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Shamanism in Siberia

A large minority of people in North Asia, particularly in Siberia, follow the religio-cultural practices of shamanism. Some researchers regard Siberia as the heartland of shamanism.[1][2]

A Buryat boy in a shaman ritual
Tuvan shaman Tash-ool Buuevich Kunga consecrating an ovoo.

The people of Siberia comprise a variety of ethnic groups, many of whom continue to observe shamanistic practices in modern times. Many classical ethnographers recorded the sources of the idea of "shamanism" among Siberian peoples.[3]

Terminology in Siberian languages edit

  • 'shaman': saman (Nedigal, Nanay, Ulcha, Orok), sama (Manchu). The variant /šaman/ (i.e., pronounced "shaman") is Evenk (whence it was borrowed into Russian).
  • 'shaman': alman, olman, wolmen[4] (Yukagir)
  • 'shaman': [qam] (Tatar, Shor, Oyrat), [xam] (Tuva, Tofalar)
  • The Buryat word for shaman is бөө (böö) [bøː], from early Mongolian böge.[5] Itself borrowed from Proto-Turkic *bögü ("sage, wizard")
  • 'shaman': ńajt (Khanty, Mansi), from Proto-Uralic *nojta (c.f. Sámi noaidi)
  • 'shamaness': [iduɣan] (Mongol), [udaɣan] (Yakut), udagan (Buryat), udugan (Evenki, Lamut), odogan (Nedigal). Related forms found in various Siberian languages include utagan, ubakan, utygan, utügun, iduan, or duana. All these are related to the Mongolian name of Etügen, the hearth goddess, and Etügen Eke 'Mother Earth'. Maria Czaplicka points out that Siberian languages use words for male shamans from diverse roots, but the words for female shaman are almost all from the same root. She connects this with the theory that women's practice of shamanism was established earlier than men's, that "shamans were originally female."[6]

Spirit-journey edit

Siberian shamans' spirit-journeys[7] (reenacting their dreams wherein they had rescued the soul of the client) were conducted in, e.g., Oroch, Altai, and Nganasan healing séances.

Songs, music edit

 
Buryat shaman performing a libation.

Shamanistic practice shows great diversity,[3] even if restricted to Siberia. In some cultures, the music or song related to shamanistic practice may mimic natural sounds, sometimes with onomatopoeia.[8]

This holds true for the practices of the noaidi among Sami groups. Although the Sami people live outside of Siberia, many of their shamanistic beliefs and practice shared important features with those of some Siberian cultures.[9] The joiks of the Sami were sung on shamanistic rites.[10] Recently, joiks are sung in two different styles: one of these is sung only by young people; the traditional one may be the other, the "mumbling" style, which resembles magic spells.[11] Several surprising characteristics of joiks can be explained by comparing the music ideals, as observed in joiks and contrasted to music ideals of other cultures. Some joiks intend to mimic natural sounds. This can be contrasted to bel canto, which intends to exploit human speech organs on the highest level to achieve an almost "superhuman" sound.[12]

The intention to mimic natural sounds is present in some Siberian cultures as well: overtone singing, and also shamanic songs of some cultures can be examples.

  • In a Soyot shamanic song, sounds of bird and wolf are imitated to represent helping spirits of the shaman.[13]
  • The seances of Nganasan shamans were accompanied by women imitating the sounds of the reindeer calf, (thought to provide fertility for those women).[14] In 1931, A. Popov observed the Nganasan shaman Dyukhade Kosterkin imitating the sound of polar bear: the shaman was believed to have transformed into a polar bear.[15]

Sound mimesis is not restricted to Siberian cultures and is not necessarily linked to shamanistic beliefs or practices. See, for example, Inuit throat singing, a game played by women, an example of Inuit music that employs overtone singing, and, in some cases, the imitation of natural sounds (mostly those of animals, e.g. geese).[16][17] The imitation of animal sounds can also serve such practical reasons as luring game in hunt.[16]

Grouped by linguistic relatedness edit

 
Uralic languages. The language isolate Yukaghir is conjectured by some to be related to Uralic[18]
 
Turkic languages, including also North Siberian Yakuts (but Dolgans are omitted), South Siberian areas, and also Central Asia
 
Eskimo language branch of the Eskimo–Aleut language family

Uralic edit

Uralic languages are proven to form a genealogical unit, a language family. Not all speakers of these languages live in Siberia or have shamanistic religions. The largest populations, the Hungarians and Finns, live outside Siberia and are mostly Christian. Sámi people had kept shamanic practices alive for a long time. They live in Europe, but practiced shamanism until the 18th century.[19] Most others (e.g. Hungarian, Finnic, Mari) have only remnant elements of shamanism.[19] The majority lives outside Siberia. Some of them used to live in Siberia, but have migrated to their present locations since then. The original location of the Proto-Uralic peoples (and its extent) is debated. Combined phytogeographical and linguistic considerations (distribution of various tree species and the presence of their names in various Uralic languages) suggest that this area was somewhere between the Kama and Vyatka rivers on the western side of the Ural Mountains.[20]

Samoyedic edit

Among several Samoyedic peoples shamanism was a living tradition also in modern times, especially at groups living in isolation until recent times (Nganasans).[21] There were distinguished several types of shamans among Nenets,[22] Enets,[23] and Selkup[24] people. (The Nganasan shaman used three different crowns, according to the situation: one for upper world, one for underneath word, one for occasion of childbirth.)[25]

Nenets people, Enets people, Nganasan people speak Northern Samoyedic languages. They live in North Siberia (Nenets live also in European parts), they provide classical examples. Selkups are the only ones who speak Southern Samoyedic languages nowadays. They live more to the south, shamanism was in decline also at the beginning of the 20th century, although folklore memories could be recorded even in the 1960s.[24] Other Southern Samoyedic languages were spoken by some peoples living in the Sayan Mountains, but language shift has taken place, making all these languages extinct.[26][27]

Nenets edit

There were several types of shamans distinguishing ones contacting upper world, ones contacting underneath world, ones contacting the dead.[22]

Nganasan edit

The isolated location of Nganasan people enabled that shamanism was a living phenomenon among them even in the beginning of the 20th century,[14] the last notable Nganasan shaman's seances could be recorded on film in the 1970s.[14][28]

One of the occasions in which the shaman partook was the clean tent rite, held after the polar night, which included sacrifices.[21][29]

Sayan Samoyedic edit

Some peoples of the Sayan Mountains spoke once Southern Samoyedic languages. Most of them underwent a language shift in the beginning and middle of the 19th century, borrowing the language of neighboring Turkic peoples. The Kamassian language survived longer: 14 old people spoke it yet in 1914. In the late 20th century, some old people had passive or uncertain knowledge of the language, but collecting reliable scientific data was no longer possible.[26][27] Today Kamassian is regarded as extinct.

