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Volga Finns

The Volga Finns (sometimes referred to as Eastern Finns)[1] are a historical group of indigenous peoples of Russia living in the vicinity of the Volga, who speak Uralic languages. Their modern representatives are the Mari people, the Erzya and the Moksha Mordvins,[2][3] as well as speakers of the extinct Merya, Muromian and Meshchera languages.[4] The Permians are sometimes also grouped as Volga Finns.

Approximate ethno-linguistic map of European Eastern Rus in the 9th century: The five Volga Finnic groups of the Merya, Mari, Muromians, Meshchera and Mordvins are shown as being surrounded by the Slavs to the west, the (Finnic) Veps to the northwest, the Permians to the northeast, and the (Turkic) Bulghars and Khazars to the southeast and south.

The modern representatives of Volga Finns live in the basins of the Sura and Moksha rivers, as well as (in smaller numbers) in the interfluve between the Volga and the Belaya rivers. The Mari language has two dialects, the Meadow Mari and the Hill Mari.

Traditionally the Mari and the Mordvinic languages (Erzya and Moksha) were considered to form a Volga-Finnic or Volgaic group within the Uralic language family,[5][6][7] accepted by linguists like Robert Austerlitz (1968), Aurélien Sauvageot & Karl Heinrich Menges (1973) and Harald Haarmann (1974), but rejected by others like Björn Collinder (1965) and Robert Thomas Harms (1974).[8] This grouping has also been criticized by Salminen (2002), who suggests it may be simply a geographic, not a phylogenetic, group.[9]

Mari edit

The Mari or Cheremis (Russian: черемисы, cheremisy; Tatar: Çirmeş) have traditionally lived along the Volga and Kama rivers in Russia. The majority of Maris today live in the Mari El Republic, with significant populations in the Tatarstan and Bashkortostan republics. The Mari people consists of three different groups: the Meadow Mari, who live along the left bank of the Volga, the Mountain Mari, who live along the right bank of the Volga, and Eastern Mari, who live in the Bashkortostan republic. 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.[10]

Merya edit

The Merya people (Russian: меря, merya; also Merä) inhabited a territory corresponding roughly to the present-day area of the Golden Ring or Zalesye regions of Russia, including the modern-day Moscow, Yaroslavl, Kostroma, Ivanovo, and Vladimir oblasts.[11] The fact is that by origin the basis of “shim” is Meryan In the modern Vepsian language, the word meri means "sea"[12] It is likely that they were peacefully assimilated by the East Slavs after their territory became incorporated into Rus' in the 10th century.[13]

In the 6th century Jordanes mentioned them briefly (as Merens); later the Primary Chronicle described them in more detail. Soviet archaeologists believed that the capital of the Merya was Sarskoe Gorodishche near the bank of the Nero Lake to the south of Rostov. The annalists also mention the Merya people in connection with some notable events: in 859 they were taxed by the Vikings, and in 862 they took part in the battle against them. In 882 they accompanied Oleg to Kiev, where he established his power, and in 907 they were among the participants in Oleg's Byzantine campaign.[14] In 1235, the Friar Julian sets out to visit the Hungarians who remain in the east. In his second travelogue, he mentions that the Tatars have conquered a country called Merovia.[14]

One hypothesis classifies the Merya as a western branch of the Mari people rather than as a separate tribe. Their ethnonyms are basically identical, Merya being a Russian transcription of the Mari self-designation, Мäрӹ (Märӛ).[15]

The unattested Merya language[16] is traditionally assumed to have been a member of the Volga-Finnic group.[13][17] This view has been challenged: Eugene Helimski supposes that the Merya language was closer to the "northwest" group of Finno-Ugric (Balto-Finnic and Sami),[18] and Gábor Bereczki supposes that the Merya language was a part of the Balto-Finnic group.[19]

The Meryans were stated to have fought with the Bolghars in wars against Tatars.[20]

Some of the inhabitants of several districts of Kostroma and Yaroslavl oblasts present themselves as Meryan, although in recent censuses, they were registered as Russians. The modern Merya people have their websites[21][22] displaying their flag, coat of arms and national anthem,[23] and participate in discussions on the subject in Finno-Ugric networks.

2010 saw the release of the film Ovsyanki (literal translation: 'The Buntings', English title: Silent Souls), based on the novel of the same name,[24] devoted to the imagined life of modern Merya (or Meadow Mari) people.

In the early 21st century, a new type of social movement, the so-called "Merya Ethnofuturism", has emerged. It is distributed across central regions of Russia, for example, in Moscow, Pereslavl-Zalessky, Kostroma Oblast, and Plyos. In May 2014, the New Gallery in the city of Ivanovo opened the art project mater Volga, Sacrum during the "Night of Museums".[25] In October 2014, a presentation of "Merya Language" was held at the III Festival of Languages at Novgorod University.

Meshchera edit

The Meshchera (Russian: мещера, meshchera or мещёра, meshchyora) lived in the territory between the Oka River and the Klyazma River. It was a land of forests, bogs and lakes. The area is still called the Meshchera Lowlands.

