude the capital of the Buryat Republic although many still follow a more traditional lifestyle in the countryside They speak a central Mongolic language called Buryat 10 UNESCO s 2010 edition of the Atlas of the World s Languages in Danger classifies the Buryat language as severely endangered 11 Contents 1 History 2 Culture and traditions 2 1 Relationship with nature 2 2 Kinship and marriage 2 3 Religion 2 3 1 Shamanism Tengrism 2 3 2 Buddhism 2 3 3 Other religions 2 4 Subsistence 2 5 Traditional medicine 2 6 Cuisine 3 Genetics 3 1 Mitochondrial DNA haplogroups 3 2 Y chromosome DNA haplogroups 3 3 Nuclear DNA genetic history 4 Subgroups 4 1 Major tribes 4 2 Other tribes 5 Notable people 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory Edit nbsp Mongol Empire circa 1207It is most likely that the ancestors of modern Buryats are Bayyrku and Kurykans who were part of the tribal union of the Tiele The Tiele in turn came from the Dingling The first information about Dingling appeared in sources from the 2nd century BC 12 The name Buriyad is mentioned as one of the forest people for the first time in The Secret History of the Mongols possibly 1240 13 It says Jochi the eldest son of Genghis Khan marched north to subjugate the Buryats in 1207 14 the Buryats lived along the Angara River and its tributaries at this time Meanwhile their component Barga appeared both west of Baikal and in northern Buryatia s Barguzin valley Linked also to the Bargas were the Khori Tumed along the Arig River in eastern Khovsgol Province and the Angara 15 A Tumad rebellion broke out in 1217 when Genghis Khan allowed his viceroy to seize 30 Tumad maidens Genghis Khan s commander Dorbei the Fierce of the Dorbeds smashed them in response The Buryats joined the Oirats challenging the imperial rule of the Eastern Mongols during the Northern Yuan period in the late 14th century 16 Historically the territories around Lake Baikal belonged to Mongolia Buryats were subject to Tusheet Khan and Setsen Khan of Khalkha Mongolia When the Russians expanded into Transbaikalia eastern Siberia in 1609 the Cossacks found only a small core of tribal groups speaking a Mongol dialect called Buryat and paying tribute to the Khalkha 17 However they were powerful enough to compel the Ket and Samoyed peoples on the Kan and the Evenks on the lower Angara to pay tribute The ancestors of most modern Buryats were speaking a variety of Turkic Tungusic dialects at that time 18 In addition to genuine Buryat Mongol tribes Bulagad Khori Ekhired Khongoodor that merged with the Buryats the Buryats also assimilated other groups including some Oirats the Khalkha Tungus Evenks and others The Khori Barga had migrated out of the Barguzin eastward to the lands between the Greater Khingan and the Argun Around 1594 most of them fled back to the Aga and Nerchinsk in order to escape subjection by the Daurs The Russians reached Lake Baikal in 1643 but the Buryats resisted them and their forces The Buryats were defeated though they attempted to revolt a few times These revolts were suppressed 5 The territory and people were formally annexed to the Russian state by treaties in 1689 and 1727 when the territories on both the sides of Lake Baikal were separated from Mongolia Consolidation of modern Buryat tribes and groups took place under the conditions of the Russian state From the middle of the 17th century to the beginning of the 20th century the Buryat population increased from 77 000 19 27 700 20 60 000 21 to 300 000 Another estimate of the rapid growth in people referring to themselves as Buryat is based on the clan list names paying tribute in the form of a sable skin tax This indicates a population of about 77 000 in 1640 rising to 157 000 in 1823 and more than a million by 1950 22 The historical roots of the Buryat culture are related to the Mongolic peoples After Buryatia was incorporated into Russia it was exposed to two traditions Buddhism and Orthodox Christianity Buryats west of Lake Baikal and Olkhon Irkut Buryats are more Russified and they soon abandoned nomadism for agriculture whereas the eastern Transbaikal Buryats are closer to the Khalkha may live in yurts and are mostly Buddhists In 1741 the Tibetan branch of Buddhism was recognized as one of the official religions in Russia and the first Buryat datsan Buddhist monastery was built The second half of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century was a time of growth for the Buryat Buddhist religion 48 datsans in Buryatia in 1914 Buddhism became an important factor in the cultural development of Buryatia Because of their skills in horsemanship and mounted combat many were enlisted into the Amur Cossacks host During the Russian Civil