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History of the Romani people

The Romani people, also referred to as Roma, Sinti, or Kale, depending on the subgroup, are an Indo-Aryan ethnic group that primarily lives in Europe. The Romani may have migrated from what is the modern Indian state of Rajasthan,[1] migrating to the northwest (the Punjab region of the Indian subcontinent) around 250 BC.[1] Their subsequent westward migration, possibly in waves, is now believed to have occurred beginning in about 500 AD.[2] It has also been suggested that emigration from India may have taken place in the context of the raids by Mahmud of Ghazni. As these soldiers were defeated, they were moved west with their families into the Byzantine Empire.[3]

The author Ralph Lilley Turner has theorised a central Indian origin of the Romani, followed by a migration to northwest India, as the Romani language shares a number of ancient isoglosses with Central Indo-Aryan languages in relation to realization of some sounds of Old Indo-Aryan. This is lent further credence by its sharing exactly the same pattern of northwestern languages such as Kashmiri and Shina through the adoption of oblique enclitic pronouns as person markers. The overall morphology suggests that Romani participated in some of the significant developments leading toward the emergence of New Indo-Aryan languages, thus indicating that the proto-Romani did not leave the Indian subcontinent until late in the second half of the first millennium.[4][5]

Origin edit

 
The initial arrival of Romani outside Bern in the 15th century, described by the chronicler as getoufte heiden "baptized heathens" and drawn wearing Saracene-style clothes and weapons (Spiezer Schilling, p. 749).

There are many different theories about the origins of the Romani people, for example, that they came from Sindh.[6]

The Romani have been described by Diana Muir Appelbaum as unique among peoples, because they have never identified themselves with a territory. They have no tradition of an ancient and distant homeland from which their ancestors migrated, nor do they claim the right to national sovereignty in any of the lands where they reside. Rather, Romani identity is bound up with the ideal of freedom expressed, in part, in having no ties to a homeland.[7] The absence of a written history has meant that the origin and early history of the Romani people was long an enigma. Indian origin was suggested on linguistic grounds as early as the late 18th century.[8]

In the Roma language, "rom" means husband/man, while "romňi" means wife/woman, and thus "roma" means "husbands/people". Some theories suggest that the ancestors of the Romani were part of the military in northern India. One modern theory states that during the invasions of Mahmud of Ghazni, defeated soldiers were moved west with their families into the Byzantine Empire, between AD 1000 and 1030.[9]

Genetic evidence has identified an Indian origin for the Roma.[10][2] This makes the Romani descendants of people who emigrated from South Asia towards Central Asia during the medieval period.[11]

Linguistic origins edit

Until the mid-to-late 18th century, theories about the origin of the Romani were mostly speculative. In 1782, Johann Christian Christoph Rüdiger published his research findings, in which he pointed out the relationship between the Romani language and Hindustani.[12] Subsequent work supported the hypothesis that Romani shared a common origin with the Indo-Aryan languages of northern India.[13]

Domari and Romani languages edit

Domari was once thought to be the "sister language" of Romani, and that the two languages had split after the Romani departed from the subcontinent, but based on more recent research findings, they should be considered two separate languages within the Central zone (Hindustani) Saraiki language group, as the differences between them are significant. Therefore, the Dom and the Rom are probably descendants of two different groups of people who migrated from the Indian subcontinent in two different waves, several centuries apart.[14][9]

The following table presents the numerals in the Romani, Domari and Lomavren languages, with the corresponding terms in Sanskrit, Hindi, Odia, and Sinhala to demonstrate the similarities.[15] Note that the Romani numerals 7 through 9 have been borrowed from Greek.

Languages
Numbers
Romani Domari Lomavren Sanskrit Hindi Odia Sinhala
1 ekh, jekh yika yak, yek éka ek ekô eka
2 duj lui dvá do dui deka
3 trin tærən tərin trí tīn tiṇi thuna/thri
4 štar štar išdör catvā́raḥ cār cari hathara/sathara
5 pandž pandž pendž páñca pā̃c pañcô paha
6 šov šaš šeš ṣáṭ chah chôô haya/saya   
7 ifta xaut haft saptá sāt satô hata/satha
8 oxto xaišt hašt aṣṭá āṭh aṭhô ata
9 inja na nu náva nau nôô nawaya
10 deš des las dáśa das dôsô dahaya
20 biš wīs vist viṃśatí bīs bisô wissa
100 šel saj saj śatá sau sôhô siiya/shathakaya

Genetic evidence edit

Further evidence for the South Asian origin of the Romanis came in the late 1990s. Researchers doing DNA analysis discovered that Romani populations carried large frequencies of particular Y chromosomes (inherited paternally) and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) (inherited maternally) that otherwise exist only in populations from South Asia.

47.3% of Romani men carry Y chromosomes of haplogroup H-M82, which is rare outside South Asia.[16] Mitochondrial haplogroup M, most common in Indian subjects and rare outside southern Asia, accounts for nearly 30% of Romani people.[16] A more detailed study of Polish Roma shows this to be of the M5 lineage, which is specific to India.[17] Moreover, a form of the inherited disorder congenital myasthenia is found in Romani subjects. Caused by the 1267delG mutation, it is otherwise known only in subjects of Indian ancestry. This is considered to be the best evidence of the Indian ancestry of the Romanis.[18]

The Romanis have been described as "a conglomerate of genetically isolated founder populations".[19] The number of common genetic disorders found among Romanis from all over Europe indicates "a common origin and founder effect".[19]

A study from 2001 by Gresham et al. suggests "a limited number of related founders, compatible with a small group of migrants splitting from a distinct caste or tribal group".[20] The study also points out that "genetic drift and different levels and sources of admixture, appear to have played a role in the subsequent differentiation of populations".[20] The same study found that "a single lineage ... found across Romani populations, accounts for almost one-third of Romani males".[20]

A 2004 study by Morar et al. concluded that the Romanis are descended from "a founder population of common origins that has subsequently split into multiple socially divergent and geographically dispersed Romani groups".[18] The same study revealed that this population "was founded approximately 32–40 generations ago, with secondary and tertiary founder events occurring approximately 16–25 generations ago".[18]

There is genetic evidence of major mixing with Balkan peoples during the time of the Ottoman Empire.[21]