The first Russian written source which mentions them is the Tolkovaya Paleya, from the 13th century. They are also mentioned in several later Russian chronicles from the period before the 16th century. This is in stark contrast to the related tribes Merya and Muroma, which appear to have been assimilated by the East Slavs by the 10th and the 11th centuries.

Ivan II, prince of Moscow, wrote in his will, 1358, about the village Meshcherka, which he had bought from the native Meshcherian chieftain Alexander Ukovich. The village appears to have been converted to the Christian Orthodox faith and to have been a vassal of Muscovy.

The Meschiera (along with Mordua, Sibir, and a few other harder-to-interpret groups) are mentioned in the "Province of Russia" on the Venetian Fra Mauro Map (ca. 1450).[26]

Several documents mention the Meshchera concerning the Kazan campaign by Ivan the Terrible in the 16th century. These accounts concern a state of Meshchera (known under a tentative name of Temnikov Meshchera, after its central town of Temnikov) which had been assimilated by the Mordvins and the Tatars. Prince A. M. Kurbsky wrote that the Mordvin language was spoken in the lands of the Meshchera.

In the village of Zhabki (Egorievsk district, Moscow Oblast), Meshchera burial sites were found in 1870. Women's bronze decorations identified as Finno-Ugric were found and dated to the 5th to 8th centuries. Very similar finds soon appeared in the Ryazan Oblast and the Vladimir Oblast, enabling archaeologists to establish what characterized the material culture of the Meshchera. 12 such sites were found from the Moskva River, along the Oka River to the town Kasimov. The general opinion is nowadays, that the Oka-Ryazan culture is identical to that of the Meshchera. The graves of women have yielded objects typical of the Volga Finns, of the 4th to 7th centuries, consisting of rings, jingling pendants, buckles and torcs. A specific feature was round breast plates with a characteristic ornamentation.[citation needed] Some of the graves contained well-preserved copper oxides of the decorations with long black hair locked into small bells into which were woven pendants.[citation needed]

In the Oka River valley, the Meshchera culture appears to have disappeared by the 11th century. In the marshy north, they appear to have stayed and to have been converted into the Orthodox faith. The Meshchera nobility appears to have been converted and assimilated by the 13th century, but the common Meshchera huntsman and fisherman may have kept elements of their language and beliefs for a longer period. In the 16th century, the St Nicholas monastery was founded in Radovitsky in order to convert the remaining Meshchera pagans. The princely family Mestchersky in Russia derives its nobility from having originally been native rulers of some of these Finnic tribes.

The Meshchera language[27] is unattested, and theories on its affiliation remain speculative.[28] Some linguists think that it might have been a dialect of Mordvinic,[13] while Pauli Rahkonen has suggested on the basis of toponymic evidence that it was a Permic or closely related language.[29] Rahkonen's speculation has been criticized by other scientists, such as by the Russian Uralist Vladimir Napolskikh.[30]

Some toponyms which Rahkonen suggested as Permic are the hydronyms stems: Un-, Ič-, Ul and Vil-, which can be compared to Udmurt uno 'big', iči 'little', vi̮l 'upper' and ulo 'lower'. Rahkonen also theorized the name Meshchera itself could be a Permic word, and its cognate be Komi mösör 'isthmus'.[31]

Contrary to popular opinion, historian Alimzhan Orlov has contested the Finnic background of Meshchera. He thinks it was originally a Turkic, more specifically, a Polovtsian (Kipchak) tribe that appeared in the 5th-8th centuries in southeastern Europe. He states that it eventually, around 1200-1300, was formed into "two Meshchera's" - one Russian, other Tatar. Orlov claims there is archaeological findings to prove his theory. Also, according to him, Ivan the Terrible originally mistakenly identified them as Mari/Cheremis. Orlov, and researches such as G. Ahmarov and M. Zekiyev, have stated that it would not be possible for a Finnic tribe to have adopted Tatar culture, referring to a theory that Mishar Tatars descend from "Tatarized" part of the tribe. Orlov does think, however, that a Turkic Meschera forms the ancestors of Mishar Tatars.[32][33][34]

Mordvins edit

The Mordvins (also Mordva, Mordvinians) remain one of the larger indigenous peoples of Russia. Less than one third of Mordvins live in the autonomous republic of Mordovia, Russian Federation, in the basin of the Volga River. They consist of two major subgroups, the Erzya and Moksha, besides the smaller subgroups of the Qaratay, Teryukhan and Tengushevo (or Shoksha) Mordvins who have become fully Russified or Turkified during the 19th to 20th centuries.

The Erzya Mordvins (Erzya: эрзят, Erzyat; also Erzia, Erzä), who speak Erzya, and the Moksha Mordvins (Moksha: мокшет, Mokshet), who speak Moksha, are the two major groups. The Qaratay Mordvins live in Kama Tamağı District of Tatarstan, and have shifted to speaking Tatar, albeit with a large proportion of Mordvin vocabulary (substratum). The Teryukhan, living in the Nizhny Novgorod Oblast of Russia, switched to Russian in the 19th century. The Teryukhans recognize the term Mordva as pertaining to themselves, whereas the Qaratay also call themselves Muksha. The Tengushevo Mordvins are a transitional group between Moksha and Erzya. They are also called Shoksha (or Shokshot). They are isolated from the bulk of the Erzyans, and their dialect/language has been influenced by the Mokshan dialects.