The shamanism of Samoyedic peoples in the Sayan Mountains survived longer (if we regard Karagas as a Samoyedic people,[26][27][30] although such approaches have been refined: the problem of their origin may be more complex[31]). Diószegi Vilmos could record not only folklore memories in the late 1950s, but he managed also to talk personally to (no longer practicing) shamans, record their personal memories, songs, some of their paraphernalia.[32]

Whether this shamanism is borrowed entirely from neighboring Turkic peoples, or whether it has some ethnic features, maybe remnants of Samoyedic origin, is unresolved. Comparative considerations suggest, that

  • Karagas shamanism is affected by Abakan-Turkic and Buryat influence.[33] Among the various Soyot cultures, the central Soyot groups, keeping cattle and horses, show Khalkha Mongol phenomena in their shamanism,[34] the shamanism of Western Soyots, living on the steppe, is similar to that of Altai Turkic peoples.[35] A shaman story narrates contacts between Soyots and Abakan Turkic peoples in a mythical form.[36]
  • Karagas and Eastern (reindeer-breeding, mountain-inhabiting) Soyots. have many similarities in their culture[37] and shamanism.[38] It was these two cultures who presented some ethnic features, phenomena lacking among neighboring Turkic peoples. E.g., the structure of their shamanic drum showed such peculiarity: it had two transoms.[39] It was also these two cultures who showed some features, which could be possibly of Samoyedic origin: the shaman's headdress, dress and boots has the effigies symbolizing human organs, mostly bones;[40] in the case of headdress, representation of human face.[41] Also the dress-initiating song of the Karagas shaman Kokuyev contained the expression "my shamanic dress with seven vertebrae".[42] Hoppál interprets the skeleton-like overlay of the Karagas shaman-dress as symbol of shamanic rebirth,[43] similar remark applies for the skeleton-like iron ornamentation of the (not Samoyedic, but genealogically unclassified, Paleosiberian) Ket shamanic dress,[44] although it may symbolize also the bones of the loon (the helper animal of the shaman).[45] (The theory of Ket origin of the Karagas has already been mentioned above.[31]) The skeleton-like overlay symbolized shamanic rebirth also among some other Siberian cultures.[46]

Hungarian edit

Starting from the late 9th century onwards, the ancestors of the Hungarian people migrated from their Proto-Uralic homeland in Siberia to the Pannonian Basin, an area that includes present-day Hungary. Today, shamanism is no longer widely practiced by Hungarians, but elements of shamanism have been preserved in their folklore. Comparative methods reveal that some motifs used in folktales, fragments of songs and folk rhymes retain aspects of the ancient belief system. In an effort to prove that shamanistic remnants existed within Hungarian folklore ethnographer, Diószegi Vilmos, compared ethnographic records of Hungarian and neighboring peoples, and works about various shamanic traditions of some Siberian peoples.[47] Mihály Hoppál continued Diószegi Vilmos's work[48] comparing shamanic beliefs of speakers of Uralic languages[49] with those of several non-Uralic Siberian peoples.[50][51]

Although Ugrian folklore preserves many traces of shamanism, shamanism itself was a dying practice among the Khanty and Mansi people by the 1930s. Shamanism is still practiced by many indigenous peoples,[52] but, among the modern Ugrians, shamanism is largely practiced by the Khanty.[53]

Ket edit

 
Ket shaman, 1914.

Traditional culture of Ket people was researched by Matthias Castrén, Vasiliy Ivanovich Anuchin, Kai Donner, Hans Findeisen, Yevgeniya Alekseyevna Alekseyenko.[54] Shamanism was a living practice in the 1930s yet, but by the 1960s almost no authentic shaman could be found. Ket shamanism shared features with those of Turkic and Mongolic peoples.[55] Besides that, there were several types of shamans,[56][57] differing in function (sacral rites, curing), power and associated animal (deer, bear).[57] Also among Kets (like at several other Siberian peoples, e.g. Karagas[40][42][43]), there are examples of using skeleton symbolics,[55] Hoppál interprets it as a symbol of shamanic rebirth,[44] although it may symbolize also the bones of the loon (the helper animal of the shaman, joining air and underwater world, just like the shaman who travelled both to the sky and the underworld as well).[45] The skeleton-like overlay represented shamanic rebirth also among some other Siberian cultures.[46]

Turkic edit

 
A shaman doctor of Kyzyl, Tuva.

Turkic peoples spread over large territories, and are far from alike. In some cases, shamanism has been widely amalgamated with Islam, in others with Buddhism, but there are surviving traditions among the Siberian Tatars,[58] Tuvans, and Tofalar.

The Altai Turks may be related to neighboring Ugrian, Samoyed, Ket, or Mongols.[59][60][61] There may be also ethnographic traces of such past of these nowadays Turkic-speaking peoples of the Altai. For example, some of them have phallic-erotic fertility rites, and that can be compared to similar rites of Ugriansɮ.[60][61]

Tungusic edit

 
Chuonnasuan (1927–2000), the last shaman of the Oroqen people, picture taken by Richard Noll in July 1994 in Manchuria near the border between China and Russia. Oroqen shamanism is now extinct.

Among the Tungusic peoples of Siberia, shamanism is also widespread.

The Tale of the Nisan Shaman, a famous piece of folklore which describes the resurrection of a rich landowner's son by a female shaman, is known among various Tungusic peoples including the Manchus, Evenks, and Nanai people.[62][63]

Koryak and Chukchi edit

Linguistically, Koryak and Chukchi are close congeners of Yup'il. Koryak shamanism is known.[64]

Yupik edit

 
Yup'ik shaman exorcising evil spirits from a sick boy, Nushagak, Alaska, 1890s

Yup'ik groups comprise a huge area stretching from Eastern Siberia through Alaska and Northern Canada (including Labrador Peninsula) to Greenland. Shamanistic practice and beliefs have been recorded at several parts of this vast area crosscutting continental borders.[65][66][67]

Like Yup'ik cultures themselves, shamanistic practices reveal diversity. Some mosaic-like examples from various cultures: the soul concepts of the various cultures were diverse as well, some groups believed that the young child had to be taken for by guardian names inherited from a recently deceased relative. Among some groups, this belief amounted to a kind of reincarnation. Also shamanism might include beliefs in soul dualism, where the free-soul of the shaman could fly to celestial or underneath realms, contacting mythological beings, negotiating with them in order to cease calamities or achieve success in hunt. If their wrath was believed to be caused by taboo breaches, the shaman asked for confessions by members of the community.

In most cultures, shamanism could be refused by the candidate: calling could be felt by visions, but generally, becoming a shaman followed conscious considerations.

