What does a marian look like? The Mari are the only people in Europe that have preserved paganism - HALAN

21.02.2019

Origin of the Mari people

The question of the origin of the Mari people is still controversial. For the first time, a scientifically substantiated theory of the ethnogenesis of the Mari was expressed in 1845 by the famous Finnish linguist M. Kastren. He tried to identify the Mari with the annalistic measure. This point of view was supported and developed by T.S. Semenov, I.N. Smirnov, S.K. Kuznetsov, A.A. Spitsyn, D.K. Zelenin, M.N. Yantemir, F.E. Egorov and many others. researchers II half of XIX- I half of the twentieth century. A prominent Soviet archaeologist A.P. Smirnov came up with a new hypothesis in 1949, who came to the conclusion about the Gorodets (close to Mordovian) basis, other archaeologists O.N. Bader and V.F. Dyakovo (close to the measure) origin of the Mari. Nevertheless, even then archaeologists were able to convincingly prove that Merya and Mari, although related to each other, are not the same people. In the late 1950s, when the permanent Mari archaeological expedition began to operate, its leaders A.Kh. Khalikov and G.A. Arkhipov developed a theory about the mixed Gorodets-Azelin (Volga-Finnish-Permian) basis of the Mari people. Subsequently, G.A. Arkhipov, developing this hypothesis further, during the discovery and study of new archaeological sites, proved that the Gorodets-Dyakovo (Volga-Finnish) component prevailed in the mixed basis of the Mari. Mari ethnos, which began in the first half of the 1st millennium AD, as a whole ended in the 9th - 11th centuries, while even then the Mari ethnos began to be divided into two main groups - mountain and meadow Mari (the latter, in comparison with the former, had a stronger influence Azelian (Permo-speaking) tribes). This theory as a whole is now supported by the majority of archaeologists dealing with this problem. The Mari archaeologist V.S. Patrushev put forward a different assumption, according to which the formation of the ethnic foundations of the Mari, as well as the Meri and Murom, took place on the basis of the Akhmylov population. Linguists (I.S. Galkin, D.E. Kazantsev), who rely on the data of the language, believe that the territory of the formation of the Mari people should not be sought in the Vetluzh-Vyatka interfluve, as archaeologists believe, but to the southwest, between the Oka and Sura. Archaeologist T.B. Nikitina, taking into account the data not only of archeology, but also of linguistics, came to the conclusion that the ancestral home of the Mari is located in the Volga part of the Oka-Sura interfluve and in the Povetluzhye, and the movement to the east, to Vyatka, occurred in VIII - XI centuries, during which contact and mixing with the Azelin (Permo-speaking) tribes took place.

The question of the origin of the ethnonyms "Mari" and "Cheremis" also remains complex and unclear. The meaning of the word "Mari", the self-name of the Mari people, many linguists deduce from the Indo-European term "Mar", "Mer" in various sound variations (translated as "man", "husband"). The word "Cheremis" (as the Russians called the Mari, and in a slightly different, but phonetically similar vowel - many other peoples) has a large number of different interpretations. The first written mention of this ethnonym (in the original "ts-r-mis") is found in a letter from the Khazar Khagan Joseph to the dignitary of the Caliph of Cordoba Hasdai ibn-Shaprut (960s). D.E. Kazantsev following the historian of the XIX century. G.I. Peretyatkovich came to the conclusion that the name "Cheremis" was given to the Mari by the Mordovian tribes, and in translation this word means "a person living on the sunny side, in the east." According to I.G. Ivanov, “Cheremis” is “a person from the Chera or Chora tribe”, in other words, the name of one of the Mari tribes was subsequently extended by the neighboring peoples to the entire ethnic group. The version of the Mari local historians of the 1920s - early 1930s F.E. Egorov and M.N. Yantemir, who suggested that this ethnonym goes back to the Turkic term "warlike person", is widely popular. F.I. Gordeev, as well as I.S. Galkin, who supported his version, defend the hypothesis of the origin of the word "Cheremis" from the ethnonym "Sarmat" through the mediation of the Turkic languages. A number of other versions were also expressed. The problem of the etymology of the word "Cheremis" is further complicated by the fact that in the Middle Ages (until the 17th - 18th centuries) not only the Maris, but also their neighbors, the Chuvashs and Udmurts, were called so in a number of cases.

Mari in the 9th - 11th centuries.

In the IX - XI centuries. in general, the formation of the Mari ethnos was completed. At the time in questionMarisettled on a vast territory within the Middle Volga region: south of the Vetluga and Yuga watershed and the Pizhma River; north of the Pyana River, the headwaters of Tsivil; east of the Unzha River, the mouth of the Oka; west of the Ileti and the mouth of the Kilmezi River.

economy Mari was complex (agriculture, cattle breeding, hunting, fishing, gathering, beekeeping, crafts and other activities related to the processing of raw materials at home). Direct evidence of the widespread use of agriculture among Mari no, there are only indirect data indicating the development of slash-and-burn agriculture among them, and there is reason to believe that in the 11th century. began the transition to arable farming.
Mari in the IX - XI centuries. almost all grains, legumes and industrial crops cultivated in the forest belt of Eastern Europe and at the present time. Slash-and-burn agriculture was combined with cattle breeding; stall keeping of livestock in combination with free grazing prevailed (mostly the same species of domestic animals and birds were bred as now).
Hunting was a significant help in the economy Mari, while in the IX - XI centuries. fur mining began to be commercial in nature. Hunting tools were bow and arrows, various traps, snares and traps were used.
Mari the population was engaged in fishing (near rivers and lakes), respectively, river navigation developed, while natural conditions (a dense network of rivers, difficult forest and swampy terrain) dictated the priority development of river rather than land routes.
Fishing, as well as gathering (first of all, forest gifts) were focused exclusively on domestic consumption. Significant spread and development in Mari received beekeeping, on the beech trees they even put signs of ownership - “tiste”. Along with furs, honey was the main export item of the Mari.
At Mari there were no cities, only rural crafts were developed. Metallurgy, due to the lack of a local raw material base, developed through the processing of imported semi-finished and finished products. Nevertheless, the blacksmith's craft in the 9th - 11th centuries. at Mari already stood out as a specialty, while non-ferrous metallurgy (mainly blacksmithing and jewelry - the manufacture of copper, bronze, silver jewelry) was predominantly done by women.
The manufacture of clothing, footwear, utensils, and some types of agricultural implements was carried out in each household in its free time from agriculture and animal husbandry. In the first place among the branches of home production were weaving and leatherworking. Linen and hemp were used as raw materials for weaving. The most common leather product was footwear.

In the IX - XI centuries. Mari traded with neighboring peoples- Udmurts, Merei, Vesyu, Mordovians, Muroma, Meshchera and other Finno-Ugric tribes. Trade relations with the Bulgars and Khazars, who were at a relatively high level of development, went beyond the scope of barter, there were elements of commodity-money relations (many Arab dirhams were found in ancient Mari burials of that time). In the area where they lived Mari, the Bulgars even founded trading posts like the Mari-Lugovsky settlement. The greatest activity of Bulgar merchants falls on the end of the 10th - the beginning of the 11th centuries. Any clear signs of close and regular ties between the Mari and Eastern Slavs in the IX - XI centuries. until discovered, things of Slavic-Russian origin in the Mari archaeological sites of that time are rare.

Based on the totality of available information, it is difficult to judge the nature of contacts Mari in the IX - XI centuries. with their Volga-Finnish neighbors - Merei, Meshchera, Mordvins, Muroma. However, according to numerous folklore works, tensions between Mari developed with the Udmurts: as a result of a number of battles and minor skirmishes, the latter were forced to leave the Vetluzh-Vyatka interfluve, retreating east, to the left bank of the Vyatka. However, among the available archaeological material there are no traces of armed conflicts between Mari and not found by the Udmurts.

Relationship Mari with the Volga Bulgars, apparently, they were not limited only to trade. At least part of the Mari population, bordering on the Volga-Kama Bulgaria, paid tribute to this country (kharaj) - at first as a vassal-intermediary of the Khazar Khagan (it is known that in the 10th century both Bulgars and Mari- ts-r-mis - were subjects of Kagan Joseph, however, the first were in a more privileged position as part of the Khazar Khaganate), then as independent state and a kind of successor to the kaganate.

Mari and their neighbors in the XII - early XIII centuries.

From the 12th century in some Mari lands, the transition to fallow farming begins. Unified funeral riteMari, cremation disappeared. If earlier in useMarimen often encountered swords and spears, but now they have been replaced everywhere by bows, arrows, axes, knives and other types of light edged weapons. Perhaps this was due to the fact that the new neighborsMarithere were more numerous, better armed and organized peoples (Slavic-Russians, Bulgars), with whom it was possible to fight only by partisan methods.

XII - beginning of the XIII centuries. were marked by a noticeable growth of the Slavic-Russian and the fall of the Bulgar influence on Mari(especially in Povetluzhye). At this time, Russian settlers appeared in the interfluve of the Unzha and Vetluga (Gorodets Radilov, first mentioned in the annals for 1171, settlements and settlements on Uzol, Linda, Vezlom, Vatom), where settlements were still found Mari and eastern measures, as well as in the Upper and Middle Vyatka (the cities of Khlynov, Kotelnich, settlements on Pizhma) - in the Udmurt and Mari lands.
Territory of settlement Mari, compared with the 9th - 11th centuries, did not undergo significant changes, however, its gradual shift to the east continued, which was largely due to the advancement of the Slavic-Russian tribes and the Slavicizing Finno-Ugric peoples from the west (primarily Merya) and, possibly , the ongoing Mari-Udmurt confrontation. The movement of the Meryan tribes to the east took place in small families or groups of them, and the settlers who reached Povetluzhye most likely mixed with related Mari tribes, completely dissolving in this environment.

Under the strong Slavic-Russian influence (obviously, through the mediation of the Meryan tribes) was the material culture Mari. In particular, according to archaeological research, dishes made on a potter's wheel (Slavic and "Slavic" ceramics) come instead of traditional local hand-made ceramics; under Slavic influence, the appearance of Mari jewelry, household items, and tools has changed. At the same time, among the Mari antiquities of the 12th - early 13th centuries, there are much fewer Bulgar items.

Not later than the beginning of the XII century. the inclusion of the Mari lands into the system of ancient Russian statehood begins. According to The Tale of Bygone Years and The Tale of the Destruction of the Russian Land, the "Cheremis" (probably these were the western groups of the Mari population) already then paid tribute to the Russian princes. In 1120, after a series of attacks by the Bulgars on the Russian cities in the Volga-Ochia, which took place in the second half of the 11th century, a series of counter-attacks by Vladimir-Suzdal princes and their allies from other Russian principalities began. The Russian-Bulgarian conflict, as is commonly believed, flared up on the basis of collecting tribute from the local population, and in this struggle, the advantage steadily leaned towards the feudal lords of North-Eastern Rus'. Reliable information about direct participation Mari not in the Russian-Bulgarian wars, although the troops of both opposing sides repeatedly passed through the Mari lands.