Muroma edit

 
Reconstruction of women's clothing and headdress metal parts from a 9th-10th century Muroma tomb.

The Muromians (Old East Slavic: Мурома, Muroma) lived in the Oka River basin. They are mentioned in the Primary Chronicle and by the Rogosk Chronicler. The Muromas as an ethnic group was formed around the seventh century AD, according to the date of the Muroma cemeteries.[14] The old town of Murom still bears their name. The Muromians paid tribute to the Rus' princes and, like the neighbouring Merya tribe, were assimilated by the East Slavs in the 11th to 12th century as their territory was incorporated into the Rus'.[35] A group of them migrated to the Carpathian Basin with the Hungarians, or Bulgars, as they are listed by the Rogosk Chronicler, among the peoples who inhabited the Carpathian Basin in 897.[36]

During the excavation of the Muroma tombs, archaeologists uncovered a rich archaeological legacy. Weapons were among the best in the surrounding areas in terms of workmanship, and the jewellery, which is found in abundance in the burials, is remarkable for its ingenuity of form and meticulous workmanship. The Muroma were characterised by arc-shaped head ornaments woven from horsehair and strips of leather, which were spirally braided with bronze wire. This is interesting because it is not observed in other Volga Finnic peoples.[37]

Like other medieval Volga Finns, animal bones were present in the burials as funeral food. Horses were buried separately, bridled and saddled, giving them a pose imitating a living animal lying on its belly with legs tucked up and head raised (it was placed on a step in the grave).[38]

In 2023, 13 Muroma tombs were excavated on the banks of the Oka River, accompanied by a number of artefacts - one of which was a belt buckle, which was most similar to the belt buckles of the conquering Hungarians.[39] Weapons such as spears and axes, as well as coins (dirhams) and five lead weights, among other things, were recovered from the grave of one of the presumably noble men.[40]

The Muroma settlements were located on high ground above the floodplain meadows. Livestock farming formed the basis of the Muroma economy, with pigs, large horned cattle, and to a lesser extent, sheep being raised. Horses played a special role, and they were also bred for meat. The Slash-and-burn agriculture played a minor role in their economy. Their commercial hunting was aimed at fur hunting.[37]

The Muromian language[41] is unattested, but is assumed to have been Uralic, and has frequently been placed in the Volga-Finnic category.[13][42][43] A. K. Matveyev identified the toponymic area upon Lower Oka and Lower Klyazma, which corresponds with Muroma.[44] According to the toponymy, the Muroma language was close to the Merya language.[45] A few words have been reconstructed in the Muroma language, based on toponyms, such as: *juga 'river', *vi̮ksa ‘river connecting two bodies of water', and *voht(V) ‘neck of land between two bodies of water’.[31] The Muroma language died out around the 10th century.[46]

The Primary Chronicle about the Muromians:

"Along the river Oka, which flows into the Volga, the Muroma, the Cheremisians, and the Mordva preserve their native languages."[47]

The Rogosk Chronicler about the Muromians:

"In the year 6405 [897] there were Slavs living along the Danube, as well as the Ugrics, Muromas and the Danubian Bulgars."[36]