 
An Altai Kizhi or Khakas shaman woman – her exact origin cannot be ascertained from the image alone. Early 20th century.[68]
 
Shaman holding a séance by fire. Settlement Kyzyl, region Tuva, Russia

Nivkh edit

Shamanism was a central part of religious and spiritual traditions of the Nivkhs, who are indigenous to the Amur river basin and adjacent Sakhalin island.[69][70][71] Shamans (ch'am) traditionally diagnosed and cured disease. The rare shamans typically wore an elaborate coats with belts often made of metal.[72] Remedies composed of plant and sometimes animal matter were employed to cure sickness. Talismans were used or offered to patients to prevent sickness.[72] Shamans additionally functioned as a conduit to combat and ward off evil spirits that cause death. A shaman's services usually were compensated with goods, quarters and food.[72] Chiyo Nakamura, a Sakhalin Nivkh shaman, was responsible for recording, preserving, and donating artifacts related to Nivkh shamanism as it declined.[73][74]

Demographics edit

The 2002 census of the Russian Federation reports 123,423 (0.23% of the population) people of ethnic groups which dominantly adhere to "traditional beliefs"

Traditional beliefs in Russia, based on 2002 Russian Census and Ethnic Group predominant religion
Ethnic Group Population (2002)
Evenks 35,527
Nanais 12,160
Evens 19,071
Chukchi 15,767
Mansi 11,432
Koryaks 8,743
Nivkhs 5,162
Itelmeni 3,180
Ulchs 2,913
Yup'ik 1,750
Udege 1,657
Ket 1,494
Chuvans 1,087
Tofalar 837
Nganasans 834
Orochs 686
Aleut 540
Oroks 346
Enets 237
Total 123,423

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hoppál 2005:13
  2. ^ Compare: Winkelman, Michael (2010). Shamanism: A Biopsychosocial Paradigm of Consciousness and Healing. ABC-CLIO. p. 60. ISBN 9780313381812. Retrieved 4 October 2015. Part of Bahn's and others' arguments are based in an arbitrary approach to conceptualizing shamanism. For instance, Bahn characterizes Siberia as 'the heartland of true shamanism' (59), resorting to the idea that the word must be restricted to the cultural region of its origin.
  3. ^ a b Hoppál 2005: 15
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 January 2001. Retrieved 17 July 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ Lessing, Ferdinand D., ed. (1960). Mongolian-English Dictionary. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 123.
  6. ^ Czaplicka, Maria (1914). "XII. Shamanism and Sex". Aboriginal Siberia. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  7. ^ ""Siberian Shamanism"".
  8. ^ Hoppál 2006: 143 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Voigt 1966: 296
  10. ^ Szomjas-Schiffert 1996: 56, 76
  11. ^ Szomjas-Schiffert 1996: 64
  12. ^ Szomjas-Schiffert 1996: 74
  13. ^ Diószegi 1960: 203
  14. ^ a b c Hoppál 2005: 92
  15. ^ Lintrop, Aarno. "The Clean Tent Rite". Studies in Siberian shamanism and religions of the Uralic peoples.
  16. ^ a b Nattiez: 5
  17. ^ Deschênes 2002
  18. ^ Vaba, Lembit. "The Yukaghirs". The Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire. NGO Red Book.
  19. ^ a b Hoppál 2005:84
  20. ^ Jaakko häkkinen http://www.sgr.fi/susa/92/hakkinen.pdf
  21. ^ a b Hoppál 2005:92–93
  22. ^ a b Hoppál 2005:88
  23. ^ Hoppál 2005:89
  24. ^ a b Hoppál 2005:94
  25. ^ Hoppál 2005:207–208
  26. ^ a b c Hajdú 1975:12
  27. ^ a b c Hajdú 1982:10
  28. ^ Hoppál 1994:62
  29. ^ The Clean Tent Rite
  30. ^ Diószegi 1960:102,154,243
  31. ^ a b Viikberg, Jüri (2001). The Tofalars. NGO Red Book. ISBN 9985-9369-2-2. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  32. ^ Diószegi 1960
  33. ^ Diószegi 1960:243
  34. ^ Diószegi 1960:226
  35. ^ Diószegi 1960:238
  36. ^ Diószegi 1960:62–63
  37. ^ Diószegi 1960:242
  38. ^ Diószegi 1960:164
  39. ^ Diószegi 1960:198,243
  40. ^ a b Diószegi 1960:128,188,243
  41. ^ Diószegi 1960:110,113
  42. ^ a b Diószegi 1960:130
  43. ^ a b Hoppál 1994:75
  44. ^ a b Hoppál 1994:65
  45. ^ a b Hoppál 2005: 198
  46. ^ a b Hoppál 2005: 199
  47. ^ Diószegi 1998
  48. ^ Hoppál 1998
  49. ^ Hoppál 1975
  50. ^ Hoppál 2005
  51. ^ Hoppál 1994
  52. ^ Hoppál 2005:96
  53. ^ ""Ugric People"".
  54. ^ Hoppál 2005: 170–171
  55. ^ a b Hoppál 2005: 172
  56. ^ Alekseyenko 1978
  57. ^ a b Hoppál 2005: 171
  58. ^ Seleznev, Alexander. "The Northernmost Outpost of Islamic Civilization". International Institute for the Study of Islam in the Modern World. Retrieved 8 April 2022.
  59. ^ "The s". The Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire.[permanent dead link]
  60. ^ a b Vajda, Edward J. . Archived from the original on 6 May 2017.
  61. ^ a b Hoppál 2005:106
  62. ^ Richtsfeld 1989, p. 200
  63. ^ Heissig 1997, p. 200
  64. ^ . Archived from the original on 21 February 2009. Retrieved 16 August 2008.
  65. ^ Kleivan & Sonne 1985
  66. ^ Merkur 1985
  67. ^ Gabus 1970
  68. ^ Hoppál 2005:77,287
  69. ^ Reid, Anna (2003). The Shaman's Coat: A Native History of Siberia. New York, New York: Walker & Company. pp. 156–157. ISBN 0-8027-1399-8.
  70. ^ Friedrich and Diamond (1994). Encyclopedia of World Cultures: Russia and Eurasia-China, Vol. 6. Boston, Massachusetts: G.K. Hall and Company. p. 285. ISBN 0-8161-1810-8.
  71. ^ Shternberg, Lev Iakovlevich; Bruce Grant (1999). The Social Organization of the Gilyak. Seattle: University of Washington Press. pp. 155–58. ISBN 0-295-97799-X.
  72. ^ a b c Friedrich and Diamond, p.283
  73. ^ Chuner Taksami (2004). Siro Sasaki (ed.). "Культурное наследие нивхов : Этнографические коллекции нивхов в музеях Японии" [Cultural heritage of the Nivkhs: Ethnographic collections of the Nivkhs in museums in Japan] (PDF). 国立民族学博物館調査報告(SER) [SENRI Ethnological Reports] (in Russian) (052). 国立民族学博物館 [National Museum of Ethnology (Japan)]: 37–38, 41, 45–46, 64. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  74. ^ "保谷民博関係人名録" [Directory of People Related to the Hoya Folk Museum] (PDF) (in Japanese). 国立民族学博物館フォーラム型情報ミュージアム [National Museum of Ethnology Forum Information Museum]. 28 July 2021. pp. 142–43. Retrieved 22 February 2024.