Connection to the Burushos and Pamiris edit

The Burushos of Hunza have a paternal-lineage genetic marker that is grouped with Pamiri speakers from Afghanistan and Tajikistan as well as the Sinti ethnic group. This find of shared genetic haplogroups may indicate an origin of the Romani people in or around those regions.[22]

Possible connection to the Domba people edit

According to a genetic study on the phylogeography of Y-chromosome haplogroup H1a1a-M82 in 2012, the ancestors of present Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes of northern India, traditionally referred to collectively as the Ḍoma, are the likely ancestral populations of modern European Roma.[23]

Romani origins based on autosomal and mitochondrial data

Mitochondrial or Y-chromosome haplotype studies provide valuable information, but a limitation of these types of studies is that they each represent only one instantiation of the genealogical process. Autosomal data permits simultaneous analysis of multiple lineages, which can provide novel information about population history. According to a genetic study on autosomal data, the two populations showing closest relatedness to Roma were Punjabis and Kashmiris, who also happen to have the highest West Eurasian-related ancestry among South Asians.[24] However, according to a study on genome-wide data published in 2019, the putative origin of the proto-Roma involves a Punjabi group with low levels of West Eurasian ancestry.[25] The classical and mtDNA genetic markers suggested the closest affinity of the Roma with Rajput and Punjabi populations from northwestern India.[26]

Early records edit

Early records of itinerant populations from India begin as early as the Sassanid period. British linguist Donald Kenrick notes the first recorded presence of Zott in Baghdad in AD 820, Khanaqin in AD 834.[27]

Contemporary scholars have suggested one of the first written references to the Romanis, under the term Atsingani, (derived from the Greek ἀτσίγγανοι – atsinganoi), dates from the Byzantine era during a time of famine in the 9th century. In the year AD 800, Saint Athanasia gave food to "foreigners called the Atsingani" near Thrace. Later, in AD 803, Theophanes the Confessor wrote that Emperor Nikephoros I had the help of the Atsingani to put down a riot with their "knowledge of magic". However, the Atsingani were a Manichean sect that disappeared from chronicles in the 11th century. Atsinganoi was used to refer to itinerant fortune tellers, ventriloquists, and wizards who visited Emperor Constantine IX in the year 1054.[28]

Roma skeletal remains exhumed from Castle Mall in Norwich, UK, were radiocarbon-dated by liquid scintillation spectrometry[clarification needed] to circa 930–1050AD.[29]

Arrival in Europe edit

 
The migration of the Romani people through the Middle East and Northern Africa to Europe. The key shows the century of arrival in that area, e.g., S.XII is the 12th century.

Romani people first arrived in Europe from north India, through Iran, Armenia, and Turkey.[30]

In 1323, Simon Simeonis, an Irish Franciscan friar, described people in likeness to the "atsingani" living in Crete: "We also saw outside this city [Candia] a tribe of people, who worship according to the Greek rite, and assert themselves to be of the race of Cain. These people rarely or never stop in one place for more than thirty days, but always, as if cursed by God, are nomad and outcast. After the thirtieth day they wander from field to field with small, oblong, black, and low tents, like those of the Arabs, and from cave to cave, because the place inhabited by them becomes after the term of thirty days so full of vermin and other filth that it is impossible to live in their neighbourhood."[31]

In 1350, Ludolf von Sudheim mentioned a similar people with a unique language, whom he called Mandapolos, a word that some theorize was possibly derived from the Greek word Mantipolos – Μαντιπόλος[32] "frenzied" from mantis – μάντις (meaning "prophet, fortune teller") and poleo – πολέω.

Around 1360, a fiefdom (called the Feudum Acinganorum) was established in Corfu. It mainly used Romani serfs, and the Romanis on the island were subservient.[33][34]

By the 14th century, the Romanis had reached the Balkans and Bohemia; by the 15th century, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal; and by the 16th century, Russia, Denmark, Scotland, and Sweden.[27] (although DNA evidence from mid-11th century skeletons in Norwich suggest that at least a few individuals may have arrived earlier, perhaps due to Viking enslavement of Romani from the eastern Mediterranean, or liaisons with the Varangians[35]).

Some Romanis migrated from Persia through North Africa,[36] reaching Europe via Spain in the 15th century.[37] Romanis began immigrating to the United States in colonial times, with small groups in Virginia and French Louisiana.[38] Larger-scale immigration began in the 1860s, with groups of Romnichal from Britain.[38] The largest number immigrated in the early 20th century, mainly from the Vlax group of Kalderash. Many Romanis also settled in Latin America.[39]

According to historian Norman Davies, a 1378 law passed by the governor of Nauplion in the Greek Peloponnese, confirming privileges for the "atsingani", is "the first documented record of Romany Gypsies in Europe". Similar documents, again representing the Romanis as a group that had been exiled from Egypt, record them reaching Braşov, Transylvania, in 1416; Hamburg, Holy Roman Empire, in 1418; and Paris in 1427. A chronicler for a Parisian journal described them as dressed in a manner that the Parisians considered shabby and reported that the Church had them leave town because they practiced palm-reading and fortune-telling.[40]

Their early history shows a mixed reception. Although 1385 marks the first recorded transaction for a Romani slave in Wallachia, they were issued safe conduct by Sigismund of the Holy Roman Empire in 1417.[27] Romanis were ordered expelled from the Meissen region of Germany in 1416, Lucerne in 1471, Milan in 1493, France in 1504, Aragon in 1512, Sweden in 1525, England in 1530 (see Egyptians Act 1530), and Denmark in 1536.[27] In 1510, any Romani found in Switzerland was ordered to be executed, and in 1554, a statute was passed in England that mandated all Romani in the country leave or face execution. Similar legislation was passed in numerous European nations, including Denmark in 1589, Sweden in 1637, whereas Portugal began deportations of Romanis to its colonies in 1538.[27]

Later, a 1596 English statute, however, gave Romanis special privileges that other wanderers lacked; France passed a similar law in 1683. Catherine the Great of Russia declared the Romanis "crown slaves" (a status superior to serfs) but also kept them out of certain parts of the capital.[40] In 1595, Ştefan Răzvan overcame his birth into slavery and became the Voivode (Prince) of Moldavia.[27]

In Wallachia, Transylvania, and Moldavia, Romanis were enslaved for five centuries, until abolition in the mid-19th century.[41]