Mari in the Golden Horde

In 1236 - 1242. Eastern Europe was subjected to a powerful Mongol-Tatar invasion, a significant part of it, including the entire Volga region, was under the rule of the conquerors. At the same time, the BulgarsMari, Mordvins and other peoples of the Middle Volga region were included in the Ulus of Jochi or the Golden Horde, an empire founded by Batu Khan. Written sources do not report a direct invasion of the Mongol-Tatars in the 30s - 40s. 13th century to the area where they livedMari. Most likely, the invasion touched the Mari settlements located near the areas that were most severely devastated (Volga-Kama Bulgaria, Mordovia) - this is the Right Bank of the Volga and the left-bank Mari lands adjacent to Bulgaria.

Mari subordinated to the Golden Horde through the Bulgar feudal lords and the khan's darugs. The main part of the population was divided into administrative-territorial and taxable units - uluses, hundreds and dozens, which were led by centurions and tenants accountable to the khan's administration - representatives local nobility. Mari, like many other peoples subject to the Golden Horde Khan, had to pay yasak, a number of other taxes, carry out various duties, including military service. They mainly supplied furs, honey, and wax. At the same time, the Mari lands were located on the forested northwestern periphery of the empire, far from the steppe zone, it did not differ in a developed economy, therefore, strict military and police control was not established here, and in the most inaccessible and remote area - in Povetluzhye and on the adjacent territory - the power of the khan was only nominal.

This circumstance contributed to the continuation of the Russian colonization of the Mari lands. More Russian settlements appeared on Pizhma and the Middle Vyatka, the development of the Povetluzhye, the Oka-Sura interfluve, and then the Lower Sura began. In Povetluzhye, Russian influence was especially strong. Judging by the “Vetluzh Chronicler” and other trans-Volga Russian chronicles of late origin, many local semi-mythical princes (kuguzes) (Kai, Kodzha-Yaraltem, Bai-Boroda, Keldibek) were baptized, were in vassal dependence on the Galician princes, sometimes concluding military alliances with the Golden Horde. Apparently, a similar situation was in Vyatka, where the contacts of the local Mari population with the Vyatka Land and the Golden Horde developed.
The strong influence of both Russians and Bulgars was felt in the Volga region, especially in its mountainous part (in the Malo-Sundyr settlement, Yulyalsky, Noselsky, Krasnoselishchensky settlements). However, here the Russian influence gradually grew, while the Bulgarian-Golden Horde weakened. By the beginning of the XV century. the interfluve of the Volga and Sura actually became part of the Grand Duchy of Moscow (before that, Nizhny Novgorod), as early as 1374, the Kurmysh fortress was founded on the Lower Sura. Relations between the Russians and the Mari were complicated: peaceful contacts were combined with periods of wars (mutual raids, campaigns of Russian princes against Bulgaria through the Mari lands from the 70s of the XIV centuries, attacks by the Ushkuyns in the second half of the XIV - early XV centuries, the participation of the Mari in the military actions of the Golden Horde against Rus', for example, in the Battle of Kulikovo).

Mass migrations continued Mari. As a result of the Mongol-Tatar invasion and subsequent raids of the steppe warriors, many Mari, who lived on the right bank of the Volga, moved to the safer left bank. At the end of the XIV - beginning of the XV centuries. the left-bank Mari, who lived in the basin of the Mesha, Kazanka, and Ashit rivers, were forced to move to the more northern regions and to the east, since the Kama Bulgars rushed here, fleeing from the troops of Timur (Tamerlane), then from the Nogai warriors. The eastern direction of the resettlement of the Mari in the XIV - XV centuries. was also due to Russian colonization. Assimilation processes also took place in the zone of contacts of the Mari with Russians and Bulgaro-Tatars.

Economic and socio-political situation of the Mari in the Kazan Khanate

The Kazan Khanate arose during the collapse of the Golden Horde - as a result of the appearance in the 30s - 40s. 15th century in the Middle Volga region of the Golden Horde Khan Ulu-Muhammed, his court and combat-ready troops, which together played the role of a powerful catalyst in consolidating the local population and creating public education, equivalent to the still decentralized Rus'.

Mari were not included in the Kazan Khanate by force; dependence on Kazan arose due to the desire to prevent an armed struggle in order to jointly oppose the Russian state and, in accordance with the established tradition, paying tribute to the Bulgarian and Golden Horde representatives of power. Allied, confederate relations were established between the Mari and the Kazan government. At the same time, there were noticeable differences in the position of the mountain, meadow and northwestern Maris in the khanate.

At the main part Mari the economy was complex, with a developed agricultural basis. Only in the northwestern Mari due to natural conditions (they lived in an area of ​​almost continuous swamps and forests), agriculture played minor role compared to forestry and animal husbandry. In general, the main features economic life Mari XV - XVI centuries. have not undergone significant changes compared to the previous time.

Mountain Mari, who lived, like the Chuvashs, the Eastern Mordovians and Sviyazhsk Tatars, on the Mountain side of the Kazan Khanate, were distinguished by their active participation in contacts with the Russian population, the relative weakness of ties with the central regions of the Khanate, from which they were separated by the large river Volga. At the same time, the Mountainous side was under fairly strict military and police control, which was associated with a high level of its economic development, an intermediate position between the Russian lands and Kazan, and the growing influence of Russia in this part of the khanate. In the Right Bank (due to its special strategic position and high economic development), foreign troops invaded more often - not only Russian warriors, but also steppe warriors. The position of the mountain people was complicated by the presence of main water and land roads to Rus' and the Crimea, since the bill of accommodation was very heavy and burdensome.

Meadow Mari unlike the mountainous ones, they did not have close and regular contacts with the Russian state, they were more connected with Kazan and the Kazan Tatars in political, economic, culturally. According to the level of their economic development, meadow Mari did not yield to the mountains. Moreover, on the eve of the fall of Kazan, the economy of the Left Bank developed in a relatively stable, calm and less harsh military-political situation, so contemporaries (A.M. Kurbsky, author of Kazan History) describe the well-being of the population of the Lugovaya and especially the Arsk side most enthusiastically and colorfully. The amounts of taxes paid by the population of the Gorny and Lugovaya sides also did not differ much. If on the Mountain side the burden of housing service was more strongly felt, then on the Lugovaya side it was the construction one: it was the population of the Left Bank that erected and maintained in proper condition the powerful fortifications of Kazan, Arsk, various prisons, notches.

Northwestern (Vetluga and Kokshay) Mari were relatively weakly drawn into the orbit of the khan's power due to their remoteness from the center and due to the relatively low economic development; at the same time, the Kazan government, fearing Russian military campaigns from the north (from Vyatka) and north-west (from Galich and Ustyug), sought to establish allied relations with the Vetluzh, Kokshai, Pizhan, Yaran Mari leaders, who also saw the benefit in supporting the invaders actions of the Tatars in relation to the outlying Russian lands.

"Military democracy" of the medieval Mari.

In the XV - XVI centuries. Mari, like other peoples of the Kazan Khanate, except for the Tatars, were at a transitional stage in the development of society from primitive to early feudal. On the one hand, individual family property was allocated within the framework of a land-related union (neighboring community), parcel labor flourished, property differentiation grew, and on the other hand, the class structure of society did not acquire its clear outlines.

Mari patriarchal families united in patronymic groups (nasyl, tukym, urlyk), and those - in larger land unions (tiste). Their unity was based not on kinship ties, but on the principle of neighborhood, to a lesser extent - on economic ties, which were expressed in various kinds of mutual "help" ("vyma"), joint ownership of common lands. Land unions were, among other things, unions of mutual military assistance. Perhaps the Tiste were territorially compatible with hundreds and uluses of the period of the Kazan Khanate. Hundreds, uluses, dozens were led by centurions or hundreds of princes (“shÿdövuy”, “puddle”), tenants (“luvuy”). The centurions appropriated for themselves some part of the yasak they collected in favor of the khan's treasury from subordinate ordinary community members, but at the same time they enjoyed authority among them as smart and courageous people, as skillful organizers and military leaders. Sotniki and foremen in the 15th - 16th centuries. they had not yet managed to break with primitive democracy, at the same time the power of the representatives of the nobility was increasingly acquiring a hereditary character.

The feudalization of the Mari society accelerated due to the Turkic-Mari synthesis. In relation to the Kazan Khanate, ordinary community members acted as a feudal-dependent population (in fact, they were personally free people and were part of a kind of semi-service estate), and the nobility acted as serving vassals. Among the Mari, representatives of the nobility began to stand out in a special military estate - mamichi (imildashi), heroes (batyrs), who probably already had some relation to the feudal hierarchy of the Kazan Khanate; on the lands with the Mari population, feudal estates began to appear - belyaki (administrative tax districts given by Kazan khans as a reward for service with the right to collect yasak from land and various fishing lands that were in the collective use of the Mari population).

The domination of the military-democratic order in the medieval Mari society was the environment where the immanent impulses for raids were laid. Warfare, once fought only to avenge attacks or to expand territory, is now becoming a constant pursuit. The property stratification of ordinary community members, whose economic activity was hampered by insufficiently favorable natural conditions and a low level of development of productive forces, led to the fact that many of them began to turn to a greater extent outside their community in search of means to satisfy their material needs and in an effort to raise their status in society. The feudalized nobility, which gravitated toward a further increase in wealth and its socio-political weight, also sought outside the community to find new sources of enrichment and strengthening its power. As a result, solidarity arose between two different layers of community members, between which a “military alliance” was formed with the aim of expansion. Therefore, the power of the Mari "princes", along with the interests of the nobility, still continued to reflect the common tribal interests.

The greatest activity in raids among all groups of the Mari population was shown by the northwestern Mari. This was due to their relatively low level of socio-economic development. Meadow and mountain Mari, engaged in agricultural labor, took a less active part in military campaigns, in addition, the local proto-feudal elite had other, besides military, ways to strengthen their power and further enrichment (primarily by strengthening ties with Kazan)

The accession of the mountain Mari to the Russian state

Entry Marithe composition of the Russian state was a multi-stage process, and the mountainMari. Together with the rest of the population of the Gornaya side, they were interested in peaceful relations with the Russian state, while in the spring of 1545 a series of major campaigns of Russian troops against Kazan began. At the end of 1546, the mountain people (Tugai, Atachik) attempted to establish a military alliance with Russia and, together with political emigrants from among the Kazan feudal lords, sought the overthrow of Khan Safa Giray and the enthronement of the Moscow vassal Shah Ali, in order to thereby prevent new invasions Russian troops and put an end to the despotic pro-Crimean internal politics of the khan. However, Moscow at that time had already set a course for the final annexation of the khanate - Ivan IV was married to the kingdom (this indicates that the Russian sovereign put forward his claim to the Kazan throne and other residences of the Golden Horde kings). Nevertheless, the Moscow government failed to take advantage of the successfully launched rebellion of the Kazan feudal lords led by Prince Kadysh against Safa Giray, and the help offered by the mountain people was rejected by the Russian governors. The mountain side continued to be considered by Moscow as enemy territory even after the winter of 1546/47. (campaigns against Kazan in the winter of 1547/48 and in the winter of 1549/50).