References edit

  • Balzer, Marjorie Mandelstam, ed. (2015) [1990]. Shamanism: Soviet Studies of Traditional Religion in Siberia and Central Asia. London/New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781138179295.
  • Deschênes, Bruno (2002). "Inuit Throat-Singing". Musical Traditions. The Magazine for Traditional Music Throughout the World.
  • Diószegi, Vilmos (1960). Sámánok nyomában Szibéria földjén. Egy néprajzi kutatóút története. Terebess Ázsia E-Tár (in Hungarian). Budapest: Magvető Könyvkiadó. The book has been translated to English: Diószegi, Vilmos (1968). Tracing shamans in Siberia. The story of an ethnographical research expedition. Translated from Hungarian by Anita Rajkay Babó. Oosterhout: Anthropological Publications.
  • Diószegi, Vilmos (1998) [1958]. A sámánhit emlékei a magyar népi műveltségben [Remnants of shamanistic beliefs in Hungarian folklore] (in Hungarian) (1. reprint kiadás ed.). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. ISBN 963-05-7542-6.
  • Gabus, Jean (1970). A karibu eszkimók [Vie et coutumes des Esquimaux Caribous] (in Hungarian). Budapest: Gondolat Kiadó.
  • Hajdú, Péter (1975). "A rokonság nyelvi háttere ["Linguistical background of the relationship]". In Hajdú, Péter (ed.). Uráli népek. Nyelvrokonaink kultúrája és hagyományai [Uralic peoples. Culture and traditions of our linguistic relatives] (in Hungarian). Budapest: Corvina Kiadó. pp. 11–43. ISBN 963-13-0900-2.
  • Hajdú, Péter (1982) [1968]. Chrestomathia Samoiedica (in Hungarian) (Second ed.). Budapest: Tankönyvkiadó. ISBN 963-17-6601-2.
  • Heissig, Walther (1997). Zu zwei evenkisch-daghurischen Varianten des mandschu Erzählstoffes "Nisan saman-i bithe". pp. 200–230. ISBN 978-3-447-09025-4. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  • Hoppál, Mihály (1975). "Az uráli népek hiedelemvilága és a samanizmus [The belief system of Uralic peoples and the shamanism]". In Hajdú, Péter (ed.). Uráli népek. Nyelvrokonaink kultúrája és hagyományai [Uralic peoples / Culture and traditions of our linguistic relatives] (in Hungarian). Budapest: Corvina Kiadó. pp. 211–233. ISBN 963-13-0900-2.
  • Hoppál, Mihály (1994). Sámánok, lelkek és jelképek [Shamans, souls and symbols] (in Hungarian). Budapest: Helikon Kiadó. ISBN 963-208-298-2.
  • Hoppál, Mihály (2005). Sámánok Eurázsiában [Shamans in Eurasia] (in Hungarian). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. ISBN 963-05-8295-3., also in German, Estonian and Finnish. Site of publisher with short description on the book (in Hungarian) 2 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Hoppál, Mihály (2006c). "Music of Shamanic Healing" (PDF). In Gerhard Kilger (ed.). Macht Musik. Musik als Glück und Nutzen für das Leben. Köln: Wienand Verlag. ISBN 3-87909-865-4.[permanent dead link]
  • Kleivan, I.; B. Sonne (1985). Eskimos: Greenland and Canada. Iconography of religions, section VIII, "Arctic Peoples", fascicle 2. Leiden, The Netherlands: Institute of Religious Iconography • State University Groningen. E.J. Brill. ISBN 90-04-07160-1.
  • Merkur, Daniel (1985). Becoming Half Hidden: Shamanism and Initiation among the Inuit. Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis / Stockholm Studies in Comparative Religion. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell.
  • Nattiez, Jean Jacques. "Inuit Games and Songs • Chants et Jeux des Inuit". Musiques & musiciens du monde • Musics & musicians of the world. Montreal: Research Group in Musical Semiotics, Faculty of Music, University of Montreal. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help). The songs are online available from the ethnopoetics website curated by Jerome Rothenberg.
  • Richtsfeld, Bruno (1989). "Die Mandschu-Erzählung "Nisan saman-i bithe" bei den Hezhe". Münchner Beiträge zur Völkerkunde. 2: 117–155.
  • Rubcova, E. S. (1954). Materials on the Language and Folklore of the Eskimoes (Vol. I, Chaplino Dialect) (in Russian). Moscow • Leningrad: Academy of Sciences of the USSR. Original data: Рубцова, Е. С. (1954). Материалы по языку и фольклору эскимосов (чаплинский диалект). Москва • Ленинград: Академия Наук СССР.
  • Shimamura, Ippei. The Roots Seekers: Shamamisn and Ethnicity Among the Mongol Buryats. Yokohama, Japan: Shumpusha, 2014. ISBN 978-4-86110-397-1
  • Szomjas-Schiffert, György (1996). Lapp sámánok énekes hagyománya • Singing tradition of Lapp shamans (in Hungarian and English). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. ISBN 963-05-6940-X.
  • Vitebsky, Piers (2001). The Shaman: Voyages of the Soul – Trance, Ecstasy and Healing from Siberia to the Amazon. Duncan Baird. ISBN 1-903296-18-8.
  • Vitebsky, Piers (1996). A sámán (in Hungarian). Budapest: Magyar Könyvklub • Helikon Kiadó. Translation of the original: Vitebsky, Piers (1995). The Shaman (Living Wisdom). Duncan Baird.
  • Voigt, Vilmos (1966). A varázsdob és a látó asszonyok. Lapp népmesék [The magic drum and the clairvoyant women. Sami folktales]. Népek meséi [Tales of folks] (in Hungarian). Budapest: Európa Könyvkiadó.
  • Andrei Znamenski, ed. (2003c). Shamanism in Siberia: Russian Records of Indigenous Spirituality. Germany: Springer Verlag. ISBN 978-1-4020-1740-7.