In the late 19th century, the Romani culture inspired in their neighbors a wealth of artistic works. Among the most notable works are Carmen and La Vie de Bohème.[40]

Ottoman Empire edit

In the Ottoman Empire, Muslim Romani people were preferred, in contrast to Christian Roma. Muslim Roma were settled in Rumelia (Balkans) from Anatolia, such as the Arlije, or Cyprus, like the Gurbeti. There were also conversions to Islam in order to achieve better living conditions under Ottoman rule. The Sanjak of the Çingene was established for Muslim Roma in Rumelia, lasting from 1520 until the end of the Ottoman Empire. Muslim Roma were able to migrate from one part of the country to another within the Ottoman Empire. The Zargari tribe migrated to the Persian Empire.[42]

Forced assimilation edit

In 1758, Maria Theresa of Austria began a program of assimilation to turn Romanis into ujmagyar (new Hungarians). The government built permanent huts to replace mobile tents, forbade travel, and forcefully removed children from their parents to be fostered by non-Romani.[27] By 1894, the majority of Romanis counted in a Hungarian national census were sedentary. In 1830, Romani children in Nordhausen were taken from their families to be fostered by Germans.[27]

Russia also encouraged settlement of all nomads in 1783, and the Polish introduced a settlement law in 1791. Bulgaria and Serbia banned nomadism in the 1880s.[27]

In 1783, racial legislation against Romanis was repealed in the United Kingdom, and a specific "Turnpike Act" was established in 1822 to prevent nomads from camping on the roadside, strengthened in the Highways Act of 1835.[27]

Persecution edit

In 1530, England issued the Egyptians Act, which banned Romani from entering the country and required those living in the country to leave within 16 days. Failure to do so could result in the confiscation of property, imprisonment, and deportation. The act was amended with the Egyptians Act 1554, which ordered the Romani to leave the country within a month. Non-complying Romanis were executed.[43]

In 1538, the first anti-ziganist (anti-Romani) legislation was issued in Moravia and Bohemia, which were under Habsburg rule. Three years later, after a series of fires in Prague that were blamed on the Romani, Ferdinand I ordered them to be expelled. In 1545, the Diet of Augsburg declared that "whoever kills a Gypsy will be guilty of no murder". The massive killing spree that resulted prompted the government to eventually step in and "forbid the drowning of Romani women and children".[44]

In 1660, Romanis were prohibited from residence in France by Louis XIV.[45]

In 1685, Portugal deported Romani people to Brasil.[45]

In 1710, Joseph I issued a decree declaring the extermination of Romani, ordering that "all adult males were to be hanged without trial, whereas women and young males were to be flogged and banished forever". In addition, they were to have their right ears cut off in the kingdom of Bohemia and their left ear in Moravia.[45] In 1721, Charles VI, Joseph's brother and successor, amended the decree to include the execution of adult female Romani, while children were "to be put in hospitals for education".[46]

Pre-war organization edit

In 1879, a national meeting of Romanis was held in the Hungarian town of Kisfalu (now Pordašinci, Slovenia). Romanis in Bulgaria held a conference in 1919, in an attempt to demand that they be given the right to vote, and a Romani journal, Istiqbal ("future"), was founded in 1923.[27]

In the Soviet Union, the All-Russian Union of Gypsies was organized in 1925 and a journal, Romani Zorya ("Romani dawn"), was published two years later. The Romengiro Lav ("Romani word") writer's circle encouraged works by authors like Nikolay Aleksandrovich Pankov and Nina Dudarova.[27]

A General Association of the Gypsies of Romania was established in 1933 with the holding of a national conference and the publication of two journals, Neamul Țiganesc ("Gypsy nation") and Timpul "time"). An "international" conference was organized in Bucharest the following year.[27]

In Yugoslavia, the publication of the Romani journal Romano Lil was started in 1935.[27]

Porajmos edit

During World War II and the Holocaust, the Nazis murdered 220,000 to 500,000 Romanies in a genocide referred to as the Porajmos. Like the Jews, they were segregated and forced to move into ghettos before they were sent to concentration or extermination camps. They were frequently killed on sight by the Einsatzgruppen, especially on the Eastern Front. 25% of European Roma died in the genocide.[47]

Post-war history edit

In Communist Central and Eastern Europe, the Romanis experienced assimilation schemes and restrictions on their cultural freedom. In public, the speaking of the Romani language and playing of Romani music were both banned in Bulgaria. In Czechoslovakia, tens of thousands of Romanis from Slovakia, Hungary, and Romania were re-settled in the border areas of the Czech lands, and their nomadic lifestyle was forbidden. In Czechoslovakia, where they were considered a "socially degraded stratum", Romani women were sterilized as part of a state policy to reduce their population. This policy was implemented with large financial incentives, threats to withhold future social welfare payments, misinformation, and involuntary sterilization.[48][49]

In the early 1990s, Germany deported tens of thousands of migrants to Central and Eastern Europe. Sixty percent of some 100,000 Romanian nationals who were deported under a 1992 treaty were Romani.[50]

In 2005, the Decade of Roma Inclusion was launched in nine Central and Southeastern European countries, in an attempt to improve the socio-economic status and increase the social inclusion of the Romani minority across the region.[51] The project initiated important processes for Roma inclusion in Europe and provided the impetus for an EU-led effort to cover similar subject matter, the EU Framework for National Roma Integration Strategies up to 2020 (EU Framework).[52]

Americas edit

Romani people began immigrating to the United States during colonial times, with small groups settling in Virginia and French Louisiana. Larger-scale immigration began in the 1860s, with groups of Romnichal from Britain.[53][54]

1997 Czech-Canadian exodus edit

In August 1997, TV Nova, a Czech television station, broadcast a documentary about the situation of Romanis who had emigrated to Canada.[55] The short report claimed that they were living comfortably with support from the state and that they were being sheltered from racial discrimination and violence.[56] At the time, life was particularly difficult for many Romanis in Czechia. As a result of the dissolution of Czechoslovakia, many Romanis were left without citizenship in either the Czechia or Slovakia.[57] Following major floods in Moravia in July 1997, many Romanis were left homeless and unwelcome in other parts of the country.[55]