By 1551, Moscow government circles came up with a plan to annex the Kazan Khanate to Russia, which provided for the rejection of the Mountainous Side with its subsequent transformation into a stronghold for capturing the rest of the Khanate. In the summer of 1551, when a powerful military outpost was erected at the mouth of the Sviyaga (Sviyazhsk fortress), the Gornaya side was annexed to the Russian state.

The reasons for the occurrence of mountain Mari and the rest of the population of the Gornaya side in the composition of Russia, apparently, were: 1) the introduction of a large contingent of Russian troops, the construction of the fortress city of Sviyazhsk; 2) the flight to Kazan of the local anti-Moscow group of feudal lords, which could organize resistance; 3) the fatigue of the population of the Gornaya side from the devastating invasions of Russian troops, their desire to establish peaceful relations by restoring the Moscow protectorate; 4) the use by Russian diplomacy of the anti-Crimean and pro-Moscow moods of the mountain people in order to directly include the Mountain side into Russia (the actions of the population of the Mountain side were seriously affected by the arrival of the former Kazan Khan Shah-Ali along with the Russian governors, accompanied by five hundred Tatar feudal lords who entered the Russian service); 5) bribing the local nobility and ordinary militia soldiers, exempting mountain people from taxes for three years; 6) relatively close ties between the peoples of the Gorny side and Russia in the years preceding the accession.

Regarding the nature of the accession of the Mountain side to the Russian state, there was no consensus among historians. One part of the scientists believes that the peoples of the Mountainous side became part of Russia voluntarily, others argue that it was a violent seizure, and others adhere to the version of the peaceful, but forced nature of the annexation. Obviously, in the annexation of the Mountainous Side to the Russian state, both the causes and circumstances of a military, violent, and peaceful, non-violent nature played a role. These factors mutually complemented each other, giving the entry of the mountain Mari and other peoples of the Mountain side into Russia an exceptional originality.

Accession of the left-bank Mari to Russia. Cheremis war 1552 - 1557

In the summer of 1551 - in the spring of 1552. The Russian state exerted powerful military and political pressure on Kazan, the implementation of a plan for the gradual elimination of the khanate by establishing a Kazan viceroy was launched. However, in Kazan, anti-Russian sentiment was too strong, probably growing as pressure from Moscow increased. As a result, on March 9, 1552, the citizens of Kazan refused to let the Russian governor and the troops accompanying him into the city, and the whole plan of the bloodless annexation of the khanate to Russia collapsed overnight.

In the spring of 1552, an anti-Moscow uprising broke out on the Mountain side, as a result of which the territorial integrity of the khanate was actually restored. The reasons for the uprising of the mountain people were: the weakening of the Russian military presence on the territory of the Mountain side, the active offensive actions of the left-bank Kazanians in the absence of retaliatory measures from the Russians, the violent nature of the accession of the Mountain side to the Russian state, the departure of Shah Ali outside the khanate, to Kasimov. As a result of large-scale punitive campaigns of the Russian troops, the uprising was suppressed, in June-July 1552 the mountain people again took the oath to the Russian Tsar. So, in the summer of 1552, the mountain Mari finally became part of the Russian state. The results of the uprising convinced the mountain people of the futility of further resistance. The mountain side, being the most vulnerable and at the same time important in the military-strategic terms, part of the Kazan Khanate, could not become a powerful center of the people's liberation struggle. Obviously, such factors as privileges and all kinds of gifts granted by the Moscow government to mountain people in 1551, the experience of multilateral peaceful relations of the local population with the Russians, the complex, contradictory nature of relations with Kazan in previous years, also played a significant role. Due to these reasons, most of the mountain people during the events of 1552-1557. remained loyal to the power of the Russian sovereign.

During the Kazan war of 1545 - 1552. Crimean and Turkish diplomats were actively working to create an anti-Moscow union of Turkic-Muslim states in order to resist the powerful Russian expansion in the east. However, the unification policy failed due to the pro-Moscow and anti-Crimean positions of many influential Nogai murzas.

In the battle for Kazan in August - October 1552, a huge number of troops participated from both sides, while the number of besiegers exceeded the number of besieged at the initial stage by 2 - 2.5 times, and before the decisive assault - by 4 - 5 times. In addition, the troops of the Russian state were better trained in military-technical and military-engineering terms; the army of Ivan IV also managed to defeat the Kazan troops in parts. October 2, 1552 Kazan fell.

In the first days after the capture of Kazan, Ivan IV and his entourage took measures to organize the administration of the conquered country. Within 8 days (from October 2 to October 10), the Prikazan meadow Mari and Tatars were sworn in. However, the main part of the left-bank Mari did not show humility, and already in November 1552 the Mari of the Lugovoi side rose to fight for their freedom. The anti-Moscow armed uprisings of the peoples of the Middle Volga region after the fall of Kazan are usually called the Cheremis wars, since the Mari were the most active in them, however, the insurrectionary movement in the Middle Volga region in 1552 - 1557. is, in essence, a continuation of the Kazan war, and the main goal of its participants was the restoration of the Kazan Khanate. People's liberation movement 1552 - 1557 in the Middle Volga region it was caused by the following reasons: 1) upholding one's independence, freedom, the right to live one's own way; 2) the struggle of the local nobility for the restoration of the order that existed in the Kazan Khanate; 3) religious confrontation (the Volga peoples - Muslims and pagans - seriously feared for the future of their religions and culture in general, since immediately after the capture of Kazan, Ivan IV began to destroy mosques, build Orthodox churches in their place, destroy the Muslim clergy and pursue a policy of forced baptism ). The degree of influence of the Turkic-Muslim states on the course of events in the Middle Volga region during this period was negligible, in some cases potential allies even interfered with the rebels.

Resistance movement 1552 - 1557 or the First Cheremis War developed in waves. The first wave - November - December 1552 (separate outbreaks of armed uprisings on the Volga and near Kazan); the second - the winter of 1552/53 - the beginning of 1554. (the most powerful stage, covering the entire Left Bank and part of the Mountain side); the third - July - October 1554 (the beginning of the decline of the resistance movement, a split among the rebels from the Arsk and Coastal sides); the fourth - the end of 1554 - March 1555. (participation in the anti-Moscow armed uprisings only of the left-bank Mari, the beginning of the leadership of the rebels by the centurion from the Lugovaya side Mamich-Berdei); the fifth - the end of 1555 - the summer of 1556. (the rebel movement led by Mamich-Berdei, supported by the Aryan and coastal people - the Tatars and southern Udmurts, the capture of Mamich-Berdei); sixth, last - late 1556 - May 1557 (widespread cessation of resistance). All waves received their impulse on the Lugovaya side, while the left-bank (Lugovye and northwestern) Mari proved to be the most active, uncompromising and consistent participants in the resistance movement.

Kazan Tatars also took an active part in the war of 1552-1557, fighting for the restoration of the sovereignty and independence of their state. But still, their role in the insurgent movement, with the exception of some of its stages, was not the main one. This was due to several factors. First, the Tatars in the XVI century. experienced a period of feudal relations, they were class differentiated and they no longer had such solidarity as was observed among the left-bank Mari, who did not know class contradictions (largely because of this, the participation of the lower classes of Tatar society in the anti-Moscow insurrectionary movement was not stable). Secondly, within the class of feudal lords there was a struggle between clans, which was due to the influx of foreign (Horde, Crimean, Siberian, Nogai) nobility and weakness central government in the Kazan Khanate, and this was successfully used by the Russian state, which was able to win over to its side a significant group of Tatar feudal lords even before the fall of Kazan. Thirdly, the proximity of the socio-political systems of the Russian state and the Kazan Khanate facilitated the transition of the feudal nobility of the khanate into the feudal hierarchy of the Russian state, while the Mari proto-feudal elite had weak ties with the feudal structure of both states. Fourthly, the settlements of the Tatars, unlike most of the left-bank Mari, were in relative proximity to Kazan, large rivers and other strategically important routes of communication, in an area where there were few natural barriers that could seriously complicate the movement of punitive troops; moreover, these were, as a rule, economically developed areas, attractive for feudal exploitation. Fifthly, as a result of the fall of Kazan in October 1552, perhaps the bulk of the most combat-ready part of the Tatar troops was destroyed, the armed detachments of the left-bank Mari then suffered to a much lesser extent.

The resistance movement was suppressed as a result of large-scale punitive operations by the troops of Ivan IV. In a number of episodes, insurgent actions took the form civil war and class struggle, but the main motive remained the struggle for the liberation of their land. The resistance movement stopped due to several factors: 1) continuous armed clashes with the tsarist troops, which brought innumerable victims and destruction to the local population; 2) mass starvation and plague epidemic that came from the trans-Volga steppes; 3) the left-bank Mari lost the support of their former allies - the Tatars and the southern Udmurts. In May 1557, representatives of almost all groups of meadow and northwestern Mari swore allegiance to the Russian tsar.

Cheremis wars of 1571 - 1574 and 1581 - 1585 Consequences of the accession of the Mari to the Russian state

After the uprising of 1552-1557. the tsarist administration began to establish strict administrative and police control over the peoples of the Middle Volga region, but at first it was possible to do this only on the Gornaya side and in the immediate vicinity of Kazan, while in most of the Lugovaya side the power of the administration was nominal. The dependence of the local left-bank Mari population was expressed only in the fact that it paid a symbolic tribute and put up soldiers from among them, who were sent to Livonian War(1558 - 1583). Moreover, the meadow and northwestern Mari continued to raid Russian lands, and local leaders actively established contacts with the Crimean Khan in order to conclude an anti-Moscow military alliance. It is no coincidence that the Second Cheremis War of 1571-1574. began immediately after the campaign of the Crimean Khan Davlet Giray, which ended with the capture and burning of Moscow. The reasons for the Second Cheremis War were, on the one hand, the same factors that prompted the Volga peoples to start an anti-Moscow insurgency shortly after the fall of Kazan, on the other hand, the population, which was under the most strict control of the tsarist administration, was dissatisfied with the increase in the volume of duties, abuses and shameless arbitrariness of officials, as well as a streak of setbacks in the protracted Livonian War. Thus, in the second major uprising of the peoples of the Middle Volga region, national liberation and anti-feudal motives intertwined. Another difference between the Second Cheremis War and the First was the relatively active intervention of foreign states - the Crimean and Siberian khanates, the Nogai Horde and even Turkey. In addition, the uprising swept the neighboring regions, which had already become part of Russia by that time - Lower Volga and the Urals. With the help of a whole range of measures (peace negotiations with a compromise with representatives of the moderate wing of the rebels, bribery, isolation of the rebels from their foreign allies, punitive campaigns, construction of fortresses (in 1574, Kokshaysk was built at the mouth of the Bolshaya and Malaya Kokshag, the first city on the territory the modern Republic of Mari El)) the government of Ivan IV the Terrible managed to first split the rebel movement, and then suppress it.