External links edit

  • Stanislav Krupar's photos of Siberian shamans Homepage |url=http://www.krupar.com/index.php?file=www/en/gallery/gallery.html&cat=5
  • Lintrop, Aado. "Studies in Siberian Shamanism and Religion of the Finno-Ugrian Peoples".
  • "Shamanic And Narrative Songs of Siberian Arctic" (music). Musique Du Monde.
  • Czapliczka, M. A. (1914). Shamanism in Siberia: excerpts from Aboriginal Siberia.
  • Vajda, Edward J. . Archived from the original on 6 May 2017. Retrieved 10 September 2007.
  • Noll, Richard; Shi, Kun (2004). "Chuonnasuan (Meng Jin Fu). The Last Shaman of the Oroqen of Northeast China" (PDF). Journal of Korean Religions (6): 135–162. It describes the life of Chuonnasuan, the last shaman of the Oroqen of Northeast China.
  • The shaman – trailer. Nganasan tribe (streamed). YouTube. Archived from the original on 18 December 2021.
  • Erich Kasten; Michael Duerr. "Siberian Studies Homepage".
  • [Ungazik settlement] (in Russian). Музея антропологии и этнографии им. Петра Великого (Кунсткамера) Российской академии наук. Archived from the original on 28 February 2009. Rendering in English: Ungazik settlement, Kunstkamera, Russian Academy of Sciences. Old photos about former life of a Siberian Yupik settlement, including those of a shaman, performing his séance.
  • Helimski, Eugene. . Shamanhood: The Endangered Language of Ritual, conference at the Centre for Advanced Study, 19–23 June 1999, Oslo. Archived from the original on 19 December 2008.