Almost overnight, there were reports of Romanis preparing to emigrate to Canada. According to one report, 5,000 from the city of Ostrava intended to move. Mayors of some Czech towns encouraged the exodus, offering to help pay for flights so that Romanis could leave. The following week, the Canadian embassy in Prague received hundreds of calls from Romanis every day, and flights between Czechia and Canada were sold out until October.[55] In 1997, 1,285 people from Czechia arrived in Canada and claimed refugee status, a rather significant jump from the 189 Czechs who did so the previous year.[57]

Lucie Čermáková, a spokesperson at the Canadian embassy in Prague, criticized the program, claiming that it "presented only one side of the matter and picked out only nonsensical ideas". Marie Jurkovičova, a spokesperson for the Czech embassy in Ottawa, suggested that "the program was full of half-truths, which strongly distorted reality and practically invited the exodus of large groups of Czech Romanies. It concealed a number of facts."[55]

Up to that point, the movement of Romanis to Canada had been fairly easy, because visa requirements for Czech citizens had been lifted by the Canadian government in April 1996. In response to the sudden influx, the Canadian government reinstated visa requirements for all Czechs as of 8 October 1997.[58]

Romani nationalism edit

 
Flag of the Romani people

A small Roma nationalist movement exists.[59]

The first World Romani Congress was held near London, England, in 1971, and was partially funded by the World Council of Churches and the government of India. It was attended by representatives from India and twenty other countries. At the congress, the green and blue flag that was unfurled at the 1933 conference, embellished with the red, sixteen-spoked chakra, was reaffirmed as the national emblem of the Romani people, and the song "Gelem, Gelem" was adopted as their national anthem.[60][61]

The International Romani Union was officially established in 1977, and in 1990, the fourth World Congress declared that 8 April is the International Day of the Roma, a day to celebrate Romani culture and raise awareness of the issues affecting the Romani community.[62]