The next armed uprising of the peoples of the Volga and Ural regions, which began in 1581, was caused by the same reasons as the previous one. What was new was that strict administrative and police supervision began to spread to the Lugovaya side (assigning heads (“watchmen”) to the local population - Russian service people who carried out control, partial disarmament, confiscation of horses). The uprising began in the Urals in the summer of 1581 (the attack of the Tatars, Khanty and Mansi on the possessions of the Stroganovs), then the unrest spread to the left-bank Mari, soon they were joined by the mountain Mari, Kazan Tatars, Udmurts, Chuvashs and Bashkirs. The rebels blocked Kazan, Sviyazhsk and Cheboksary, made long trips deep into Russian territory - to Nizhny Novgorod, Khlynov, Galich. The Russian government was forced to urgently end the Livonian War by signing a truce with the Commonwealth (1582) and Sweden (1583), and throw significant forces into pacifying the Volga population. The main methods of fighting against the rebels were punitive campaigns, the construction of fortresses (Kozmodemyansk was built in 1583, Tsarevokokshaysk in 1584, Tsarevosanchursk in 1585), as well as peace negotiations, during which Ivan IV, and after his death, the actual The ruler of Russia, Boris Godunov, promised amnesty and gifts to those who wanted to stop the resistance. As a result, in the spring of 1585, "they finished off the Tsar and Grand Duke Fyodor Ivanovich of All Rus' with the brow of the Cheremis with a centuries-old peace."

The entry of the Mari people into the Russian state cannot be unambiguously characterized as evil or good. Both negative and positive consequences of entering Mari into the system of Russian statehood, closely intertwined with each other, began to manifest themselves in almost all spheres of the development of society. However Mari and other peoples of the Middle Volga region, on the whole, faced the pragmatic, restrained and even mild (compared to Western European) imperial policy of the Russian state.
This was due not only to fierce resistance, but also to an insignificant geographical, historical, cultural and religious distance between the Russians and the peoples of the Volga region, as well as those ascending to early medieval traditions of multinational symbiosis, the development of which later led to what is usually called the friendship of peoples. The main thing is that, despite all the terrible upheavals, Mari nevertheless, they survived as an ethnic group and became an organic part of the mosaic of the unique Russian super-ethnos.

Materials used - Svechnikov S.K. Methodical manual "History of the Mari people of the IX-XVI centuries"

Yoshkar-Ola: GOU DPO (PC) C "Mari Institute of Education", 2005


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1. History

The distant ancestors of the Mari came to the Middle Volga around the 6th century. These were tribes belonging to the Finno-Ugric language group. In anthropological terms, the Udmurts, Komi-Permyaks, Mordvins, and Saami are closest to the Mari. These peoples belong to the Ural race - transitional between Caucasians and Mongoloids. The Mari among the named peoples are the most Mongoloid, with dark hair and eyes.


The neighboring peoples called the Mari "Cheremis". The etymology of this name is not clear. The self-name of the Mari - "Mari" - is translated as "man", "man".

The Mari are among the peoples who have never had their own state. Starting from the 8th-9th centuries, they were conquered by the Khazars, the Volga Bulgars, and the Mongols.

In the 15th century, the Mari became part of the Kazan Khanate. From that time on, their devastating raids on the lands of the Russian Volga region began. Prince Kurbsky in his "Tales" noted that "Cheremi people are extremely blood-drinking." Even women took part in these campaigns, who, according to contemporaries, were not inferior to men in courage and courage. The upbringing of the younger generation was also relevant. Sigismund Herberstein in his Notes on Muscovy (XVI century) indicates that the Cheremis are “very experienced archers, and they never let go of the bow; they find such pleasure in it that they do not even give their sons food, unless they first pierce the intended target with an arrow.

The accession of the Mari to the Russian state began in 1551 and ended a year later, after the capture of Kazan. However, for several more years, uprisings of conquered peoples flared in the Middle Volga region - the so-called "Cheremis wars". The Mari were the most active in them.

The formation of the Mari people was completed only in the XVIII century. At the same time, the Mari alphabet was created on the basis of the Russian alphabet.

Before October revolution the Mari were scattered as part of the Kazan, Vyatka, Nizhny Novgorod, Ufa and Yekaterinburg provinces. Important role In the ethnic consolidation of the Mari played the formation in 1920 of the Mari Autonomous Region, which was then transformed into autonomous republic. However, today only half of the 670 thousand Mari live in the Republic of Mari El. The rest are scattered outside.

2. Religion, culture

The traditional religion of the Mari is characterized by the idea of ​​the supreme god - Kugu Yumo, who is opposed by the bearer of evil - Keremet. Both deities were sacrificed in special groves. The leaders of the prayers were priests - carts.

The conversion of the Mari to Christianity began immediately after the fall of the Kazan Khanate and acquired a special scope in the 18th-19th centuries. The traditional faith of the Mari people was severely persecuted. By order of the secular and ecclesiastical authorities, sacred groves were cut down, prayers were dispersed, and stubborn pagans were punished. Conversely, those who converted to Christianity were given certain benefits.

As a result, most of the Mari were baptized. However, there are still many adherents of the so-called "Mari faith", which combines Christianity and traditional religion. Paganism remained almost untouched among the Eastern Mari. In the 70s of the 19th century, the Kugu Sorta (“big candle”) sect appeared, which tried to reform the old beliefs.

Adherence to traditional beliefs contributed to the establishment of the national identity of the Mari. Of all the peoples of the Finno-Ugric family, they have preserved their language, national traditions, and culture to the greatest extent. At the same time, Mari paganism carries elements of national alienation, self-isolation, which, however, do not have aggressive, hostile tendencies. On the contrary, in the traditional Mari pagan appeals to the Great God, along with a prayer for the happiness and well-being of the Mari people, there is a request to give a good life to Russians, Tatars and all other peoples.
The highest moral rule among the Mari was a respectful attitude towards any person. “Respect the elders, pity the younger ones,” says a folk proverb. It was considered a holy rule to feed the hungry, to help the one who asks, to provide shelter to the traveler.

The Mari family strictly monitored the behavior of its members. It was considered dishonor for a husband if his son was caught in some bad deed. Mutilation and theft were considered the gravest crimes, and the massacre of the people punished them most severely.

Traditional performances still have a huge impact on the life of the Mari society. If you ask a Mari what is the meaning of life, he will answer something like this: remain optimistic, believe in your happiness and good luck, do good deeds, for the salvation of the soul is in kindness.

The Mari ethnic group was formed on the basis of the Finno-Ugric tribes that lived in the Volga-Vyatka interfluve in the 1st millennium AD. e. as a result of contacts with the Bulgars and other Turkic-speaking peoples, the ancestors of modern, Tatars,.

The Russians used to call the Mari Cheremis. Mari are divided into three main sub-ethnic groups: mountain, meadow and eastern Mari. From the 15th century the mountain Mari fell under Russian influence. The Meadow Mari, who were part of the Kazan Khanate, for a long time offered fierce resistance to the Russians, during the Kazan campaign of 1551-1552. they were on the side of the Tatars. Part of the Mari moved to Bashkiria, not wanting to be baptized (Eastern), the rest were baptized in the XVI-XVIII centuries.

In 1920, the Mari Autonomous Region was created, in 1936 - the Mari ASSR, in 1992 - the Republic of Mari El. At present, the mountain Mari inhabit the right bank of the Volga, the meadow ones live in the Vetluzhsko-Vyatka interfluve, the eastern ones - east of the river. Vyatka, mainly in the territory of Bashkiria. Most of the Mari live in the Republic of Mari El, about a quarter - in Bashkiria, the rest - in Tataria, Udmurtia, Nizhny Novgorod, Kirov, Sverdlovsk, Perm regions. According to the 2002 census, more than 604,000 Mari lived in the Russian Federation.

The basis of the economy of the Mari was arable. They have long grown rye, oats, barley, millet, buckwheat, hemp, flax, and turnips. Horticulture was also developed, they planted mainly onions, cabbage, radishes, carrots, hops, from the 19th century. potatoes are widely used.

The Mari cultivated the soil with a plow (step), a hoe (katman), a Tatar plow (saban). Cattle breeding was not very developed, as evidenced by the fact that manure was only enough for 3-10% of arable land. If possible, they kept horses, cattle, and sheep. By 1917, 38.7% of Mari households were arable, big role beekeeping (then apiary beekeeping), fishing, as well as hunting and various forestry activities: tar smoking, logging and timber rafting, and hunting played.

During the hunt, the Mari up to mid-nineteenth V. used bows, horns, wooden traps, flintlock guns. On a large scale, otkhodnichestvo was developed for woodworking enterprises. Of the crafts, the Mari were engaged in embroidery, wood carving, and the production of women's silver jewelry. The main means of transportation in summer were four-wheeled carts (oryava), tarantasses and wagons, in winter - sledges, firewood and skis.

In the second half of the XIX century. Mari settlements were of the street type; a log hut with a gable roof, built according to the Great Russian scheme, served as a dwelling: hut-canopy, hut-canopy-hut or hut-canopy-cage. The house had a Russian stove, the kitchen was separated by a partition.

Along the front and side walls of the house there were benches, in the front corner there was a table and a chair especially for the owner of the house, shelves for icons and dishes, there was a bed or bunks to the side of the door. In the summer, the Mari could live in a summer house, which was a log building without a ceiling with a gable or shed roof and an earthen floor. There was a hole in the roof for smoke to escape. A summer kitchen was set up here. In the middle of the building was placed a hearth with a hanging cauldron. To the outbuildings of an ordinary Mari estate there were a cage, a cellar, a barn, a barn, a chicken coop, a bathhouse. Wealthy Mari built two-story storerooms with a gallery-balcony. Food was stored on the first floor, utensils on the second.

