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Nakh peoples

The Nakh peoples are a group of North Caucasian peoples identified by their use of the Nakh languages and other cultural similarities. These are chiefly the ethnic Chechen (including the Chechen sub-ethnos, the Kists, in Georgia), Ingush and Bats peoples of the North Caucasus, including closely related minor or historical groups.

Chechens at a wedding, circa 1870–1886
Ingush highlanders, early 20th century

The ethnonyms "Vainakh", "Nakh" and "Nakhchi" edit

"Nakh peoples" and "Vainakh peoples" are two terms that were coined by Soviet ethnographers such as the Russian linguist Nikolai Yakovlev [ru] and Ingush ethnographer Zaurbek Malsagov [ru]. The reasoning behind the creation of these terms was to unite the closely related nations of Chechen and Ingush into one term. The terms "Vainakh" (our people) and "Nakh" (people) were first used as a term to unite two peoples in 1928.[1] It was subsequently popularized by other Soviet authors, poets, and historians such as Mamakaev and Volkova in their research. According to the historian Victor Schnirelmann, the terms "Vainakh" and "Nakh" were introduced more actively during the period from the 1960s through the 1980s.[2]

History edit

The first documented collective term used to refer to the Nakh peoples in general "Kists" was introduced by Johann Anton Güldenstädt in the 1770s.[3] Julius von Klaproth believed the term Kists only applied to the Kistin society of Ingushetia, and instead used the Tatar term "Mizdschegi" to refer to the Nakh peoples.[4] The term Nakhchiy (in the form of Natschkha, Nakhchui and Nacha) at the end of the 18th and beginning of 19th centuries was mentioned as the name (i.e. exonym) that the Ingush gave to the Chechens and not as the self-name of the Ingush. Starting in the second half of the 19th century, the term was used by some Russian officers, historians and linguists for both the Chechen and Ingush nations (and sometimes for the Batsbi, notably by Peter von Uslar). Today, the term is in its modern lowland version of "Nokhchi" and is only used by Chechens and Pankisi Kists. In 1859, Adolf Berge was the second one to use this term for both the Chechens and Ingush.[5] The famous Russian linguist Peter von Uslar, who studied the North Caucasian languages, also referred to both nations in 1888 as "Nakhchuy"/"Nakhchiy".[6] This classification was also used by Potto,[7] Veidenbaum [ru],[8] Gan [ru],[9] Dubrovin [ru][10] and many others during the 19th century.

According to Umalat Laudaev, the first Chechen ethnographer and historian, Nazranians (a subgroup of Ingush) used this ethnonym occasionally:[11]

The Shatois and Nazranians are reluctant to call themselves Nakhchoy, which stems from their previous hostile attitudes towards the Chechens. But with the outpouring of heartfelt feelings at meetings, at a party, on the way, etc. they always confirm their unity of tribe, expressing themselves: "We are common brothers (wai tsa vezherey detsy)" or "We are the same Nakhchoy (wai tsa nakhchoy du)".

— Umalat Laudaev, "Collection of information about the Caucasian highlanders, Vol. VI."

However, it was mentioned by Peter Simon Pallas in the late 18th century that a clear distinction between self-designation of the Ingush and Chechens had already existed:

There is a tribe of people differing entirely from all other inhabitants of the Caucasus, in language as well as in stature, and features of the countenance: the Galgai or Ingush, also referred to as Lamur, meaning "inhabitants of mountains". Their nearest relatives, both by consanguinity and language, are the Chechens, whom they call Natschkha.

— Peter Simon Pallas, "Travels Through the Southern Provinces of the Russian Empire, in the Years 1793 and 1794"

The 19th century historian Bashir Dalgat [ru] published several works about Chechen and Ingush ethnography. He proposed to use the term "Nakhchuy" for both the Chechens and Ingush.[12] This, however, had no fruition in Caucasology, mainly due to the fact that the Ingush commonly referred to themselves as "Ghalghaï", while the Chechens called themselves "Nakhchoy" or "Nokhchoy".

The oldest mention of Nakhchiy occurred in 1310 by the Georgian Patriarch Cyril Donauri, who mentions the "People of Nakhche" among Tushetians, Avars and many other Northeast Caucasian nations. The term Nakhchiy has also been connected to the city Nakhchivan and the nation of Nakhchamatyan (mentioned in the 7th-century Armenian work Ashkharhatsuyts) by many Soviet and modern historians.[13] Chechen manuscripts in Arabic from the early 1820s do mention a certain Nakhchuvan (near modern-day Kagizman, Turkey) as the homeland of all Nakhchiy.[14]

Etymology of the ethnonym Nakhchi edit

The etymology of "Nakhchi" is believed to have come from "Nakh" (people) + "-chi" (suffix) or "Nakh" (people) + "Chuo" (territory). Chechen researcher Ahmad Suleymanov [ru] claimed that the terms "Nakh" and "Nakhchi" are not the same, and have different foundations and different origins.[15] Whatever the case, contemporary historians and linguists agree that the ethnonym includes the term "Nakh" (people). Many historians such as Potto, Berge, Gan, Dubrovin believed that it meant "the nation".[13] Linguists like Arbi Vagapov have also pointed out that similar terms are found in other Northeast Caucasian languages such as Rutul where "Nukhchi" translates to "Tribesman".[16]

Chechen ethnographer Umalat Laudaev offered a different etymology for the origin of the ethnonym Nakhchi:

In primitive times, having not yet been acquainted with arable farming, for lack of bread they (lowland Chechens) ate a large amount of cheese; boasting of their abundance in front of their compatriots who lived in the meager Argun mountains and populous Ichkeria, they called themselves in Chechen "Nakhchoy". Cheese in Chechen is called "nakhchi"; the plural form of the word is "nakhchiy", hence the popular name "Nakhchoy", that is, "people abounding with cheese." It is also possible that this name was ascribed to the lowland Chechens as a mockery, calling them raw foodists, just as today the Nadterechny Chechens are mockingly called “kaldash yuts nakh”, that is, people who eat cottage cheese. That the Chechens got the name "Nakhchoy" from cheese is also confirmed by the fact that the Nazrans, who do not speak in the same Chechen language, call cheese "nakhchi", and the Chechens - "Nakhchiy".

— Umalat Laudaev, "Collection of information about the Caucasian highlanders, Vol. VI."

This version has been criticized by many authors including the Chechen linguist I. Aliroev [ru] who believed the etymology made no sense.[17] Linguists and historians such as Shavlaeva and Tesaev, however, believed the etymology confused "Nakhch" (cheese) with the Chechen term "Nakhch" (processed), which has the same root. In their version, the etymology would mean "the processed ones" (i.e. the people who are accepted in society due to their qualities and lineage).[18] Authors such as Berge mentioned also that the term "Nakhchi" could mean "the people of excellence".[19]

Historical mentions of Nakhchi edit

Historical mentions
Name Author Source Date
Nakhche[20] Archbishop Cyril Donauri Historical document 1310
Nakhshai[21] Sala-Uzden Prince Adzhi Historical letter 1756
Natschkha[22] Peter Simon Pallas "Travels through the southern provinces of the Russian Empire in the years 1793 and 1794" 1793
Nakhchui[23] Julius Klaproth "Description of trips to the Caucasus and Georgia in 1807 and 1808" 1807
Nacha[24] Semyon Bronevsky "News of the Caucasus" 1823
Nakhchoy[25] Chechen Manuscript "Migration from Nakhchuvan" 1828
Nakhche[26] Adolf Berge "Chechnya and Chechens" 1859
Nakhchoy[27] Kedi Dosov "Nakhchoyn Juz" 1862
Nakhche[28] Nikolai Dubrovin "History of war and domination of Russians in the Caucasus" 1871
Nakhchoy[29] Umalat Laudaev "The Chechen Tribe" 1872
Nakhche[30] Kerovbe Patkanian "Armenian geography of the 7th century AD" 1877

The ethnonym "Ghalghaï" edit

Ghalghaï (Ingush: ГIалгIай, [ˈʁəlʁɑj]) is the self-name of the Ingush, a Caucasian people,[31][32][33][34][35] that is most often associated with the word "ghāla" (гIала) – meaning "tower" or "fortress" and the plural form of the suffix of person – "gha" (гIа), thus, translated as "people/inhabitants of towers", though according to some researchers the ethnonym has a more ancient origin.[36] Some scholars associate it with the ancient Gargareans[37][38][39][40] and Gelaï[41][42][43][44][45] mentioned in the 1st century in the work of the ancient historian and geographer Strabo. In Georgian sources, in the form of Gligvi, modern researchers mention them living in the Darial Gorge at the time of the deployment of Mirian I's forces into the Darial Pass in the 1st century.[46] They are also mentioned in the 18th century edition of Georgian Chronicles during the reign of Kvirike III.[47][48] In Russian sources, "Ghalghaï" first becomes known in the second half of the 16th century, in the form of "Kolkans"/"Kalkans", "Kolki"/"Kalki", "Kalkan people".[49][50][51][52] The famous Georgian historian and linguist Ivane Javakhishvili proposed to use Ghalghaï (Georgian: Ghilghuri or Ghlighvi)[53] as a general name or classification for the Ingush, Chechen and Bats languages:

"Chachnuri" (Chechen) – i.e. "Nakhchouri" (Nakhchoy), "Ingushuri" (Ingush) – i.e. "Kisturi" (Kist) in the North Caucasus, and "Tsovuri" (Tsova) – i.e. "Batsburi" (Batsbi) in Georgia, in the Tushin community, constitute another separate group, which currently does not have its own common distinct name. In ancient times, Greek and Roman geographers called the native inhabitants of the middle and eastern parts of the North Caucasus – "Geli" and "Legi". The name Geli (Gelae) is the equivalent of the modern "Ghalgha", as pronounced in their own language and in the Tushin language; and the equivalent of Legi is the Georgian "Lekebi" (Leks, Avars). In Georgian, the first corresponds to "Ghilghvi" (singular) and "Ghilghvelebi" (plural), which are often found in old Tushin folk poems. And in other regions of Georgia, it is customary to designate them as "Ghlighvi". Since there is no common name for the above three languages, such a name is necessary, therefore, instead of an artificially invented name, it is better to use the (traditional) name that existed in antiquity. It is with this in mind that I choose to present this group of languages – Chachnuri (Chechen), Kisturi (Ingush) and Tsovuri (Tsova, i.e. Batsbi) — under the general name "Ghilghuri" (Ghalghaï)

— I. Javakhishvili, "The initial structure and relationship of the Georgian and Caucasian languages." Tbilisi, 1937. / p. 97[54]

History edit

9th–12th centuries
An association of clans called Durdzuks (Durdzuki) is mentioned by the Persian writers Ibn al-Faqih and al-Baladzori in the 9th to 10th centuries, stating "the construction of Chosroes Anushirvanom (VI) in Durzukia 12 gates and stone fortifications".[55]
1239
Destruction of the Alania capital of Maghas (both names known solely from Muslim Arabs) and Alan confederacy of the Northern Caucasian highlanders, nations, and tribes by Batu Khan (a Mongol leader and a grandson of Genghis Khan). "Maghas was destroyed in the beginning of 1239 by the hordes of Batu Khan. Historically, Maghas was located at approximately the same place on which the new capital of Ingushetia is now built."[56] However, there are many other theories as to where Maghas was originally located, such as in Chechnya, Kabardino-Balkaria or North-Ossetia.
13th–14th centuries
Independence wars against Tatar-Mongol hordes and the army of Tamerlane.
14th–16th centuries
The State of Simsir was a union of Vainakh teips. They started a national struggle of liberation from the Golden Horde.[57] After the Mongol invasion, Islam started its spread in the region.[58] The spread of Islam seems to have started in the lowland part of the Vainakh states at this time, associated with the advent of the Arabic language and Arabic writing. Inscriptions on monuments from this time, preserved in some Vainakh villages, also testify to this.[59]
17th century – present
Ongoing struggle over the independence of Chechnya; Ingush remain less openly rebellious, but still have a particularly problematic conflict with the Ossetes; Batsbi and Kists are considered Georgians and are part of Georgia (living mainly in the Tusheti region).
1829–1859
Caucasian Imamate
1917–1922
Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus
1919–1920
North Caucasian Emirate
1921-1924
Mountain Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of the Russian SFSR

Social structure edit

 
Necropolis in Itum Kale (Chechnya), and tower of Tsoi-Pheda protecting the peace of the dead

Traditionally, Nakh peoples were known as a society with a highly developed and complex clan system. Individuals are united in family groups called "Tsa" – house. Several Tsa's are part of the "Gar" -branch or "Nekh"-road, a group of Gar's is in turn called a teip, a unit of tribal organization of Vainakh people. Teip has its own Council of Elders and unites people from the political, economic and military sides. Teips leave all cases to the democratically elected representatives of houses i.e. "Tsa". The number of participants of Teipan-Kheli depends on the number of houses.