Permians edit

The Udmurts, although part of the Permians, the speakers of Permic languages, are sometimes called Perm Finns and considered to belong in the Volga Finnic group of peoples, because their homeland lies in the northern part of the Volga River basin.[48]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Jaycox, Faith (2005). The Progressive Era. Infobase Publishing. p. 371. ISBN 0-8160-5159-3.
  2. ^ Abercromby, John (1898) [1898]. Pre- and Proto-historic Finns. D. Nutt/Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1-4212-5307-0.
  3. ^ "Finno-Ugric religion: Geographic and cultural background » The Finno-Ugric peoples". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15th edition. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-10.
  4. ^ Sinor, Denis (1990). The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia. Cambridge University Press. p. 151. ISBN 0-521-24304-1.
  5. ^ Grenoble, Lenore (2003). Language Policy in the Soviet Union. Springer. pp. PA80. ISBN 978-1-4020-1298-3.
  6. ^ The Uralic Language Family: Facts, Myths and Statistics; By Angela Marcantonio; p57; ISBN 0-631-23170-6
  7. ^ Voegelin, C. F.; & Voegelin, F. M. (1977). Classification and index of the world's languages. New York: Elsevier. ISBN 0-444-00155-7.
  8. ^ Ruhlen, Merritt (1991). A Guide to the World's Languages: Classification. Stanford University Press. p. 68. ISBN 0-8047-1894-6.
  9. ^ Salminen, Tapani (2002). "Problems in the taxonomy of the Uralic languages in the light of modern comparative studies". Helsinki.fi.
  10. ^ "Всероссийская перепись населения 2002 года". Perepis2002.ru.
  11. ^ "Насон - История города Вологды - Озера".
  12. ^ "Насон - История города Вологды - Озера".
  13. ^ a b c d Janse, Mark; Sijmen Tol; Vincent Hendriks (2000). Language Death and Language Maintenance. John Benjamins Publishing Company. p. A108. ISBN 978-90-272-4752-0.
  14. ^ a b c Klima, László. A finnugor és szamojéd népek története. pp. 49–50.
  15. ^ Petrov A., KUGARNYA, Marij kalykyn ertymgornyzho, #12 (850), 2006, March, the 24th.
  16. ^ "Merya". MultiTree. 2009-06-22. Retrieved 2012-07-13.
  17. ^ Wieczynski, Joseph (1976). The Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet History. Academic International Press. ISBN 978-0-87569-064-3.
  18. ^ Helimski, Eugene (2006). "The «Northwestern» group of Finno-Ugric languages and its heritage in the place names and substratum vocabulary of the Russian North". In Nuorluoto, Juhani (ed.). The Slavicization of the Russian North (Slavica Helsingiensia 27) (PDF). Helsinki: Department of Slavonic and Baltic Languages and Literatures. pp. 109–127. ISBN 978-952-10-2852-6.
  19. ^ Bereczki, Gábor (1996). "Le méria, une language balto-finnoise disparue". In Fernandez, M.M. Jocelyne; Raag, Raimo (eds.). Contacts de languages et de cultures dans l'aire baltique / Contacts of Languages and Cultures in the Baltic Area. Uppsala Multiethnic Papers. pp. 69–76.
  20. ^ SOUTH-EASTERN CONTACT AREA OF FINNIC LANGUAGES IN THE LIGHT OF ONOMASTICS (helsinki.fi)
  21. ^ ""Meryan Mastor"".
  22. ^ "Меря - Меряния - Залесская Русь - НОВОСТИ". www.merjamaa.ru.
  23. ^ «National Anthem of Merya» on YouTube
  24. ^ 13/07/2012+26°C. . Themoscownews.com. Archived from the original on 2014-03-01. Retrieved 2012-07-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  25. ^ . www.vrns.ru. Archived from the original on 2021-01-25. Retrieved 2021-11-27.
  26. ^ "Tuti questi populi, çoè nef, alich, marobab, balimata, quier, smaici, meschiera, sibir, cimano, çestan, mordua, cimarcia, sono ne la provincia de rossia"; item 2835 in: Falchetta, Piero (2006), Fra Mauro's World Map, Brepols, pp. 700–701, item 2835, ISBN 2-503-51726-9; also in the list online
  27. ^ "Meshcherian". MultiTree. 2009-06-22. Retrieved 2012-07-13.
  28. ^ Aikio, Ante (2012). "An essay on Saami ethnolinguistic prehistory" (PDF). Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne. Helsinki, Finland: Finno-Ugrian Society. 266: 63–117. Retrieved 5 July 2017.
  29. ^ Rahkonen, Pauli (2009), "The Linguistic Background of the Ancient Meshchera Tribe and Principal Areas of Settlement", Finnisch-Ugrische Forschungen, 60, ISSN 0355-1253
  30. ^ "Вопросы Владимиру Напольских-2. Uralistica". Forum.molgen.org. Retrieved 2012-07-13.
  31. ^ a b Pauli Rahkonen. South-Eastern contact area of Finnic languages in the light of onomastics: dissertation, Faculty of Arts, University of Helsinki. 2018
  32. ^ "Алимжан Орлов: Нижегородские татары - потомки древней мещеры".
  33. ^ Орлов, Орлов. "Нижегородские татары: этнические корни и исторические судьбы".
  34. ^ Zekiyev, M. Z. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-04-08.
  35. ^ Uibopuu, Valev; Herbert, Lagman (1988). Finnougrierna och deras språk (in Swedish). Studentlitteratur. ISBN 978-91-44-25411-1.
  36. ^ a b Remete, Farkas László (2010). Magyarok eredete [The origin of Hungarians] (in Hungarian). Budapest. p. 37.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  37. ^ a b Рябинин Е. А. (1997). Finno-Ugric Tribes in Ancient Russia. Publishing house of St. Petersburg State University.
  38. ^ Зеленцова О. В., Яворская Л. В. К вопросу об особенностях ритуальных действий с животными в погребальных обрядах муромы (по археозоологическим материалам Подболотьевского могильника).
  39. ^ "ARCHAEOLOGISTS FIND MUROMIAN BURIAL GROUND IN MUROMA". Heritage Daily.
  40. ^ "A magyarok ősi rokonainak nyomára bukkantak". National Geographic (in Hungarian).
  41. ^ "Muromanian". MultiTree. 2009-06-22. Retrieved 2012-07-13.
  42. ^ Wieczynski, Joseph (1976). The Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet History. Academic International Press. ISBN 978-0-87569-064-3.
  43. ^ Taagepera, Rein (1999). The Finno-Ugric Republics and the Russian State. Routledge. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-415-91977-7.
  44. ^ "Насон - История города Вологды - Озера".
  45. ^ Матвеев А. К. Мерянская проблема и лингвистическое картографирование // Вопросы языкознания. 2001. № 5.
  46. ^ Blokland, Rogier (2003). The Endangered Uralic Languages. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company. p. 108. ISBN 9027247528.
  47. ^ The Russian Primary Chronicle. p. 55.
  48. ^ Ekaterina Goldina & Rimma Goldina (2018) On North-Western Contacts of Perm Finns in VII–VIII Centuries, Estonian Journal of Archaeology 22: 2, 163–180
  • Klima, László (1996). The linguistic affinity of the Volgaic Finno-Ugrians and their Ethnogenesis. Oulu: Societas Historiae Fenno-Ugricae. Retrieved 2014-08-26.
  • Aleksey Uvarov, "Étude sur les peuples primitifs de la Russie. Les mériens" (1875).
  • Taagepera, Rein (1999). The Finno-Ugric Republics and the Russian State. Routledge. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-415-91977-7.