The traditional dishes of the Mari were soup with dumplings, dumplings with meat or cottage cheese, boiled sausage from bacon or blood with cereals, dried sausage from horse meat, puff pancakes, cheesecakes, boiled flat cakes, baked flat cakes, dumplings, pies stuffed with fish, eggs, potatoes , hemp seed. Bread was prepared by the Mari as unleavened. The national cuisine is also characterized by specific dishes from squirrel meat, hawk, owl, hedgehog, snake, viper, dried fish flour, hemp seed. From drinks, the Mari preferred beer, buttermilk (eran), mead, they knew how to drive vodka from potatoes and grain.

The traditional clothing of the Mari is considered to be a tunic-shaped shirt, trousers, an open summer caftan, a waist towel made of hemp canvas, a belt. In ancient times, the Mari sewed clothes from homespun linen and hemp fabrics, then from purchased fabrics.

The men wore small-brimmed felt hats and caps; for hunting, work in the forest, they used a mosquito net-type headgear. On their feet they wore bast shoes, leather boots, felt boots. For work in marshy places, wooden platforms were attached to the shoes. Distinctive features The women's national costume included an apron, belt pendants, chest, neck, and ear jewelry made of beads, cowrie shells, sequins, coins, silver clasps, bracelets, and rings.

Married women wore various headdresses:

  • shymaksh - a cone-shaped cap with an occipital lobe, put on a birch bark frame;
  • magpie, borrowed from the Russians;
  • tarpan - a head towel with an overcoat.

Until the 19th century The most common female headdress was shurka, a high headdress on a birch bark frame, reminiscent of Mordovian and headdresses. Outerwear was straight and detachable caftans made of black or white cloth and fur coats. Traditional types of clothing are still worn by the older generation of Mari, national costumes are often used in wedding rituals. At present, modernized types of national clothes are widespread - a shirt made of white and an apron made of multi-colored fabric, decorated with embroidery and mites, belts woven from multi-colored threads, caftans made of black and green fabric.

Mari communities consisted of several villages. At the same time, there were mixed Mari-Russian, Mari-Chuvash communities. The Mari lived mostly in small monogamous families; large families were quite rare.

In the old days, the Mari had small (urmat) and larger (nasyl) tribal divisions, the latter were part of the rural community (mer). At the time of marriage, the bride's parents were paid a ransom, and they gave a dowry (including cattle) for their daughter. The bride was often older than the groom. Everyone was invited to the wedding, and it took on the character of a general holiday. Traditional features of the ancient customs of the Mari are still present in wedding rituals: songs, national costumes with decorations, a wedding train, the presence of everyone.

The Mari had a highly developed folk medicine based on ideas about the cosmic life force, the will of the gods, corruption, the evil eye, evil spirits, the souls of the dead. Before the adoption of Christianity, the Mari adhered to the cult of ancestors and gods: the supreme god Kugu Yumo, the gods of heaven, the mother of life, the mother of water and others. An echo of these beliefs was the custom of burying the dead in winter clothes (in a winter hat and mittens) and taking the bodies to the cemetery in a sleigh even in the summer.

According to tradition, nails collected during life, rosehip branches, a piece of canvas were buried with the deceased. The Mari believed that in the next world, nails would be needed in order to overcome mountains, clinging to rocks, rose hips would help drive away a snake and a dog guarding the entrance to the kingdom of the dead, and along a piece of canvas, like a bridge, the souls of the dead would pass into the afterlife.

In ancient times, the Mari were pagans. They adopted the Christian faith in the 16th-18th centuries, but, despite all the efforts of the church, the religious beliefs of the Mari remained syncretic: a small part of the Eastern Mari converted to Islam, while the rest remain faithful to pagan rites to this day.

The mythology of the Mari is characterized by the presence a large number female gods. There are at least 14 deities denoting mother (ava), which indicates strong remnants of matriarchy. The Mari performed pagan collective prayers in sacred groves under the guidance of priests (karts). In 1870, the Kugu Sorta sect of a modernist-pagan persuasion arose among the Mari. Until the beginning of the twentieth century. ancient customs were strong among the Mari, for example, when a husband and wife who wanted to get a divorce divorced, they were first tied with a rope, which was then cut. This was the whole rite of divorce.

IN last years Mari make attempts to revive ancient national traditions and customs, unite in public organizations. The largest of them are "Oshmari-Chimari", "Mari Ushem", the Kugu Sorta (Big Candle) sect.

The Mari speak the Mari language of the Finno-Ugric group Ural family. In the Mari language, mountain, meadow, eastern and northwestern dialects are distinguished. The first attempts to create writing were made as early as the middle of the 16th century, in 1775 the first grammar in Cyrillic was published. In 1932-34. an attempt was made to switch to Latin graphics. Since 1938, a single graphics in Cyrillic has been established. The literary language is based on the language of the meadow and mountain Mari.

The folklore of the Mari is characterized mainly by fairy tales and songs. There is no single epic. Musical instruments represented by a drum, a harp, a flute, a wooden pipe (puch) and some others.


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Mari: who are we?

Did you know that in the XII-XV centuries, for three hundred (!) Years, in the territory of the present Nizhny Novgorod region, in the interfluve of Pizhma and Vetluga, there was the Vetluzhsky Mari principality. One of his princes, Kai Khlynovsky, had written Peace Treaties with Alexander Nevsky and the Khan of the Golden Horde! And in the fourteenth century, the “kuguza” (prince) Osh Pandash united the Mari tribes, attracted the Tatars to his side, and during the nineteen-year war defeated the squad of the Galich prince Andrei Fedorovich. In 1372, the Vetluzh Mari principality became independent.

The center of the principality was in the still existing village of Romachi, Tonshaevsky district, and in the Sacred Grove of the village, according to historical evidence, Osh Pandash was buried in 1385.

In 1468, the Vetluzh Mari principality ceased to exist and became part of Russia.

The Mari are the oldest inhabitants of the interfluve of Vyatka and Vetluga. This is confirmed by archaeological excavations of ancient Mari burial grounds. Khlynovsky on the river. Vyatka, dating back to the 8th - 12th centuries, Yumsky on the river. Yuma, a tributary of Tansy (IX - X centuries), Kocherginsky on the river. Urzhumka, a tributary of the Vyatka (IX - XII centuries), the Cheremis cemetery on the river. Ludyanka, a tributary of the Vetluga (VIII - X centuries), Veselovsky, Tonshaevsky and other burial grounds (Berezin, pp. 21-27,36-37).

The decomposition of the tribal system among the Mari occurred at the end of the 1st millennium, tribal principalities arose, which were ruled by elected elders. Using their position, they eventually began to seize power over the tribes, enriching themselves at their expense and raiding their neighbors.

However, this could not lead to the formation of their own early feudal state. Already at the stage of completion of their ethnogenesis, the Mari turned out to be the object of expansion from the Turkic East and Slavic state. From the south, the Mari were invaded by the Volga Bulgars, then the Golden Horde and the Kazan Khanate. Russian colonization proceeded from the north and west.

The Mari tribal elite turned out to be split, some of its representatives were guided by the Russian principalities, the other part actively supported the Tatars. Under such conditions, there could be no question of creating a national feudal state.

At the end of the 12th - beginning of the 13th centuries, the only Mari region over which the power of the Russian principalities and Bulgars was rather arbitrary was the area between the Vyatka and Vetluga rivers in their middle reaches. The natural conditions of the forest zone did not make it possible to clearly tie the northern borders of the Volga Bulgaria, and then the Golden Horde, to the terrain, so the Mari living in this area formed a kind of "autonomy". Since the collection of tribute (yasak), both for the Slavic principalities and the eastern conquerors, was carried out by the local increasingly feudalized tribal elite (Sanukov. p. 23)

Mari could act as a mercenary army in the internecine strife of the Russian princes, and make predatory raids on Russian lands alone or in alliance with the Bulgars or Tatars.

In the Galich manuscripts, the Cheremis war near Galich is mentioned for the first time in 1170, where the Vetluzh and Vyatka Cheremis appear as a hired army for a war between brothers quarreling among themselves. Both in this and in the following year 1171, the Cheremis were defeated and driven away from Galich Mersky (Dementiev, 1894, p. 24).

In 1174, the Mari population itself was attacked.
"The Vetluzh Chronicler" tells: "Novgorod warriors conquered from the Cheremis their city of Koksharov on the Vyatka River and called it Kotelnich, and the Cheremis left from their side to Yuma and Vetluga." Since that time, Shanga (the Shang settlement in the upper reaches of the Vetluga) has been more strengthened near the Cheremis. When in 1181 the Novgorodians conquered the Cheremis on Yuma, many residents found it better to live on Vetluga - on Yakshan and Shanga.

After the displacement of the Mari from the river. Yuma, some of them went down to their relatives on the river. Tansy. Throughout the river basin Tansy has been inhabited by Mari tribes since ancient times. According to numerous archaeological and folklore data: political, trade, military and cultural centers Mari were located on the territory of modern Tonshaevsky, Yaransky, Urzhumsky and Sovietsky districts of the Nizhny Novgorod and Kirov regions (Aktsorin, pp. 16-17,40).

The time of foundation of Shanza (Shanga) on Vetluga is unknown. But there is no doubt that its foundation is connected with the advancement of the Slavic population to the areas inhabited by the Mari. The word "shanza" comes from the Mari shengze (shenze) and means eye. By the way, the word shengze (eyes) is used only by the Tonshaev Mari of the Nizhny Novgorod region (Dementiev, 1894 p. 25).

Shanga was set up by the Mari on the border of their lands as a guard post (eyes), which watched the advance of the Russians. Only a sufficiently large military-administrative center (principality), which united significant Mari tribes, could set up such a watch fortress.

The territory of the modern Tonshaevsky district was part of this principality, it is no coincidence that in the 17th-18th centuries there was the Mari Armachinsky volost with its center in the village of Romachi. And the Mari, who lived here, owned at that time "since ancient times" lands on the banks of the Vetluga in the area of ​​the Shang settlement. Yes, and the legends about the Vetluzh principality are known mainly among the Tonshaev Mari (Dementiev, 1892, p. 5.14).

Beginning in 1185, the Galich and Vladimir-Suzdal princes unsuccessfully tried to recapture Shangu from the Mari principality. Moreover, in 1190 Mari was placed on the river. Vetluga is another "city of Khlynov", headed by Prince Kai. Only by 1229 did the Russian princes manage to force Kai to make peace with them and pay tribute. A year later, Kai refused tribute (Dementiev, 1894. p. 26).

By the 40s of the XIII century, the Vetluzh Mari principality was significantly strengthened. In 1240, the Yuma prince Kodzha Yeraltem built the city of Yakshan on Vetluga. Kodzha accepts Christianity and builds churches, freely allowing Russian and Tatar settlements on the Mari lands.