shamanism, siberia, large, minority, people, north, asia, particularly, siberia, follow, religio, cultural, practices, shamanism, some, researchers, regard, siberia, heartland, shamanism, buryat, shaman, ritual, tuvan, shaman, tash, buuevich, kunga, consecrati. A large minority of people in North Asia particularly in Siberia follow the religio cultural practices of shamanism Some researchers regard Siberia as the heartland of shamanism 1 2 A Buryat boy in a shaman ritual Tuvan shaman Tash ool Buuevich Kunga consecrating an ovoo The people of Siberia comprise a variety of ethnic groups many of whom continue to observe shamanistic practices in modern times Many classical ethnographers recorded the sources of the idea of shamanism among Siberian peoples 3 Contents 1 Terminology in Siberian languages 2 Spirit journey 3 Songs music 4 Grouped by linguistic relatedness 4 1 Uralic 4 1 1 Samoyedic 4 1 2 Nenets 4 1 3 Nganasan 4 1 4 Sayan Samoyedic 4 1 5 Hungarian 4 2 Ket 4 3 Turkic 4 4 Tungusic 4 5 Koryak and Chukchi 4 6 Yupik 4 7 Nivkh 5 Demographics 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksTerminology in Siberian languages edit shaman saman Nedigal Nanay Ulcha Orok sama Manchu The variant saman i e pronounced shaman is Evenk whence it was borrowed into Russian shaman alman olman wolmen 4 Yukagir shaman qam Tatar Shor Oyrat xam Tuva Tofalar The Buryat word for shaman is boo boo boː from early Mongolian boge 5 Itself borrowed from Proto Turkic bogu sage wizard shaman najt Khanty Mansi from Proto Uralic nojta c f Sami noaidi shamaness iduɣan Mongol udaɣan Yakut udagan Buryat udugan Evenki Lamut odogan Nedigal Related forms found in various Siberian languages include utagan ubakan utygan utugun iduan or duana All these are related to the Mongolian name of Etugen the hearth goddess and Etugen Eke Mother Earth Maria Czaplicka points out that Siberian languages use words for male shamans from diverse roots but the words for female shaman are almost all from the same root She connects this with the theory that women s practice of shamanism was established earlier than men s that shamans were originally female 6 Spirit journey editSiberian shamans spirit journeys 7 reenacting their dreams wherein they had rescued the soul of the client were conducted in e g Oroch Altai and Nganasan healing seances Songs music editSee also Imitation of sounds in shamanism and Shamanic music nbsp Buryat shaman performing a libation Shamanistic practice shows great diversity 3 even if restricted to Siberia In some cultures the music or song related to shamanistic practice may mimic natural sounds sometimes with onomatopoeia 8 This holds true for the practices of the noaidi among Sami groups Although the Sami people live outside of Siberia many of their shamanistic beliefs and practice shared important features with those of some Siberian cultures 9 The joiks of the Sami were sung on shamanistic rites 10 Recently joiks are sung in two different styles one of these is sung only by young people the traditional one may be the other the mumbling style which resembles magic spells 11 Several surprising characteristics of joiks can be explained by comparing the music ideals as observed in joiks and contrasted to music ideals of other cultures Some joiks intend to mimic natural sounds This can be contrasted to bel canto which intends to exploit human speech organs on the highest level to achieve an almost superhuman sound 12 The intention to mimic natural sounds is present in some Siberian cultures as well overtone singing and also shamanic songs of some cultures can be examples In a Soyot shamanic song sounds of bird and wolf are imitated to represent helping spirits of the shaman 13 The seances of Nganasan shamans were accompanied by women imitating the sounds of the reindeer calf thought to provide fertility for those women 14 In 1931 A Popov observed the Nganasan shaman Dyukhade Kosterkin imitating the sound of polar bear the shaman was believed to have transformed into a polar bear 15 Sound mimesis is not restricted to Siberian cultures and is not necessarily linked to shamanistic beliefs or practices See for example Inuit throat singing a game played by women an example of Inuit music that employs overtone singing and in some cases the imitation of natural sounds mostly those of animals e g geese 16 17 The imitation of animal sounds can also serve such practical reasons as luring game in hunt 16 Grouped by linguistic relatedness edit nbsp Uralic languages The language isolate Yukaghir is conjectured by some to be related to Uralic 18 nbsp Turkic languages including also North Siberian Yakuts but Dolgans are omitted South Siberian areas and also Central Asia nbsp Eskimo language branch of the Eskimo Aleut language family Uralic edit See also Finnic mythologies Uralic languages are proven to form a genealogical unit a language family Not all speakers of these languages live in Siberia or have shamanistic religions The largest populations the Hungarians and Finns live outside Siberia and are mostly Christian Sami people had kept shamanic practices alive for a long time They live in Europe but practiced shamanism until the 18th century 19 Most others e g Hungarian Finnic Mari have only remnant elements of shamanism 19 The majority lives outside Siberia Some of them used to live in Siberia but have migrated to their present locations since then The original location of the Proto Uralic peoples and its extent is debated Combined phytogeographical and linguistic considerations distribution of various tree species and the presence of their names in various Uralic languages suggest that this area was somewhere between the Kama and Vyatka rivers on the western side of the Ural Mountains 20 Samoyedic edit Among several Samoyedic peoples shamanism was a living tradition also in modern times especially at groups living in isolation until recent times Nganasans 21 There were distinguished several types of shamans among Nenets 22 Enets 23 and Selkup 24 people The Nganasan shaman used three different crowns according to the situation one for upper world one for underneath word one for occasion of childbirth 25 Nenets people Enets people Nganasan people speak Northern Samoyedic languages They live in North Siberia Nenets live also in European parts they provide classical examples Selkups are the only ones who speak Southern Samoyedic languages nowadays They live more to the south shamanism was in decline also at the beginning of the 20th century although folklore memories could be recorded even in the 1960s 24 Other Southern Samoyedic languages were spoken by some peoples living in the Sayan Mountains but language shift has taken place making all these languages extinct 26 27 Nenets edit Main article Tadibya There were several types of shamans distinguishing ones contacting upper world ones contacting underneath world ones contacting the dead 22 Nganasan edit The isolated location of Nganasan people enabled that shamanism was a living phenomenon among them even in the beginning of the 20th century 14 the last notable Nganasan shaman s seances could be recorded on film in the 1970s 14 28 One of the occasions in which the shaman partook was the clean tent rite held after the polar night which included sacrifices 21 29 Sayan Samoyedic edit Some peoples of the Sayan Mountains spoke once Southern Samoyedic languages Most of them underwent a language shift in the beginning and middle of the 19th century borrowing the language of neighboring Turkic peoples The Kamassian language survived longer 14 old people spoke it yet in 1914 In the late 20th century some old people had passive or uncertain knowledge of the language but collecting reliable scientific data was no longer possible 26 27 Today Kamassian is regarded as extinct The shamanism of Samoyedic peoples in the Sayan Mountains survived longer if we regard Karagas as a Samoyedic people 26 27 30 although such approaches have been refined the problem of their origin may be more complex 31 Dioszegi Vilmos could record not only folklore memories in the late 1950s but he managed also to talk personally to no longer practicing shamans record their personal memories songs some of their paraphernalia 32 Whether this shamanism is borrowed entirely from neighboring Turkic peoples or whether it has some ethnic features maybe remnants of Samoyedic origin is unresolved Comparative considerations suggest that Karagas shamanism is affected by Abakan Turkic and Buryat influence 33 Among the various Soyot cultures the central Soyot groups keeping cattle and horses show Khalkha Mongol phenomena in their shamanism 34 the shamanism of Western Soyots living on the steppe is similar to that of Altai Turkic peoples 35 A shaman story narrates contacts between Soyots and Abakan Turkic peoples in a mythical form 36 Karagas and