Some believe that most teips made unions called shahars and tukkhums, a military-economic or military-political union of teips. However, this has been heavily disputed by several historians and ethnographers, including Dalgat who claims that most Chechens never used tukkhums. He also claims that they were only used by some societies in the lowlands.[60]

The national scale issues were addressed through Mehk-Khel, the People's Council. Representatives of the Council were elected by each Teip Council and had an enormous influence on the destiny of the people. They could start a war or prohibit and prevent any teip from starting one. Mehk-Khel could gather in different places at different times. It used to gather in Terloy-Mokhk and Akkhi-Mokhk's Galain-Chozh region. A gigantic Mehk-Kheli stone still stands in Galain-Chozh, around which Mehk-Kheli members solved issues.[61]

Political structure edit

 
Sharoy village

Chechen-Ingush society has always been egalitarian, unstratified, and classless. Traditionally, there was no formal political organization and no political or economic ranking.[62] Many observers, including famous Russians such as Leo Tolstoy, have been very impressed by the democratic nature of the indigenous Chechen governments prior to Russian conquest. According to the Western Ichkerophile Tony Wood, the Vainakh peoples, in particular the Chechens (as the Ingush and the Batsbi have fallen under foreign domination much more frequently and as a result, the indigenous system and democratic values are less deeply ingrained), could be described as one of the few nations in the world with an indigenous system highly resemblant of democracy[63] (others cited are often Scots, Albanians and Basques; notably, all three, much like the Vainakh peoples, are mountain dwelling peoples with a clan-based social organization and a strong attachment to the concept of freedom). In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, a couple of Circassian tribes overthrew their traditional aristocracy and established a democratic, egalitarian society, with some adoptions from the Nakh system. This advance, which may have spread eventually to all of the Circassian tribes, was halted by their political state being annihilated by Russian conquest, a fate later shared by the rest of the Caucasus.

It is notable that the Chechen and Ingush systems, as well as the system later adopted from them by some Eastern Circassian tribes, resembles the typical Western democratic republic. It has a central government with a legislative body (the Mehk-Khel), a body resemblant of an executive branch (the Mehk-Khetasho) as well as a judicial branch (the other councils). The adat and other bodies have served as the constitution. The members of all three of the main national councils of the nation were elected, producing an indigenous democracy of the Nakh peoples.[64]

During the Soviet Union period, as well as during the Ramzan Kadyrov's regime, the Teip-Council system was strongly criticized by the federal and local administration installed in Chechnya and Ingushetia, who viewed it as a destabilizing force and an obstacle to maintaining order. They said that such a system was illustrative of the anarchic nature of the Caucasian ethos.[65]

The democratic and egalitarian nature, the values of freedom and equality of Chechen society have been cited as factors contributing to their resistance to Russian rule (in addition, there was no elite to be coopted by Tsarist authorities, as Wood notes).[66][67][68][69]

Tower architecture edit

 
Ruins of the medieval settlement Erzi (Ingushetia)
 
Chechen military tower near settlement Chanta

A characteristic feature of Vainakh architecture in the Middle Ages, rarely seen outside Chechnya and Ingushetia, was the Vainakh tower. This was a kind of multi-floor structure that was used for dwelling or defense (or both). Nakh tower architecture and construction techniques reached their peak from the 15th to 17th centuries.[61]

Residential towers had two or three floors, supported by a central pillar of stone blocks, and were topped with flat shale roofing. These towers have been compared in character to the prehistoric mountain settlements dating to 8000 BC.

Military ("combat") towers were 25 meters high or more,[61] with four of five floors and a square base approximately six meters wide. Access to the second floor was through a ladder. The defenders fired at the enemy through loopholes. The top of the tower had mashikul – overhanging small balconies without a floor. These towers were usually crowned with pyramid-shaped roofing built in steps and topped with a sharpened capstone.

Buildings combining the functions of residential and military towers were intermediate in size between the two types, and had both loop-holes and mashikuls. Nakh towers used to be sparingly decorated with religious or symbolic petrographs, such as solar signs or depictions of the author's hands, animals, etc. Military towers often bore a Golgotha cross.

Traditional economy edit

Agricultural structures edit

 
Ruins of ancient Ingush settlement, and agricultural terraces behind.

Lack of arable land in sufficient quantities in the mountainous areas forced Vainakhs to use their territory of residence as efficiently as possible. They leveled the steep slopes, organized terraces suitable for agriculture. On the barren rocky slopes of rocks, which are unsuitable for agriculture, Vainakhs hew foundations for terraces. On carts harnessed donkeys and oxen, they brought black soil of the lowlands, and filled artificial terraces with it.[70] For maximum harvest was organized by the entire irrigation system, which consisted of a small artificial stream canals connected with the mountain rivers, these canals were called Taatol, they also built a small stone canals called Epala, and quite small wooden troughs Aparri. Some scholars notably I. Diakonov and S. Starostin proposed that Epala and Aparri may correspond to Urartian irrigation canal name "pili" and Hurrian "pilli/a".[71] Some irrigation structures were built also on lowlands but they were less complicated.

Vehicles edit

Carts and carriages made by Vainakh masters were highly valued in the region and beyond. Products of Vainakh masters brought power not only to the Caucasian peoples, but also by such excess power to the established industry of Russia. To support non-competitive domestic producers, Russia overlaid Vainakh manufacturers with large fees. At this complaining Terek Cossacks in their letters to Russian Government, despite the fact that they are a natural enemy of the tree.[72] In 1722 the Russian Army bought 616 vehicles for 1308 rubles, at a time when the annual salary of the governor of the three villages was only 50 rubles.[73][74]

Carpet weaving edit

 
Nakh traditional feasting carpet: Isting/Istang

Since ancient times Ingush and Chechens have been producing thin felt carpets called Isting (Ingush) or Istang (Chechen).[75][76][77] Ingush and Chechen rugs are distinguished by a peculiar pattern and high quality. Jacob Reineggs, who visited the region in the 18th century, noticed that Chechen and Ingush women skillfully manufactured carpets and fringes.[78] Vainakh carpets were divided among themselves into different groups dependent on patterns:

  • Сarpet with colorful ornaments (Chechen: Khorza istang), (Ingush: Khoza isting).
  • Rug with fringe (Chechen: Khinja yolu istang), (Ingush: Chachakh isting).
  • Plain rug, without any decorations or ornaments.
  • Thick floor rugs (Chechen: Kuuz), (Ingush: Kuvz)
  • Expensive wall carpet (Chechen: Pals)

Religion edit

 
Tkhaba-Yerdy Church in Ingushetia.

During the Middle Ages, Vainakh society felt a strong Byzantine influence that led to the adoption of Eastern Orthodox Christianity in some parts of the country (particularly the mountainous South). However, Christianity did not last long. After the devastation of the country by Tamerlane, Christianity was extinguished (due to the temporary loss of contacts between Georgia and Nakh Christians) and gradually the Chechens and Ingush returned to their native, pagan beliefs (while the Bats were permanently Christianized). Islam began to spread on Nakh peoples lands from 16th and 17th centuries.

Vainakhs are predominantly Muslim of the Shafi`i school of thought of Sunni Islam.[79] The majority of Chechens (approx. 2 million) and Ingush (approx. 1 million people)[80] are Muslim of the Shafi`i school. Kists (about 15,400 people) are mainly Sunni Muslims with a Georgian Orthodox minority, while Bats (approx. 3,000 people) are Christian (Georgian Orthodox).[79]

By rite, most Chechens are Qadiris, with a considerable Naqshbandi minority. There is also a tiny Salafi minority (Sunni sect).[81] The two main groups (Salafism is more of a modern introduction to the region, and is still considered to be completely foreign) have often had divergent responses to events (for example, the Qadiri authorities initially backing the Bolsheviks who promised to grant freedom to the Chechens from Russia; while the Naqshbandis were more sceptical of the Bolsheviks' sincerity).

Burial vaults or crypts remained from the pagan period in the history of Vainakhs, before some of them converted to Islam in the 16th century (Islam has spread throughout the entire region only in the 17th century). They were built either a bit deepening into the ground or half underground and on the surface. The latter formed whole "towns of the dead" on the outskirts of the villages and reminded sanctuaries from the outside, with a dummy vaults constructed of overlapping stones. The deceased were placed on the special shelves in the crypts, in clothes and decorations and arms.

The general Islamic rituals established burials with the further penetration of Islam inside the mountainous regions of Chechnya and Ingushetia. Stone steles, churts, inscribed with prayers and epitaphs, began to be erected at the graves and more prosperous mountaineers were honoured with mausoleums after death. The Borgha-Kash Mausoleum dating to the very beginning of the 15th century and built for a Noghai prince is a good example of this.

Legends and mythology edit

Only a few fragments of Vainakh mythology have survived to modern times. These fragments consist of the names of deities personifying elements of animist ideas, the Nart sagas, cosmogonic tradition, remnants of stock-breeding and landtilling, totemic beliefs, and folk calendar.[82]

The greatest samples of Nakh mythology are the legends of Pkharmat, Lake Galanchozh, the epic war of Pkhagalberi (hare riders) dwarves against the Narts, Lake Kezenoyam, and myths about how sun, moon and stars appeared.[83]

The Nakh myth recounts the tale of the legendary figure Pkharmat, who was purportedly shackled atop Mount Kazbek by God Sela as punishment for his audacious theft of heavenly fire. This narrative bears notable similarities to the Greek myth of Prometheus and the Georgian myth of Amirani. The legendary war of Pkhalberi (hare riders) dwarves against the Narts can be compared to the Greek myth of "Cranes and Pygmies war".[84] The Golden Fleece myth appears to be intricately intertwined with the Nakh 11-year calendar tradition. According to this myth, a ram's skin was ceremonially placed within an oak frame known as "Jaar" for a duration of 11 years, eventually yielding the revered Golden Fleece known as "Dasho Ertal."[85]

Legend of Kouzan-Am Lake edit

 
Lake Kezenoyam

This legend has explicit parallels with Biblical Sodom and Gomorrah, Grecian Baucis and Philemon, and the Islamic Lot. It relates that there once stood a very rich town at the place where now there is only a lake. Despite their great wealth, the people of this town were afflicted with insatiable greed and covetousness. Thus it came to pass that the supreme god Dela sent his representatives in the guise of beggars, to test them. They begged the wealthy citizens to give them food, but were driven away with only blows and curses in return. Only one poor family in the village shared their food with them, keeping only a morsel of burnt bread for themselves, while giving an unburnt loaf of fine white bread to their guests. On leaving the house, the grateful strangers told the family that after some time had passed, water would begin to form puddles outside their front door, and that when this happened they should gather up only the barest of necessities, leave their home, and go to the mountains. The poor family heeded this advice, but, before departing for higher ground, warned the rich of the town of the impending disaster, and begged them to follow them, but, such was the avarice of the rich folk, that they would not abandon their treasures – not even to save themselves from a watery grave. That evening, the family watched from the mountains as a terrible catastrophe unfolded: they saw the water cover their house and with it the greedy folk who had stayed behind. To commemorate the terrible flood, the Vainakhs named the newly-formed lake Kouzan-am/Kezenoyam 'lake of sorrow and cruelty'.

Interestingly, the tradition of an ancient settlement associated with the lake is borne out by the archeological record for the area: traces of human habitation dating back as far as 40,000 BC have been found near Kouzan-am. Cave paintings, artifacts, and other archaeological evidence bear witness to continuous habitation for some 8,000 years.[86] People living in these settlements used tools, fire, and clothing made of animal skins.[86]

Legend of Galain-Am Lake edit

 
Galain-Am Lake

Legend has it that two women once decided to wash their laundry in the purest water to be found near their village, and that this water proved to be that of the sacred Lake Galain-am, abode of Tusholi, daughter of the Vainakh supreme deity Dela. The goddess, outraged at such sacrilege, punished the offenders by turning them into two stones. This, however, did not solve the problem of the ritually impure lake and the enraged goddess could no longer bear to dwell in its sullied waters. Emerging from them, she assumed the form of a supernatural bull, and began systematically to destroy the villages that dotted the hillside. This destruction continued until, at last, the bull was tamed in the aul of Ame in the area named Galain-Chazh (after the Galay-teip, a clan later deported en masse to Kazakhstan in 1944). The inhabitants of Galain-Chazh harnessed the energies of the newly-tamed animal, availing themselves of its mighty strength to plough their fields; but the following Spring torrential rain began to fall upon the fields which the sacred animal had ploughed. This pelting rain continued to flood the fields until at last they disappeared beneath the waters of a new lake, into which Tusholi gratefully disappeared, rejoicing in the purity of her newly-formed abode.

Cosmology and creation edit

In ancient Nakh cosmology, the universe was created by the supreme god Dela. Earth, created in three years, was three times larger than the heavens and was propped up on gigantic bull horns. The realm of the Vainakh Gods lay above the clouds. Ishtar-Deela was the ruler of the subterranean world, Deeli-Malkhi. Deeli-Malkhi was larger than the human realm and took seven years to create. Nakhs believed that when the sun sets in the west it goes to the netherworld and rises out of it in the east. Deeli-Malkhi was not an evil realm of the dead or undead, but not far removed in morality from the upper world – even superior to it in some respects – most notably in its social structures. Unlike in certain other religions, there was no judgment in the afterlife. Dela-Malkh was the sun god playing a central role in religious celebrations. On December 25, Nakhs celebrated the Sun Festival in honour of the Sun God's birthday.[86]

The names of stars and constellations were also connected to myths:

  • Milky Way as the route of scattered straw (Chechen: Ča Taqina Tača)
  • Great Bear as the seven brothers’ seven stars (Chechen: Vorx Vešin Vorx Seda) meets 7 sons of the god of the universe Tq'a. In the Ingush version of the legend Pkharmat, seven sons of Tq'a were punished by his wife Khimekhninen for help Magal, stealing fire from Tq'a. She lifted them up into the air, far from land that they have become the seven stars.
  • Gemini (Chechen: Kovreģina Seda)
  • Sirius, Betelgeuse and Procyon as Tripodstar (Chechen: Qokogseda)
  • Orion as Evening star (Chechen: Märkaj Seda)
  • Capricornus as Roofing towers (Chechen: Neģara Bjovnaš)
  • Venus depending on daytime as sunset star (Chechen: Sadov Seda) and sunrise star (Chechen: Saxül Seda). The name of the planet is Dilbat

Genetics edit

A 2011 study by Oleg Balanovsky and a number of other geneticists showed that the Y-DNA haplogroup J2a4b* (a subclade of J2, located mainly in the Middle East, Caucasus and Mediterranean) was highly associated with Nakh peoples.[87] J2a4b* accounted for the majority of the Y-chromosomes of Ingush and Chechen men, with the Ingush having a much higher percentage, 87.4%, than Chechens, who had 51–58% depending on region (the lowest being in Malgobek, the highest in Dagestan and Achkhoy-Martan). In their paper, Balanovsky et al. speculated that the differences between fraternal Caucasian populations may have arisen due to genetic drift, which would have had a greater effect among the Ingush than the Chechens due to their smaller population.[87] The Chechens and the Ingush have the highest frequencies of J2a4b* yet reported (other relatively high frequencies, between 10 and 20 percent, are found in the Mediterranean and Georgia).