War most of the Buryats sided with the White forces of Baron Ungern Sternberg and Ataman Semenov They formed a sizable portion of Ungern s forces and often received favorable treatment when compared with other ethnic groups in the Baron s army After the Revolution most of the lamas were loyal to Soviet power In 1925 a battle against religion and clergy in Buryatia began Datsans were gradually closed down and the activity of the clergy was curtailed Consequently in the late 1930s the Buddhist clergy ceased to exist and thousands of cultural treasures were destroyed Attempts to revive Buddhism started during World War II and it was officially re established in 1946 A revival of Buddhism has taken place since the late 1980s as an important factor in the national consolidation In the 1930s Buryat Mongolia was one of the sites of Soviet studies aimed to disprove Nazi race theories Among other things Soviet physicians studied the endurance and fatigue levels of Russian Buryat Mongol and Russian Buryat Mongol workers to prove that all three groups were equally able 23 In 1923 the Buryat Mongol Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was formed and included Baikal province Pribaykalskaya guberniya with Russian population The Buryats rebelled against the communist rule and collectivization of their herds in 1929 The rebellion was quickly crushed by the Red Army with loss of 35 000 Buryats 24 The Buryat refugees fled to Mongolia and resettled however only a few of them joined the Shambala rebellion there In 1937 in an effort to disperse Buryats Stalin s government separated a number of counties raions from the Buryat Mongol Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic and formed Ust Orda Buryat Autonomous Okrug and Agin Buryat Autonomous Okrug at the same time some raions with Buryat populations were left out Fearing Buryat nationalism Joseph Stalin had more than 10 000 Buryats killed 25 Moreover Stalinist purge of Buryats spread into Mongolia known as the incident of L humbee In 1958 the name Mongol was removed from the name of the republic Buryat ASSR Also around 1958 the Mongolian script was banned and replaced by Cyrillic 5 BASSR declared its sovereignty in 1990 and adopted the name Republic of Buryatia in 1992 The constitution of the Republic was adopted by the People s Khural in 1994 and a bilateral treaty with the Russian Federation was signed in 1995 In the context of the Russian invasion of Ukraine since 2022 the Buryats have been reported as one of Russia s ethnic minority groups suffering from a disproportionally large casualty rate among Russian forces reinforcing the processes of assimilation and Russification 26 27 28 Ethnic Buryats often enlist in the army because of financial reasons 29 nbsp Buryat Mongol Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic in 1925 nbsp Buryat Mongol ASSR in 1929 nbsp Buryats depicted on a 1933 Peoples of the Soviet Union stamp nbsp Buryat Mongol ASSR in 1989 nbsp Map of autonomous Buryat territories until 2008 Republic of Buryatia and autonomous okrugs of Aga Buryatia and Ust Orda BuryatiaCulture and traditions Edit nbsp Two men of Buryatia carrying load on pole between their shoulders nbsp Traditional wooden hut of Buryatia nbsp Traditional Buryat dressRelationship with nature Edit The Buryat national tradition is ecological by origin in that the religious and mythological ideas of the Buryat people have been based on a theology of nature The environment has traditionally been deeply respected by Buryats due to the nomadic way of life and religious culture The harsh climatic conditions of the region have in turn created a fragile balance between humans society and the environment itself This has led to a delicate approach to nature oriented not towards its conquest but rather towards a harmonious interaction and equal partnership with it A synthesis of Buddhism and traditional beliefs that formed a system of ecological traditions has thus constituted a major attribute of Buryat eco culture 30 Kinship and marriage Edit Prior to the arrival of the Russians Buryats lived in semi nomadic groups scattered across the steppes Kinship was immensely important in Buryat society both in spiritual and social terms All Buryats traced their lineage to a single mythical individual with the particular ancestor varying based upon geographical region 7 Kinship also determined proximity as neighbours were nearly always related 7 Groups of relatives that inhabited the same grazing land organized themselves into clans based on genealogy While coalitions between clans did occur they were infrequent and often relied on looser interpretations of kinship and relations 7 Marriage was arranged by the