External links edit

  • The Gateway to the Meshchera

  This article contains content from the Owl Edition of Nordisk familjebok, a Swedish encyclopedia published between 1904 and 1926, now in the public domain.

volga, finns, also, baltic, finns, finnic, peoples, sometimes, referred, eastern, finns, historical, group, indigenous, peoples, russia, living, vicinity, volga, speak, uralic, languages, their, modern, representatives, mari, people, erzya, moksha, mordvins, w. See also Baltic Finns and Finnic peoples The Volga Finns sometimes referred to as Eastern Finns 1 are a historical group of indigenous peoples of Russia living in the vicinity of the Volga who speak Uralic languages Their modern representatives are the Mari people the Erzya and the Moksha Mordvins 2 3 as well as speakers of the extinct Merya Muromian and Meshchera languages 4 The Permians are sometimes also grouped as Volga Finns Approximate ethno linguistic map of European Eastern Rus in the 9th century The five Volga Finnic groups of the Merya Mari Muromians Meshchera and Mordvins are shown as being surrounded by the Slavs to the west the Finnic Veps to the northwest the Permians to the northeast and the Turkic Bulghars and Khazars to the southeast and south The modern representatives of Volga Finns live in the basins of the Sura and Moksha rivers as well as in smaller numbers in the interfluve between the Volga and the Belaya rivers The Mari language has two dialects the Meadow Mari and the Hill Mari Traditionally the Mari and the Mordvinic languages Erzya and Moksha were considered to form a Volga Finnic or Volgaic group within the Uralic language family 5 6 7 accepted by linguists like Robert Austerlitz 1968 Aurelien Sauvageot amp Karl Heinrich Menges 1973 and Harald Haarmann 1974 but rejected by others like Bjorn Collinder 1965 and Robert Thomas Harms 1974 8 This grouping has also been criticized by Salminen 2002 who suggests it may be simply a geographic not a phylogenetic group 9 Contents 1 Mari 2 Merya 3 Meshchera 4 Mordvins 5 Muroma 6 Permians 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksMari editMain article Mari people The Mari or Cheremis Russian cheremisy cheremisy Tatar Cirmes have traditionally lived along the Volga and Kama rivers in Russia The majority of Maris today live in the Mari El Republic with significant populations in the Tatarstan and Bashkortostan republics The Mari people consists of three different groups the Meadow Mari who live along the left bank of the Volga the Mountain Mari who live along the right bank of the Volga and Eastern Mari who live in the Bashkortostan republic 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 10 Merya editSee also Merya language and Meryans The Merya people Russian merya merya also Mera inhabited a territory corresponding roughly to the present day area of the Golden Ring or Zalesye regions of Russia including the modern day Moscow Yaroslavl Kostroma Ivanovo and Vladimir oblasts 11 The fact is that by origin the basis of shim is Meryan In the modern Vepsian language the word meri means sea 12 It is likely that they were peacefully assimilated by the East Slavs after their territory became incorporated into Rus in the 10th century 13 In the 6th century Jordanes mentioned them briefly as Merens later the Primary Chronicle described them in more detail Soviet archaeologists believed that the capital of the Merya was Sarskoe Gorodishche near the bank of the Nero Lake to the south of Rostov The annalists also mention the Merya people in connection with some notable events in 859 they were taxed by the Vikings and in 862 they took part in the battle against them In 882 they accompanied Oleg to Kiev where he established his power and in 907 they were among the participants in Oleg s Byzantine campaign 14 In 1235 the Friar Julian sets out to visit the Hungarians who remain in the east In his second travelogue he mentions that the Tatars have conquered a country called Merovia 14 One hypothesis classifies the Merya as a western branch of the Mari people rather than as a separate tribe Their ethnonyms are basically identical Merya being a Russian transcription of the Mari self designation Marӹ Marӛ 15 The unattested Merya language 16 is traditionally assumed to have been a member of the Volga Finnic group 13 17 This view has been challenged Eugene Helimski supposes that the Merya language was closer to the northwest group of Finno Ugric Balto Finnic and Sami 18 and Gabor Bereczki supposes that the Merya language was a part of the Balto Finnic group 19 The Meryans were stated to have fought with the Bolghars in wars against Tatars 20 Some of the inhabitants of several districts of Kostroma and Yaroslavl oblasts present themselves as Meryan although in recent censuses they were registered as Russians The modern Merya people have their websites 21 22 displaying their flag coat of arms and national anthem 23 and participate in discussions on the subject in Finno Ugric networks 2010 saw the release of the film Ovsyanki literal translation The Buntings English title Silent Souls based on the novel of the same name 24 devoted to the imagined life of modern Merya or Meadow Mari people In the early 21st century a new type of social movement the so called Merya Ethnofuturism