Hypotheses of origins edit

The Vainakh have been referred to by various names, including Durdzuks in medieval Arab, Georgian and Armenian ethnography.

Historical linguists, including Johanna Nichols, have connected ancestral Nakh languages and their distant relatives to a Neolithic migration from the Fertile Crescent.[88][89]

Another view, not necessarily contradicting the previous one, posits a migration of Nakh into their present location in the North Caucasus during the classical era, following the collapse of Urartu.[citation needed]

Igor Diakonoff and Sergei Starostin have suggested that Nakh is distantly related to Hurro-Urartian, which they included as a branch of the Northeastern Caucasian language family (which were dubbed Alarodian languages by Diakonoff).[90][91][92] Several studies argue that the connection is probable.[93][94] Other scholars, however, doubt that the language families are related,[95][96] or believe that, while a connection is possible, the evidence is far from conclusive.[97][98] Various interpretations of the Nakh-Urartian relationship exist: another, held by Kassian (2011), is that Urartian and Nakh's common vocabulary instead reflects a history of intense borrowing from Urartian into Nakh.[99]

According to Amjad Jaimoukha, the mythological Gargareans, a group who migrated from eastern Asia Minor to the North Caucasus mentioned by Greek writer Strabo,[100] are connected to the Nakh root gergara, meaning "kindred" in proto-Nakh.[101] However, Jaimoukha's theory is unlikely as Strabo and other ancient Greek writers considered the Gargareans to be Greeks.[102]

List of Nakh peoples edit

Contemporary edit

 
Group portrait of Chechen men and young woman in traditional costumes, 19th century
 
Ingush from the village of Gvileti
 
Ingush woman in traditional costume, 1881
  • Vainakh (Chechen-Ingush dialect continuum)
  • The Bats people or the Batsbi are a small Nakh-speaking community in Georgia who are also known as the Ts'ova-Tush after the Ts’ova Gorge in the historic Georgian province of Tusheti (known to them as "Tsovata"), where they are believed to have settled after migrating from the North Caucasus in the 16th century. Their population is estimated to be ca. 3000. Unlike the other Nakh peoples the Bats people are overwhelmingly Orthodox Christians.

Historical edit

The following is a list of historical or prehistoric peoples who have been proposed as speakers of Nakh languages.

Sophene

According to Georgian scholars I. A. Djavashvili and Giorgi Melikishvili the Urartuan state of Supani was occupied by the ancient Nakh tribe Tzov, the state of which is called Tsobena in ancient Georgian historiography.[107][108][109] Sophene was part of the kingdom of Urartu from the 8th to 7th centuries BCE. After uniting the region with his kingdom in the early 8th century BCE, king Argishtis I of Urartu resettled many of its inhabitants to his newly built city of Erebuni. However, Djavashvili's and Melikishvili's theory is not widely accepted.

Gargareans

Jaimoukha argued that the Vainakhs are descended from the Gargarei, a mythological tribe who are mentioned in the Geographica of Strabo (1st century BCE)[110] and in Naturalis Historia of Pliny the Elder (1st century CE).[111] Strabo wrote that "... the Amazons live close to Gargarei, on the northern foothills of the Caucasus mountains". Gaius Plinius Secundus also localizes Gargarei as living north of the Caucasus, but calls them Gegar.[112] Some scholars (P. K. Uslar, K. Miller, N. F. Yakovleff, E. I. Krupnoff, L. A. Elnickiy, I. M. Diakonoff, V. N. Gamrekeli) supported the proposal that Gargarei is an earlier form of the Vainakh ethnonym. Jaimoukha notes that "Gargarean" is one of many Nakh root words - gergara, meaning, in fact, "kindred" in proto-Nakh.[113] If this is the case, it would make Gargarei virtually equivalent to the Georgian term Dzurdzuk (referring to the lake Durdukka in the South Caucasus, where they are thought to have migrated from, as noted by Strabo, before intermixing with the local population) which they applied to a Nakh people who had migrated north across the mountains to settle in modern Chechnya and Ingushetia.

Despite Jaimoukha's claims, Strabo suggests that the Gargareans were Aeolian Greeks and locates their homeland Gargara in Troad, in the far west of modern Turkey.[114]

Tsanars and Tzanaria

The Tsanars were a people of East-Central Northern Georgia, living in an area around modern Khevi. Tsanaria was their state, and it distinguished itself by the decisive role it and its people played in fending off the Arab invasion of Georgia. Their language is thought by many historians (including Vladimir Minorsky and Amjad Jaimoukha) to be Nakh, based on placenames, geographic location, and other such evidence.[115] However, there is opposition to the theory that theirs was a Nakh language. Others claim they spoke a Sarmatian language like Ossetic. The Tsanars, too, eventually were assimilated within Georgiandom.

Ghlighvi

Ghlighvi has been a historical name for the Ingush, deriving from their ethnonym Ghalghaï. It was mentioned by Vakhushti of Kartli in 1745, a Georgian noble.[116]

Dvals and Dvaleti

The Dvals were a historic people living in modern-day South Ossetia and some nearby regions, as well as the southern parts of North Ossetia (South and West of the Gligvs, South and East of the Malkh). They integrated themselves into the Georgian kingdom and produced a number of fine Georgian calligraphers and historians. They also produced an Orthodox saint: Saint Nicholas of Dvaleti. The language of the Dvals is thought to be Nakh by many historians,[115][117][118][119][120][121] though there is a rival camp which argues for its status as a close relative of Ossetic.[121] Another theory posits that the Dvals were of Karvelian (Georgian) origin.[122] Various evidence given to support the Nakh theory (Different scholars use different arguments.) includes the presence of Nakh placenames in former Dval territory,[121] taken as evidence of Nakh–Svan contact, which probably would have indicated the Nakh nature of the Dvals or of people there before them,[115] and the presence of a foreign-origin Dval clan among the Chechens.[120] The Dvals were assimilated by the Georgians and the Ossetians. It is thought that Dval did not become fully extinct until the 18th century, making the Dvals the most recent Nakh people known to have disappeared.

Malkhs

The Malkhs were a Nakh people,[115] who were deemed to be the westernmost Nakh people, and made an alliance with the Greek Bosporus Kingdom.

Durdzuks and Durdzuketi

Durdzuk is a medieval ethnonym used mainly in Georgian, Armenian and Arabic sources in the 9th-18th centuries, in which most researchers identify the Durdzuks as the ancestors of modern Chechens and Ingush. Some researchers localize the Durdzuks in the mountainous Ingushetia and identify them with the Ingush,[123][124][125][126] others believe that during the Middle Ages the population of Chechnya was known to the South Caucasian peoples under the name "Durdzuks" (or "Dzurdzuks"),[127] and the population of Ingushetia under the names "Gligvi"[128][129][130] The Georgian historian V. N. Gamrekeli claims that "Durdzuk" is definitely and, with all its references, uniformly localized, between Didoet-Dagestan in the east and the gorge of the Terek River, in the west.[131]

The Durdzuks constructed numerous kingdoms, notably Durdzuketi; and they were noted for their exceptionally fierce devotion to freedom and their ability to resist invaders, ranging from the Arabs to the Scythians to Turkic peoples to the Mongolian invaders. They seemed also to have been employed as mercenaries by various parties. They had a written language using Georgian script (It is not known whether they spoke that language however.), but most of these writings have been lost, with only a few pieces surviving. After the 14th-century Second Mongol Invasion of Durdzuketi and the destruction wrought by the two invasions (including, as Amjad Jaimoukha notes, the destruction of their memory of their past[115]), they radically changed their culture.

Isadiks

The Isadiks were an ancient Nakh people of the North Caucasus who were farmers.[132] They were probably undone by Scythian invaders. A remnant of them may have been absorbed by the Vainakh, as their name can now be seen in the Chechen teip Sadoy.

Khamekits

The Khamekits were another ancient Nakh people of the North Caucasus who were farmers.[133] They were also probably undone by Scythian invaders. A remnant of them may have been absorbed by the Vainakh, as their name may now be reflected in the Ingush teip Khamki.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Malsagov, Zaurbek (1928). КУЛЬТУРНАЯ РАБОТА В ЧЕЧНЕ И ИНГУШИИ В СВЯЗИ С УНИФИКАЦИЕЙ АЛФАВИТОВ. Vladikavkaz: Serdalo. pp. 3–11.
  2. ^ Schnirelmann, Victor (2016). Be Alans. Intellectuals and Politics in the North Caucasus in the 20th Century. -M.: New literary review. p. 279. Но после их объединения в 1934 г. в единую Чечено-Ингушскую автономную область (Чечено-Ингушская АССР с 1936 г.) власти всеми силами пытались обеспечить слияние чеченцев и ингушей в единый народ, для которого было создано новое название «вейнахи/вайнахи». В 1960-1980-х гг. эта идентичность активно внедрялась в сознание чеченцев и ингушей и постепенно приобретала все большую популярность.
  3. ^ Гюльденштедт 2002, p. 238.
  4. ^ Klaproth, Julius Heinrich (1812). Reise in den Kaukasus und nach Georgien unter nommen in den Jahren 1807 and 1808 [Journeys to the Caucasus and Georgia made in 1807 and 1808] (in German). Halle und Berlin: In den Buchhandlungen des Hallischen Waisenhauses. p. 239.
  5. ^ Берже, А.П (1859). Чечня и Чеченцы. Тифлис. pp. 65–66. Вот исчисление всех племен, на которые принято делить Чеченцев. В строгом же смысле деление это не имеет основания. Самим Чеченцам оно совершенно неизвестно. Они сами себя называют Нахче, т.е. "народ" и это относится до всего народа, говорящего на Чеченском языке и его наречиях. Упомянутые же названия им были даны или от аулов, как Цори, Галгай, Шатой и др., или от рек и гор, как Мичиковцы и Качкалыки. Весьма вероятно, что рано или поздно все или большая часть приведенных нами имен исчезнут и Чеченцы удержат за собою одно общее наименование.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ Услар, П.К. (1888). Этнография Кавказа. Языкознание. Ч. II. Чеченский язык. Тифлис. Предлагаемая азбука составлена для языка народа, который сам себя назвал "нахчуй" или "нахчий" (в единственном числе – "нахчуо"), а у нас называемо чеченцами или кистинцами (последнее название грузинское). Язык нахчуй дробится на множество наречий, которые возникли частью по уединенному положению некоторых обществ, частью под влиянием языков соседних народов, осетин, и в особенности кумыков» [...] язык нахчуй демонстрирует «замечательное характерное единство» за исключением диалекта джераховцев, которые говорят весьма измененным наречием.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ Potto, Vasily (1887). Кавказская война в отдельных очерках, эпизодах, легендах и биографиях. pp. 63–64. Чеченцев обыкновенно делят на множество групп, или обществ, давая им имя от рек и гор, на которых они обитали, или от значительных аулов, обнаруживающих влияние на другие. Таковы алдинцы, атагинцы, назрановцы, карабулаки, джерахи, галгаевцы, мичиковцы, качкалыковцы, ичкеринцы, ауховцы и прочие, и прочие. Но это разделение чеченского народа на множество отдельных родов сделано, однако же, русскими и, в строгом смысле, имеет значение только для них же. Местным жителям оно совершенно неизвестно. Чеченцы сами себя называют нахче, то есть народ, и название это относится одинаково ко всем племенам и поколениям, говорящим на чеченском языке и его наречиях.
  8. ^ Вейденбаум, Е. Г. (1888). Путеводитель по Кавказу. Тифлис. p. 70. В старинных русских дипломатических актах, относящихся к 16−17 столетиям, упоминается в горах по Тереку народ мичкизы. Впоследствии, когда русские войска побывали за Тереком, появились названия чеченцев и кистов, наконец, при более близком знакомстве с горцами восточной половины северного склона Кавказского хребта, мы узнали о существовании галгаев, глигвов, ингушей, карабулаков, назрановцев, ичкеринцев, ауховцев и много других народов. После лингвистических исследований оказалось, что все они составляют одно племя или народ, который сам себя называет нахчий, у нас же известен теперь под именем чеченцев. Bcе же приведенные выше названия означают или родовые подразделения этого народа, или заимствованы нами от названий селений (напр. назрановцы и чеченцы) и местностей (ауховцы, ичкеринцы), или же, наконец, взяты у соседних народов{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ Ган, К. Ф. (1897). Путешествие в страну пшавов, хевсур, кистин и ингушей. Кавказский вестник, № 6. В Чечне живут чеченцы, число которых по переписи 1897 года простирается до 283 421 лиц обоего пола. Имя свое получили они от разрушенного большого аула Чечень, расположенного в нижнем течении Аргуна. Русские делили их на 20 различных племен, как-то: назрановцев, кистин, галгаев, цоринов, шатойцев, шароецев, чабирлойцев, ичкеринцев, качкаликов и т. д. Народ сам не знает этих названий. Они сами называют себя "нахче", т.е. народ»
  10. ^ Дубровин, Н. Ф. (1871). История войны и владычества русских на Кавказе. Том I, Книга 1. pp. 368–369.
  11. ^ Лаудаев, Умалат (1872). Сборник сведений о кавказских горцах Вып. VI. Тифлис.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  12. ^ Dalgat, Bashir (1892). Родовой быт и обычное право чеченцев и ингушей / Подготовка издания и предисловие. Институт мировой литературы имени А. М. Горького. p. 382. ISBN 978-5-9208-0307-8.
  13. ^ a b ""Вайнахи и аланы" Руслан Арсанукаев о происхождении названий и самоназваний Чеченцев и Ингушей".
  14. ^ "Предание о происхождении чеченцев".
  15. ^ Ахмад Сулейманов. «Топонимия Чечено-Ингушетии.» Грозный, 1978.
  16. ^ Вагапов, Арби (2011). Этимологический словарь чеченского языка. ISBN 978-9941-10-439-8.
  17. ^ Алироев, И. Ю. Язык, история и культура вайнахов.
  18. ^ Шавлаева, Тамара (2009). Из истории развития шерстяного промысла чеченцев в XIX – начале XX в.
  19. ^ Берже, А.П (1859). Чечня и Чеченцы. Тифлис. p. 134.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  20. ^ Dzhanashvili, Мосэ (1897). Известия груз. летописей и историков о Сев. Кавказе и России. Tbilisi.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  21. ^ Баширов, Саламбек (2018). Этническая история Терско-Сулакского междуречья (на примере семьи Башир-шейха Аксайского). Grozny.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  22. ^ Pallas, Peter Simon (1802). Travels through the southern provinces of the Russian Empire, in the years 1793 and 1794. London.
  23. ^ Klaproth, Julius (1811). Travels in the Caucasus and Georgia, performed in the years 1807 and 1808, by command of the Russian government.
  24. ^ Bronevsky, Semyon (1823). News in the Caucasus. Tbilisi.
  25. ^ Salgiriev, A.M (2019). "Chronicle of the exodus of Chechens from Nakhchuvan (translation and commentary)". Tallam. 2: 33–35.
  26. ^ Berge, Adolph (1859). Chechnya and Chechens. Tbilisi.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  27. ^ Dosov, Kedi (1862). Nakhchoyn Juz.
  28. ^ Н.Ф, Дубровин (1871). История войны и владычества русских на Кавказе. Том I, Книга 1. СПб. pp. 368–369.
  29. ^ Laudaev, Umalat (1872). Чеченское племя. Tbilisi: Сборник сведений о кавказских горцах.
  30. ^ Patkanian, Kerovbe (1877). Armenian geography of the 7th century AD.
  31. ^ Гюльденштедт 2002, p. 37.
  32. ^ Pallas 1811, p. 176.
  33. ^ Klaproth 1814, pp. 5, 9, 57.
  34. ^ Броневский 1823, p. 153:

    "Кисты сами себя называютъ поперемѣнно Кисты, Галга, Ингуши, и одно названiе вмѣсто другаго употребляютъ..."

  35. ^ Робакидзе 1968, pp. 15, 27, 204.
  36. ^ Крупнов 1971, p. 34.
  37. ^ Крупнов 1971, p. 26.
  38. ^ Латышев 1947, pp. 222, 281.
  39. ^ Anchabadze 2009, p. 33.
  40. ^ Mayor 2016, p. 361.
  41. ^ Яновский 1846, p. 201.
  42. ^ Кох 1842, p. 489.
  43. ^ Klaproth 1814, p. 643.
  44. ^ Бутков 1869, p. 10.
  45. ^ Wahl 1875, p. 239.
  46. ^ Бердзенешвили et al. 1962, p. 25.
  47. ^ Джанашвили 1897, p. 31.
  48. ^ Волкова 1973, p. 158.
  49. ^ Кушева 1963, p. 65.
  50. ^ Волкова 1973, pp. 154–155.
  51. ^ Белокуров 1889, pp. 222, 456.
  52. ^ Богуславский, Владимир Вольфович (2004). Славянская энциклопедия XVII век (in Russian). ОЛМА Медиа Групп. p. 538. ISBN 9785224036592.
  53. ^ Чикобава 2010, pp. 30–31.
  54. ^ ჯავახიშვილი 1937, p. 97: "ჩაჩნური, ანუ ნახჭოური, ინგუშური, ანუ ქისტური ჩრდილოეთს კავკასიაში და წოვური, ანუ ბაცბური საქართველოში, თუშეთის თეშში. ენათა შეორე ცალკეულ ჯგუფს შეადგენენ, რომელსაც ამჟამად აგრეთვე თავისი ცალკეული ზოგადი სახელი არ მოეპოება. ძველად, ბერძენთა და რომალითა იეოგრაფები იმიერკავკასიის შუა და აღმოსავლეთის ნაწილის მიწა-წყალზე მობინადრედ გელ-ებსა და ლეგ-ებს ასახელებდენ. გელ-ების სახელი უდრის იქაურსი და თუშურს თანამედროვე ღალღას, ლეგ-ებისა კი ქართულს ლეკებს პირველი სახელის ქართ. შესატყვისობა ღილღვი (მხ. რ.) და ლილივებია (მრ. რ.), რომელიც ძველს თუშურ ხალხურ ლექსებში ხშირად გვხვდება. სხვაგან და ჩვეულებრივ საქართველოში კი მათ აღსანიშნივად ღლილვია მიღებული. რაკი ზემოაღნიშნული სამი ენის ზოგადი სახელი არ არსებობს, ასეთი სახელი კი საჭიროა, ამიტომ, ხელოვნურად შეთხზულის მაგოერ, აქაც ისევ ძველად არსებული ასეთი სახელის გამოყენება სჯობია, სწორედ ამ მოსაზრებით ვხელმძღვანელობ, რომ ენათა მეორე ჯგუფის. — ჩაჩნურიიხა, ქისტურისა და წოვური ენების, — ზოგად სახელად ისევ ღილღღურის შემოღებას ვრჩეობ".
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External links edit