In 1245, on the complaint of the Galich prince Konstantin Yaroslavich Udaly (brother of Alexander Nevsky), the Khan (Tatar) ordered the right bank of the Vetluga River to the Galich prince, the left to the Cheremis. The complaint of Konstantin Udaly was apparently caused by the incessant raids of the Vetluzh Mari.

In 1246, Russian settlements in Povetluzhye were suddenly attacked and devastated by the Mongol-Tatars. Some of the inhabitants were killed or captured, the rest fled into the forests. Including the Galicians, who settled on the banks of the Vetluga after the Tatar attack in 1237. About the scale of the ruin says "Manuscript Life of St. Barnabas of Vetluzhsky." "In the same summer ... deserted from the capture of that Pogan Batu ... along the river bank, called Vetluga, ... And where there was a dwelling for people overgrown everywhere with a forest, great forests and the Vetluzh desert was called" (Kherson, p. 9 ). The Russian population, hiding from the raids of the Tatars and civil strife, settles in the Mari principality: in Shang and Yakshan.

In 1247 Grand Duke Alexander Nevsky made peace with the Mari and ordered trade and the exchange of goods in Shang. The Tatar Khan and the Russian princes recognized the Mari principality and were forced to reckon with it.

In 1277, the Galich prince David Konstantinovich continued to engage in trade with the Mari. However, already in 1280, David's brother, Vasily Konstantinovich, launched an attack on the Mari principality. In one of the battles, the Mari prince Kyi Khlynovsky was killed, and the principality was obliged to pay tribute to Galich. The new prince Mari, remaining a tributary of the Galich princes, renewed the cities of Shangu and Yakshan, re-fortified Busaksy and Yur (Bulaksy - the village of Odoevskoye, Sharyinsky district, Yur - a settlement on the Yuryevka river near the city of Vetluga).

In the first half of the 14th century, the Russian princes did not conduct active hostilities with the Mari, attracted the Mari nobility to their side, actively contributed to the spread of Christianity among the Mari, and encouraged the transition of Russian settlers to the Mari lands.

In 1345, the Galich prince Andrey Semenovich (son of Simeon the Proud) married the daughter of the Mari prince Nikita Ivanovich Baiboroda (the Mari name is Osh Pandash). Osh Pandash converted to Orthodoxy, and the daughter he gave to Andrei was baptized by Mary. At the wedding in Galicia was the second wife of Simeon the Proud - Eupraxia, on which, according to legend, the Mari sorcerer caused damage due to envy. Which, however, cost the Mari, without any consequences (Dementiev, 1894, pp. 31-32).

Armament and military affairs of the Mari / Cheremis

Noble Mari warrior of the middle of the XI century.

Chain mail, a helmet, a sword, a spearhead, a whip pommel, a sword scabbard tip were reconstructed based on materials from the excavations of the Sarsk settlement.

The stigma on the sword reads +LVNVECIT+ i.e. "Lun did" and is currently the only one of its kind.

The lanceolate spearhead, which stands out for its size (the first tip on the left), belongs to type I according to Kirpichnikov's classification and, apparently, is of Scandinavian origin.

The figure depicts warriors occupying a low position in the social structure of the Mari society in the second half of the 11th century. Their set of weapons consists of hunting weapons and axes. In the foreground is an archer armed with a bow, arrows, a knife and an eye axe. At the moment, there is no data on the design features of the Mari bows themselves. The reconstruction shows a simple bow and arrow with a characteristic lance-shaped tip. Bow cases and quivers appear to have been made from organic materials (in this case, leather and birch bark, respectively), and their shape is also unknown.

In the background, a warrior is depicted armed with a massive promotional (it is very difficult to distinguish between a combat and a fishing ax) ax and several throwing spears with two-thorn socketed and lanceolate tips.

In general, the Mari warriors were armed quite typically for their time. Most of them, apparently, owned bows, axes, spears, sulits, and fought on foot, without using dense formations. Representatives of the tribal elite could afford expensive protective (chain mail and helmets) and offensive bladed weapons (swords, scramasaxes).

The poor preservation of a fragment of chain mail found at the Sarskoye settlement does not allow us to judge with certainty the method of weaving and the cut of this protective element of weapons as a whole. One can only assume that they were typical for their time. Judging by the find of a piece of chain mail, the Cheremis tribal elite could also use plate armor that was simpler to manufacture and cheaper than chain mail. No shell plates were found at the Sarskoye settlement, but they are present among the items of weapons originating from Sarskoye-2. This suggests that the Mari warriors, in any case, were familiar with a similar armor design. The presence of so-called weapons in the Mari complex also seems extremely probable. "soft armor", made from organic materials (leather, felt, fabric), densely stuffed with wool or horsehair and quilted. For obvious reasons, it is impossible to confirm the existence of this kind of armor with archaeological data. Nothing definite can be said about their cut and appearance. Because of this, such armor is not reproduced in reconstructions.

No traces of the use of shields by the Mari have been found. However, the shields themselves are a very rare archaeological find, and written and pictorial sources are extremely scarce and uninformative about the measure. In any case, the existence of shields in the Mari weapons complex of the 9th - 12th centuries. perhaps, because both the Slavs and the Scandinavians, who undoubtedly had contact with the measure, widely used shields, which were widespread at that time, in fact, throughout Europe of a round shape, which is confirmed by both written and archaeological sources. Finds of parts of the equipment of the horse and rider - stirrups, buckles, belt distributor, whip tip, in the absence of weapons specially adapted for cavalry combat (pikes, sabers, flails), allow us to conclude that the Mari have no cavalry as a special kind of troops . It is possible, with a very great deal of caution, to assume the presence of small cavalry units, consisting of tribal nobility.

Reminds me of the situation with the mounted warriors of the Ob Ugrians.

The bulk of the Cheremis troops, especially in the case of major military conflicts, consisted of a militia. There was no standing army, every free man could own a weapon and was, if necessary, a warrior. This suggests the widespread use by the Mari in military conflicts of fishing weapons (bows, spears with two-thorn tips) and working axes. Funds for the purchase of specialized "combat" weapons, most likely, were available only to representatives of the social elite of society. One can assume the existence of contingents of warriors - professional soldiers, for whom the war was the main occupation.

As for the mobilization capabilities of the annalistic Mary, they were quite significant for their time.

In general, the military potential of the Cheremis can be assessed as high. The structure of its armed organization and the complex of weapons changed over time, enriched with elements borrowed from neighboring ethnic groups, but retaining some originality. These circumstances, along with a fairly high population density for its time and a good economic potential, allowed the Vetluzh principality of the Mari to take a significant part in the events of early Russian history.

Mari noble warrior. Illustrations-reconstructions by I. Dzysya from the book "Kievan Rus" (publishing house "Rosmen").

The legends of the Vetluzhsky borderland have their own zest. They usually have a girl in them. She can take revenge on the robbers (be they Tatars or Russians), drown them in the river, for example, at the cost of her own life. She may be a girlfriend of a robber, but out of jealousy she also drowns him (and drowns herself). Or maybe she herself can be a robber or a warrior.

Nikolai Fomin portrayed the Cheremis warrior as follows:

Very close and, in my opinion, very veristic. Can be used to create male version"Mari-Cheremis combatant. By the way, Fomin, apparently, did not dare to reconstruct the shield.

Mari national costume:

Ovda-witch among the Mari

Mari names:

Male names

Abdai, Abla, Abukay, Abulek, Agey, Agish, Adai, Adenai, Adibek, Adim, Aim, Ait, Aygelde, Ayguza, Ayduvan, Aydush, Ayvak, Aimak, Aymet, Ayplat, Aytukay, Azamat, Azmat, Azygey, Azyamberdey, Akaz, Akanai, Akipai, Akmazik, Akmanai, Akoz, Akpay, Akpars, Akpas, Akpatyr, Aksay, Aksar, Aksaran, Aksyan, Aktai, Aktan, Aktanai, Aktubay, Aktugan, Aktygan, Aktygash, Alatay, Albacha, Alek, Almaday, Alkay, Almakay, Alman, Almantai, Alpay, Altybay, Altym, Altysh, Alshik, Alym, Amash, Anai, Angish, Andugan, Ansai, Anykay, Apai, Apakai, Apisar, Appak, Aptriy, Aptysh, Arazgelde, Ardash, Asai, Asamuk, Askar, Aslan, Asmay, Atavay, Atachik, Aturay, Atyuy, Ashkelde, Ashtyvay

Bikey, Buckeye, Bakmat, Birdey

Vakiy, Valitpay, Varash, Vachiy, Vegeney, Vetkan, Voloy, Vurspatyr

Eksei, Elgoza, Elos, Emesh, Epish, Yesieniei

Zainikay, Zengul, Zilkay

Ibat, Ibray, Ivuk, Idulbay, Izambay, Izvay, Izerge, Izikay, Izimar, Izyrgen, Ikaka, Ilandai, Ilbaktai, Ilikpay, Ilmamat, Ilsek, Imai, Imakai, Imanay, Indybay, Ipay, Ipon, Irkebay, Isan, Ismeney, Istak, Iver, Iti, Itykay, Ishim, Ishkelde, Ishko, Ishmet, Ishterek

Yolgyza, Yoray, Yormoshkan, Yorok, Yylanda, Yinash

Kavik, Kavyrlya, Kaganai, Kazaklar, Kazmir, Kazulai, Kakaley, Kalui, Kamai, Kambar, Kanai, Kaniy, Kanykiy, Karantai, Karachey, Karman, Kachak, Kebey, Kebyash, Keldush, Keltey, Kelmekey, Kendugan, Kenchyvay, Kenzhivay, Kerey, Kechim, Kilimbay, Kildugan, Kildyash, Kimai, Kinash, Kindu, Kirysh, Kispelat, Kobey, Kovyazh, Kogoy, Kozhdemyr, Kozher, Kozash, Kokor, Kokur, Koksha, Kokshavuy, Konakpay, Kopon, Kori, Kubakay, Kugerge, Kugubai, Kulmet, Kulbat, Kulshet, Kumanai, Kumunzai, Kuri, Kurmanai, Kutyarka, Kylak

Lagat, Laksyn, Lapkay, Leventey, Lekay, Lotai,

Magaza, Madiy, Maksak, Mamatai, Mamich, Mamuk, Mamulai, Mamut, Manekay, Mardan, Marzhan, Marshan, Masai, Mekesh, Memey, Michu, Moise, Mukanai, Mulikpai, Mustai

Ovdek, Ovrom, Odygan, Ozambay, Ozati, Okash, Oldygan, Onar, Onto, Onchep, Orai, Orlai, Ormik, Orsay, Orchama, Opkyn, Oskay, Oslam, Oshay, Oshkelde, Oshpay, Örözöy, Örtömö