family at times occurring as early as one to two years old 31 A unique aspect of traditional Buryat marriage was the kalym an exchange that combined both bride wealth and a dowry 31 Kalym involved a husband exchanging an agreed number of head of cattle for his bride while the bride s family would provide dowry in the form of a yurt and other essential household goods 31 If a husband did not have enough cattle a period of bride service would be arranged Polygamy was permitted however only men of extreme wealth could afford the price of multiple wives Marriage ceremonies involved rituals such as the bride stoking the fire in the grooms tent with three pieces of fat and sprinkling fat upon the clothing of the groom s father 7 The arrival of the Russians saw drastic changes to the way kalym system worked Money became a significant part of the exchange Over time the price of a bride significantly increased to the point where in the 1890s bride price involved 400 to 600 rubles in addition to 86 107 head of livestock when 70 years earlier only the wealthiest Western Buryats gave 100 heads of cattle 32 As the situation worsened many men engaged in multi year work contracts with wealthy herd owners under the promise their employer would aid them in gaining a wife 31 Later on the kalym system fell out of favour and was replaced by marriages arrangements based upon courtship and romantic feelings Religion Edit See also Buddhism in Buryatia Religion today in the Republic of Buryatia is primarily divided between Russian Orthodoxy Buddhism and irreligious 33 Shamanism has undergone a revival in rural areas since Soviet repression however it is still small Those involved practise either Yellow shamanism Black shamanism or a mixture of the two 34 Shamanism Tengrism Edit nbsp Buryat shaman of Olkhon Lake BaikalBuryats traditionally practised shamanism also called Tengrism with a focus on worship of nature A core concept of Buryat shamanism is the triple division of the physical and spiritual world 8 7 There are three divisions within the spirit world the tengeri the bōxoldoy and lower spirits 7 These spirits are the supreme rulers of mankind the spirits of commoners and the spirits of slaves respectively In parallel to this is the concept that man is divided into three parts the body beye the breath and life of a man and the soul 7 The soul is further divided into three parts first second and third The first soul is contained within the entirety of the physical skeleton and that damage to it damages the soul Rituals involving the sacrifice of animals involve great care not to damage the bones lest the deity receiving the offering reject it 7 The second soul is believed to have the power to leave the body transform into other beings and is stored in the organs The third soul is similar to the second differing only in that its passing marks the end of one s life 7 The number three and multiples of it are deeply sacred to the Buryat Examples of this numerology include three major yearly sacrifices shamans prolonging the lives of the sick by three or nine years the total number of tengeri being 99 and countless other examples Shamans are divided into two classes great shamans of arctic regions and little shamans from the taiga Shamans often are associated with nervous disorders and in some cases are prone to seizure 7 Shamans can also be divided into White shamans that summon good spirits and Black shamans that summon malicious ones Yellow shamanism refers to shamanistic practices that have been heavily influenced by Buddhism Shamans exist to heal especially in regards to psychological illnesses 35 Buryat shamanism is not necessarily hereditary and other members of the kinship group can receive the calling however shamans do keep records of their lineage and a descendant is preferred 7 Shamans could both control and be controlled by spirits There are variations in belief between different traditional groups so there is no consensus on beliefs and practices For example Western Buryats along the Kuda river believe in reincarnation of the third soul likely a result of their exposure to Buddhism Buddhism Edit nbsp Ivolginsky Datsan is a monastery complex consisting of seven Buddhist templesA majority of the Buryats are followers of Buddhism 5 6 The Buryats converted to Tibetan Buddhism in the early eighteenth century under the influence of Tibetan and Mongolian missionaries 5 6 Other religions Edit A small minority of Buryats are converts to Christianity The earliest Orthodox mission was established in Irkutsk in 1731 Some Buryats converted to Christianity for material incentives while others were forcefully converted 5 Despite its presence in the area Christianity