    nakh, peoples, group, north, caucasian, peoples, identified, their, nakh, languages, other, cultural, similarities, these, chiefly, ethnic, chechen, including, chechen, ethnos, kists, georgia, ingush, bats, peoples, north, caucasus, including, closely, related. The Nakh peoples are a group of North Caucasian peoples identified by their use of the Nakh languages and other cultural similarities These are chiefly the ethnic Chechen including the Chechen sub ethnos the Kists in Georgia Ingush and Bats peoples of the North Caucasus including closely related minor or historical groups Chechens at a wedding circa 1870 1886 Ingush highlanders early 20th century Contents 1 The ethnonyms Vainakh Nakh and Nakhchi 1 1 History 1 2 Etymology of the ethnonym Nakhchi 1 3 Historical mentions of Nakhchi 2 The ethnonym Ghalghai 3 History 4 Social structure 4 1 Political structure 5 Tower architecture 6 Traditional economy 6 1 Agricultural structures 6 2 Vehicles 6 3 Carpet weaving 7 Religion 7 1 Legends and mythology 7 1 1 Legend of Kouzan Am Lake 7 1 2 Legend of Galain Am Lake 7 1 3 Cosmology and creation 8 Genetics 9 Hypotheses of origins 10 List of Nakh peoples 10 1 Contemporary 10 2 Historical 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksThe ethnonyms Vainakh Nakh and Nakhchi edit Nakh peoples and Vainakh peoples are two terms that were coined by Soviet ethnographers such as the Russian linguist Nikolai Yakovlev ru and Ingush ethnographer Zaurbek Malsagov ru The reasoning behind the creation of these terms was to unite the closely related nations of Chechen and Ingush into one term The terms Vainakh our people and Nakh people were first used as a term to unite two peoples in 1928 1 It was subsequently popularized by other Soviet authors poets and historians such as Mamakaev and Volkova in their research According to the historian Victor Schnirelmann the terms Vainakh and Nakh were introduced more actively during the period from the 1960s through the 1980s 2 History edit The first documented collective term used to refer to the Nakh peoples in general Kists was introduced by Johann Anton Guldenstadt in the 1770s 3 Julius von Klaproth believed the term Kists only applied to the Kistin society of Ingushetia and instead used the Tatar term Mizdschegi to refer to the Nakh peoples 4 The term Nakhchiy in the form of Natschkha Nakhchui and Nacha at the end of the 18th and beginning of 19th centuries was mentioned as the name i e exonym that the Ingush gave to the Chechens and not as the self name of the Ingush Starting in the second half of the 19th century the term was used by some Russian officers historians and linguists for both the Chechen and Ingush nations and sometimes for the Batsbi notably by Peter von Uslar Today the term is in its modern lowland version of Nokhchi and is only used by Chechens and Pankisi Kists In 1859 Adolf Berge was the second one to use this term for both the Chechens and Ingush 5 The famous Russian linguist Peter von Uslar who studied the North Caucasian languages also referred to both nations in 1888 as Nakhchuy Nakhchiy 6 This classification was also used by Potto 7 Veidenbaum ru 8 Gan ru 9 Dubrovin ru 10 and many others during the 19th century According to Umalat Laudaev the first Chechen ethnographer and historian Nazranians a subgroup of Ingush used this ethnonym occasionally 11 The Shatois and Nazranians are reluctant to call themselves Nakhchoy which stems from their previous hostile attitudes towards the Chechens But with the outpouring of heartfelt feelings at meetings at a party on the way etc they always confirm their unity of tribe expressing themselves We are common brothers wai tsa vezherey detsy or We are the same Nakhchoy wai tsa nakhchoy du Umalat Laudaev Collection of information about the Caucasian highlanders Vol VI However it was mentioned by Peter Simon Pallas in the late 18th century that a clear distinction between self designation of the Ingush and Chechens had already existed There is a tribe of people differing entirely from all other inhabitants of the Caucasus in language as well as in stature and features of the countenance the Galgai or Ingush also referred to as Lamur meaning inhabitants of mountains Their nearest relatives both by consanguinity and language are the Chechens whom they call Natschkha Peter Simon Pallas Travels Through the Southern Provinces of the Russian Empire in the Years 1793 and 1794 The 19th century historian Bashir Dalgat ru published several works about Chechen and Ingush ethnography He proposed to use the term Nakhchuy for both the Chechens and Ingush 12 This however had no fruition in Caucasology mainly due to the fact that the Ingush commonly referred to themselves as Ghalghai while the Chechens called themselves Nakhchoy or Nokhchoy The oldest mention of Nakhchiy occurred in 1310 by the Georgian Patriarch Cyril Donauri who mentions the People of Nakhche among Tushetians Avars and many other Northeast Caucasian nations The term Nakhchiy has also been connected to the city Nakhchivan and the nation of Nakhchamatyan mentioned in the 7th century Armenian work Ashkharhatsuyts by many Soviet and modern historians 13 Chechen manuscripts in Arabic from the early 1820s do mention a certain Nakhchuvan near modern day Kagizman Turkey as the homeland of all Nakhchiy 14 Etymology of the ethnonym Nakhchi edit The etymology of Nakhchi is believed to have come from Nakh people chi suffix or Nakh people Chuo territory Chechen researcher Ahmad Suleymanov ru claimed that the terms Nakh and Nakhchi are not the same and have different foundations and different origins 15 Whatever the case contemporary historians and linguists agree that the ethnonym includes the term Nakh people Many historians such as Potto Berge Gan Dubrovin believed that it meant the nation 13 Linguists like Arbi Vagapov have also pointed out that similar terms are found in other Northeast Caucasian languages such as Rutul where Nukhchi translates to Tribesman 16 Chechen ethnographer Umalat Laudaev offered a different etymology for the origin of the ethnonym Nakhchi In primitive times having not yet been acquainted with arable farming for lack of bread they lowland Chechens ate a large amount of cheese boasting of their abundance in front of their compatriots who lived in the meager Argun mountains and populous Ichkeria they called themselves in Chechen Nakhchoy Cheese in Chechen is called nakhchi the plural form of the word is nakhchiy hence the popular name Nakhchoy that is people abounding with cheese It is also possible that this name was ascribed to the lowland Chechens as a mockery calling them raw foodists just as today the Nadterechny Chechens are mockingly called kaldash yuts nakh that is people who eat cottage cheese That the Chechens got the name Nakhchoy from cheese is also confirmed by the fact that the Nazrans who do not speak in the same Chechen language call cheese nakhchi and the Chechens Nakhchiy Umalat Laudaev Collection of information about the Caucasian highlanders Vol VI This version has been criticized by many authors including the Chechen linguist I Aliroev ru who believed the etymology made no sense 17 Linguists and historians such as Shavlaeva and Tesaev however believed the etymology confused Nakhch cheese with the Chechen term Nakhch processed which has the same root In their version the etymology would mean the processed ones i e the people who are accepted in society due to their qualities and lineage 18 Authors such as Berge mentioned also that the term Nakhchi could mean the people of excellence 19 Historical mentions of Nakhchi edit Historical mentions Name Author Source Date Nakhche 20 Archbishop Cyril Donauri Historical document 1310 Nakhshai 21 Sala Uzden Prince Adzhi Historical letter 1756 Natschkha 22 Peter Simon Pallas Travels through the southern provinces of the Russian Empire in the years 1793 and 1794 1793 Nakhchui 23 Julius Klaproth Description of trips to the Caucasus and Georgia in 1807 and 1808 1807 Nacha 24 Semyon Bronevsky News of the Caucasus 1823 Nakhchoy 25 Chechen Manuscript Migration from Nakhchuvan 1828 Nakhche 26 Adolf Berge Chechnya and Chechens 1859 Nakhchoy 27 Kedi Dosov Nakhchoyn Juz 1862 Nakhche 28 Nikolai Dubrovin History of war and domination of Russians in the Caucasus 1871 Nakhchoy 29 Umalat Laudaev The Chechen Tribe 1872 Nakhche 30 Kerovbe Patkanian Armenian geography of the 7th century AD 1877The ethnonym Ghalghai editMain article GhalghaiGhalghai Ingush GIalgIaj ˈʁelʁɑj is the self name of the Ingush a Caucasian people 31 32 33 34 35 that is most often associated with the word ghala gIala meaning tower or fortress and the plural form of the suffix of person gha gIa thus translated as people inhabitants of towers though according to some researchers the ethnonym has a more ancient origin 36 Some scholars associate it with the ancient Gargareans 37 38 39 40 and Gelai 41 42 43 44 45 mentioned in the 1st century in the work of the ancient historian and geographer Strabo In Georgian sources in the form of Gligvi modern researchers mention them living in the Darial Gorge at the time of the deployment of Mirian I s forces into the Darial Pass in the 1st century 46 They are also mentioned in the 18th century edition of Georgian Chronicles during the reign of Kvirike III 47 48 In Russian sources Ghalghai first becomes known in the second half of the 16th century in the form of Kolkans Kalkans Kolki Kalki Kalkan people 49 50 51 52 The famous Georgian historian and linguist Ivane Javakhishvili proposed to use Ghalghai Georgian Ghilghuri or Ghlighvi 53 as a general name or classification for the Ingush Chechen and Bats languages Chachnuri Chechen i e Nakhchouri Nakhchoy Ingushuri Ingush i e Kisturi Kist in the North Caucasus and Tsovuri Tsova i e Batsburi Batsbi in Georgia in the Tushin community constitute another separate group which currently does not have its own common distinct name In ancient times Greek and Roman geographers called the native inhabitants of the middle and eastern parts of the North Caucasus Geli and Legi The name Geli Gelae is the equivalent of the modern Ghalgha as pronounced in their own language and in the Tushin language and the equivalent of Legi is the Georgian Lekebi Leks Avars In Georgian the first corresponds to Ghilghvi singular and Ghilghvelebi plural which are often found in old Tushin folk poems And in other regions of Georgia it is customary to designate them as Ghlighvi Since there is no common name for the above three languages such a name is necessary therefore instead of an artificially invented name it is better to use the traditional name that existed in antiquity It is with this in mind that I choose to present this group of languages Chachnuri Chechen Kisturi Ingush and Tsovuri Tsova i e Batsbi under the general name Ghilghuri Ghalghai I Javakhishvili The initial structure and relationship of the Georgian and Caucasian languages Tbilisi 1937 p 97 54 History editMain articles History of Chechnya and History of Ingushetia 9th 12th centuries An association of clans called Durdzuks Durdzuki is mentioned by the Persian writers Ibn al Faqih and al Baladzori in the 9th to 10th centuries stating the construction of Chosroes Anushirvanom VI in Durzukia 12 gates and stone fortifications 55 1239 Destruction of the Alania capital of Maghas both names known solely from Muslim Arabs and Alan confederacy of the Northern Caucasian highlanders nations and tribes by Batu Khan a Mongol leader and a grandson of Genghis Khan Maghas was destroyed in the beginning of 1239 by the hordes of Batu Khan Historically Maghas was located at approximately the same place on which the new capital of Ingushetia is now built 56 However there are many other theories as to where Maghas was originally located such as in Chechnya Kabardino Balkaria or North Ossetia 13th 14th centuries Independence wars against Tatar Mongol hordes and the army of Tamerlane 14th 16th centuries The State of Simsir was a union of Vainakh teips They started a national struggle of liberation from the Golden Horde 57 After the Mongol invasion Islam started its spread in the region 58 The spread of Islam seems to have started in the lowland part of the Vainakh states at this time associated with the advent of the Arabic language and Arabic writing Inscriptions on monuments from this time preserved in some Vainakh villages also testify to this 59 17th century present Ongoing struggle over the independence of Chechnya Ingush remain less openly rebellious but still have a particularly problematic conflict with the Ossetes Batsbi and Kists are considered Georgians and are part of Georgia living mainly in the Tusheti region 1829 1859 Caucasian Imamate 1917 1922 Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus 1919 1920 North Caucasian Emirate 1921 1924 Mountain Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of the Russian SFSRSocial structure editMain articles Teip Tukkhum and Ingush societies nbsp Necropolis in Itum Kale Chechnya and tower of Tsoi Pheda protecting the peace of the dead Traditionally Nakh peoples were known as a society with a highly developed and complex clan system Individuals are united in family groups called Tsa house Several Tsa s are part of the Gar branch or Nekh road a group of Gar s is in turn called a teip a unit of tribal organization of Vainakh people Teip has its own Council of Elders and unites people from the political economic and military sides Teips leave all cases to the democratically elected representatives of houses i e Tsa The number of participants of Teipan Kheli depends on the number of houses Some believe that most teips made unions called shahars and tukkhums a military economic or military political union of teips However this has been heavily disputed by several historians and ethnographers including Dalgat who claims that most Chechens never used tukkhums He also claims that they were only used by some societies in the lowlands 60 The national scale issues were addressed through Mehk Khel the People s Council Representatives of the Council were elected by each Teip Council and had an enormous influence on the destiny of the people They could start a war or prohibit and prevent any teip from starting one Mehk Khel could gather in different places at different times It used to gather in Terloy Mokhk and Akkhi Mokhk s Galain Chozh region A gigantic Mehk Kheli stone still stands in Galain Chozh around which Mehk Kheli members solved issues 61 Political structure edit nbsp Sharoy village Chechen Ingush society has always been egalitarian unstratified and classless Traditionally there was no formal political organization and no political or economic ranking 62 Many observers including famous Russians such as Leo Tolstoy have been very impressed by the democratic nature of the indigenous Chechen governments prior to Russian conquest According to the Western Ichkerophile Tony Wood the Vainakh peoples in particular the Chechens as the Ingush and the Batsbi have fallen under foreign domination much more frequently and as a result the indigenous system and democratic values are less deeply ingrained could be described as one of the few nations in the world with an indigenous system highly resemblant of democracy 63 others cited are often Scots Albanians and Basques