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Mari people

The Mari (Mari: мари; Russian: марийцы, romanizedmariytsy) are a Finnic people, who have traditionally lived along the Volga and Kama rivers in Russia. Almost half of Maris today live in the Mari El republic, with significant populations in the Bashkortostan and Tatarstan republics. In the past, the Mari have also been known as the Cheremisa or the Cheremis people in Russian and the Çirmeş in Tatar.

Mari
мари
марийцы
Mari people in Yoshkar-Ola
Total population
c. 600,000
Regions with significant populations
 Russia
     Mari El
547,605 (2010)
    290,863 (2010)[1]
 Kazakhstan4,416 (2009)[2]
 Ukraine4,130 (2001)[3]
 Belarus416 (2009)[4]
 Latvia234 (2019)[5]
 Estonia241 (2011)[6]
Languages
Mari, Russian
Religion
Majority Russian Orthodox Christianity and Mari Native Religion
Related ethnic groups
Other Finnic peoples

Name

The ethnic name mari derives from the Proto-Indo-Iranian root *márya-, meaning 'human', literally 'mortal, one who has to die', which indicates early contacts between Finno-Ugric and Indo-Iranian languages.[7]

History

Early history

Some scholars have proposed that two tribes mentioned by the Gothic writer Jordanes in his Getica among the peoples in the realm of Gothic king Ermanaric in the fourth century CE can be equated with the Mari people. However, the identification of the Imniscaris (or Sremniscans) with "Cheremis", and Merens with "Mari" is controversial.[8] The first safely attested mention of the Mari people comes from Khazar sources from the 10th century, where they appear by the exonym tsarmis (= "Cheremis"). At that time, the Mari settlement area was along the Volga. In the 13th century, the Mari fell under the influence sphere of the Golden Horde, and in 1443 became subjects of the Kazan khanate. During this time, the Maris experienced some cultural convergence with the ruling Tatars and the Volga Bulgars, which is also seen in Turkic lexical and grammatical influence on the Mari language.

In 1552, the Mari territory was incorporated into Russia with the Russian conquest of Kazan under Ivan the Terrible. While some Maris (mostly Hill Maris) assisted the Russian conquest, the majority of the Maris fought back in the so-called "Cheremis Wars". By the end of the 16th century, resistance was finally quelled, leaving a heavy toll on the Mari population. As a result of the ensuing influx of Russian settlers, and to escape forced Christianization (starting from c. 1700), Maris started to settle further east in present-day Bashkortostan. In the following centuries under tsarist Russia, the Maris were able to retain their ethnic and cultural identity, reinforced by repeated waves of returning to their traditional pre-Christian religion.[9][10]

Soviet Union

During the Soviet Era, the Mari Section was set up under the auspices of Narkomnats, the Peoples Commissariat for nationalities. Its task was to facilitate the close union of the Mari people with other people, to abolish anti-Russian mistrust and to raise the "class consciousness" of Mari workers. In practice this involved facilitating grain requisitions by the Soviet state, the recruitment of soldiers for the Red Army and the implementation of Bolshevik control of the society.[11]

During the Soviet Era, Bolshevik policies officially aimed at combating undue influence of nationalism in a multi-nation union, resulted in the murder of leading Mari figures, such as Sergei Čavajn and Olyk Ipai and other teachers, scientists, artists, as well as religious and community leaders.[12][13]

Russian Federation

 
Mari pagan priests (kart)

Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, the newly created republic of Mari El saw a revival of Mari culture and language. However, following the appointment of Leonid Markelov as Head of the republic in 2001, the government of Mari El has pursued a policy of intense Russification in the region. According to Vasily Pekteyev of the Mari National Theater in Yoshkar-Ola, "[Markelov] hated the Mari people". He noted that the Mari language is no longer taught in villages or schools and that the republic of Mari El "has already ceased to be an ethnic republic in anything but name. We are just another oblast."[14] In 2005, the European Commission expressed its concern over reports of repression against ethnic Mari opposition figures, journalists, and government officials that promoted Mari culture and opposed Markelov's reappointment as head of the republic that year.[15]