has emerged It is distributed across central regions of Russia for example in Moscow Pereslavl Zalessky Kostroma Oblast and Plyos In May 2014 the New Gallery in the city of Ivanovo opened the art project mater Volga Sacrum during the Night of Museums 25 In October 2014 a presentation of Merya Language was held at the III Festival of Languages at Novgorod University Meshchera editSee also Meshchera language The Meshchera Russian meshera meshchera or meshyora meshchyora lived in the territory between the Oka River and the Klyazma River It was a land of forests bogs and lakes The area is still called the Meshchera Lowlands The first Russian written source which mentions them is the Tolkovaya Paleya from the 13th century They are also mentioned in several later Russian chronicles from the period before the 16th century This is in stark contrast to the related tribes Merya and Muroma which appear to have been assimilated by the East Slavs by the 10th and the 11th centuries Ivan II prince of Moscow wrote in his will 1358 about the village Meshcherka which he had bought from the native Meshcherian chieftain Alexander Ukovich The village appears to have been converted to the Christian Orthodox faith and to have been a vassal of Muscovy The Meschiera along with Mordua Sibir and a few other harder to interpret groups are mentioned in the Province of Russia on the Venetian Fra Mauro Map ca 1450 26 Several documents mention the Meshchera concerning the Kazan campaign by Ivan the Terrible in the 16th century These accounts concern a state of Meshchera known under a tentative name of Temnikov Meshchera after its central town of Temnikov which had been assimilated by the Mordvins and the Tatars Prince A M Kurbsky wrote that the Mordvin language was spoken in the lands of the Meshchera In the village of Zhabki Egorievsk district Moscow Oblast Meshchera burial sites were found in 1870 Women s bronze decorations identified as Finno Ugric were found and dated to the 5th to 8th centuries Very similar finds soon appeared in the Ryazan Oblast and the Vladimir Oblast enabling archaeologists to establish what characterized the material culture of the Meshchera 12 such sites were found from the Moskva River along the Oka River to the town Kasimov The general opinion is nowadays that the Oka Ryazan culture is identical to that of the Meshchera The graves of women have yielded objects typical of the Volga Finns of the 4th to 7th centuries consisting of rings jingling pendants buckles and torcs A specific feature was round breast plates with a characteristic ornamentation citation needed Some of the graves contained well preserved copper oxides of the decorations with long black hair locked into small bells into which were woven pendants citation needed In the Oka River valley the Meshchera culture appears to have disappeared by the 11th century In the marshy north they appear to have stayed and to have been converted into the Orthodox faith The Meshchera nobility appears to have been converted and assimilated by the 13th century but the common Meshchera huntsman and fisherman may have kept elements of their language and beliefs for a longer period In the 16th century the St Nicholas monastery was founded in Radovitsky in order to convert the remaining Meshchera pagans The princely family Mestchersky in Russia derives its nobility from having originally been native rulers of some of these Finnic tribes The Meshchera language 27 is unattested and theories on its affiliation remain speculative 28 Some linguists think that it might have been a dialect of Mordvinic 13 while Pauli Rahkonen has suggested on the basis of toponymic evidence that it was a Permic or closely related language 29 Rahkonen s speculation has been criticized by other scientists such as by the Russian Uralist Vladimir Napolskikh 30 Some toponyms which Rahkonen suggested as Permic are the hydronyms stems Un Ic Ul and Vil which can be compared to Udmurt uno big ici little vi l upper and ulo lower Rahkonen also theorized the name Meshchera itself could be a Permic word and its cognate be Komi mosor isthmus 31 Contrary to popular opinion historian Alimzhan Orlov has contested the Finnic background of Meshchera He thinks it was originally a Turkic more specifically a Polovtsian Kipchak tribe that appeared in the 5th 8th centuries in southeastern Europe He states that it eventually around 1200 1300 was formed into two Meshchera s one Russian other Tatar Orlov claims there is archaeological findings to prove his theory Also according to him Ivan the Terrible originally mistakenly identified them as Mari Cheremis Orlov and researches such as G Ahmarov and M Zekiyev have stated that it would not be possible for a Finnic tribe to have adopted Tatar culture referring to a theory that Mishar Tatars descend from Tatarized part of the tribe Orlov does think however that a Turkic Meschera forms the ancestors of Mishar Tatars 32 33 34 Mordvins editMain article Mordvins The Mordvins also Mordva Mordvinians remain one of the larger indigenous peoples of Russia Less than one third of Mordvins live in the autonomous republic of Mordovia Russian Federation in the basin of the Volga River They consist of two major subgroups the Erzya and Moksha besides the smaller subgroups of the