notably all three much like the Vainakh peoples are mountain dwelling peoples with a clan based social organization and a strong attachment to the concept of freedom In the late 18th and early 19th centuries a couple of Circassian tribes overthrew their traditional aristocracy and established a democratic egalitarian society with some adoptions from the Nakh system This advance which may have spread eventually to all of the Circassian tribes was halted by their political state being annihilated by Russian conquest a fate later shared by the rest of the Caucasus It is notable that the Chechen and Ingush systems as well as the system later adopted from them by some Eastern Circassian tribes resembles the typical Western democratic republic It has a central government with a legislative body the Mehk Khel a body resemblant of an executive branch the Mehk Khetasho as well as a judicial branch the other councils The adat and other bodies have served as the constitution The members of all three of the main national councils of the nation were elected producing an indigenous democracy of the Nakh peoples 64 During the Soviet Union period as well as during the Ramzan Kadyrov s regime the Teip Council system was strongly criticized by the federal and local administration installed in Chechnya and Ingushetia who viewed it as a destabilizing force and an obstacle to maintaining order They said that such a system was illustrative of the anarchic nature of the Caucasian ethos 65 The democratic and egalitarian nature the values of freedom and equality of Chechen society have been cited as factors contributing to their resistance to Russian rule in addition there was no elite to be coopted by Tsarist authorities as Wood notes 66 67 68 69 Tower architecture editMain article Vainakh tower architecture nbsp Ruins of the medieval settlement Erzi Ingushetia nbsp Chechen military tower near settlement Chanta A characteristic feature of Vainakh architecture in the Middle Ages rarely seen outside Chechnya and Ingushetia was the Vainakh tower This was a kind of multi floor structure that was used for dwelling or defense or both Nakh tower architecture and construction techniques reached their peak from the 15th to 17th centuries 61 Residential towers had two or three floors supported by a central pillar of stone blocks and were topped with flat shale roofing These towers have been compared in character to the prehistoric mountain settlements dating to 8000 BC Military combat towers were 25 meters high or more 61 with four of five floors and a square base approximately six meters wide Access to the second floor was through a ladder The defenders fired at the enemy through loopholes The top of the tower had mashikul overhanging small balconies without a floor These towers were usually crowned with pyramid shaped roofing built in steps and topped with a sharpened capstone Buildings combining the functions of residential and military towers were intermediate in size between the two types and had both loop holes and mashikuls Nakh towers used to be sparingly decorated with religious or symbolic petrographs such as solar signs or depictions of the author s hands animals etc Military towers often bore a Golgotha cross Traditional economy editAgricultural structures edit nbsp Ruins of ancient Ingush settlement and agricultural terraces behind Lack of arable land in sufficient quantities in the mountainous areas forced Vainakhs to use their territory of residence as efficiently as possible They leveled the steep slopes organized terraces suitable for agriculture On the barren rocky slopes of rocks which are unsuitable for agriculture Vainakhs hew foundations for terraces On carts harnessed donkeys and oxen they brought black soil of the lowlands and filled artificial terraces with it 70 For maximum harvest was organized by the entire irrigation system which consisted of a small artificial stream canals connected with the mountain rivers these canals were called Taatol they also built a small stone canals called Epala and quite small wooden troughs Aparri Some scholars notably I Diakonov and S Starostin proposed that Epala and Aparri may correspond to Urartian irrigation canal name pili and Hurrian pilli a 71 Some irrigation structures were built also on lowlands but they were less complicated Vehicles edit Carts and carriages made by Vainakh masters were highly valued in the region and beyond Products of Vainakh masters brought power not only to the Caucasian peoples but also by such excess power to the established industry of Russia To support non competitive domestic producers Russia overlaid Vainakh manufacturers with large fees At this complaining Terek Cossacks in their letters to Russian Government despite the fact that they are a natural enemy of the tree 72 In 1722 the Russian Army bought 616 vehicles for 1308 rubles at a time when the annual salary of the governor of the three villages was only 50 rubles 73 74 Carpet weaving edit nbsp Nakh traditional feasting carpet Isting Istang Since ancient times Ingush and Chechens have been producing thin felt carpets called Isting Ingush or Istang Chechen 75 76 77 Ingush and Chechen rugs are distinguished by a peculiar pattern and high quality Jacob Reineggs who visited the region in the 18th century noticed that Chechen and Ingush women skillfully manufactured carpets and fringes 78 Vainakh carpets were divided among themselves into different groups dependent on patterns Sarpet with colorful ornaments Chechen Khorza istang Ingush Khoza isting Rug with fringe Chechen Khinja yolu istang Ingush Chachakh isting Plain rug without any decorations or ornaments Thick floor rugs Chechen Kuuz Ingush Kuvz Expensive wall carpet Chechen Pals Rugs and carpets nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Religion edit nbsp Tkhaba Yerdy Church in Ingushetia During the Middle Ages Vainakh society felt a strong Byzantine influence that led to the adoption of Eastern Orthodox Christianity in some parts of the country particularly the mountainous South However Christianity did not last long After the devastation of the country by Tamerlane Christianity was extinguished due to the temporary loss of contacts between Georgia and Nakh Christians and gradually the Chechens and Ingush returned to their native pagan beliefs while the Bats were permanently Christianized Islam began to spread on Nakh peoples lands from 16th and 17th centuries Vainakhs are predominantly Muslim of the Shafi i school of thought of Sunni Islam 79 The majority of Chechens approx 2 million and Ingush approx 1 million people 80 are Muslim of the Shafi i school Kists about 15 400 people are mainly Sunni Muslims with a Georgian Orthodox minority while Bats approx 3 000 people are Christian Georgian Orthodox 79 By rite most Chechens are Qadiris with a considerable Naqshbandi minority There is also a tiny Salafi minority Sunni sect 81 The two main groups Salafism is more of a modern introduction to the region and is still considered to be completely foreign have often had divergent responses to events for example the Qadiri authorities initially backing the Bolsheviks who promised to grant freedom to the Chechens from Russia while the Naqshbandis were more sceptical of the Bolsheviks sincerity Burial vaults or crypts remained from the pagan period in the history of Vainakhs before some of them converted to Islam in the 16th century Islam has spread throughout the entire region only in the 17th century They were built either a bit deepening into the ground or half underground and on the surface The latter formed whole towns of the dead on the outskirts of the villages and reminded sanctuaries from the outside with a dummy vaults constructed of overlapping stones The deceased were placed on the special shelves in the crypts in clothes and decorations and arms The general Islamic rituals established burials with the further penetration of Islam inside the mountainous regions of Chechnya and Ingushetia Stone steles churts inscribed with prayers and epitaphs began to be erected at the graves and more prosperous mountaineers were honoured with mausoleums after death The Borgha Kash Mausoleum dating to the very beginning of the 15th century and built for a Noghai prince is a good example of this Legends and mythology edit Main article Vainakh mythology Only a few fragments of Vainakh mythology have survived to modern times These fragments consist of the names of deities personifying elements of animist ideas the Nart sagas cosmogonic tradition remnants of stock breeding and landtilling totemic beliefs and folk calendar 82 The greatest samples of Nakh mythology are the legends of Pkharmat Lake Galanchozh the epic war of Pkhagalberi hare riders dwarves against the Narts Lake Kezenoyam and myths about how sun moon and stars appeared 83 The Nakh myth recounts the tale of the legendary figure Pkharmat who was purportedly shackled atop Mount Kazbek by God Sela as punishment for his audacious theft of heavenly fire This narrative bears notable similarities to the Greek myth of Prometheus and the Georgian myth of Amirani The legendary war of Pkhalberi hare riders dwarves against the Narts can be compared to the Greek myth of Cranes and Pygmies war 84 The Golden Fleece myth appears to be intricately intertwined with the Nakh 11 year calendar tradition According to this myth a ram s skin was ceremonially placed within an oak frame known as Jaar for a duration of 11 years eventually yielding the revered Golden Fleece known as Dasho Ertal 85 Legend of Kouzan Am Lake edit nbsp Lake Kezenoyam This legend has explicit parallels with Biblical Sodom and Gomorrah Grecian Baucis and Philemon and the Islamic Lot It relates that there once stood a very rich town at the place where now there is only a lake Despite their great wealth the people of this town were afflicted with insatiable greed and covetousness Thus it came to pass that the supreme god Dela sent his representatives in the guise of beggars to test them They begged the wealthy citizens to give them food but were driven away with only blows and curses in return Only one poor family in the village shared their food with them keeping only a morsel of burnt bread for themselves while giving an unburnt loaf of fine white bread to their guests On leaving the house the grateful strangers told the family that after some time had passed water would begin to form puddles outside their front door and that when this happened they should gather up only the barest of necessities leave their home and go to the mountains The poor family heeded this advice but before departing for higher ground warned the rich of the town of the impending disaster and begged them to follow them but such was the avarice of the rich folk that they would not abandon their treasures not even to save themselves from a watery grave That evening the family watched from the mountains as a terrible catastrophe unfolded they saw the water cover their house and with it the greedy folk who had stayed behind To commemorate the terrible flood the Vainakhs named the newly formed lake Kouzan am Kezenoyam lake of sorrow and cruelty Interestingly the tradition of an ancient settlement associated with the lake is borne out by the archeological record for the area traces of human habitation dating back as far as 40 000 BC have been found near Kouzan am Cave paintings artifacts and other archaeological evidence bear witness to continuous habitation for some 8 000 years 86 People living in these settlements used tools fire and clothing made of animal skins 86 Legend of Galain Am Lake edit nbsp Galain Am Lake Legend has it that two women once decided to wash their laundry in the purest water to be found near their village and that this water proved to be that of the sacred Lake Galain am abode of Tusholi daughter of the Vainakh supreme deity Dela The goddess outraged at such sacrilege punished the offenders by turning them into two stones This however did not solve the problem of the ritually impure lake and the enraged goddess could no longer bear to dwell in its sullied waters Emerging from them she assumed the form of a supernatural bull and began systematically to destroy the villages that dotted the hillside This destruction continued until at last the bull was tamed in the aul of Ame in the area named Galain Chazh after the Galay teip a clan later deported en masse to Kazakhstan in 1944 The inhabitants of Galain Chazh harnessed the energies of the newly tamed animal availing themselves of its mighty strength to plough their fields but the following Spring torrential rain began to fall upon the fields which the sacred animal had ploughed This pelting rain continued to flood the fields until at last they disappeared beneath the waters of a new lake into which Tusholi gratefully disappeared rejoicing in the purity of her newly formed abode Cosmology and creation edit See also Vainakh religion In ancient Nakh cosmology the universe was created by the supreme god Dela Earth created in three years was three times larger than the heavens and was propped up on gigantic bull horns The realm of the Vainakh Gods lay above the clouds Ishtar Deela was the ruler of the subterranean world Deeli Malkhi Deeli Malkhi was larger than the human realm and took seven years to create Nakhs believed that when the sun sets in the west it goes to the netherworld and rises out of it in the east Deeli Malkhi was not an evil realm of the dead or undead but not far removed in morality from the upper world even superior to it in some respects most notably in its social structures Unlike in certain other religions there was no judgment in the afterlife Dela Malkh was the sun god playing a central role in religious celebrations On December 25 Nakhs celebrated the Sun Festival in honour of the Sun God s birthday 86 The names of stars and constellations were also connected to myths Milky Way as the route of scattered straw Chechen Ca Taqina Taca Great Bear as the seven brothers seven stars Chechen Vorx Vesin Vorx Seda meets 7 sons of the god of the universe Tq a In the Ingush version of the legend Pkharmat seven sons of Tq a were punished by his wife Khimekhninen for help Magal stealing fire from Tq a She lifted them up into the air far from land that they have become the seven stars Gemini Chechen Kovregina Seda Sirius Betelgeuse and Procyon as Tripodstar Chechen Qokogseda Orion as Evening star Chechen Markaj Seda Capricornus as Roofing towers Chechen Negara Bjovnas Venus depending on daytime as sunset star Chechen Sadov Seda and sunrise star Chechen Saxul Seda The name of the planet is DilbatGenetics editFurther information Genetic history of the Caucasus A 2011 study by Oleg Balanovsky and a number of other geneticists showed that the Y DNA haplogroup J2a4b a subclade of J2 located mainly in the Middle East Caucasus and Mediterranean was highly associated with Nakh peoples 87 J2a4b accounted for the majority of the Y chromosomes of Ingush and Chechen men with the Ingush having a much higher percentage 87 4 than Chechens who had 51 58 depending on region the lowest being in Malgobek the highest in Dagestan and Achkhoy Martan In their paper Balanovsky et al speculated that the differences between fraternal Caucasian populations may have arisen due to genetic