Ethnic groups

The Mari people consists of four different groups: the Meadow Mari, who live along the left bank of the Volga, the Hill (Mountain) Mari, who live along the right bank of the Volga, the Northwestern Mari, who live in Southern part of Kirov Oblast and Eastern part of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, and Eastern Mari, who live in the Bashkortostan, Tatarstan, Udmurtia republics and Perm Krai and Sverdlovsk Oblast. In the 2002 Russian census, 604,298 people identified themselves as "Mari," with 18,515 of those specifying that they were Mountain Mari and 56,119 as Eastern Mari. Almost 60% of Mari lived in rural areas.[16]

Language

 
Yvan Kyrlya, a Mari Soviet actor and poet.

The Mari have their own language, also called Mari, which is a member of the Uralic language family. It is written with a modified version of the Cyrillic alphabet. Linguists today distinguish four different dialects, which are not all mutually intelligible: Hill Mari (мары йӹлмӹ), concentrated mainly along the right Volga bank; Meadow Mari (марий йылме), spoken in the lowland regions of the Kokshaga and Volga rivers, which includes the city of Yoshkar-Ola; Eastern Mari, spoken east of the Vyatka River; and Northwestern Mari (маре йӹлмӹ) in the South-West of Kirov Oblast and North-East of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast.

In the 2002 census, 451,033 people stated that they spoke the Mari language.

Religion

 
Mari orthodox monks and novices. 1894

Maris have traditionally practiced a shamanistic faith that closely connected the individual with nature. According to those beliefs, nature exerts an influence over people. Nature is seen as a sacred, powerful, and living being with which people are fully intertwined. Nature also serves as a source of absolute good who always helps humans as long as they refrain from harming or opposing it.[17]

The Mari native religion also possesses a pantheon of gods who reside in the heavens, the most important of whom is known as the Great White God (Ош Кугу Юмо, Osh Kugu Yumo). Other lesser gods include the god of fire (Тул Юмо, Tul Yumo) and the god of wind (Мардеж Юмо, Mardezh Yumo). The Mari also believe in a number of half-men, half-gods (керемет, keremet) who live on earth. The most revered of these is Chumbulat (Чумбулат), or Chumbylat (Чумбылат), a renowned leader and warrior.[18]

Attempts to convert the Maris to Christianity began in the 16th century after their territory was incorporated into the Russian Empire during the reign of Ivan IV "the Terrible". Pressure to convert to Christianity and adopt Russian culture by the tsarist authorities in the 17th and 18th century led to backlash by the Maris as they faced persecution to conform.[19] Adoption of Christianity was not universal, however, and many Mari today still practice paganism in syncretic forms, or purer forms adhering to organized neopagan Mari traditional religion organizations.[clarification needed (see talk)][citation needed] While most Mari today are members of the Russian Orthodox Church, pagans still comprise a significant minority of 25.