is not perceived as a Buryat religion 36 Subsistence Edit Traditionally the Buryats were semi nomadic pastoralists Buryat nomads tended herds of cattle sheep goats and camels 7 Buryats also relied greatly on local resources to supplement their diets Following colonization by Russia pastoralism was gradually replaced by agriculture The Buryat of today are largely agrarian but most in rural areas still focus on raising livestock as their main way of surviving The Buryats located in Siberia are still largely focused on raising livestock due to the shortness of the growing season They focus on the raising of dairy cattle and the growing of berries to sustain most of their diet There are also some communities that farm various types of trees and cash crops such as wheat and rye 37 On the slopes of the Sayan and Altai Mountains there are communities whose way of life is breeding reindeer 7 Mongolian Buryats are farmers as well but are typically semi settled They build sheds and fences to keep livestock contained and use hay as their main source of food for the livestock 38 However the Buryats located in Buryatia are more focused on the agriculture aspect of farming and not the livestock raising aspect Traditional medicine Edit Buryat healing practices incorporates folk shamanic traditions and Tibeto Mongolian medicine Before the adoption of Buddhism the Buryats relied on shamanic rituals to stop or cure pain and illness which was said to be caused by evil spirits With the conversion to Tibetan Buddhism Buryats incorporated Tibetan medical practices to their healing practices Medical schools were soon established and Buryats studying in these schools learned about medical and prescription techniques Training in treatment and diagnostics was also given in these schools Buryats soon contributed to expanding the Tibeto Mongolian medical literature 39 Traditional Buryat medicine emphasises the use of mineral and thermal springs for healing A balanced diet of meat offal plants and herbs and proper nutrition were recommended to cure illness The use of herbs for medical purposes was minimal because of the lack of vegetation in the semi deserts and dry steppes However Buryat healers were considered skilled in healing wounds treating head trauma midwifery and bone setting In the modern age some practices derived from Buryat folk medicine has been incorporated into contemporary settings 39 Cuisine Edit nbsp Buuz a steamed meat dumpling is probably the most iconic dish of Buryat cuisineBuryat cuisine is very similar to Mongolian cuisine and share many dishes like buuz and khuushuur Dairy products are an important part of the cuisine and traditional dishes are often hearty and simple Most main courses are usually meat based but fish like omul is common especially around Lake Baikal Genetics EditMitochondrial DNA haplogroups Edit The Buryats have a diverse pool of mitochondrial DNA with about 83 7 247 295 belonging to haplogroups of Eastern Eurasian origin or affinity and about 16 3 48 295 belonging to haplogroups of Western Eurasian origin or affinity The most common Eastern Eurasian mtDNA haplogroups among present day Buryats are D4 approximately 29 of the total Buryat population C approximately 16 6 and G2a approximately 11 The most common Western Eurasian mtDNA haplogroups among the Buryats are H approximately 6 8 and U approximately 5 4 40 Another mtDNA study of Buryats shows they have 24 6 25 of West Eurasian maternal lineages 41 Y chromosome DNA haplogroups Edit Lell et al 2002 tested a sample of thirteen Buryat males collected in Kushun village Nizhneudinsk District Irkutsk Region representing the Buryats of the Sayan Baikal upland The Y chromosomes of these individuals were assigned to the following haplogroups 6 13 46 2 O M119 3 13 23 1 N Tat 2 13 15 4 N DYS7Cdel xTat 1 13 7 7 C M48 1 13 7 7 F M89 xK M9 42 This sample entirely lacks C M407 and instead has a great proportion of O M119 thus it appears very different from published samples of Y DNA collected from Buryats east of Lake Baikal Derenko et al 2006 tested a sample of 238 Buryat males and found the following Y DNA haplogroup distribution 4 238 1 7 P 92R7 xQ DYS199 M3 R1 M173 2 238 0 8 R1 M173 xR1a SRY1532b 5 238 2 1 R1a1 M17 3 238 1 3 N LLY22g xTat 45 238 18 9 N3 Tat 152 238 63 9 C RPS4Y M130 4 238 1 7 F M89 xG M201 H M52 I M170 J 12f2 K M9 1 238 0 4 G M201 1 238 0 4 I M170 21 238 8 8 K M9 xL M20 N LLY22g P 92R7 43 Boris Malyarchuk Miroslava Derenko Galina Denisova et al 2010 retested 217 of these 238 Buryats and found that they were 148 217 68 2 haplogroup C RPS4Y711 M130 including 117 217 53 9 C3d M407 18 217 8 3 C3 M217 xC3a M93 C3b P39 C3c M77 C3d M407 C3e P53 1 C3f P62 and 13 217 6 0 C3c