In 2000, the 5th World Romani Congress issued an official declaration in which it stated that the Romani people are a non-territorial nation.[63]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b Bhanoo, Sindya N. (10 December 2012). "Genomic Study Traces Roma to Northern India". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
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history, romani, people, romani, people, also, referred, roma, sinti, kale, depending, subgroup, indo, aryan, ethnic, group, that, primarily, lives, europe, romani, have, migrated, from, what, modern, indian, state, rajasthan, migrating, northwest, punjab, reg. The Romani people also referred to as Roma Sinti or Kale depending on the subgroup are an Indo Aryan ethnic group that primarily lives in Europe The Romani may have migrated from what is the modern Indian state of Rajasthan 1 migrating to the northwest the Punjab region of the Indian subcontinent around 250 BC 1 Their subsequent westward migration possibly in waves is now believed to have occurred beginning in about 500 AD 2 It has also been suggested that emigration from India may have taken place in the context of the raids by Mahmud of Ghazni As these soldiers were defeated they were moved west with their families into the Byzantine Empire 3 The author Ralph Lilley Turner has theorised a central Indian origin of the Romani followed by a migration to northwest India as the Romani language shares a number of ancient isoglosses with Central Indo Aryan languages in relation to realization of some sounds of Old Indo Aryan This is lent further credence by its sharing exactly the same pattern of northwestern languages such as Kashmiri and Shina through the adoption of oblique enclitic pronouns as person markers The overall morphology suggests that Romani participated in some of the significant developments leading toward the emergence of New Indo Aryan languages thus indicating that the proto Romani did not leave the Indian subcontinent until late in the second half of the first millennium 4 5 Contents 1 Origin 1 1 Linguistic origins 1 1 1 Domari and Romani languages 1 2 Genetic evidence 1 2 1 Connection to the Burushos and Pamiris 1 2 2 Possible connection to the Domba people 2 Early records 3 Arrival in Europe 3 1 Ottoman Empire 3 2 Forced assimilation 3 3 Persecution 3 4 Pre war organization 3 5 Porajmos 3 6 Post war history 4 Americas 4 1 1997 Czech Canadian exodus 5 Romani nationalism 6 See also 7 References 7 1 SourcesOrigin edit nbsp The initial arrival of Romani outside Bern in the 15th century described by the chronicler as getoufte heiden baptized heathens and drawn wearing Saracene style clothes and weapons Spiezer Schilling p 749 There are many different theories about the origins of the Romani people for example that they came from Sindh 6 The Romani have been described by Diana Muir Appelbaum as unique among peoples because they have never identified themselves with a territory They have no tradition of an ancient and distant homeland from which their ancestors migrated nor do they claim the right to national sovereignty in any of the lands where they reside Rather Romani identity is bound up with the ideal of freedom expressed in part in having no ties to a homeland 7 The absence of a written history has meant that the origin and early history of the Romani people was long an enigma Indian origin was suggested on linguistic grounds as early as the late 18th century 8 In the Roma language rom means husband man while romni means wife woman and thus roma means husbands people Some theories suggest that the ancestors of the Romani were part of the military in northern India One modern theory states that during the invasions of Mahmud of Ghazni defeated soldiers were moved west with their families into the Byzantine Empire between AD 1000 and 1030 9 Genetic evidence has identified an Indian origin for the Roma 10 2 This makes the Romani descendants of people who emigrated from South Asia towards Central Asia during the medieval period 11 Linguistic origins edit Until the mid to late 18th century theories about the origin of the Romani were mostly speculative In 1782 Johann Christian Christoph Rudiger published his research findings in which he pointed out the relationship between the Romani language and Hindustani 12 Subsequent work supported the hypothesis that Romani shared a common origin with the Indo Aryan languages of northern India 13 Domari and Romani languages edit Main article Domari language Domari was once thought to be the sister language of Romani and that the two languages had split after the Romani departed from the subcontinent but based on more recent research findings they should be considered two separate languages within the Central zone Hindustani Saraiki language group as the differences between them are significant Therefore the Dom and the Rom are probably descendants of two different groups of people who migrated from the Indian subcontinent in two different waves several centuries apart 14 9 The following table presents the numerals in the Romani Domari and Lomavren languages with the corresponding terms in Sanskrit Hindi Odia and Sinhala to demonstrate the similarities 15 Note that the Romani numerals 7 through 9 have been borrowed from Greek LanguagesNumbers Romani Domari Lomavren Sanskrit Hindi Odia Sinhala1 ekh jekh yika yak yek eka ek eko eka2 duj di lui dva do dui deka3 trin taeren terin tri tin tiṇi thuna thri4 star star isdor catva raḥ car cari hathara sathara5 pandz pandz pendz panca pa c panco paha6 sov sas ses ṣaṭ chah choo haya saya 7 ifta xaut haft sapta sat sato hata satha8 oxto xaist hast aṣṭa aṭh aṭho ata9 inja na nu nava nau noo nawaya10 des des las dasa das doso dahaya20 bis wis vist viṃsati bis biso wissa100 sel saj saj sata sau soho siiya shathakayaGenetic evidence edit Further evidence for the South Asian origin of the Romanis came in the late 1990s Researchers doing DNA analysis discovered that Romani populations carried large frequencies of particular Y chromosomes inherited paternally and mitochondrial DNA mtDNA inherited maternally that otherwise exist only in populations from South Asia 47 3 of Romani men carry Y chromosomes of haplogroup H M82 which is rare outside South Asia 16 Mitochondrial haplogroup M most common in Indian subjects and rare outside southern Asia accounts for nearly 30 of Romani people 16 A more detailed study of Polish Roma shows this to be of the M5 lineage which is specific to India 17 Moreover a form of the inherited disorder congenital myasthenia is found in Romani subjects Caused by the 1267delG mutation it is otherwise known only in subjects of Indian ancestry This is considered to be the best evidence of the Indian ancestry of the Romanis 18 The Romanis have been described as a conglomerate of genetically isolated founder populations 19 The number of common genetic disorders found among Romanis from all over Europe indicates a common origin and founder effect 19 A study from 2001 by Gresham et al suggests a limited number of related founders compatible with a small group of migrants splitting from a distinct caste or tribal group 20 The study also points out that genetic drift and different levels and sources of admixture appear to have played a role in the subsequent differentiation of populations 20 The same study found that a single lineage found across Romani populations accounts for almost one third of Romani males 20 A 2004 study by Morar et al concluded that the Romanis are descended from a founder population of common origins that has subsequently split into multiple socially divergent and geographically dispersed Romani groups 18 The same study revealed that this population was founded approximately 32 40 generations ago with secondary and tertiary founder events occurring approximately 16 25 generations ago 18 There is genetic evidence of major mixing with Balkan peoples during the time of the Ottoman Empire 21 Connection to the Burushos and Pamiris edit The Burushos of Hunza have a paternal lineage genetic marker that is grouped with Pamiri