drift which would have had a greater effect among the Ingush than the Chechens due to their smaller population 87 The Chechens and the Ingush have the highest frequencies of J2a4b yet reported other relatively high frequencies between 10 and 20 percent are found in the Mediterranean and Georgia Hypotheses of origins editThe Vainakh have been referred to by various names including Durdzuks in medieval Arab Georgian and Armenian ethnography Historical linguists including Johanna Nichols have connected ancestral Nakh languages and their distant relatives to a Neolithic migration from the Fertile Crescent 88 89 Another view not necessarily contradicting the previous one posits a migration of Nakh into their present location in the North Caucasus during the classical era following the collapse of Urartu citation needed Igor Diakonoff and Sergei Starostin have suggested that Nakh is distantly related to Hurro Urartian which they included as a branch of the Northeastern Caucasian language family which were dubbed Alarodian languages by Diakonoff 90 91 92 Several studies argue that the connection is probable 93 94 Other scholars however doubt that the language families are related 95 96 or believe that while a connection is possible the evidence is far from conclusive 97 98 Various interpretations of the Nakh Urartian relationship exist another held by Kassian 2011 is that Urartian and Nakh s common vocabulary instead reflects a history of intense borrowing from Urartian into Nakh 99 According to Amjad Jaimoukha the mythological Gargareans a group who migrated from eastern Asia Minor to the North Caucasus mentioned by Greek writer Strabo 100 are connected to the Nakh root gergara meaning kindred in proto Nakh 101 However Jaimoukha s theory is unlikely as Strabo and other ancient Greek writers considered the Gargareans to be Greeks 102 List of Nakh peoples editContemporary edit nbsp Group portrait of Chechen men and young woman in traditional costumes 19th century nbsp Ingush from the village of Gvileti nbsp Ingush woman in traditional costume 1881 Vainakh Chechen Ingush dialect continuum The Chechen people are a North Caucasian native ethnic group they refer to themselves as Nokhchiy pronounced no xtʃʼiː Their worldwide population is around 2 million approximately 75 of which live in the Republic of Chechnya a subdivision of the Russian Federation Most Chechens are Sunni Muslims of the Shafi i school The Ingush people are a North Caucasian native ethnic group of the North Caucasus mostly inhabiting the Russian republic of Ingushetia The endonym they use for self designation is Ghalghai The Ingush people are predominantly Sunni Muslims and speak the Ingush language which according to some authors is mutually intelligible with Chechen despite popular misconceptions and they are closely related 103 Their total population is estimated to be c 1 million worldwide 80 The Orstkhoy are a historical ethnoterritorial society sub group among the Chechen and Ingush people In the tradition of the Chechen ethno hierarchy it is considered one of the nine historical Chechen tukkhums in the Ingush tradition as one of the seven historical Ingush shahars 104 105 Many sources refer to them as one of the most militant Vainakh tribe 106 The Kist people are a Chechen sub ethnos belonging to Chechen teips living in Georgia They primarily live in the Pankisi Gorge in the eastern Georgian region of Kakheti where there are approximately 5 000 Kist people Majority of Kists are Sunni Muslim however there are still remaining small pockets of Christian Kists in Pankisi Tusheti and Kakheti The Bats people or the Batsbi are a small Nakh speaking community in Georgia who are also known as the Ts ova Tush after the Ts ova Gorge in the historic Georgian province of Tusheti known to them as Tsovata where they are believed to have settled after migrating from the North Caucasus in the 16th century Their population is estimated to be ca 3000 Unlike the other Nakh peoples the Bats people are overwhelmingly Orthodox Christians Historical edit The following is a list of historical or prehistoric peoples who have been proposed as speakers of Nakh languages Sophene According to Georgian scholars I A Djavashvili and Giorgi Melikishvili the Urartuan state of Supani was occupied by the ancient Nakh tribe Tzov the state of which is called Tsobena in ancient Georgian historiography 107 108 109 Sophene was part of the kingdom of Urartu from the 8th to 7th centuries BCE After uniting the region with his kingdom in the early 8th century BCE king Argishtis I of Urartu resettled many of its inhabitants to his newly built city of Erebuni However Djavashvili s and Melikishvili s theory is not widely accepted Gargareans Jaimoukha argued that the Vainakhs are descended from the Gargarei a mythological tribe who are mentioned in the Geographica of Strabo 1st century BCE 110 and in Naturalis Historia of Pliny the Elder 1st century CE 111 Strabo wrote that the Amazons live close to Gargarei on the northern foothills of the Caucasus mountains Gaius Plinius Secundus also localizes Gargarei as living north of the Caucasus but calls them Gegar 112 Some scholars P K Uslar K Miller N F Yakovleff E I Krupnoff L A Elnickiy I M Diakonoff V N Gamrekeli supported the proposal that Gargarei is an earlier form of the Vainakh ethnonym Jaimoukha notes that Gargarean is one of many Nakh root words gergara meaning in fact kindred in proto Nakh 113 If this is the case it would make Gargarei virtually equivalent to the Georgian term Dzurdzuk referring to the lake Durdukka in the South Caucasus where they are thought to have migrated from as noted by Strabo before intermixing with the local population which they applied to a Nakh people who had migrated north across the mountains to settle in modern Chechnya and Ingushetia Despite Jaimoukha s claims Strabo suggests that the Gargareans were Aeolian Greeks and locates their homeland Gargara in Troad in the far west of modern Turkey 114 Tsanars and Tzanaria The Tsanars were a people of East Central Northern Georgia living in an area around modern Khevi Tsanaria was their state and it distinguished itself by the decisive role it and its people played in fending off the Arab invasion of Georgia Their language is thought by many historians including Vladimir Minorsky and Amjad Jaimoukha to be Nakh based on placenames geographic location and other such evidence 115 However there is opposition to the theory that theirs was a Nakh language Others claim they spoke a Sarmatian language like Ossetic The Tsanars too eventually were assimilated within Georgiandom Ghlighvi Ghlighvi has been a historical name for the Ingush deriving from their ethnonym Ghalghai It was mentioned by Vakhushti of Kartli in 1745 a Georgian noble 116 Dvals and Dvaleti The Dvals were a historic people living in modern day South Ossetia and some nearby regions as well as the southern parts of North Ossetia South and West of the Gligvs South and East of the Malkh They integrated themselves into the Georgian kingdom and produced a number of fine Georgian calligraphers and historians They also produced an Orthodox saint Saint Nicholas of Dvaleti The language of the Dvals is thought to be Nakh by many historians 115 117 118 119 120 121 though there is a rival camp which argues for its status as a close relative of Ossetic 121 Another theory posits that the Dvals were of Karvelian Georgian origin 122 Various evidence given to support the Nakh theory Different scholars use different arguments includes the presence of Nakh placenames in former Dval territory 121 taken as evidence of Nakh Svan contact which probably would have indicated the Nakh nature of the Dvals or of people there before them 115 and the presence of a foreign origin Dval clan among the Chechens 120 The Dvals were assimilated by the Georgians and the Ossetians It is thought that Dval did not become fully extinct until the 18th century making the Dvals the most recent Nakh people known to have disappeared Malkhs The Malkhs were a Nakh people 115 who were deemed to be the westernmost Nakh people and made an alliance with the Greek Bosporus Kingdom Durdzuks and Durdzuketi Durdzuk is a medieval ethnonym used mainly in Georgian Armenian and Arabic sources in the 9th 18th centuries in which most researchers identify the Durdzuks as the ancestors of modern Chechens and Ingush Some researchers localize the Durdzuks in the mountainous Ingushetia and identify them with the Ingush 123 124 125 126 others believe that during the Middle Ages the population of Chechnya was known to the South Caucasian peoples under the name Durdzuks or Dzurdzuks 127 and the population of Ingushetia under the names Gligvi 128 129 130 The Georgian historian V N Gamrekeli claims that Durdzuk is definitely and with all its references uniformly localized between Didoet Dagestan in the east and the gorge of the Terek River in the west 131 The Durdzuks constructed numerous kingdoms notably Durdzuketi and they were noted for their exceptionally fierce devotion to freedom and their ability to resist invaders ranging from the Arabs to the Scythians to Turkic peoples to the Mongolian invaders They seemed also to have been employed as mercenaries by various parties They had a written language using Georgian script It is not known whether they spoke that language however but most of these writings have been lost with only a few pieces surviving After the 14th century Second Mongol Invasion of Durdzuketi and the destruction wrought by the two invasions including as Amjad Jaimoukha notes the destruction of their memory of their past 115 they radically changed their culture Isadiks The Isadiks were an ancient Nakh people of the North Caucasus who were farmers 132 They were probably undone by Scythian invaders A remnant of them may have been absorbed by the Vainakh as their name can now be seen in the Chechen teip Sadoy Khamekits The Khamekits were another ancient Nakh people of the North Caucasus who were farmers 133 They were also probably undone by Scythian invaders A remnant of them may have been absorbed by the Vainakh as their name may now be reflected in the Ingush teip Khamki See also editDeportation of the Chechens and Ingush Peoples of the Caucasus Northeast Caucasian languages Nakh languages Y DNA haplogroups in populations of the Caucasus List of Chechen peopleReferences edit Malsagov Zaurbek 1928 KULTURNAYa RABOTA V ChEChNE I INGUShII V SVYaZI S UNIFIKACIEJ ALFAVITOV Vladikavkaz Serdalo pp 3 11 Schnirelmann Victor 2016 Be Alans Intellectuals and Politics in the North Caucasus in the 20th Century M New literary review p 279 No posle ih obedineniya v 1934 g v edinuyu Checheno Ingushskuyu avtonomnuyu oblast Checheno Ingushskaya ASSR s 1936 g vlasti vsemi silami pytalis obespechit sliyanie chechencev i ingushej v edinyj narod dlya kotorogo bylo sozdano novoe nazvanie vejnahi vajnahi V 1960 1980 h gg eta identichnost aktivno vnedryalas v soznanie chechencev i ingushej i postepenno priobretala vse bolshuyu populyarnost Gyuldenshtedt 2002 p 238 Klaproth Julius Heinrich 1812 Reise in den Kaukasus und nach Georgien unter nommen in den Jahren 1807 and 1808 Journeys to the Caucasus and Georgia made in 1807 and 1808 in German Halle und Berlin In den Buchhandlungen des Hallischen Waisenhauses p 239 Berzhe A P 1859 Chechnya i Chechency Tiflis pp 65 66 Vot ischislenie vseh plemen na kotorye prinyato delit Chechencev V strogom zhe smysle delenie eto ne imeet osnovaniya Samim Chechencam ono sovershenno neizvestno Oni sami sebya nazyvayut Nahche t e narod i eto otnositsya do vsego naroda govoryashego na Chechenskom yazyke i ego narechiyah Upomyanutye zhe nazvaniya im byli dany ili ot aulov kak Cori Galgaj Shatoj i dr ili ot rek i gor kak Michikovcy i Kachkalyki Vesma veroyatno chto rano ili pozdno vse ili bolshaya chast privedennyh nami imen ischeznut i Chechency uderzhat za soboyu odno obshee naimenovanie a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Uslar P K 1888 Etnografiya Kavkaza Yazykoznanie Ch II Chechenskij yazyk Tiflis Predlagaemaya azbuka sostavlena dlya yazyka naroda kotoryj sam sebya nazval nahchuj ili nahchij v edinstvennom chisle nahchuo a u nas nazyvaemo chechencami ili kistincami poslednee nazvanie gruzinskoe Yazyk nahchuj drobitsya na mnozhestvo narechij kotorye voznikli chastyu po uedinennomu polozheniyu nekotoryh obshestv chastyu pod vliyaniem yazykov sosednih narodov osetin i v osobennosti kumykov yazyk nahchuj demonstriruet zamechatelnoe harakternoe edinstvo za isklyucheniem dialekta dzherahovcev kotorye govoryat vesma izmenennym narechiem a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Potto Vasily 1887 Kavkazskaya vojna v otdelnyh ocherkah epizodah legendah i biografiyah pp 63 64 Chechencev obyknovenno delyat na mnozhestvo grupp ili obshestv davaya im imya ot rek i gor na kotoryh oni obitali ili ot znachitelnyh aulov obnaruzhivayushih vliyanie na drugie Takovy aldincy atagincy nazranovcy karabulaki dzherahi galgaevcy michikovcy kachkalykovcy ichkerincy auhovcy i prochie i prochie No eto razdelenie chechenskogo naroda na mnozhestvo otdelnyh rodov sdelano odnako zhe russkimi i v strogom smysle imeet znachenie tolko dlya nih zhe Mestnym zhitelyam ono sovershenno neizvestno Chechency sami sebya nazyvayut nahche to est narod i nazvanie eto otnositsya odinakovo ko vsem plemenam i pokoleniyam govoryashim na chechenskom yazyke i ego narechiyah Vejdenbaum E G 1888 Putevoditel po Kavkazu Tiflis p 70 V starinnyh russkih diplomaticheskih aktah otnosyashihsya k 16 17 stoletiyam upominaetsya v gorah po Tereku narod michkizy Vposledstvii kogda russkie vojska pobyvali za Terekom poyavilis nazvaniya chechencev i kistov nakonec pri bolee blizkom znakomstve s gorcami vostochnoj poloviny severnogo sklona Kavkazskogo hrebta my uznali o sushestvovanii galgaev gligvov ingushej karabulakov nazranovcev ichkerincev auhovcev i mnogo drugih narodov Posle lingvisticheskih issledovanij okazalos chto vse oni sostavlyayut odno plemya ili narod kotoryj sam sebya nazyvaet nahchij u nas zhe izvesten teper pod imenem chechencev Bce zhe privedennye vyshe nazvaniya oznachayut ili rodovye podrazdeleniya etogo naroda ili zaimstvovany nami ot nazvanij selenij napr nazranovcy i chechency i mestnostej auhovcy ichkerincy ili zhe nakonec vzyaty u sosednih narodov a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Gan K F 1897 Puteshestvie v stranu pshavov hevsur kistin i ingushej Kavkazskij vestnik 6 V Chechne zhivut chechency chislo kotoryh po perepisi 1897 goda prostiraetsya do 283 421 lic oboego pola Imya svoe poluchili oni ot razrushennogo bolshogo aula Chechen raspolozhennogo v nizhnem techenii Arguna Russkie delili ih na 20 razlichnyh plemen kak to nazranovcev kistin galgaev corinov shatojcev sharoecev chabirlojcev ichkerincev kachkalikov i t d Narod sam ne znaet etih nazvanij Oni sami nazyvayut sebya nahche t e narod Dubrovin N F 1871 Istoriya vojny i vladychestva russkih na Kavkaze Tom I Kniga 1 pp 368 369 Laudaev Umalat 1872 Sbornik svedenij o kavkazskih gorcah Vyp VI Tiflis a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Dalgat Bashir 1892 Rodovoj byt i obychnoe pravo chechencev i ingushej Podgotovka izdaniya i predislovie Institut mirovoj literatury imeni A M Gorkogo p 382 ISBN 978 5 9208 0307 8 a b Vajnahi i alany Ruslan Arsanukaev o