M77 Fourteen of the 217 Buryats 6 5 had STR haplotypes belonging to the star cluster in C3 from which it might be inferred that they most likely belonged to C2a1a3 P369 M504 44 Karafet et al 2006 tested a sample of 81 Buryat males and found that they belonged to the following Y DNA haplogroups 45 81 55 6 C M217 xM86 4 81 4 9 C M86 1 81 1 2 G M201 1 81 1 2 J 12f2 2 81 2 5 N P43 23 81 28 4 N M178 2 81 2 5 O LINE 3 81 3 7 R M207 45 Karafet et al 2018 retested the same sample of Buryat males minus the G M201 singleton and found that they belonged to the following haplogroups 4 80 5 0 C2a1a2a M86 5 80 6 3 C2a1a3 P369 40 80 50 0 C2b1a1a1a M407 1 80 1 3 J2a1 P354 xJ2a1a L27 2 80 2 5 N1a2b1 P63 xP362 23 80 28 8 N1a1a1a1a3a P89 2 80 2 5 O2a1b JST002611 1 80 1 3 R2a M124 1 80 1 3 R1a1a1b1a Z282 1 80 1 3 R1b1a1b1a1a2 P312 xL21 46 Kim et al 2011 reported the following Y DNA haplogroup distribution in a sample of Mongolians Buryats 47 16 36 44 44 C2 M217 1 36 2 78 D1a1a M15 1 36 2 78 F M89 xK M9 9 36 25 00 N M231 1 36 2 78 O1b2 SRY465 x47z 1 36 2 78 O2a M324 xO2a1b JST002611 O2a2 P201 6 36 16 67 O2a2 P201 1 36 2 78 R M207 48 nbsp Buryat womenKharkov et al 2014 examined blood samples obtained from a total of 297 ethnic Buryats separated into eight geographical groups according to the location of sample collection Okinsky district N 53 southwest of the Republic of Buryatia ethnoterritorial group of Oka Buryats Dzhida N 31 and Kyakhta N 27 south ethnoterritorial group of Selenga Buryats the Kizhinga N 64 and Eravninsky N 30 regions east ethnoterritorial group of Khorin Buryats Kurumkan village N 23 north ethnoterritorial group of Barguzin Buryats Ulan Ude and Khuramsha 30 km west of Ulan Ude N 26 ethnoterritorial group of Kudarinsk Buryats and Aginskoe village N 44 Agin Buryat Autonomous Region of Chita Agin Buryats For the statistical treatment samples from Ulan Ude and Khuramsha village were united into one group designated as Ulan Ude The authors found significant differences among eastern Buryats Khorin Buryats from Kizhinga and Eravninsky districts of Buryatia plus Agin Buryats from Agin Buryat Okrug of Zabaykalsky Krai southern and central Buryats Selenga Buryats from Dzhida and Kyakhta plus Kudarinsk Buryats from Ulan Ude and Khuramsha and southwestern and northern Buryats Oka Buryats from Okinsky district of Buryatia plus Barguzin Buryats from Kurumkan village Similar to the Buryat samples examined by Malyarchuk et al 2010 and Karafet et al 2018 the southwestern and northern Buryat samples of Kharkov et al 2014 exhibited an extremely high frequency of haplogroup C2 M407 48 76 63 2 C3d M407 14 76 18 4 N1c1 Tat 4 76 5 3 O3a3c M134 xM117 3 76 3 9 C3 M217 xM77 M86 M407 2 76 2 6 C3c M77 M86 2 76 2 6 O3a3c1 M117 2 76 2 6 R1a1a M17 1 76 1 3 N1b P43 In contrast the eastern Buryat samples of Kharkov et al 2014 exhibited an extremely high frequency of haplogroup N Tat 102 138 73 9 N1c1 Tat 19 138 13 8 C3d M407 5 138 3 6 C3c M77 M86 4 138 2 9 E 3 138 2 2 C3 M217 xM77 M86 M407 2 138 1 4 R1a1a M17 1 138 0 7 O3a M324 xM7 M134 1 138 0 7 O3a3c1 M117 1 138 0 7 R2a M124 The southern and central Buryat samples of Kharkov et al 2014 exhibited a significant proportion of C3 M217 xM77 M86 M407 which may be related to Y DNA subclades that often have been observed among Mongols in Mongolia while also exhibiting both N Tat and C M407 with moderate frequency 26 84 31 0 N1c1 Tat 19 84 22 6 C3d M407 16 84 19 0 C3 M217 xM77 M86 M407 8 84 9 5 R1a1a M17 7 84 8 3 R2a M124 4 84 4 8 C3c M77 M86 4 84 4 8 O3a M324 xM7 M134 49 Haplogroup N M178 is found mainly among the indigenous peoples of northern Eurasia e g Yakuts Finns Among Buryats haplogroup N M178 is more common toward the east cf 50 64 78 1 N1c1 in a sample of Buryat from Kizhinginsky District 34 44 77 3 N1c1 in a sample of Buryat from Aga Buryatia and 18 30 60 0 N1c1 in a sample of Buryat from Yeravninsky District every one of which regions is located at a substantial distance east of the eastern shore of the southern half of Lake Baikal versus 6 31 19 4 N1c1 in a sample of Buryat from Dzhidinsky District which is slightly south of the southwestern end of the lake and 2 23 8 7 N1c1 in a sample of Buryat from Kurumkansky District which is slightly east of the northeastern end of the lake 49 and it mostly belongs to a subclade N F4205 that reaches its maximal frequency among Buryats but which also has been found in some other Mongolic peoples as well as in Kazakhstan Uzbekistan Turkey Ukraine and Poland N F4205 is estimated to share a common ancestor with N B202 which has been found in many present day inhabitants of Chukotka approximately 4 600 95 CI 3 700 lt gt 5 500 years before present 50 Haplogroup C3d M407 is found