Eastern reindeer breeding mountain inhabiting Soyots have many similarities in their culture 37 and shamanism 38 It was these two cultures who presented some ethnic features phenomena lacking among neighboring Turkic peoples E g the structure of their shamanic drum showed such peculiarity it had two transoms 39 It was also these two cultures who showed some features which could be possibly of Samoyedic origin the shaman s headdress dress and boots has the effigies symbolizing human organs mostly bones 40 in the case of headdress representation of human face 41 Also the dress initiating song of the Karagas shaman Kokuyev contained the expression my shamanic dress with seven vertebrae 42 Hoppal interprets the skeleton like overlay of the Karagas shaman dress as symbol of shamanic rebirth 43 similar remark applies for the skeleton like iron ornamentation of the not Samoyedic but genealogically unclassified Paleosiberian Ket shamanic dress 44 although it may symbolize also the bones of the loon the helper animal of the shaman 45 The theory of Ket origin of the Karagas has already been mentioned above 31 The skeleton like overlay symbolized shamanic rebirth also among some other Siberian cultures 46 Hungarian edit Main article Shamanistic remnants in Hungarian folklore Starting from the late 9th century onwards the ancestors of the Hungarian people migrated from their Proto Uralic homeland in Siberia to the Pannonian Basin an area that includes present day Hungary Today shamanism is no longer widely practiced by Hungarians but elements of shamanism have been preserved in their folklore Comparative methods reveal that some motifs used in folktales fragments of songs and folk rhymes retain aspects of the ancient belief system In an effort to prove that shamanistic remnants existed within Hungarian folklore ethnographer Dioszegi Vilmos compared ethnographic records of Hungarian and neighboring peoples and works about various shamanic traditions of some Siberian peoples 47 Mihaly Hoppal continued Dioszegi Vilmos s work 48 comparing shamanic beliefs of speakers of Uralic languages 49 with those of several non Uralic Siberian peoples 50 51 Although Ugrian folklore preserves many traces of shamanism shamanism itself was a dying practice among the Khanty and Mansi people by the 1930s Shamanism is still practiced by many indigenous peoples 52 but among the modern Ugrians shamanism is largely practiced by the Khanty 53 Ket edit nbsp Ket shaman 1914 Traditional culture of Ket people was researched by Matthias Castren Vasiliy Ivanovich Anuchin Kai Donner Hans Findeisen Yevgeniya Alekseyevna Alekseyenko 54 Shamanism was a living practice in the 1930s yet but by the 1960s almost no authentic shaman could be found Ket shamanism shared features with those of Turkic and Mongolic peoples 55 Besides that there were several types of shamans 56 57 differing in function sacral rites curing power and associated animal deer bear 57 Also among Kets like at several other Siberian peoples e g Karagas 40 42 43 there are examples of using skeleton symbolics 55 Hoppal interprets it as a symbol of shamanic rebirth 44 although it may symbolize also the bones of the loon the helper animal of the shaman joining air and underwater world just like the shaman who travelled both to the sky and the underworld as well 45 The skeleton like overlay represented shamanic rebirth also among some other Siberian cultures 46 Turkic edit Further information Turkic mythology nbsp A shaman doctor of Kyzyl Tuva Turkic peoples spread over large territories and are far from alike In some cases shamanism has been widely amalgamated with Islam in others with Buddhism but there are surviving traditions among the Siberian Tatars 58 Tuvans and Tofalar The Altai Turks may be related to neighboring Ugrian Samoyed Ket or Mongols 59 60 61 There may be also ethnographic traces of such past of these nowadays Turkic speaking peoples of the Altai For example some of them have phallic erotic fertility rites and that can be compared to similar rites of Ugriansɮ 60 61 Tungusic edit nbsp Chuonnasuan 1927 2000 the last shaman of the Oroqen people picture taken by Richard Noll in July 1994 in Manchuria near the border between China and Russia Oroqen shamanism is now extinct Among the Tungusic peoples of Siberia shamanism is also widespread The Tale of the Nisan Shaman a famous piece of folklore which describes the resurrection of a rich landowner s son by a female shaman is known among various Tungusic peoples including the Manchus Evenks and Nanai people 62 63 Koryak and Chukchi edit Linguistically Koryak and Chukchi are close congeners of Yup il Koryak shamanism is known 64 Yupik edit nbsp Yup ik shaman exorcising evil spirits from a sick boy Nushagak Alaska 1890s Main article Shamanism among Eskimo peoples Yup ik groups comprise a huge area stretching from Eastern Siberia through Alaska and Northern Canada including Labrador Peninsula to Greenland Shamanistic practice and beliefs have been recorded at several parts of this vast area crosscutting continental borders 65 66 67 Like Yup ik cultures themselves shamanistic practices reveal diversity Some mosaic like examples from various cultures the soul concepts of the various cultures were diverse as well some groups believed that the young child had to be taken for by guardian names inherited from a recently deceased relative Among some groups this belief amounted to a kind of reincarnation Also shamanism might include beliefs in soul dualism where the free soul of the shaman could fly to celestial or underneath realms contacting mythological beings negotiating with them in order to cease calamities or achieve success in hunt If their wrath was believed to be caused by taboo breaches the shaman asked for confessions by members of the community In most cultures shamanism could be refused by the candidate calling could be felt by visions but generally becoming a shaman followed conscious considerations nbsp An Altai Kizhi or Khakas shaman woman her exact origin cannot be ascertained from the image alone Early 20th century 68 nbsp Shaman holding a seance by fire Settlement Kyzyl region Tuva Russia Nivkh edit Shamanism was a central part of religious and spiritual traditions of the Nivkhs who are indigenous to the Amur river basin and adjacent Sakhalin island 69 70 71 Shamans ch am traditionally diagnosed and cured disease The rare shamans typically wore an elaborate coats with belts often made of metal 72 Remedies composed of plant and sometimes animal matter were employed to cure sickness Talismans were used or offered to patients to prevent sickness 72 Shamans additionally functioned as a conduit to combat and ward off evil spirits that cause death A shaman s services usually were compensated with goods quarters and food 72 Chiyo Nakamura a Sakhalin Nivkh shaman was responsible for recording preserving and donating artifacts related to Nivkh shamanism as it declined 73 74 Demographics editThe 2002 census of the Russian Federation reports 123 423 0 23 of the population people of ethnic groups which dominantly adhere to traditional beliefs Traditional beliefs in Russia based on 2002 Russian Census and Ethnic Group predominant religion Ethnic Group Population 2002 Evenks 35 527 Nanais 12 160 Evens 19 071 Chukchi 15 767 Mansi 11 432 Koryaks 8 743 Nivkhs 5 162 Itelmeni 3 180 Ulchs 2 913 Yup ik 1 750 Udege 1 657 Ket 1 494 Chuvans 1 087 Tofalar 837 Nganasans 834 Orochs 686 Aleut 540 Oroks 346 Enets 237 Total 123 423See also editIndigenous peoples of the Russian North Shamanism in the Qing dynasty Shamanism in Russia Chinese shamanism Korean shamanism Manchu shamanism Mongolian shamanism Yakut shamanism Reindeer in Siberian Shamanism Ainu religion nbsp Siberia portalNotes edit Hoppal 2005 13 Compare Winkelman Michael 2010 Shamanism A Biopsychosocial Paradigm of Consciousness and Healing ABC CLIO p 60 ISBN 9780313381812 Retrieved 4 October 2015 Part of Bahn s and others arguments are based in an arbitrary approach to conceptualizing shamanism For instance Bahn characterizes Siberia as the heartland of true shamanism 59 resorting to the idea that the word must be restricted to the cultural region of its origin a b Hoppal 2005 15 Archived copy Archived from the original on 12 January 2001 Retrieved 17 July 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Lessing Ferdinand D ed 1960 Mongolian English Dictionary Berkeley University of California Press p 123 Czaplicka Maria 1914 XII Shamanism and Sex Aboriginal Siberia Oxford Clarendon Press Retrieved 7 March 2015 Siberian Shamanism Hoppal 2006 143 Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Voigt 1966 296 Szomjas Schiffert 1996 56 76 Szomjas Schiffert 1996 64 Szomjas Schiffert 1996 74 Dioszegi 1960 203 a b c Hoppal 2005 92 Lintrop Aarno The Clean Tent Rite Studies in Siberian