Paybakhta, Payberde, Paygash, Paygish, Paygul, Paygus, Paygyt, Payder, Paydush, Paymas, Paymet, Paymurza, Paymyr, Paysar, Pakay, Pakey, Pakiy, Pakit, Paktek, Pakshay, Paldai, Pangelde, Parastay, Pasyvy, Patay, Paty, Patyk, Patyrash, Pashatley, Pashbek, Pashkan, Pegash, Pegenei, Pekey, Pekesh, Pekoza, Pekpatyr, Pekpulat, Pektan, Pektash, Pektek, Pektubai, Pektygan, Pekshik, Petigan, Pekmet, Pibakai, Pibulat, Pidalai, Pogolti, Pozanay, Repent, Poltish, Pombay, Understand, Por, Porandai, Porzay, Posak, Posibey, Pulat, Pyrgynde

Rotkay, Ryazhan

Sabati, Savay, Savak, Savat, Savy, Savli, Saget, Sain, Saipyten, Saituk, Sakai, Saldai, Saldugan, Saldyk, Salmandai, Salmiyan, Samai, Samukai, Samut, Sanin, Sanuk, Sapay, Sapan, Sapar, Saran, Sarapay, Sarbos, Sarvay, Sardai, Sarkandai, Sarman, Sarmanai, Sarmat, Saslyk, Satai, Satkay, S?p? Suangul, Subay, Sultan, Surmanay, Surtan

Tavgal, Tayvylat, Taygelde, Tayyr, Talmek, Tamas, Tanay, Tanakay, Tanagay, Tanatar, Tantush, Tarai, Temai, Temyash, Tenbai, Tenikey, Tepai, Terei, Terke, Tyatyuy, Tilmemek, Tilyak, Tinbay, Tobulat, Togilday, Todanai, Toy, Toybai, Toybakhta, Toyblat, Toyvator, Toygelde, Toyguza, Toydak, Toidemar, Toyderek, Toydybek, Toykei, Toymet, Tokai, Tokash, Tokey, Tokmai, Tokmak, Tokmash, Tokmurza, Tokpay, Tokpulat, Toksubai, Toktay, Toktamysh, Toktanay, Toktar, Toktaush, Tokshey, Toldugak, Tolmet, Tolubay, Tolubey, Topkay, Topoy, Torash, Torut, Tosai, Tosak, Tots, Topay, Tugay, Tulat, Tunay, Tunbay, Turnaran, Tyatyakay, Temer, Tyulebay, Tyuley, Tyushkay, Tyabyanak, Tyabikey, Tabley, Tuman, Tyaush

Uksay, Ulem, Ultecha, Ur, Urazai, Ursa, Teach

Tsapai, Tsatak, Tsorabatyr, Tsorakai, Tsotnay, Tsörysh, Tsyndush

Chavay, Chalay, Chapey, Chekeney, Chemekey, Chepish, Chetnay, Chimay, Chicher, Chopan, Chopi, Chopoy, Chorak, Chorash, Chotkar, Chuzhgan, Chuzay, Chumbylat (Chumblatt), Chyachkay

Shabay, Shabdar, Shaberde, Shadai, Shaymardan, Shamat, Shamray, Shamykay, Shanzora, Shiik, Shikvava, Shimai, Shipai, Shogen, Strek, Shumat, Shuet, Shyen

Ebat, Evay, Evrash, Eishemer, Ekay, Exesan, Elbakhta, Eldush, Elikpay, Elmurza, Elnet, Elpay, Eman, Emanai, Emash, Emek, Emeldush, Emen (Emyan), Emyatai, Enai, Ensai, Epai, Epanai, Erakay , Erdu, Ermek, Ermyza, Erpatyr, Esek, Esik, Eskey, Esmek, Esmeter, Esu, Esyan, Etvay, Etyuk, Echan, Eshay, Eshe, Eshken, Eshmanay, Eshmek, Eshmyay, Eshpay (Ishpay), Eshplat, Eshpoldo, Eshpulat, Eshtanay, Eshterek

Yuadar, Yuanay (Yuvanay), Yuvan, Yuvash, Yuzay, Yuzykay, Yukez, Yukey, Yukser, Yumakay, Yushkelde, Yushtanay

Yaberde, Yagelde, Yagodar, Yadyk, Yazhay, Yaik, Yakay, Yakiy, Yakman, Yakterge, Yakut, Yakush, Yakshik, Yalkai (Yalky), Yalpay, Yaltay, Yamai, Yamak, Yamakay, Yamaliy, Yamanai, Yamatai, Yambay, Yambaktyn , Yambarsha, Yamberde, Yamblat, Yambos, Yamet, Yammurza, Yamshan, Yamyk, Yamysh, Yanadar, Yanay, Yanak, Yanaktai, Yanash, Yanbadysh, Yanbasar, Yangay, Yangan (Yanygan), Yangelde, Yangerche, Yangidey, Yangoza, Yanguvat, Yangul, Yangush, Yangys, Yandak, Yanderek, Yandugan, Yanduk, Yandush (Yandysh), Yandula, Yandygan, Yandylet, Yandysh, Yaniy, Yanikey, Yansai, Yantemir (Yandemir), Yantecha, Yantsit, Yantsora, Yanchur (Yanchura), Yanygit , Yanyk, Yanykay (Yanyky), Yapay, Yapar, Yapush, Yaraltem, Yaran, Yarandai, Yarmiy, Yastap, Yatman, Yaush, Yachok, Yashay, Yashkelde, Yashkot, Yashmak, Yashmurza, Yashpay, Yashpadar, Yashpatyr, Yashtugan

Women's names

Aivika, Aikavi, Akpika, Aktalche, Alipa, Amina, Anay, Arnyaviy, Arnyasha, Asavi, Asildik, Astana, Atybylka, Achiy

Baitabichka

Yoktalche

Kazipa, Kaina, Kanipa, Kelgaska, Kechavi, Kigeneshka, Kinai, Kinichka, Kistelet, Xilbika

Mayra, Makeva, Malika, Marzi (Myarzi), Marziva

Naltichka, Nachi

Ovdachi, Ovoy, Ovop, Ovchi, Okalche, Okachi, Oksina, Okutiy, Onasi, Orina, Ochiy

Paizuka, Payram, Pampalche, Payalche, Penalche, Pialche, Pidelet

Sagida, Saiviy, Sailan, Sakeva, Salika, Salima, Samiga, Sandyr, Saskaviy, Saskai, Saskanai, Sebichka, Soto, Sylvika

Ulina, Unavi, Usti

Changa, Chatuk, Chachi, Chilbichka, Chinbeika, Chinchi, Chichavi

Shaivi, Shaldybeyka

Evika, Ekevi, Elika, Erviy, Ervika, Erika

Yukchi, Yulaviy

Yalche, Yambi, Yanipa

Occupations of the population: settled agricultural and livestock farming, developed crafts, metalworking in combination with ancient traditional occupations: gathering, hunting, fishing, beekeeping.
Note: The lands are very good and fertile.

Resources: fish, honey, wax.

Troop Line:

1. Detachment of the prince's bodyguards - mounted heavily armed fighters with swords, in chain mail and plate armor, with spears, swords and shields. The helmet is pointed, with sultans. The squad is small.
Onyzha is a prince.
Kugyza - leader, elder.

2. Vigilantes - as in the color illustration - in chain mail, hemispherical helmets, with swords and shields.
Patyr, odyr - warrior, hero.

3. Lightly armed warriors with darts and axes (without shields) in padded jackets. No helmets in hats.
Marie - men.

4. Archers with good strong bows and sharp arrows. No helmets. in quilted sleeveless jackets.
Yumo - bow.

5. Special seasonal unit - Cheremis skier. The Mari had - Russian chronicles mark them repeatedly.
kuas - ski, skis - fell kuas

The symbol of the Mari is a white elk - a symbol of nobility and strength. It indicates the presence around the city of rich forests and meadows where these animals live.

The main colors of the Mari: Osh Mari - White Mari. So the Mari called themselves, glorified whiteness traditional clothes the purity of your thoughts. The reason for this was, first of all, their usual outfits, the custom that had developed over the years to wear all white. In winter and summer they put on a white caftan, under a caftan - a white linen shirt, on their heads - a hat made of white felt. And only the dark red patterns embroidered on the shirt, along the hem of the caftan, brought variety and noticeable peculiarity to White color all attire.

Therefore, they should be made mainly - white clothes. There were many redheads.

More ornaments and embroidery:

And, perhaps, everything. The faction is ready.

Here's more about the Mari, by the way, touches on the mystical aspect of traditions, it may come in handy.

Scientists attribute the Mari to the group of Finno-Ugric peoples, but this is not entirely true. According to ancient Mari legends, this people in ancient times came from Ancient Iran, the birthplace of the prophet Zarathustra, and settled along the Volga, where they mixed with the local Finno-Ugric tribes, but retained their originality. This version is also confirmed by philology. According to the Doctor of Philology, Professor Chernykh, out of 100 Mari words, 35 are Finno-Ugric, 28 are Turkic and Indo-Iranian, and the rest Slavic origin and other peoples. Carefully studied the prayer texts of the ancient Mari religion, Professor Chernykh came to an amazing conclusion: the prayer words of the Mari are more than 50% of Indo-Iranian origin. It was in the prayer texts that the proto-language of the modern Mari was preserved, not subject to the influence of the peoples with whom they had contacts in later periods.

Outwardly, the Mari are quite different from other Finno-Ugric peoples. As a rule, they are not very tall, with dark hair, slightly slanted eyes. Mari girls are very beautiful at a young age, but by the age of forty, most of them are very old and either shrink or become incredibly full.

The Mari remember themselves under the rule of the Khazars from the 2nd century. - 500 years, then under the rule of the Bulgars 400, 400 under the Horde. 450 - under the Russian principalities. According to ancient predictions, the Mari cannot live under someone for more than 450-500 years. But they will not have an independent state. This cycle of 450-500 years is associated with the passage of a comet.

Before the collapse of the Bulgar Khaganate, namely at the end of the 9th century, the Mari occupied vast areas, and their number was more than a million people. This is the Rostov region, Moscow, Ivanovo, Yaroslavl, the territory of modern Kostroma, Nizhny Novgorod, modern Mari El and the Bashkir lands.

In ancient times, the Mari people were ruled by princes, whom the Mari called oms. The prince combined the functions of both a military commander and a high priest. The Mari religion considers many of them to be saints. Saint in Mari - shnuy. For a person to be recognized as a saint, 77 years must pass. If after this period, when prayerfully addressed to him, healings from diseases occur, and other miracles occur, then the deceased is recognized as a saint.