mainly among the northern and southwestern Buryats Barghuts Hamnigans Soyots Kazakh Khongirad 51 and Dorbet Kalmyks Nuclear DNA genetic history Edit A large scale genetic study from 2021 shows that the Buryats as well as other Mongolic ethnic groups such as Mongols have nearly exclusively East Eurasian East Asian related genetic ancestry 95 to 98 which can be largely traced back to Neolithic millet agriculturalists of Northeast Asia but also Paleo Siberians and Yellow river farmers from around the Yellow River region of Northern China Genetic evidence shows that Northeast Asian like ancestry massively expanded westwards during the Bronze Age and Iron Age in several waves Although Buryats are closer to their Mongolic and Tungusic speaking neighbors out of the major East Asian ethnic groups they are genetically closest to the Koreans followed by Northern Han Japanese and Southern Han in that order according to FST genetic distance measurements 52 Subgroups Edit nbsp Mongol states in the 14th to 17th centuries This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message According to the Buryat creation myth there were 11 Buryat tribes or clans According to the myth all 11 tribes are descendants of a man and a mysterious but beautiful creature that turns into a swan during the day and a woman during the night After the two married the man asked her to give him her wings so that she would not turn into a swan anymore However it is said that after some time the woman asked for her wings back and flew away never to return Today there are a number of different Buryat tribes or clans Major tribes Edit Bulagad Alagui Gotol Sharaldai Bubai Khogoi Erkhidei Kholtubai Onkhotoi Ongoy Bulut Barai Yengut Buin Olzoy Murui Khulmenge Khurkhut Soyot Noyot Kharanut Ashabagat Abaganat Buzgan Dalakhai Khongodor Ashkhai Ashata Kholsho Uta Baima Dasha Naidar Nashan Badarkhan Boldoy Terte Shoshoolog Khori Buryats Galzut Sharait Khubduut Gushit Khuatsai Khargana Batanai Bodonguut Khudai Sagaan Khalbin Ekhirid Shono Khengelder Abzay Bayanday Olzon Segenut Galzut Kharbyat Khaital Sartuul Buryats Khorchin Khirid Khatagin Saljiud Batod Atagan Khorlid Onkhod Khoit Uriankhai Khereit SongolOther tribes Edit Dzungar origin Galzut Segenut Ikinat Bukot Zamot Khaital Zungar Khuramsha Atagan Khamnigan Buryats Darkhat Khangin KhorchinNotable people EditFor a more comprehensive list see List of Buryats Valery Inkijinoff French actor Balzhinima Tsyrempilov Russian archer Yuriy Yekhanurov former Prime Minister of Ukraine Agvan Dorjiev Buddhist monk tutor of the 13th Dalai Lama Dashi Namdakov sculptor Irina Pantaeva model Yul Brynner actor Ōrora Satoshi sumo wrestler Rōga Tokiyoshi sumo wrestler half Buryat Dorzhi Banzarov academicAlso see List of BuryatsSee also EditList of indigenous peoples of Russia Buddhism in Russia Far Eastern Republic Shamanism in SiberiaReferences Edit a b Buryat Mongolia Siberia Shamanism Britannica Nacionalnyj sostav naseleniya Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved 30 December 2022 2020 POPULATION AND HOUSING CENSUS OF MONGOLIA summary Archived from the original on 2021 07 15 China Radio International 2006 Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2013 01 19 a b c d e f g h Skutsch Carl ed 2005 Encyclopedia of the World s Minorities New York Routledge p 251 ISBN 1 57958 468 3 a b c Chackars Melissa November 2020 Copp Paul Wedemeyer Christian K eds Buddhism and the Siberian Buryat Chronicles Stories of Origin Rivalry and Negotiation in the Russian Empire History of Religions University of Chicago Press for the University of Chicago Divinity School 60 2 81 102 doi 10 1086 710574 JSTOR 00182710 LCCN 64001081 OCLC 299661763 S2CID 229366370 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Krader Lawrence October 1954 Buryat Religion and Society Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 10 3 322 351 doi 10 1086 soutjanth 10 3 3629134 S2CID 130687667 a b Quijada Jastine B Graber Kathryn E Stephen Eric 2015 Finding Their Own Revitalizing Buryat Culture Through Shamanic Practices in Ulan Ude Problems of Post Communism 62 5 258 72 doi 10 1080 10758216 2015 1057040 S2CID 143106014 The New Encyclopaedia Britannica 15th Edition 1977 Vol II p 396 ISBN 0 85229 315 1 Invalid id Ethnologue com Retrieved 2012 08 13 UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in danger www unesco org Retrieved 2019 04 19 Kyzlasov Leonid 1989 Drevnyaya i srednevekovaya istoriya Yuzhnoj Sibiri v kratkom izlozhenii Posobie dlya uchitelej istorii Abakan p 58 Erich Haenisch Die Geheime Geschichte der Mongolen Leipzig 1948 p 112 Owen Lattimore The Mongols of Manchuria p 165 C P Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire p 61 D T S