Genetics

Osteopetrosis affects 1 newborn out of every 20,000 to 250,000[20] worldwide, but the odds are much higher in the Russian region of Mari El with 1 of every 14,000 newborns affected.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ Official site of the Russian Census of 2010. Information materials about the final results of the Russian Census of 2010. (in Russian)
  2. ^ Kazakh Census of 2009. Ethnic composition of the population 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine. (in Russian)
  3. ^ State statistics committee of Ukraine – Ethnic composition of population, 2001 census (in Ukrainian)
  4. ^ Ethnic composition of Belarus. Census of 2009. (in Russian)
  5. ^ Population distribution of Latvia by ethnic composition and citizenship as of 01.01.2019.. (in Latvian)
  6. ^ RL0428: Rahvastik rahvuse, soo ja elukoha järgi, 31. detsember 2011 (in Estonian)
  7. ^ Parpola, A.; Carpelan, C. (2005). "The cultural counterparts to Proto-Indo-European, Proto-Uralic and Proto-Aryan: Matching the dispersal and contact patterns in the linguistic and archaeological record". In Bryant, E. F. (ed.). The Indo-Aryan controversy: Evidence and inference in Indian history. Routledge. p. 119. ISBN 9780700714636.
  8. ^ Korkkanen, Irma (1975). The peoples of Hermanaric Jordanes, Getica 116. Suomalaisen Tiedeakatemian toimituksia, Sarja B , nide 187. Helsinki: Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia.
  9. ^ Saarinen, Sirkka (2002). "Tscheremissisch" (PDF). In Okuka, Miloš (ed.). Lexikon der Sprachen des europäischen Ostens. Wieser Enzyklopädie des europäischen Ostens 10. Klagenfurt: Alpen-Adria-Universität. Retrieved 4 July 2020.
  10. ^ Taagepera, Rein (1999). The Finno-Ugric republics and the Russian state. New York: Routledge.
  11. ^ The Sorcerer as Apprentice: Stalin as Commissar of nationalities, 1917–1924, by Stephen Blank, Greenwood Press, London 1994 ISBN 978-0-313-28683-4
  12. ^ . library.ndsu.edu. Archived from the original on 2013-10-22.
  13. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Victims of Stalin repression in Mari El". YouTube.
  14. ^ Coalson, Robert; Lyubimov, Dmitry; Alpaut, Ramazan (2018-06-20). "A Common Language: Russia's 'Ethnic' Republics See Language Bill As Existential Threat". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Retrieved 2018-06-21.
  15. ^ Lobjakas, Ahto (2005-03-07). "European Commission 'Concerned' Over Treatment Of Finno-Ugric Minorities". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Retrieved 2018-06-21.
  16. ^ Всероссийская перепись населения 2002 года, . Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
  17. ^ Шкалина, Галина. "Язычество народа Мари-феномен европейской культуры". "Етносфера".
  18. ^ Чумбылат – марийский национальный герой (retrieved January 2, 2014) (in Russian)
  19. ^ Minahan, James (2002). Encyclopedia of the stateless nations. Greenwood Press. p. 1190. ISBN 0-313-32111-6. OCLC 314923345.
  20. ^ ghr.nlm.nih.gov/condition/osteopetrosis

External links

  • MariUver, a blog about Mari culture and issues
  • The Moscow Times: 'Europe's Last Pagans' Worship in Marii-El Grove
  • RT Documentary: Europe's Last Pagans, an English-language video documentary
  • Photo story, 2014
  • Ural Mari. There's No Death, a project about traditional culture and believes of the Ural Mari