Often such holy princes possessed various extraordinary abilities, and were in one person a righteous sage and a warrior merciless to the enemy of his people. After the Mari finally fell under the rule of other tribes, they no longer had princes. And the religious function is performed by the priest of their religion - kart. The supreme kart of all Maris is elected by the council of all karts and his powers within the framework of his religion are approximately equal to the powers of the patriarch among Orthodox Christians.

In ancient times, the Mari really believed in many gods, each of which reflected some element or force. However, at the time of the unification of the Mari tribes, like the Slavs, the Mari had an acute political and religious need for religious reformation.

But the Mari did not follow the path of Vladimir Krasno Solnyshko and did not accept Christianity, but changed their own religion. The Mari prince Kurkugza became a reformer, whom the Mari now revere as a saint. Kurkugza studied other religions: Christianity, Islam, Buddhism. He was helped to study other religions by trading people from other principalities and tribes. The prince also studied shamanism northern peoples. Having learned in detail about all religions, he reformed the old Mari religion and introduced a cult of worship of the supreme God - Osh Tyun Kugu Yumo, the Lord of the Universe.

This is the hypostasis of the great one God, responsible for the power and control of all other hypostases (incarnations) of the one God. Under him, the supremacy of the hypostases of the one God was determined. The main ones were Anavarem Yumo, Ilyan Yumo, Pirshe Yumo. The prince did not forget his kinship and roots with the people of the Mer, with whom the Mari lived in harmony and had common linguistic and religious roots. Hence the deity Mer Yumo.

Ser Lagash is an analogue of the Christian Savior, but inhuman. This is also one of the hypostases of the Almighty, which arose under the influence of Christianity. Shochyn Ava became an analogue of the Christian Mother of God. Mlande Ava is the hypostasis of the one God, responsible for fertility. Perke Ava is the hypostasis of the one God, responsible for economy and abundance. Tynya Yuma is the celestial dome, which consists of nine Kawa Yuma (heavens). Keche Ava (sun), Shidr Ava (stars), Tylize Ava (moon) are the upper tier. The lower tier is Mardezh Ava (wind), Pyl Ava (clouds), Vit Ava (water), Kudricha Yuma (thunder), Volgenche Yuma (lightning). If the deity ends in Yumo, it is an oz (master, lord). And if it ends in Ava, then strength.

Thanks for reading to the end...

And, I tell you, he still brings bloody sacrifices to God.

At the invitation of the organizers of the international conference dedicated to languages ​​in computers, I visited the capital of Mari El - Yoshkar Ola.

Yoshkar is red, and ola, I have already forgotten what it means, since the city in the Finno-Ugric languages ​​\u200b\u200bis just "kar" (in the words Syktyvkar, Kudymkar, for example, or Shupashkar - Cheboksary).

And the Mari are Finno-Ugric, i.e. are related in language to the Hungarians, Nenets, Khanty, Udmurts, Estonians and, of course, the Finns. Hundreds of years of living together with the Turks also played a role - there are many borrowings, for example, in his welcoming speech, a high-ranking official called the founding enthusiasts of the only radio broadcasting in the Mari language radio batyrs.

The Mari are very proud of the fact that they put up stubborn resistance to the troops of Ivan the Terrible. One of the brightest Mari, oppositionist Laid Shemyer (Vladimir Kozlov) even wrote a book about the defense of Kazan by the Mari.

We had something to lose, unlike some of the Tatars, who were related to Ivan the Terrible, and actually changed one khan for another, - he says (according to some versions, Wardaah Uybaan did not even know the Russian language).

This is how Mari El appears from the train window. Swamps and Mary.

Somewhere there is snow.

This is me and my Buryat colleague in the first minutes of entering the Mari land. Zhargal Badagarov - participant of the conference in Yakutsk, which took place in 2008.

We are examining the monument to the famous Mari - Yivan Kyrla. Remember Mustafa from the first Soviet sound film? He was a poet and an actor. Repressed in 1937 on charges of bourgeois nationalism. The reason was a fight in a restaurant with tipsy students.

He died in one of the Ural camps from starvation in 1943.

On the monument he rides on a trolley. And he sings a Mari song about a marten.

And we are met by the hosts. Fifth from the left is a legendary figure. The same radio batyr - Andrey Chemyshev. He is famous for having once written a letter to Bill Gates.

“How naive I was then, I didn’t know much, I didn’t understand much ... - he says, - but there was no end to journalists, I already started to pick and choose - again the first channel, but do you have a BBC there ... "

After the rest, we were taken to the museum. which was opened especially for us. By the way, in the letter, the radio batyr wrote: “Dear Bill Gates, we paid you by purchasing the Windows license package, so we ask you to include five Mari letters in the standard fonts.”

It is surprising that Mari inscriptions are everywhere. Although they did not come up with special gingerbread sticks, and the owners do not bear any responsibility for not writing a sign in the second state language. Employees of the Ministry of Culture say that they just have a heart-to-heart talk with them. Well, they said in secret that the chief architect of the city plays a big role in this matter.

Here is such an Aivika. In fact, I don’t know the name of the charming guide, but the most popular female name among the Mari is Aivika. The stress is on the last syllable. And also Salika. There is even a TV movie in Mari with Russian and English subtitles of the same name. I brought this as a gift to one Yakut Mari - his aunt asked.

The excursion is built curiously - it is proposed to get acquainted with the life and culture of the Mari by tracing the fate of the Mari girl. Of course her name is Aivika))). Birth.

Here Aivika seemed to be in the cradle (not visible).

This is a holiday with mummers, such as carols.

The "bear" also has a birch bark mask.

Do you see Aivika blowing into the chimney? It is she who announces to the district that she has become a girl and it is time for her to get married. A rite of passage. Some hot Finno-Ugric guys))) immediately also wanted to notify the district of their readiness ... But they were told that the pipe was in another place))).

Traditional three-layer pancakes. Bake for the wedding.

Pay attention to the monists of the bride.

It turns out that having conquered the Cheremis, Ivan the Terrible forbade blacksmithing to foreigners - so that weapons would not be forged. And the Mari had to make decorations from coins.

One of the traditional occupations is fishing.

Beekeeping - collecting honey from wild bees - is also an ancient occupation of the Mari.

Livestock.

Here are the Finno-Ugric peoples: in a sleeveless jacket a representative of the Mansi people (takes pictures), in a suit - a man from the Komi Republic, behind him is a bright one - an Estonian.

End of life.

Pay attention to the bird on the poles - the cuckoo. A link between the worlds of the living and the dead.

That's where our "cuckoo, cuckoo, how much do I have left?"

And this is a priest in a sacred birch grove. Kart or card. Until now, they say, about 500 sacred groves have been preserved - a kind of temples. Where the Mari sacrifice to their gods. Bloody. Usually chicken, goose or lamb.

An employee of the Udmurt Institute for Advanced Training of Teachers, the administrator of the Udmurt Wikipedia Denis Sakharnykh. As a true scientist, Denis is a supporter of a scientific, non-captive approach to promoting languages ​​on the web.

As you can see, the Mari make up 43% of the population. The second largest after the Russians, of which 47.5%.

The Mari are mainly divided by language into mountain and meadow. Mountain people live on the right bank of the Volga (towards Chuvashia and Mordovia). The languages ​​are so different that there are two wikipedias - in Highland Mari and Meadow Mari.

Questions about the Cheremis wars (30 years of resistance) are asked by a Bashkir colleague. The girl in white in the background is an employee of the Institute of Anthropology and Ethnology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, she calls her area of ​​​​scientific interest - what would you think? - Identity of the Ilimpi Evenks. This summer he is going to Tura in the Krasnoyarsk Territory and maybe even visit the village of Essey. We wish good luck to the fragile city girl in the development of the polar expanses, which are difficult even in summer.

Picture next to the museum.

After the museum, in anticipation of the beginning of the meeting, we walked around the city center.

This slogan is extremely popular.

The city center is being actively rebuilt by the current head of the republic. And in the same style. Pseudo-Byzantine.

They even built a mini-Kremlin. Which, they say, is almost always closed.

On the main square, on one side, there is a monument to the saint, on the other - to the conqueror. The guests of the city chuckle.

Here is another attraction - a clock with a donkey (or a mule?).

Mariyka talks about the donkey, how it became the unofficial symbol of the city.

Soon it will strike three o'clock - and the donkey will come out.

We love the donkey. As you understand - the donkey is not simple - he brought Christ to Jerusalem.

Participant from Kalmykia.

And this is the same "conqueror". The first imperial governor.

UPD: Pay attention to the coat of arms of Yoshkar-Ola - they say it will be removed soon. Someone in the City Council decided to make the elk horned. But maybe that's idle talk.

UPD2: The coat of arms and the flag of the Republic have already been changed. Markelov - and no one doubts that it was he, although the parliament voted - replaced the Mari cross with a bear with a sword. The sword is looking down and sheathed. Symbolic, right? In the picture - the old Mari coat of arms has not yet been removed.

Here it was plenary session conferences. No, a sign in honor of another event)))

Curious thing. In Russian and Mari ;-) In fact, everything was correct on other plates. Street in Mari - urem.

Shop - kevyt.

As one colleague who once visited us sarcastically remarked, the landscape resembles Yakutsk. It is sad that our guests hometown appears in this form.

A language is alive if it is in demand.

But we still need to provide the technical side - the ability to print.

Our wiki is among the first in Russia.

Absolutely correct remark of Mr. Leonid Soames, CEO of Linux-Ink (Peter): the state does not seem to notice the problem. By the way, Linux-Ink is developing a browser, spell checker and office for independent Abkhazia. Naturally in the Abkhazian language.

Actually, the participants of the conference tried to answer this sacramental question.

Pay attention to the amounts. This is for building from scratch. For the whole republic - a mere trifle.

An employee of the Bashkir Institute for Humanitarian Research reports. I am acquainted with our Vasily Migalkin. Linguists of Bashkortostan began to approach the so-called. language corpus - a comprehensive codification of the language.

And on the presidium sits the main organizer of the action, an employee of the Mari Ministry of Culture, Eric Yuzykain. Fluent in Estonian and Finnish. Mine native language mastered already as an adult, in many respects, he admits, thanks to his wife. Now he teaches the language to his children.

DJ "Radio Mari El", admin of the Lugovoi Mari wiki.

Representative of the Word Foundation. Very promising Russian fund, which is ready to support projects for minority languages.

Wikimedists.

And these are the same new buildings in the quasi-Italian style.

It was Muscovites who began to build casinos, but a decree on their ban arrived in time.

In general, when asked who finances the entire "Byzantium", they answer that the budget.

If we talk about the economy, there were (and probably still are) military factories in the republic for the production of the legendary S-300 missiles. Because of this, earlier Yoshkar-Ola was even a closed territory. Like our Tiksi.



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