eveendorzh Tu u khiĭn Khu reelen Mongolyn Shinzhlekh Ukhaany Akademi Mongol Ulsyn tu u kh XIV zuuny dund u ees XVII zuuny ekhen u e p 43 University of Pittsburgh University Center for International Studies Temple University Russian History Histoire Russe p 464 Bowles Gordon T 1977 The People of Asia pp 278 279 Weidenfeld and Nicolson London ISBN 0 297 77360 7 1 permanent dead link Tradicionnaya materialnaya kultura buryatskogo etnosa Predbajkalya Etnogenez i rasselenie Sredovaya kultura buryat Russian Buryats Archived from the original on Nov 10 2006 Retrieved Jul 17 2022 P B Abzaev Buryaty na rubezhe XX XXI vv Chislennost sostav zanyatiya Russian Bowles Gordon T 1977 The People of Asia p 279 Weidenfeld and Nicolson London ISBN 0 297 77360 7 Hirsch Francine 2002 Race without the Practice of Racial Politics Slavic Review 61 1 30 43 doi 10 2307 2696979 JSTOR 2696979 S2CID 147121638 James Minahan Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations Vol 2 S Z p 345 James Stuart Olson Lee Brigance Pappas Nicholas Charles Pappas An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires p 125 Bessonov Ania 2022 10 05 Russian ethnic minorities bearing brunt of Russia s war mobilization in Ukraine CBC News Petkova Mariya Putin is using ethnic minorities to fight in Ukraine www aljazeera com Retrieved 2023 06 10 The Savage Warriors of Siberia How an Ethnic Minority in Russia Came to Be Unfairly Blamed for the Worst War Crimes in Ukraine Media Diversity Institute 2022 08 12 Retrieved 2023 06 10 The Republic of Buryatia invasion of Ukraine is an extension of Russia s domestic dominance over the country s ethnic minorities Global Voices 2022 06 30 Retrieved 2023 06 10 Esuna Dugarova Buryatia a symbol of Eurasia in the heartland of Baikal UN Special magazine a b c d Newyear Tristra 2009 Our Primitive Customs and Lord Kalym The Evolving Buryat Discourse on Bride Price 1880 1930 Inner Asia 11 1 5 22 doi 10 1163 000000009793066596 JSTOR 23614933 Khangalov M 1958 Sobranie sochinenii torn I amp II Collected Works vols 1 amp 2 Ulan Ude Buriatskoe knizhnoe izdatel stvo p 57 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Arena Atlas of Religions and Nationalities in Russia Sreda 2012 Shimamura Ippei 1969 島村一平 1969 2014 The roots seekers Shamanism and ethnicity among the Mongol Buriats 島村 一平 1969 English ed Yokohama Kanazawa Japan ISBN 9784861103971 OCLC 873448431 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Coming Together Buryat and Mongolian Healers Meet in Post Soviet Reality www culturalsurvival org Retrieved 2019 04 19 Norwicka Ewa Polec Wojciech 2019 Religious Diversity for the Sake of Ethnic Unity Shamanism and Buddhism in Creating Buryat ethnic Identity Polish Sociological Review 206 237 247 via ProQuest Family Farming in Russian Regions Small Scale Agriculture and Food Supporting Russia s Food Self Sufficiency Journal of Small Business and Entrepreneurship Development jsbednet com Retrieved 2019 10 15 Hurelbaatar A 2000 An Introduction to the History and Religion of the Buryat Mongols of Shinehen in China Inner Asia 2 1 73 116 doi 10 1163 146481700793647931 JSTOR 23615472 a b Bolsokhoyeva Natalia 2007 Tibetan Medical Schools of the Aga Area Chita Region PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2021 05 15 Retrieved 15 May 2021 Derenko Miroslava Malyarchuk Boris Grzybowski Tomasz Denisova Galina Dambueva Irina Perkova Maria Dorzhu Choduraa Luzina Faina Lee Hong Kyu Vanecek Tomas Villems Richard Zakharov Ilia November 2007 Phylogeographic Analysis of Mitochondrial DNA in Northern Asian Populations The American Journal of Human Genetics 81 5 1025 1041 doi 10 1086 522933 PMC 2265662 PMID 17924343 Starikovskaya Elena B Sukernik Rem I Derbeneva Olga A Volodko Natalia V Ruiz Pesini Eduardo Torroni Antonio Brown Michael D Lott Marie T Hosseini Seyed H Huoponen Kirsi Wallace Douglas C January 2005 Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in Indigenous Populations of the Southern Extent of Siberia and the Origins of Native American Haplogroups Annals of Human Genetics 69 1 67 89 doi 10 1046 j 1529 8817 2003 00127 x PMC 3905771 PMID 15638829 Lell Jeffrey T Sukernik Rem I Starikovskaya Yelena B Su Bing Jin Li Schurr Theodore G Underhill Peter A Wallace Douglas C January 2002 The Dual Origin and Siberian Affinities of Native American Y Chromosomes The American Journal of Human Genetics 70 1 192 206 doi 10 1086 338457 PMC 384887 PMID 11731934 Derenko Miroslava Malyarchuk Boris Denisova Galina A Wozniak Marcin Dambueva Irina Dorzhu Choduraa Luzina Faina Miscicka Sliwka Danuta Zakharov Ilia January 2006 Contrasting patterns of Y chromosome variation in South Siberian populations from Baikal and Altai Sayan regions Human