speakers from Afghanistan and Tajikistan as well as the Sinti ethnic group This find of shared genetic haplogroups may indicate an origin of the Romani people in or around those regions 22 Possible connection to the Domba people edit According to a genetic study on the phylogeography of Y chromosome haplogroup H1a1a M82 in 2012 the ancestors of present Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes of northern India traditionally referred to collectively as the Ḍoma are the likely ancestral populations of modern European Roma 23 Romani origins based on autosomal and mitochondrial dataMitochondrial or Y chromosome haplotype studies provide valuable information but a limitation of these types of studies is that they each represent only one instantiation of the genealogical process Autosomal data permits simultaneous analysis of multiple lineages which can provide novel information about population history According to a genetic study on autosomal data the two populations showing closest relatedness to Roma were Punjabis and Kashmiris who also happen to have the highest West Eurasian related ancestry among South Asians 24 However according to a study on genome wide data published in 2019 the putative origin of the proto Roma involves a Punjabi group with low levels of West Eurasian ancestry 25 The classical and mtDNA genetic markers suggested the closest affinity of the Roma with Rajput and Punjabi populations from northwestern India 26 Early records editEarly records of itinerant populations from India begin as early as the Sassanid period British linguist Donald Kenrick notes the first recorded presence of Zott in Baghdad in AD 820 Khanaqin in AD 834 27 Contemporary scholars have suggested one of the first written references to the Romanis under the term Atsingani derived from the Greek ἀtsigganoi atsinganoi dates from the Byzantine era during a time of famine in the 9th century In the year AD 800 Saint Athanasia gave food to foreigners called the Atsingani near Thrace Later in AD 803 Theophanes the Confessor wrote that Emperor Nikephoros I had the help of the Atsingani to put down a riot with their knowledge of magic However the Atsingani were a Manichean sect that disappeared from chronicles in the 11th century Atsinganoi was used to refer to itinerant fortune tellers ventriloquists and wizards who visited Emperor Constantine IX in the year 1054 28 Roma skeletal remains exhumed from Castle Mall in Norwich UK were radiocarbon dated by liquid scintillation spectrometry clarification needed to circa 930 1050AD 29 Arrival in Europe edit nbsp The migration of the Romani people through the Middle East and Northern Africa to Europe The key shows the century of arrival in that area e g S XII is the 12th century Romani people first arrived in Europe from north India through Iran Armenia and Turkey 30 In 1323 Simon Simeonis an Irish Franciscan friar described people in likeness to the atsingani living in Crete We also saw outside this city Candia a tribe of people who worship according to the Greek rite and assert themselves to be of the race of Cain These people rarely or never stop in one place for more than thirty days but always as if cursed by God are nomad and outcast After the thirtieth day they wander from field to field with small oblong black and low tents like those of the Arabs and from cave to cave because the place inhabited by them becomes after the term of thirty days so full of vermin and other filth that it is impossible to live in their neighbourhood 31 In 1350 Ludolf von Sudheim mentioned a similar people with a unique language whom he called Mandapolos a word that some theorize was possibly derived from the Greek word Mantipolos Mantipolos 32 frenzied from mantis mantis meaning prophet fortune teller and poleo polew Around 1360 a fiefdom called the Feudum Acinganorum was established in Corfu It mainly used Romani serfs and the Romanis on the island were subservient 33 34 By the 14th century the Romanis had reached the Balkans and Bohemia by the 15th century Germany France Italy Spain and Portugal and by the 16th century Russia Denmark Scotland and Sweden 27 although DNA evidence from mid 11th century skeletons in Norwich suggest that at least a few individuals may have arrived earlier perhaps due to Viking enslavement of Romani from the eastern Mediterranean or liaisons with the Varangians 35 Some Romanis migrated from Persia through North Africa 36 reaching Europe via Spain in the 15th century 37 Romanis began immigrating to the United States in colonial times with small groups in Virginia and French Louisiana 38 Larger scale immigration began in the 1860s with groups of Romnichal from Britain 38 The largest number immigrated in the early 20th century mainly from the Vlax group of Kalderash Many Romanis also settled in Latin America 39 According to historian Norman Davies a 1378 law passed by the governor of Nauplion in the Greek Peloponnese confirming privileges for the atsingani is the first documented record of Romany Gypsies in Europe Similar documents again representing the Romanis as a group that had been exiled from Egypt record them reaching Brasov Transylvania in 1416 Hamburg Holy Roman Empire in 1418 and Paris in 1427 A chronicler for a Parisian journal described them as dressed in a manner that the Parisians considered shabby and reported that the Church had them leave town because they practiced palm reading and fortune telling 40 Their early history shows a mixed reception Although 1385 marks the first recorded transaction for a Romani slave in Wallachia they were issued safe conduct by Sigismund of the Holy Roman Empire in 1417 27 Romanis were ordered expelled from the Meissen region of Germany in 1416 Lucerne in 1471 Milan in 1493 France in 1504 Aragon in 1512 Sweden in 1525 England in 1530 see Egyptians Act 1530 and Denmark in 1536 27 In 1510 any Romani found in Switzerland was ordered to be executed and in 1554 a statute was passed in England that mandated all Romani in the country leave or face execution Similar legislation was passed in numerous European nations including Denmark in 1589 Sweden in 1637 whereas Portugal began deportations of Romanis to its colonies in 1538 27 Later a 1596 English statute however gave Romanis special privileges that other wanderers lacked France passed a similar law in 1683 Catherine the Great of Russia declared the Romanis crown slaves a status superior to serfs but also kept them out of certain parts of the capital 40 In 1595 Stefan Răzvan overcame his birth into slavery and became the Voivode Prince of Moldavia 27 In Wallachia Transylvania and Moldavia Romanis were enslaved for five centuries until abolition in the mid 19th century 41 In the late 19th century the Romani culture inspired in their neighbors a wealth of artistic works Among the most notable works are Carmen and La Vie de Boheme 40 Ottoman Empire edit In the Ottoman Empire Muslim Romani people were preferred in contrast to Christian Roma Muslim Roma were settled in Rumelia Balkans from Anatolia such as the Arlije or Cyprus like the Gurbeti There were also conversions to Islam in order to achieve better living conditions under Ottoman rule The Sanjak of the Cingene was established for Muslim Roma in Rumelia lasting from 1520 until the end of the Ottoman Empire Muslim Roma were able to migrate from one part of the country to another within the Ottoman Empire The Zargari tribe migrated to the Persian Empire 42 Forced assimilation edit In 1758 Maria Theresa of Austria began a program of assimilation to turn Romanis into ujmagyar new Hungarians The government built permanent huts to replace mobile tents forbade travel and forcefully removed children from their parents to be fostered by non Romani 27 By 1894 the majority of Romanis counted in a Hungarian national census were sedentary In 1830 Romani children in Nordhausen were taken from their families to be fostered by Germans 27 Russia also encouraged settlement of all nomads in 1783 and the Polish introduced a settlement law in 1791 Bulgaria and Serbia banned nomadism in the 1880s 27 In 1783 