mari, people, mari, mari, мари, russian, марийцы, romanized, mariytsy, finnic, people, have, traditionally, lived, along, volga, kama, rivers, russia, almost, half, maris, today, live, mari, republic, with, significant, populations, bashkortostan, tatarstan, r. The Mari Mari mari Russian marijcy romanized mariytsy are a Finnic people who have traditionally lived along the Volga and Kama rivers in Russia Almost half of Maris today live in the Mari El republic with significant populations in the Bashkortostan and Tatarstan republics In the past the Mari have also been known as the Cheremisa or the Cheremis people in Russian and the Cirmes in Tatar MarimarimarijcyMari people in Yoshkar OlaTotal populationc 600 000Regions with significant populations Russia Mari El547 605 2010 290 863 2010 1 Kazakhstan4 416 2009 2 Ukraine4 130 2001 3 Belarus416 2009 4 Latvia234 2019 5 Estonia241 2011 6 LanguagesMari RussianReligionMajority Russian Orthodox Christianity and Mari Native ReligionRelated ethnic groupsOther Finnic peoples Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 Soviet Union 2 3 Russian Federation 3 Ethnic groups 4 Language 5 Religion 6 Genetics 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksName EditThe ethnic name mari derives from the Proto Indo Iranian root marya meaning human literally mortal one who has to die which indicates early contacts between Finno Ugric and Indo Iranian languages 7 History EditEarly history Edit Some scholars have proposed that two tribes mentioned by the Gothic writer Jordanes in his Getica among the peoples in the realm of Gothic king Ermanaric in the fourth century CE can be equated with the Mari people However the identification of the Imniscaris or Sremniscans with Cheremis and Merens with Mari is controversial 8 The first safely attested mention of the Mari people comes from Khazar sources from the 10th century where they appear by the exonym tsarmis Cheremis At that time the Mari settlement area was along the Volga In the 13th century the Mari fell under the influence sphere of the Golden Horde and in 1443 became subjects of the Kazan khanate During this time the Maris experienced some cultural convergence with the ruling Tatars and the Volga Bulgars which is also seen in Turkic lexical and grammatical influence on the Mari language In 1552 the Mari territory was incorporated into Russia with the Russian conquest of Kazan under Ivan the Terrible While some Maris mostly Hill Maris assisted the Russian conquest the majority of the Maris fought back in the so called Cheremis Wars By the end of the 16th century resistance was finally quelled leaving a heavy toll on the Mari population As a result of the ensuing influx of Russian settlers and to escape forced Christianization starting from c 1700 Maris started to settle further east in present day Bashkortostan In the following centuries under tsarist Russia the Maris were able to retain their ethnic and cultural identity reinforced by repeated waves of returning to their traditional pre Christian religion 9 10 Soviet Union Edit During the Soviet Era the Mari Section was set up under the auspices of Narkomnats the Peoples Commissariat for nationalities Its task was to facilitate the close union of the Mari people with other people to abolish anti Russian mistrust and to raise the class consciousness of Mari workers In practice this involved facilitating grain requisitions by the Soviet state the recruitment of soldiers for the Red Army and the implementation of Bolshevik control of the society 11 During the Soviet Era Bolshevik policies officially aimed at combating undue influence of nationalism in a multi nation union resulted in the murder of leading Mari figures such as Sergei Cavajn and Olyk Ipai and other teachers scientists artists as well as religious and community leaders 12 13 Russian Federation Edit Mari pagan priests kart Following the collapse of the Soviet Union the newly created republic of Mari El saw a revival of Mari culture and language However following the appointment of Leonid Markelov as Head of the republic in 2001 the government of Mari El has pursued a policy of intense Russification in the region According to Vasily Pekteyev of the Mari National Theater in Yoshkar Ola Markelov hated the Mari people He noted that the Mari language is no longer taught in villages or schools and that the republic of Mari El has already ceased to be an ethnic republic in anything but name We are just another oblast 14 In 2005 the European Commission expressed its concern over reports of repression against ethnic Mari opposition figures journalists and government officials that promoted Mari culture and opposed Markelov s reappointment as head of the republic that year 15 Ethnic groups EditThe Mari people consists of four different groups the Meadow Mari who live along the left bank of the Volga the Hill Mountain Mari who live along the right bank of the Volga the Northwestern Mari who live in Southern part of Kirov Oblast and Eastern part of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast and Eastern Mari who live in the Bashkortostan Tatarstan Udmurtia republics and Perm Krai and Sverdlovsk Oblast In the 2002 Russian census 604 298 people identified themselves as Mari with 18 515 of those specifying that they were Mountain Mari and 56 119 as Eastern Mari Almost 60 of Mari lived in rural areas 16 Language EditMain article Mari language Yvan Kyrlya a Mari Soviet actor and poet The Mari have their own language also called Mari which is a member of the Uralic language family It is written with a