shamanism and religions of the Uralic peoples a b Nattiez 5 Deschenes 2002 Vaba Lembit The Yukaghirs The Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire NGO Red Book a b Hoppal 2005 84 Jaakko hakkinen http www sgr fi susa 92 hakkinen pdf a b Hoppal 2005 92 93 a b Hoppal 2005 88 Hoppal 2005 89 a b Hoppal 2005 94 Hoppal 2005 207 208 a b c Hajdu 1975 12 a b c Hajdu 1982 10 Hoppal 1994 62 The Clean Tent Rite Dioszegi 1960 102 154 243 a b Viikberg Juri 2001 The Tofalars NGO Red Book ISBN 9985 9369 2 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Dioszegi 1960 Dioszegi 1960 243 Dioszegi 1960 226 Dioszegi 1960 238 Dioszegi 1960 62 63 Dioszegi 1960 242 Dioszegi 1960 164 Dioszegi 1960 198 243 a b Dioszegi 1960 128 188 243 Dioszegi 1960 110 113 a b Dioszegi 1960 130 a b Hoppal 1994 75 a b Hoppal 1994 65 a b Hoppal 2005 198 a b Hoppal 2005 199 Dioszegi 1998 Hoppal 1998 Hoppal 1975 Hoppal 2005 Hoppal 1994 Hoppal 2005 96 Ugric People Hoppal 2005 170 171 a b Hoppal 2005 172 Alekseyenko 1978 a b Hoppal 2005 171 Seleznev Alexander The Northernmost Outpost of Islamic Civilization International Institute for the Study of Islam in the Modern World Retrieved 8 April 2022 The s The Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire permanent dead link a b Vajda Edward J The Altai Turks Archived from the original on 6 May 2017 a b Hoppal 2005 106 Richtsfeld 1989 p 200 Heissig 1997 p 200 Koryak worldview Archived from the original on 21 February 2009 Retrieved 16 August 2008 Kleivan amp Sonne 1985 Merkur 1985 Gabus 1970 Hoppal 2005 77 287 Reid Anna 2003 The Shaman s Coat A Native History of Siberia New York New York Walker amp Company pp 156 157 ISBN 0 8027 1399 8 Friedrich and Diamond 1994 Encyclopedia of World Cultures Russia and Eurasia China Vol 6 Boston Massachusetts G K Hall and Company p 285 ISBN 0 8161 1810 8 Shternberg Lev Iakovlevich Bruce Grant 1999 The Social Organization of the Gilyak Seattle University of Washington Press pp 155 58 ISBN 0 295 97799 X a b c Friedrich and Diamond p 283 Chuner Taksami 2004 Siro Sasaki ed Kulturnoe nasledie nivhov Etnograficheskie kollekcii nivhov v muzeyah Yaponii Cultural heritage of the Nivkhs Ethnographic collections of the Nivkhs in museums in Japan PDF 国立民族学博物館調査報告 SER SENRI Ethnological Reports in Russian 052 国立民族学博物館 National Museum of Ethnology Japan 37 38 41 45 46 64 Retrieved 20 April 2024 保谷民博関係人名録 Directory of People Related to the Hoya Folk Museum PDF in Japanese 国立民族学博物館フォーラム型情報ミュージアム National Museum of Ethnology Forum Information Museum 28 July 2021 pp 142 43 Retrieved 22 February 2024 References editBalzer Marjorie Mandelstam ed 2015 1990 Shamanism Soviet Studies of Traditional Religion in Siberia and Central Asia London New York Routledge ISBN 9781138179295 Deschenes Bruno 2002 Inuit Throat Singing Musical Traditions The Magazine for Traditional Music Throughout the World Dioszegi Vilmos 1960 Samanok nyomaban Sziberia foldjen Egy neprajzi kutatout tortenete Terebess Azsia E Tar in Hungarian Budapest Magveto Konyvkiado The book has been translated to English Dioszegi Vilmos 1968 Tracing shamans in Siberia The story of an ethnographical research expedition Translated from Hungarian by Anita Rajkay Babo Oosterhout Anthropological Publications Dioszegi Vilmos 1998 1958 A samanhit emlekei a magyar nepi muveltsegben Remnants of shamanistic beliefs in Hungarian folklore in Hungarian 1 reprint kiadas ed Budapest Akademiai Kiado ISBN 963 05 7542 6 Gabus Jean 1970 A karibu eszkimok Vie et coutumes des Esquimaux Caribous in Hungarian Budapest Gondolat Kiado Hajdu Peter 1975 A rokonsag nyelvi hattere Linguistical background of the relationship In Hajdu Peter ed Urali nepek Nyelvrokonaink kulturaja es hagyomanyai Uralic peoples Culture and traditions of our linguistic relatives in Hungarian Budapest Corvina Kiado pp 11 43 ISBN 963 13 0900 2 Hajdu Peter 1982 1968 Chrestomathia Samoiedica in Hungarian Second ed Budapest Tankonyvkiado ISBN 963 17 6601 2 Heissig Walther 1997 Zu zwei evenkisch daghurischen Varianten des mandschu Erzahlstoffes Nisan saman i bithe pp 200 230 ISBN 978 3 447 09025 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Hoppal Mihaly 1975 Az urali nepek hiedelemvilaga es a samanizmus The belief system of Uralic peoples and the shamanism In Hajdu Peter ed Urali nepek Nyelvrokonaink kulturaja es hagyomanyai Uralic peoples Culture and traditions of our linguistic relatives in Hungarian Budapest Corvina Kiado pp 211 233 ISBN 963 13 0900 2 Hoppal Mihaly 1994 Samanok lelkek es jelkepek Shamans souls and symbols in Hungarian Budapest Helikon Kiado ISBN 963 208 298 2 Hoppal Mihaly 2005 Samanok Eurazsiaban Shamans in Eurasia in Hungarian Budapest Akademiai Kiado ISBN 963 05 8295 3 also in German Estonian and Finnish Site of publisher with short description on the book in Hungarian Archived 2 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine Hoppal Mihaly 2006c Music of Shamanic Healing PDF In Gerhard Kilger ed Macht Musik Musik als Gluck und Nutzen fur das Leben Koln Wienand Verlag ISBN 3 87909 865 4 permanent dead link Kleivan I B Sonne 1985 Eskimos Greenland and Canada Iconography of religions section VIII Arctic Peoples fascicle 2 Leiden The Netherlands Institute of Religious Iconography State University Groningen E J Brill ISBN 90 04 07160 1 Merkur Daniel 1985 Becoming Half Hidden Shamanism and Initiation among the Inuit Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis Stockholm Studies in Comparative Religion Stockholm Almqvist amp Wiksell Nattiez Jean Jacques Inuit Games and Songs Chants et Jeux des Inuit Musiques amp musiciens du monde Musics amp musicians of the world Montreal Research Group in Musical Semiotics Faculty of Music University of Montreal a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The songs are online available from the ethnopoetics website curated by Jerome Rothenberg Richtsfeld Bruno 1989 Die Mandschu Erzahlung Nisan saman i bithe bei den Hezhe Munchner Beitrage zur Volkerkunde 2 117 155 Rubcova E S 1954 Materials on the Language and Folklore of the Eskimoes Vol I Chaplino Dialect in Russian Moscow Leningrad Academy of Sciences of the USSR Original data Rubcova E S 1954 Materialy po yazyku i folkloru eskimosov chaplinskij dialekt Moskva Leningrad Akademiya Nauk SSSR Shimamura Ippei The Roots Seekers Shamamisn and Ethnicity Among the Mongol Buryats Yokohama Japan Shumpusha 2014 ISBN 978 4 86110 397 1 Szomjas Schiffert Gyorgy 1996 Lapp samanok enekes hagyomanya Singing tradition of Lapp shamans in Hungarian and English Budapest Akademiai Kiado ISBN 963 05 6940 X Vitebsky Piers 2001 The Shaman Voyages of the Soul Trance Ecstasy and Healing from Siberia to the Amazon Duncan Baird ISBN 1 903296 18 8 Vitebsky Piers 1996 A saman in Hungarian Budapest Magyar Konyvklub Helikon Kiado Translation of the original Vitebsky Piers 1995 The Shaman Living Wisdom Duncan Baird Voigt Vilmos 1966 A varazsdob es a lato asszonyok Lapp nepmesek The magic drum and the clairvoyant women Sami folktales Nepek mesei Tales of folks in Hungarian Budapest Europa Konyvkiado Andrei Znamenski ed 2003c Shamanism in Siberia Russian Records of Indigenous Spirituality Germany Springer Verlag ISBN 978 1 4020 1740 7 External links editStanislav Krupar s photos of Siberian shamans Homepage url http www krupar com index php file www en gallery gallery html amp cat 5 Lintrop Aado Studies in Siberian Shamanism and Religion of the Finno Ugrian Peoples Shamanic And Narrative Songs of Siberian Arctic music Musique Du Monde Czapliczka M A 1914 Shamanism in Siberia excerpts from Aboriginal Siberia Vajda Edward J The Altai Turks Archived from the original on 6 May 2017 Retrieved 10 September 2007 Noll Richard Shi Kun 2004 Chuonnasuan Meng Jin Fu The Last Shaman of the Oroqen of Northeast China PDF Journal of Korean Religions 6 135 162 It describes the life of Chuonnasuan the last shaman of the Oroqen of Northeast China The shaman trailer Nganasan tribe streamed YouTube Archived from the original on 18 December 2021 Erich Kasten Michael Duerr Siberian Studies Homepage Poselok Ungazik Chaplino Ungazik settlement in Russian Muzeya antropologii i etnografii im Petra Velikogo Kunstkamera Rossijskoj akademii nauk Archived from the original on 28 February 2009 Rendering in English Ungazik settlement Kunstkamera Russian Academy of Sciences Old photos about former life of a Siberian Yupik settlement including those of a shaman performing his seance Helimski Eugene Nganasan shamanistic tradition observation and hypotheses Shamanhood The Endangered Language of Ritual conference at the Centre for Advanced Study 19 23 June 1999 Oslo Archived from the original on 19 December 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shamanism in Siberia amp oldid 1220833693, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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