racial legislation against Romanis was repealed in the United Kingdom and a specific Turnpike Act was established in 1822 to prevent nomads from camping on the roadside strengthened in the Highways Act of 1835 27 Persecution edit Main article Anti Romani sentiment In 1530 England issued the Egyptians Act which banned Romani from entering the country and required those living in the country to leave within 16 days Failure to do so could result in the confiscation of property imprisonment and deportation The act was amended with the Egyptians Act 1554 which ordered the Romani to leave the country within a month Non complying Romanis were executed 43 In 1538 the first anti ziganist anti Romani legislation was issued in Moravia and Bohemia which were under Habsburg rule Three years later after a series of fires in Prague that were blamed on the Romani Ferdinand I ordered them to be expelled In 1545 the Diet of Augsburg declared that whoever kills a Gypsy will be guilty of no murder The massive killing spree that resulted prompted the government to eventually step in and forbid the drowning of Romani women and children 44 In 1660 Romanis were prohibited from residence in France by Louis XIV 45 In 1685 Portugal deported Romani people to Brasil 45 In 1710 Joseph I issued a decree declaring the extermination of Romani ordering that all adult males were to be hanged without trial whereas women and young males were to be flogged and banished forever In addition they were to have their right ears cut off in the kingdom of Bohemia and their left ear in Moravia 45 In 1721 Charles VI Joseph s brother and successor amended the decree to include the execution of adult female Romani while children were to be put in hospitals for education 46 Pre war organization edit In 1879 a national meeting of Romanis was held in the Hungarian town of Kisfalu now Pordasinci Slovenia Romanis in Bulgaria held a conference in 1919 in an attempt to demand that they be given the right to vote and a Romani journal Istiqbal future was founded in 1923 27 In the Soviet Union the All Russian Union of Gypsies was organized in 1925 and a journal Romani Zorya Romani dawn was published two years later The Romengiro Lav Romani word writer s circle encouraged works by authors like Nikolay Aleksandrovich Pankov and Nina Dudarova 27 A General Association of the Gypsies of Romania was established in 1933 with the holding of a national conference and the publication of two journals Neamul Țiganesc Gypsy nation and Timpul time An international conference was organized in Bucharest the following year 27 In Yugoslavia the publication of the Romani journal Romano Lil was started in 1935 27 Porajmos edit Main article Romani genocide During World War II and the Holocaust the Nazis murdered 220 000 to 500 000 Romanies in a genocide referred to as the Porajmos Like the Jews they were segregated and forced to move into ghettos before they were sent to concentration or extermination camps They were frequently killed on sight by the Einsatzgruppen especially on the Eastern Front 25 of European Roma died in the genocide 47 Post war history edit In Communist Central and Eastern Europe the Romanis experienced assimilation schemes and restrictions on their cultural freedom In public the speaking of the Romani language and playing of Romani music were both banned in Bulgaria In Czechoslovakia tens of thousands of Romanis from Slovakia Hungary and Romania were re settled in the border areas of the Czech lands and their nomadic lifestyle was forbidden In Czechoslovakia where they were considered a socially degraded stratum Romani women were sterilized as part of a state policy to reduce their population This policy was implemented with large financial incentives threats to withhold future social welfare payments misinformation and involuntary sterilization 48 49 In the early 1990s Germany deported tens of thousands of migrants to Central and Eastern Europe Sixty percent of some 100 000 Romanian nationals who were deported under a 1992 treaty were Romani 50 In 2005 the Decade of Roma Inclusion was launched in nine Central and Southeastern European countries in an attempt to improve the socio economic status and increase the social inclusion of the Romani minority across the region 51 The project initiated important processes for Roma inclusion in Europe and provided the impetus for an EU led effort to cover similar subject matter the EU Framework for National Roma Integration Strategies up to 2020 EU Framework 52 Americas editRomani people began immigrating to the United States during colonial times with small groups settling in Virginia and French Louisiana Larger scale immigration began in the 1860s with groups of Romnichal from Britain 53 54 1997 Czech Canadian exodus edit In August 1997 TV Nova a Czech television station broadcast a documentary about the situation of Romanis who had emigrated to Canada 55 The short report claimed that they were living comfortably with support from the state and that they were being sheltered from racial discrimination and violence 56 At the time life was particularly difficult for many Romanis in Czechia As a result of the dissolution of Czechoslovakia many Romanis were left without citizenship in either the Czechia or Slovakia 57 Following major floods in Moravia in July 1997 many Romanis were left homeless and unwelcome in other parts of the country 55 Almost overnight there were reports of Romanis preparing to emigrate to Canada According to one report 5 000 from the city of Ostrava intended to move Mayors of some Czech towns encouraged the exodus offering to help pay for flights so that Romanis could leave The following week the Canadian embassy in Prague received hundreds of calls from Romanis every day and flights between Czechia and Canada were sold out until October 55 In 1997 1 285 people from Czechia arrived in Canada and claimed refugee status a rather significant jump from the 189 Czechs who did so the previous year 57 Lucie Cermakova a spokesperson at the Canadian embassy in Prague criticized the program claiming that it presented only one side of the matter and picked out only nonsensical ideas Marie Jurkovicova a spokesperson for the Czech embassy in Ottawa suggested that the program was full of half truths which strongly distorted reality and practically invited the exodus of large groups of Czech Romanies It concealed a number of facts 55 Up to that point the movement of Romanis to Canada had been fairly easy because visa requirements for Czech citizens had been lifted by the Canadian government in April 1996 In response to the sudden influx the Canadian government reinstated visa requirements for all Czechs as of 8 October 1997 58 Romani nationalism edit nbsp Flag of the Romani peopleA small Roma nationalist movement exists 59 The first World Romani Congress was held near London England in 1971 and was partially funded by the World Council of Churches and the government of India It was attended by representatives from India and twenty other countries At the congress the green and blue flag that was unfurled at the 1933 conference embellished with the red sixteen spoked chakra was reaffirmed as the national emblem of the Romani people and the song Gelem Gelem was adopted as their national anthem 60 61 The International Romani Union was officially established in 1977 and in 1990 the fourth World Congress declared that 8 April is the International Day of the Roma a day to celebrate Romani culture and raise awareness of the issues affecting the Romani community 62 In 2000 the 5th World Romani Congress issued an official declaration in which it stated that the Romani people are a non territorial nation 63 See also editTimeline of Romani history Anti Indian sentiment Demographics of India Indian people Rajasthani people Names of the Romani peopleReferences edit a b Marinov Aleksandar G 3 October 2019 Inward Looking The Impact of Migration on Romanipe from the Romani Perspective Berghahn Books p 31 ISBN 978 1 78920 362 2 It is unclear what made this people leave the Indian sub continent but they