modified version of the Cyrillic alphabet Linguists today distinguish four different dialects which are not all mutually intelligible Hill Mari mary jӹlmӹ concentrated mainly along the right Volga bank Meadow Mari marij jylme spoken in the lowland regions of the Kokshaga and Volga rivers which includes the city of Yoshkar Ola Eastern Mari spoken east of the Vyatka River and Northwestern Mari mare jӹlmӹ in the South West of Kirov Oblast and North East of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast In the 2002 census 451 033 people stated that they spoke the Mari language Religion Edit Mari orthodox monks and novices 1894 Maris have traditionally practiced a shamanistic faith that closely connected the individual with nature According to those beliefs nature exerts an influence over people Nature is seen as a sacred powerful and living being with which people are fully intertwined Nature also serves as a source of absolute good who always helps humans as long as they refrain from harming or opposing it 17 The Mari native religion also possesses a pantheon of gods who reside in the heavens the most important of whom is known as the Great White God Osh Kugu Yumo Osh Kugu Yumo Other lesser gods include the god of fire Tul Yumo Tul Yumo and the god of wind Mardezh Yumo Mardezh Yumo The Mari also believe in a number of half men half gods keremet keremet who live on earth The most revered of these is Chumbulat Chumbulat or Chumbylat Chumbylat a renowned leader and warrior 18 Attempts to convert the Maris to Christianity began in the 16th century after their territory was incorporated into the Russian Empire during the reign of Ivan IV the Terrible Pressure to convert to Christianity and adopt Russian culture by the tsarist authorities in the 17th and 18th century led to backlash by the Maris as they faced persecution to conform 19 Adoption of Christianity was not universal however and many Mari today still practice paganism in syncretic forms or purer forms adhering to organized neopagan Mari traditional religion organizations clarification needed see talk citation needed While most Mari today are members of the Russian Orthodox Church pagans still comprise a significant minority of 25 Genetics EditOsteopetrosis affects 1 newborn out of every 20 000 to 250 000 20 worldwide but the odds are much higher in the Russian region of Mari El with 1 of every 14 000 newborns affected citation needed See also EditMari language Mari UshemReferences Edit Official site of the Russian Census of 2010 Information materials about the final results of the Russian Census of 2010 in Russian Kazakh Census of 2009 Ethnic composition of the population Archived 2011 07 23 at the Wayback Machine in Russian State statistics committee of Ukraine Ethnic composition of population 2001 census in Ukrainian Ethnic composition of Belarus Census of 2009 in Russian Population distribution of Latvia by ethnic composition and citizenship as of 01 01 2019 in Latvian RL0428 Rahvastik rahvuse soo ja elukoha jargi 31 detsember 2011 in Estonian Parpola A Carpelan C 2005 The cultural counterparts to Proto Indo European Proto Uralic and Proto Aryan Matching the dispersal and contact patterns in the linguistic and archaeological record In Bryant E F ed The Indo Aryan controversy Evidence and inference in Indian history Routledge p 119 ISBN 9780700714636 Korkkanen Irma 1975 The peoples of Hermanaric Jordanes Getica 116 Suomalaisen Tiedeakatemian toimituksia Sarja B nide 187 Helsinki Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia Saarinen Sirkka 2002 Tscheremissisch PDF In Okuka Milos ed Lexikon der Sprachen des europaischen Ostens Wieser Enzyklopadie des europaischen Ostens 10 Klagenfurt Alpen Adria Universitat Retrieved 4 July 2020 Taagepera Rein 1999 The Finno Ugric republics and the Russian state New York Routledge The Sorcerer as Apprentice Stalin as Commissar of nationalities 1917 1924 by Stephen Blank Greenwood Press London 1994 ISBN 978 0 313 28683 4 Germans from Russia Heritage Collection library ndsu edu Archived from the original on 2013 10 22 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Victims of Stalin repression in Mari El YouTube Coalson Robert Lyubimov Dmitry Alpaut Ramazan 2018 06 20 A Common Language Russia s Ethnic Republics See Language Bill As Existential Threat Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Retrieved 2018 06 21 Lobjakas Ahto 2005 03 07 European Commission Concerned Over Treatment Of Finno Ugric Minorities Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Retrieved 2018 06 21 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2002 goda Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2002 goda Archived from the original on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2008 01 16 Shkalina Galina Yazychestvo naroda Mari fenomen evropejskoj kultury Etnosfera Chumbylat marijskij nacionalnyj geroj retrieved January 2 2014 in Russian Minahan James 2002 Encyclopedia of the stateless nations Greenwood Press p 1190 ISBN 0 313 32111 6 OCLC 314923345 ghr nlm nih gov condition osteopetrosisExternal links EditMariUver a blog about Mari culture and issues The Moscow Times Europe s Last Pagans Worship in Marii El Grove RT Documentary Europe s Last Pagans an English language video documentary Photo story 2014 Ural Mari There s No Death a project about traditional culture and believes of the Ural Mari Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mari people amp oldid 1149308080, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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