Genetics 118 5 591 604 doi 10 1007 s00439 005 0076 y PMID 16261343 S2CID 23011845 Malyarchuk Boris Derenko Miroslava Denisova Galina Wozniak Marcin Grzybowski Tomasz Dambueva Irina Zakharov Ilia November 2010 Phylogeography of the Y chromosome haplogroup C in northern Eurasia Y chromosome haplogroup C phylogeography Annals of Human Genetics 74 6 539 546 doi 10 1111 j 1469 1809 2010 00601 x PMID 20726964 S2CID 40763875 Hammer Michael F Karafet Tatiana M Park Hwayong Omoto Keiichi Harihara Shinji Stoneking Mark Horai Satoshi January 2006 Dual origins of the Japanese common ground for hunter gatherer and farmer Y chromosomes Journal of Human Genetics 51 1 47 58 doi 10 1007 s10038 005 0322 0 PMID 16328082 S2CID 6559289 Karafet Tatiana M Osipova Ludmila P Savina Olga V Hallmark Brian Hammer Michael F November 2018 Siberian genetic diversity reveals complex origins of the Samoyedic speaking populations American Journal of Human Biology 30 6 e23194 doi 10 1002 ajhb 23194 PMID 30408262 S2CID 53238849 Kim W Shin D J Harihara S Kim Y J March 2000 Y chromosomal DNA variation in East Asian populations and its potential for inferring the peopling of Korea Journal of Human Genetics 45 2 76 83 doi 10 1007 s100380050015 PMID 10721667 S2CID 1753653 Kim Soon Hee Kim Ki Cheol Shin Dong Jik Jin Han Jun Kwak Kyoung Don Han Myun Soo Song Joon Myong Kim Won Kim Wook 2011 High frequencies of Y chromosome haplogroup O2b SRY465 lineages in Korea a genetic perspective on the peopling of Korea Investigative Genetics 2 1 10 doi 10 1186 2041 2223 2 10 PMC 3087676 PMID 21463511 a b Kharkov V N Khamina K V Medvedeva O F Simonova K V Eremina E R Stepanov V A February 2014 Gene pool of Buryats Clinal variability and territorial subdivision based on data of Y chromosome markers Russian Journal of Genetics 50 2 180 190 doi 10 1134 S1022795413110082 S2CID 15595963 N Y16323 YTree www yfull com Retrieved Jul 17 2022 E E Ashirbekov D M Botbaev A M Belkozhaev A O Abayldaev A S Neupokoeva J E Mukhataev B Alzhanuly D A Sharafutdinova D D Mukushkina M B Rakhymgozhin A K Khanseitova S A Limborska N A Aytkhozhina Distribution of Y Chromosome Haplogroups of the Kazakh from the South Kazakhstan Zhambyl and Almaty Regions Reports of the National Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Kazakhstan ISSN 2224 5227 Volume 6 Number 316 2017 85 95 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2021 09 23 Retrieved 2021 06 25 Wang Chuan Chao Yeh Hui Yuan Popov Alexander N Zhang Hu Qin Matsumura Hirofumi Sirak Kendra Cheronet Olivia Kovalev Alexey Rohland Nadin Kim Alexander M Mallick Swapan March 2021 Genomic insights into the formation of human populations in East Asia Nature 591 7850 413 419 Bibcode 2021Natur 591 413W doi 10 1038 s41586 021 03336 2 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 7993749 PMID 33618348 Further reading EditThis further reading section may contain inappropriate or excessive suggestions that may not follow Wikipedia s guidelines Please ensure that only a reasonable number of balanced topical reliable and notable further reading suggestions are given removing less relevant or redundant publications with the same point of view where appropriate Consider utilising appropriate texts as inline sources or creating a separate bibliography article August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Shimamura Ippei The Roots Seekers Shamanism and Ethnicity Among the Mongol Buryats Kanagawa Japan Shumpusha Publishing 2014 ISBN 978 4 86110 397 1 Ethnic groups Buryats J G Gruelin Siberia Pierre Simon Pallas Sammlungen historischer Nachrichten uber die mongolischen Volkerschaften St Petersburg 1776 1802 M A Castren Versuch einer buriatischen Sprachlehre 1857 Sir H H Howorth History of the Mongols 1876 1888 The film A Pearl in the Forest MOJLHON illustrates the heavy price paid by the Buryats in the 1930s during the Stalinist purges Murphy Dervla 2007 Silverland A Winter Journey Beyond the Urals London John Murray Natalia Zhukovskaia Ed Buryaty Moskva Nauka 2004 a classic general description Buryat Supermodel identifies herself as Siberian Eskimo Derenko MV Malyarchuk BA Dambueva IK Shaikhaev GO Dorzhu CM Nimaev DD Zakharov IA December 2000 Mitochondrial DNA variation in two South Siberian Aboriginal populations implications for the genetic history of North Asia Human Biology 72 6 945 73 PMID 11236866 Anthology of Buryat folklore Pushkinskiĭ dom 2000 CD External links Edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Buriats nbsp Media related to Buryat people at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Buryats amp oldid 1176904788, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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