are generally believed to have originated from central India possibly in the modern Indian state of Rajasthan migrating to the northwest around 250 BC a b Bhanoo Sindya N 10 December 2012 Genomic Study Traces Roma to Northern India The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Hancock Ian F Dowd Siobhan Djuric Rajko 2004 The Roads of the Roma a PEN anthology of Gypsy Writers Hatfield United Kingdom University of Hertfordshire Press pp 14 15 ISBN 978 0 900458 90 3 Matras Yaron 2006 Romani PDF In Brown Keith ed Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics Oxford Elsevier pp 656 658 doi 10 1016 B0 08 044854 2 04471 0 ISBN 9780080448541 Retrieved 30 August 2009 Taylor Becky 2014 Another Darkness Another Dawn London Reaktion Books p 22 ISBN 978 1 78023 257 7 Hyderabad Gypsies hail from Sindh claims Dr Kazi Dawn 25 September 2006 Appelbaum Diana 1 March 2011 The Rootless Roma The American Interest Vol 6 no 4 Fraser 1995 a b Hancock Ian 2007 On Romani Origins and Identity The Romani Archives and Documentation Center Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Mendizabal Isabel Lao Oscar Marigorta Urko M Wollstein Andreas Gusmao Leonor Ferak Vladimir Ioana Mihai Jordanova Albena Kaneva Radka Kouvatsi Anastasia Kucinskas Vaidutis Makukh Halyna Metspalu Andres Netea Mihai G de Pablo Rosario Pamjav Horolma Radojkovic Dragica Rolleston Sarah J H Sertic Jadranka Macek Milan Comas David Kayser Manfred December 2012 Reconstructing the Population History of European Romani from Genome wide Data Current Biology 22 24 2342 2349 Bibcode 2012CBio 22 2342M doi 10 1016 j cub 2012 10 039 hdl 10230 25348 PMID 23219723 S2CID 13874469 Hancock Ian 2002 We are the Romani people Ame sam e Rromane dzene Hatfield University of Hertfordshire Press p 13 ISBN 1 902806 19 0 Rudiger Johann Christian Christoph 1996 Originally published 1782 On the Indic Language and Origin of the Gypsies PDF Translated by Priego Thimmel Manuel Bernhardt Karl Monreal Annette University of Manchester Archived from the original PDF on 29 September 2006 Halwachs Dieter W 21 April 2004 Romani An Attempting Overview Archived from the original on 17 February 2005 Retrieved 26 August 2007 What is Domari Romani Project University of Manchester Retrieved 23 July 2008 Hancock Ian 2007 On Romani Origins and Identity RADOC net Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 a b Kalaydjieva Luba Morar Bharti Chaix Raphaelle Tang Hua October 2005 A newly discovered founder population the Roma Gypsies BioEssays 27 10 1084 1094 doi 10 1002 bies 20287 PMID 16163730 Malyarchuk B A Grzybowski T Derenko M V Czarny J Miscicka Sliwka D March 2006 Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in the Polish Roma Annals of Human Genetics 70 2 195 206 doi 10 1111 j 1529 8817 2005 00222 x PMID 16626330 S2CID 662278 a b c Morar Bharti Gresham David Angelicheva Dora Tournev Ivailo Gooding Rebecca Guergueltcheva Velina Schmidt Carolin Abicht Angela Lochmuller Hanns Tordai Attila Kalmar Lajos Nagy Melinda Karcagi Veronika Jeanpierre Marc Herczegfalvi Agnes Beeson David Venkataraman Viswanathan Warwick Carter Kim Reeve Jeff de Pablo Rosario Kucinskas Vaidutis Kalaydjieva Luba October 2004 Mutation History of the Roma Gypsies The American Journal of Human Genetics 75 4 596 609 doi 10 1086 424759 PMC 1182047 PMID 15322984 a b Kalaydjieva Luba Gresham David Calafell Francesc December 2001 Genetic studies of the Roma Gypsies a review BMC Medical Genetics 2 1 5 doi 10 1186 1471 2350 2 5 PMC 31389 PMID 11299048 a b c Gresham David Morar Bharti Underhill Peter A Passarino Giuseppe Lin Alice A Wise Cheryl Angelicheva Dora Calafell Francesc Oefner Peter J Shen Peidong Tournev Ivailo de Pablo Rosario Kuĉinskas Vaidutis Perez Lezaun Anna Marushiakova Elena Popov Vesselin Kalaydjieva Luba December 2001 Origins and Divergence of the Roma Gypsies The American Journal of Human Genetics 69 6 1314 1331 doi 10 1086 324681 PMC 1235543 PMID 11704928 Banfai Zsolt Melegh Bela I Sumegi Katalin Hadzsiev Kinga Miseta Attila Kasler Miklos Melegh Bela 13 June 2019 Revealing the Genetic Impact of the Ottoman Occupation on Ethnic Groups of East Central Europe and on the Roma Population of the Area Frontiers in Genetics 10 558 doi 10 3389 fgene 2019 00558 PMC 6585392 PMID 31263480 Wells R Spencer Yuldasheva Nadira Ruzibakiev Ruslan Underhill Peter A Evseeva Irina Blue Smith Jason Jin Li Su Bing Pitchappan Ramasamy Shanmugalakshmi Sadagopal Balakrishnan Karuppiah Read Mark Pearson Nathaniel M Zerjal Tatiana Webster Matthew T Zholoshvili Irakli Jamarjashvili Elena Gambarov Spartak Nikbin Behrouz Dostiev Ashur Aknazarov Ogonazar Zalloua Pierre Tsoy Igor Kitaev Mikhail Mirrakhimov Mirsaid Chariev Ashir Bodmer Walter F 28 August 2001 The Eurasian Heartland A continental perspective on Y chromosome diversity Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 98 18 10244 10249 Bibcode 2001PNAS 9810244W doi 10 1073 pnas 171305098 PMC 56946 PMID 11526236 Rai Niraj Chaubey Gyaneshwer Tamang Rakesh Pathak Ajai Kumar Singh Vipin Kumar Karmin Monika Singh Manvendra Rani Deepa Selvi Anugula Sharath Yadav Brijesh Kumar Singh Ashish Srinivasagan Ramkumar Yadav Anita Kashyap Manju Narvariya Sapna Reddy Alla G Driem George van Underhill Peter A Villems Richard Kivisild Toomas Singh Lalji Thangaraj 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Mark Gypsies msg Stefan s Florilegium Archived from the original on 24 August 2007 Retrieved 24 December 2014 Fraser 1995 pp 50 51 Keil Charles Blau Dick Kiel Anjeliki V Feld Steven 2002 Bright Balkan morning Romani lives amp the power of music in Greek Macedonia Wesleyan University Press p 108 ISBN 978 0 8195 6488 7 Pitts M 2006 DNA Surprise Romani in England 440 years too early British Archaeology 89 9 Bankston Carl Leon 16 March 2019 Racial and Ethnic Relations in America Ethnic entrepreneurship Salem Press ISBN 9780893566340 via Google Books Noble John Forsyth Susan 2001 Andalucia Lonely Planet ISBN 978 1 86450 191 9 via Internet Archive gypsies reached spain 15th century a b Smith David James 2016 Only Horses from Wild Lulu Press ISBN 978 1 365 19773 4 via Google Books Tchileva Druzhemira 27 May 2004 Emerging Romani Voices from Latin America European Roma Rights Centre a b c Davies Norman 1997 Christendom in crisis Europe A History 2nd ed Random House pp 387 388 ISBN 978 1 4070 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pariah syndrome an account of gypsy slavery and persecution Ann Arbor Karoma Publishers ISBN 978 0 89720 079 0 Hancock Ian 2010 Karanth Dileep ed Danger Educated Gypsy Selected Essays University of Hertfordshire Press ISBN 978 1 907396 02 1 Kenrick Donald 1993 From India to the Mediterranean the migration of the Gypsies Paris Gypsy Research Centre University Rene Descartes ISBN 978 2 86565 082 8 Kolev Deyan 2004 Shaping modern identities social and ethnic changes in Gypsy community in Bulgaria during the Communist period MA thesis Budapest Central European University Lewy Guenter 2000 The Nazi persecution of the Gypsies New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512556 6 Marushiakova Elena Popov Vesselin 2001 Gypsies in the Ottoman Empire a contribution to the history of the Balkans Hatfield University of Hertfordshire Press ISBN 978 1 902806 02 0 Radenez Julien 2016 Contribution a l histoire des Tsiganes en Europe Hommes amp Migrations in French 1314 151 155 doi 10 4000 hommesmigrations 3660 Ramanush Nicolas 2012 Atras do Muro Invisivel Crencas tradicoes e ativismo cigano in Portuguese Thakur Harish K 27 October 2009 Silent Flows Danube Conifers Thakur Harish K 1 October 2013 Theories of Roma Origins and the Bengal Linkage Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences 4 10 doi 10 5901 mjss 2013 v4n10p22 Turner Ralph 1926 The Position of Romani in Indo Aryan Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society 5 4 145 189 OCLC 884343280 ProQuest 1299017883 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of the Romani people amp oldid 1215812091 Origin, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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