proishozhdenii nazvanij i samonazvanij Chechencev i Ingushej Predanie o proishozhdenii chechencev Ahmad Sulejmanov Toponimiya Checheno Ingushetii Groznyj 1978 Vagapov Arbi 2011 Etimologicheskij slovar chechenskogo yazyka ISBN 978 9941 10 439 8 Aliroev I Yu Yazyk istoriya i kultura vajnahov Shavlaeva Tamara 2009 Iz istorii razvitiya sherstyanogo promysla chechencev v XIX nachale XX v Berzhe A P 1859 Chechnya i Chechency Tiflis p 134 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Dzhanashvili Mose 1897 Izvestiya gruz letopisej i istorikov o Sev Kavkaze i Rossii Tbilisi a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bashirov Salambek 2018 Etnicheskaya istoriya Tersko Sulakskogo mezhdurechya na primere semi Bashir shejha Aksajskogo Grozny a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Pallas Peter Simon 1802 Travels through the southern provinces of the Russian Empire in the years 1793 and 1794 London Klaproth Julius 1811 Travels in the Caucasus and Georgia performed in the years 1807 and 1808 by command of the Russian government Bronevsky Semyon 1823 News in the Caucasus Tbilisi Salgiriev A M 2019 Chronicle of the exodus of Chechens from Nakhchuvan translation and commentary Tallam 2 33 35 Berge Adolph 1859 Chechnya and Chechens Tbilisi a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Dosov Kedi 1862 Nakhchoyn Juz N F Dubrovin 1871 Istoriya vojny i vladychestva russkih na Kavkaze Tom I Kniga 1 SPb pp 368 369 Laudaev Umalat 1872 Chechenskoe plemya Tbilisi Sbornik svedenij o kavkazskih gorcah Patkanian Kerovbe 1877 Armenian geography of the 7th century AD Gyuldenshtedt 2002 p 37 Pallas 1811 p 176 Klaproth 1814 pp 5 9 57 Bronevskij 1823 p 153 Kisty sami sebya nazyvayut poperemѣnno Kisty Galga Ingushi i odno nazvanie vmѣsto drugago upotreblyayut Robakidze 1968 pp 15 27 204 Krupnov 1971 p 34 Krupnov 1971 p 26 Latyshev 1947 pp 222 281 Anchabadze 2009 p 33 Mayor 2016 p 361 Yanovskij 1846 p 201 Koh 1842 p 489 Klaproth 1814 p 643 Butkov 1869 p 10 Wahl 1875 p 239 Berdzeneshvili et al 1962 p 25 Dzhanashvili 1897 p 31 Volkova 1973 p 158 Kusheva 1963 p 65 Volkova 1973 pp 154 155 Belokurov 1889 pp 222 456 Boguslavskij Vladimir Volfovich 2004 Slavyanskaya enciklopediya XVII vek in Russian OLMA Media Grupp p 538 ISBN 9785224036592 Chikobava 2010 pp 30 31 ჯავახიშვილი 1937 p 97 ჩაჩნური ანუ ნახჭოური ინგუშური ანუ ქისტური ჩრდილოეთს კავკასიაში და წოვური ანუ ბაცბური საქართველოში თუშეთის თეშში ენათა შეორე ცალკეულ ჯგუფს შეადგენენ რომელსაც ამჟამად აგრეთვე თავისი ცალკეული ზოგადი სახელი არ მოეპოება ძველად ბერძენთა და რომალითა იეოგრაფები იმიერკავკასიის შუა და აღმოსავლეთის ნაწილის მიწა წყალზე მობინადრედ გელ ებსა და ლეგ ებს ასახელებდენ გელ ების სახელი უდრის იქაურსი და თუშურს თანამედროვე ღალღას ლეგ ებისა კი ქართულს ლეკებს პირველი სახელის ქართ შესატყვისობა ღილღვი მხ რ და ლილივებია მრ რ რომელიც ძველს თუშურ ხალხურ ლექსებში ხშირად გვხვდება სხვაგან და ჩვეულებრივ საქართველოში კი მათ აღსანიშნივად ღლილვია მიღებული რაკი ზემოაღნიშნული სამი ენის ზოგადი სახელი არ არსებობს ასეთი სახელი კი საჭიროა ამიტომ ხელოვნურად შეთხზულის მაგოერ აქაც ისევ ძველად არსებული ასეთი სახელის გამოყენება სჯობია სწორედ ამ მოსაზრებით ვხელმძღვანელობ რომ ენათა მეორე ჯგუფის ჩაჩნურიიხა ქისტურისა და წოვური ენების ზოგად სახელად ისევ ღილღღურის შემოღებას ვრჩეობ Volkova N G Uk soch page 135 D V Zayats 2001 Maghas The Sun City New Capital of Ingushetia Archived from the original on March 7 2003 Ahmadov Sharpudin Bachuevich 2002 Chechnya i Ingushetiya v XVIII nachale XIX veka Elista Dzhangar APP p 447 Hizriev X A Checheno Ingushetiya v period feodalnoj razdrob lennosti HSh XV vv Istoriya Checheno Ingushetii 7 8 kl Groznyj 1991 page 41 Epigraficheskie pamyatniki Severnogo Kavkaza XVTII XIX vv part 2 M 1968 page 28 Dalgat Bashir 2008 Ancestral life and common law of the Chechens and Ingush Preparation of the publication and foreword by U B Dalgat nstitute of World Literature named after A M Gorky ISBN 978 5 9208 0307 8 a b c Lecha Ilyasov The Diversity of the Chechen Culture From Historical Roots to the Present ISBN 9785904549022 The Ingush with notes on the Chechen Background information www lx berkeley edu Retrieved 19 March 2022 Wood Tony Chechnya The Case for Independence The Chechen Nation A Portrait of Ethnical Features www shamsali org Retrieved 9 April 2018 The Chechen Nation A Portrait of Ethnical Features www shamsali org Retrieved 9 April 2018 Sakwa Edward Chechnya From Past to Future Wood Tony Chechnya The Case for Independence An Encyclopedia by Brockgaus and Efron Vol 76 page 786 Potto Caucasian Wars Istoriya narodov Severnogo Kavkaza s drevnejshih vremen do konca XVIII M 1988 page 376 Igor M Diakonoff Sergei A Starostin Hurro Urartian and East Caucasian Languages Ancient Orient Ethnocultural Relations Moscow 1988 pp 170 Polnoe sobranie zakonov Rossijskoj imperii c 1649 g t XIX 1770 1774 1830 No 13602 pages 267 268 Gricenko N P Istoki druzhby Groznyj 1975 Page 27 Russkodagestanskie otnosheniya XVII pervaya chetvert XVIII v Dokumenty i materialy Mahachkala 1958 s 274 Sheblykin I P 1928 Iskusstvo ingushej v pamyatnikah materialnoj kultury Vladikavkaz INGIK p 29 Iogann Blaramberg 1835 Topograficheskoe statisticheskoe etnograficheskoe i voennoe opisanie Kavkaza Nalchik El Fa Ingushi trudolyubivy osobenno zhenshiny Oni ne tolko hlopochut po hozyajstvu no takzhe shyut odezhdu dlya svoih muzhej hodyat v les za drovami i nesut etot tyazhelyj gruz verst 10 cherez gornye hrebty Zhenshiny rabotayut na melnicah delayut kovry i vojlochnye odeyala Oni takzhe izgotovlyayut tonkuyu sherstyanuyu tkan prednaznachaemuyu dlya tcuki kotoraya sluzhit odezhdoj dlya muzhchin zhenshin i detej Shavlaeva T M 2009 Iz istorii razvitii a shersti a nogo promysla chechent s ev v XIX nachale XXv istoriko etnograficheskoe issledovanie Nalʹchik Respublikanskiĭ poligrafkombinat im Revoli u t s ii 1905 g p 65 ISBN 978 5 88195 989 0 OCLC 719861084 Hasbulatov A I Checheno Ingushetiya nakanune pervoj russkoj burzhuazno demokraticheskoj revolyucii Groznyj 1963 page 38 a b Who are the Chechens PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2006 09 15 by Johanna Nichols University of California Berkeley a b Albogachieva 2017 p 4 Shattering the Al Qaeda Chechen Myth Part 1 Archived from the original on 2004 01 29 by Brian Glyn Williams The Jamestown Foundation October 2 2003 Madaeva Z A Vajnahskaya mifologiya Etnograficheskoe obozrenie 1992 3 Page 109 Dalgat U B Geroicheskij epos chechencev i ingushej M 1972 Hasiev S M Mify o zayachih vsadnikah Rukopis Hasiev S M O tradicionnom otschete vremeni u chechencev a b c Jaimoukha Amjad M 2005 03 01 The Chechens a handbook 1st ed Routledge p 110 ISBN 978 0 415 32328 4 Retrieved 2009 08 14 a b Balanovsky O Dibirova K Dybo A Mudrak O Frolova S Pocheshkhova E Haber M Platt D Schurr T Haak W Kuznetsova M Radzhabov M Balaganskaya O Romanov A Zakharova T Soria Hernanz D F Zalloua P Koshel S Ruhlen M Renfrew C Wells R S Tyler Smith C Balanovska E Genographic C 2011 Parallel Evolution of Genes and Languages in the Caucasus Region Molecular Biology and Evolution 28 10 2905 2920 doi 10 1093 molbev msr126 PMC 3355373 PMID 21571925 Johanna Nichols February 1997 The Ingush with notes on the Chechen Background information University of California Berkeley Archived from the original on 2006 12 08 Retrieved 2007 02 10 Bernice Wuethrich 19 May 2000 Peering Into the Past With Words Science 288 5469 1158 doi 10 1126 science 288 5469 1158 S2CID 82205296 Diakonoff I M 1984 The Pre History of the Armenian People Translated by Lori Jennings New York Delmar Starostin Sergei A Diakonoff Igor M 1986 Hurro Urartian as an Eastern Caucasian Language Munich R Kitzinger Diakonoff Igor M 1995 Long Range Linguistic Relations Cultural Transmission or Consanguinity PDF Mother Tongue 24 34 40 Ivanov Vyacheslav V 1999 Comparative Notes on Hurro Urartian Northern Caucasian and Indo European PDF UCLA Indo European Studies 1 147 264 Greppin John A C 2008 The Urartian substratum in Armenian PDF Bulletin of the Georgian National Academy of Sciences 2 2 134 137 Smeets Rieks 1989 On Hurro Urartian as an Eastern Caucasian language Bibliotheca Orientalis XLVI 260 280 Fournet Arnaud 2013 About the vocalic system of Armenian words of substratic origins Archiv Orientalni 1 Zimansky Paul 2011 Urartian and Urartians The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Anatolia p 556 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Gamkrelidze Thomas V Gudava T E 1998 Caucasian Languages Encyclopaedia Britannica A C Kassian 2011 Some considerations on Hurrian North Caucasian lexical matches Strabo Geography Pages 1 49 Jaimoukha Chechens Page 30 Amaseia Strabo of 2016 02 13 Delphi Complete Works of Strabo Geography Illustrated Delphi Classics ISBN 978 1 78656 368 2 Nichols Johanna Sprouse Ronald L Vagapov Arbi 2003 Chechen English and English Chechen Dictionary Taylor amp Francis p 4 ISBN 0 415 31594 8 Anchabadze 2001 p 29 Pavlova 2012 pp 56 83 Sulejmanov 1978 p 80 Dzhavahishvili I A Vvedenie v istoriyu gruzinskogo naroda kn 1 Tbilisi 1950 page 47 49 Chechnya i Ingushetiya V XVIII nachale XIX veka Page 52 Gadzhieva V G Sochinenie I Gerbera Opisanie stran i narodov mezhdu Astrahanyu i rekoyu Kuroj nahodyashihsya M 1979 page 55 Strabo Geography Bk 11 Ch 5 Sec 1 Chechnya i Ingushetiya V XVIII nachale XIX veka Page 51 Latyshev V V Izvestiya drevnih pisatelej grecheskih i latinskih o Skifii i Kavkaze t 1 Grecheskie pisateli SPb 1890 t 2 Latinskie pisateli vyp 1 SPb 1904 vyp 2 SPb 1906 Krupnov E I Uk soch page 25 Jaimoukha Chechens Page 30 Strabo 1856 The Geography of Strabo H G Bohn a b c d e Jaimoukha Amjad The Chechens A Handbook Routledge Curzon Oxon 2005 Bagrationi Vakhushti 1745 Description of the Georgian Kingdom Bakhushti Bagrationi Gamrekeli V N Dvaly i Dvaletiya v I XV vv n e Tbilisi 1961 page 138 Melikishvili G A K izucheniyu drevnej vostochnomaloazijskoj etnonimiki VDI 1962 1 page 62 Gamrekeli a b Melikishvilli a b c Kuznetsov V 1992 Essays on the history of Alans in Russian Vladikavkaz IR ISBN 978 5 7534 0316 2 http www nplg gov ge dlibrary collect 0001 000355 inglisuri 20osebis 20texti pdf permanent dead link Klaproth Julius von 1812 Reise in den Kaukasus und nach Georgien unter nommen in den Jahren 1807 and 1808 Halle und Berlin Genko A N 1930 From the cultural past of the Ingush Notes of the College of Orientalists at the Asian Museum of the USSR Academy of Sciences pp 681 761 Yeremyan S T 1939 Trade routes of Transcaucasia in the era of the Sassanids According to Tabula Peutingiriana VDI Sotavov and Meyer 1991 The North Caucasus in Russian Iranian and Russian Turkish relations in the 18th century Kharadze R L Robakidze A I On the issue of Nakh ethnonymy Caucasian ethnographic collection II Tbilisi Metsniereba 1968 P 12 40 268 p Merzbacher G 1901 Aus den Hochregionen des Kaukasus Wanderungen Erlebnisse Beobachtungen Markovin V I 1965 In the gorges of Argun and Fortanga Merzbacher G 1905 To the ethnography of the inhabitants of the Caucasian Alps Gamrekeli V N 1961 Dval and Dvaletia in the I XV centuries p 27 Anchabadze George The Vainakhs Page 34 Anchabadze George The Vainakhs Page 20 Jaimoukha A The Chechens A Handbook London and New York Routledge 2005 Bibliography editჯავახიშვილი ივანე 1937 ქართული ერის ისტორიის შესავალი Introduction to the history of the Georgian nation PDF in Georgian Vol 2 ქართული და კავკასიური ენების თავდაპირველი ბუნება და ნათესაობა თბილისი სსრკ მეცნიერებათა აკადემია საქართველოს ფილიალი pp 1 754 Chikobava A S 2010 Vvedenie v iberijsko kavkazskoe yazykoznanie Introduction to Iberian Caucasian Linguistics in Russian Tbilisi Tbilisskij Gos Universitet im I Dzhavazhishvili Izd Universal Gyuldenshtedt Iogann Anton 2002 Puteshestvie po Kavkazu v 1770 1773 gg in Russian Sankt Peterburg Peterburgskoe Vostokovedenie pp 1 508 Pallas Peter Simon 1811 Second voyage de Pallas ou voyages entrepris dans les gouvernemens meridionaux de l Empire de Russie pendant les annees 1793 et 1794 in French Vol 2 Paris pp 1 383 Klaproth Julius Heinreich 1814 Geographisch historische Beschreibung des ostlichen Kaukasus zwischen den Flussen Terek Aragwi Kur und dem Kaspischen Meere Pt 2 of Volume 50 in German Bronevskij Semyon Mihajlovich 1823 Novejshie geograficheskie i istoricheskie izvestiya o Kavkaze Chast II in Russian Moskva Tipografiya S Selivanovskogo pp 1 458 Robakidze A I 1968 Kavkazskij etnograficheskij sbornik Ocherki etnografii Gornoj Ingushetii in Russian Tbilisi Mecniereba pp 1 333 Krupnov E I 1971 Srednevekovaya Ingushetiya in Russian Moskva Izd Nauka Latyshev V V 1947 Izvestiya drevnih pisatelej o Skifii i Kavkaze VESTNIK DREVNEJ ISTORII 4 in Russian Moskva Leningrad Izdatelstvo Akademii Nauk SSSR Anchabadze George 2009 Vainakhs The Chechen and Ingush Tbilisi Caucasian House pp 1 76 Mayor Adrienne 2016 The Amazons Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691170275 Yanovskij A O 1846 Drevnej Kavkazskoj Albanii Chast LII Otd II in Russian Sankt Peterburg Zhurnal Ministerstva narodnogo prosvesheniya Koh Karl 1842 Puteshestvie cherez Rossiyu k Kavkazskomu pereshejku 1836 1837 1838 g in Russian Butkov P G 1869 Materialy dlya novoj istorii Kavkaza s 1722 po 1803 god Chast vtoraya Imperatorskaya akademiya nauk Nepremennyj sekretar akademik K Veselovskij in Russian Sankt Peterburg Tipografiya Imperatorskoj akademii nauk pp 1 602 Wahl O W 1875 The Land of the Czar London Chapman and Hall pp 1 417 Berdzeneshvili N A Dondua V D Dumbadze M K Melikishvili G A Meshia Sh A 1962 Istoriya Gruzii s drevnejshih vremyon do 60 h godov XIX veka in Russian Tbilisi Izdatelstvo uchebno pedagogicheskoj literatury Dzhanashvili M G 1897 Izvestiya gruzinskih letopisej i istorikov o Severnom Kavkaze i Rossii in Russian Tiflis Tipografiya K P Kozlovskogo Volkova N G 1973 Etnonimy i plemennye nazvaniya Severnogo Kavkaza in Russian Moskva Nauka pp 1 211 Kusheva E N 1963 Narody Severnogo Kavkaza i ih svyazi s Rossiej vtoraya polovina XVI 30 e gody XVIII veka in Russian Moskva Izdatelstvo Akademii Nauk SSSR pp 1 373 Belokurov Sergej Alekseevich 1889 Snosheniya Rossii s Kavkazom Vypusk 1 j 1578 1613 gg in Russian Moskva Universitetskaya tipografiya pp 1 715 Albogachieva M S G 2017 Islam v Ingushetii etnografiya i istoriko kulturnye aspekty Islam in Ingushetia ethnography and historical and cultural aspects in Russian SPb Rossijskaya akademiya nauk Muzej antropologii i etnografii im Petra Velikogo Kunstkamera pp 1 264 ISBN 978 5 88431 349 1 Anchabadze George 2001 Vainakhs The Chechen and Ingush Tbilisi Caucasian House pp 1 76 Pavlova O S 2012 Ingushskij etnos na sovremennom etape cherty socialno psihologicheskogo portreta The Ingush ethnos at the present stage features of the socio psychological portrait in Russian Moskva Forum pp 1 384 ISBN 9785911346652 OCLC 798995782 Sulejmanov A S 1978 Shajhiev A H ed Chast II Gornaya Ingushetiya yugo zapad i Chechnya centr i yugo vostok Part 2 Mountainous Ingushetia southwest and Chechnya center and southeast Toponimiya Checheno Ingushetii v IV chastyah 1976 1985 gg in Russian Groznyj Checheno Ingushskoe Knizhnoe Izdatelstvo pp 1 233 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nakh peoples Vainakh information portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nakh peoples amp oldid 1215507453 Hypotheses of origins, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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