Qaratay Teryukhan and Tengushevo or Shoksha Mordvins who have become fully Russified or Turkified during the 19th to 20th centuries The Erzya Mordvins Erzya erzyat Erzyat also Erzia Erza who speak Erzya and the Moksha Mordvins Moksha mokshet Mokshet who speak Moksha are the two major groups The Qaratay Mordvins live in Kama Tamagi District of Tatarstan and have shifted to speaking Tatar albeit with a large proportion of Mordvin vocabulary substratum The Teryukhan living in the Nizhny Novgorod Oblast of Russia switched to Russian in the 19th century The Teryukhans recognize the term Mordva as pertaining to themselves whereas the Qaratay also call themselves Muksha The Tengushevo Mordvins are a transitional group between Moksha and Erzya They are also called Shoksha or Shokshot They are isolated from the bulk of the Erzyans and their dialect language has been influenced by the Mokshan dialects Muroma edit nbsp Reconstruction of women s clothing and headdress metal parts from a 9th 10th century Muroma tomb The Muromians Old East Slavic Muroma Muroma lived in the Oka River basin They are mentioned in the Primary Chronicle and by the Rogosk Chronicler The Muromas as an ethnic group was formed around the seventh century AD according to the date of the Muroma cemeteries 14 The old town of Murom still bears their name The Muromians paid tribute to the Rus princes and like the neighbouring Merya tribe were assimilated by the East Slavs in the 11th to 12th century as their territory was incorporated into the Rus 35 A group of them migrated to the Carpathian Basin with the Hungarians or Bulgars as they are listed by the Rogosk Chronicler among the peoples who inhabited the Carpathian Basin in 897 36 During the excavation of the Muroma tombs archaeologists uncovered a rich archaeological legacy Weapons were among the best in the surrounding areas in terms of workmanship and the jewellery which is found in abundance in the burials is remarkable for its ingenuity of form and meticulous workmanship The Muroma were characterised by arc shaped head ornaments woven from horsehair and strips of leather which were spirally braided with bronze wire This is interesting because it is not observed in other Volga Finnic peoples 37 Like other medieval Volga Finns animal bones were present in the burials as funeral food Horses were buried separately bridled and saddled giving them a pose imitating a living animal lying on its belly with legs tucked up and head raised it was placed on a step in the grave 38 In 2023 13 Muroma tombs were excavated on the banks of the Oka River accompanied by a number of artefacts one of which was a belt buckle which was most similar to the belt buckles of the conquering Hungarians 39 Weapons such as spears and axes as well as coins dirhams and five lead weights among other things were recovered from the grave of one of the presumably noble men 40 The Muroma settlements were located on high ground above the floodplain meadows Livestock farming formed the basis of the Muroma economy with pigs large horned cattle and to a lesser extent sheep being raised Horses played a special role and they were also bred for meat The Slash and burn agriculture played a minor role in their economy Their commercial hunting was aimed at fur hunting 37 The Muromian language 41 is unattested but is assumed to have been Uralic and has frequently been placed in the Volga Finnic category 13 42 43 A K Matveyev identified the toponymic area upon Lower Oka and Lower Klyazma which corresponds with Muroma 44 According to the toponymy the Muroma language was close to the Merya language 45 A few words have been reconstructed in the Muroma language based on toponyms such as juga river vi ksa river connecting two bodies of water and voht V neck of land between two bodies of water 31 The Muroma language died out around the 10th century 46 The Primary Chronicle about the Muromians Along the river Oka which flows into the Volga the Muroma the Cheremisians and the Mordva preserve their native languages 47 The Rogosk Chronicler about the Muromians In the year 6405 897 there were Slavs living along the Danube as well as the Ugrics Muromas and the Danubian Bulgars 36 Permians editThe Udmurts although part of the Permians the speakers of Permic languages are sometimes called Perm Finns and considered to belong in the Volga Finnic group of peoples because their homeland lies in the northern part of the Volga River basin 48 See also editBaltic FinnsReferences edit Jaycox Faith 2005 The Progressive Era Infobase Publishing p 371 ISBN 0 8160 5159 3 Abercromby John 1898 1898 Pre and Proto historic Finns D Nutt Adamant Media Corporation ISBN 1 4212 5307 0 Finno Ugric religion Geographic and cultural background The Finno Ugric peoples Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15th edition Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 2008 Retrieved 2008 06 10 Sinor Denis 1990 The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia Cambridge University Press p 151 ISBN 0 521 24304 1 Grenoble Lenore 2003 Language Policy in the Soviet Union Springer pp PA80 ISBN 978 1 4020 1298 3 The Uralic Language Family Facts Myths and Statistics By Angela Marcantonio p57 ISBN 0 631 23170 6 Voegelin C F amp Voegelin F M 1977 Classification and index of the world s languages New York Elsevier ISBN 0 444 00155 7 Ruhlen Merritt 1991 A Guide to the World s Languages Classification Stanford University Press p 68 ISBN 0 8047 1894 6 Salminen Tapani 2002 Problems in the taxonomy of the Uralic languages in the light of modern comparative studies Helsinki fi Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2002 goda Perepis2002 ru Nason Istoriya goroda Vologdy Ozera Nason Istoriya goroda Vologdy Ozera a b c d Janse Mark Sijmen Tol Vincent Hendriks 2000 Language Death and Language Maintenance John Benjamins Publishing Company p A108 ISBN 978 90 272 4752 0 a b c Klima Laszlo A finnugor es szamojed nepek tortenete pp 49 50 Petrov A KUGARNYA Marij kalykyn ertymgornyzho 12 850 2006 March the 24th Merya MultiTree 2009 06 22 Retrieved 2012 07 13 Wieczynski Joseph 1976 The Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet History Academic International Press ISBN 978 0 87569 064 3 Helimski Eugene 2006 The Northwestern group of Finno Ugric languages and its heritage in the place names and substratum vocabulary of the Russian North In Nuorluoto Juhani ed The Slavicization of the Russian North Slavica Helsingiensia 27 PDF Helsinki Department of Slavonic and Baltic Languages and Literatures pp 109 127 ISBN 978 952 10 2852 6 Bereczki Gabor 1996 Le meria une language balto finnoise disparue In Fernandez M M Jocelyne Raag Raimo eds Contacts de languages et de cultures dans l aire baltique Contacts of Languages and Cultures in the Baltic Area Uppsala Multiethnic Papers pp 69 76 SOUTH EASTERN CONTACT AREA OF FINNIC LANGUAGES IN THE LIGHT OF ONOMASTICS helsinki fi Meryan Mastor Merya Meryaniya Zalesskaya Rus NOVOSTI www merjamaa ru National Anthem of Merya on YouTube 13 07 2012 26 C Silent Souls film Themoscownews com Archived from the original on 2014 03 01 Retrieved 2012 07 13 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Etnofuturizm i separatizm www vrns ru Archived from the original on 2021 01 25 Retrieved 2021 11 27 Tuti questi populi coe nef alich marobab balimata quier smaici meschiera sibir cimano cestan mordua cimarcia sono ne la provincia de rossia item 2835 in Falchetta Piero 2006 Fra Mauro s World Map Brepols pp 700 701 item 2835 ISBN 2 503 51726 9 also in the list online Meshcherian MultiTree 2009 06 22 Retrieved 2012 07 13 Aikio Ante 2012 An essay on Saami ethnolinguistic prehistory PDF Memoires de la Societe Finno Ougrienne Helsinki Finland Finno Ugrian Society 266 63 117 Retrieved 5 July 2017 Rahkonen Pauli 2009 The Linguistic Background of the Ancient Meshchera Tribe and Principal Areas of Settlement Finnisch Ugrische Forschungen 60 ISSN 0355 1253 Voprosy Vladimiru Napolskih 2 Uralistica Forum molgen org Retrieved 2012 07 13 a b Pauli Rahkonen South Eastern contact area of Finnic languages in the light of onomastics dissertation Faculty of Arts University of Helsinki 2018 Alimzhan Orlov Nizhegorodskie tatary potomki drevnej meshery Orlov Orlov Nizhegorodskie tatary etnicheskie korni i istoricheskie sudby Zekiyev M Z Miserler Baskurtlar ve dilleri PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 04 08 Uibopuu Valev Herbert Lagman 1988 Finnougrierna och deras sprak in Swedish Studentlitteratur ISBN 978 91 44 25411 1 a b Remete Farkas Laszlo 2010 Magyarok eredete The origin of Hungarians in Hungarian Budapest p 37 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Ryabinin E A 1997 Finno Ugric Tribes in Ancient Russia Publishing house of St Petersburg State University Zelencova O V Yavorskaya L V K voprosu ob osobennostyah ritualnyh dejstvij s zhivotnymi v pogrebalnyh obryadah muromy po arheozoologicheskim materialam Podbolotevskogo mogilnika ARCHAEOLOGISTS FIND MUROMIAN BURIAL GROUND IN MUROMA Heritage Daily A magyarok osi rokonainak nyomara bukkantak National Geographic in Hungarian Muromanian MultiTree 2009 06 22 Retrieved 2012 07 13 Wieczynski Joseph 1976 The Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet History Academic International Press ISBN 978 0 87569 064 3 Taagepera Rein 1999 The Finno Ugric Republics and the Russian State Routledge p 51 ISBN 978 0 415 91977 7 Nason Istoriya goroda Vologdy Ozera Matveev A K Meryanskaya problema i lingvisticheskoe kartografirovanie Voprosy yazykoznaniya 2001 5 Blokland Rogier 2003 The Endangered Uralic Languages Amsterdam John Benjamins Publishing Company p 108 ISBN 9027247528 The Russian Primary Chronicle p 55 Ekaterina Goldina amp Rimma Goldina 2018 On North Western Contacts of Perm Finns in VII VIII Centuries Estonian Journal of Archaeology 22 2 163 180 Klima Laszlo 1996 The linguistic affinity of the Volgaic Finno Ugrians and their Ethnogenesis Oulu Societas Historiae Fenno Ugricae Retrieved 2014 08 26 Aleksey Uvarov Etude sur les peuples primitifs de la Russie Les meriens 1875 Taagepera Rein 1999 The Finno Ugric Republics and the Russian State Routledge p 51 ISBN 978 0 415 91977 7 External links editThe Gateway to the Meshchera nbsp This article contains content from theOwl Editionof Nordisk familjebok a Swedish encyclopedia published between 1904 and 1926 now in the public domain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Volga Finns amp oldid 1187304255, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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