External signs of the Finno-Ugric peoples. Back to the roots: interesting facts about the Finno-Ugric peoples

17.04.2019

There is such a group of peoples - Finno-Ugric. my roots- from there (I am from Udmurtia, my father and his parents are from Komi), although I am considered Russian, and the nationality in the passport is Russian. Today I will tell you about my discoveries and research of these peoples.
It is customary to refer to the Finno-Ugric peoples:
1) Finns, Estonians, Hungarians.
2) In Russia - Udmurts, Komi, Mari, Mordovians and other Volga peoples.
How can all these peoples belong to the same group? Why do Hungarians and Finns and Udmurts practically have a common language, although between them there are completely alien peoples of other language groups - Poles, Lithuanians, Russians ..?

I did not plan to conduct such a study, it just happened. It all started with the fact that I was on a business trip in the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug of Ugra. Feel the similarity of the name? Ugra - Finno-Ugric peoples.
Then I visited the Kaluga region, where there is a very large and long river Ugra - the main tributary of the Oka.
Then, quite by accident, I learned other things, until it all came together in my head into a single picture. I will present it to you now. Which of you is a historian - you can write their dissertation. I don’t need it, I already wrote and defended it at one time, though on a different topic and another subject, economics (I am a Ph.D. in economics). I must say right away that the official versions do not support this, and the peoples of Yugra are not classified as Finno-Ugric.

It was the 3rd-4th century AD. These centuries are usually called the Epoch of the great migration of peoples. The peoples went from the East (from Asia) to the West (Europe). Other peoples were ousted and driven out of their homes, and they were also forced to go to the West.
While in Western Siberia, at the confluence of the Ob and Irtysh rivers, the people of Yugra lived. Then the peoples of Khanty and Mansi came to them from the East, forced them out of their lands, and the Yugra peoples had to go to the West in search of new lands. Part of the Yugra peoples, of course, remained. Until now, this district is called - Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug-Yugra. However, in museums and among local historians of Khanty-Mansiysk, I heard a version that the peoples of Ugra are also not local, and before they were forced out by the Khanty and Mansi, they also came from somewhere in the East - from Siberia.
So, The people of Ugra crossed the Ural Mountains and came to the banks of the Kama River. Part went against the current to the North (this is how the Komi appeared), part crossed the river and remained in the area of ​​the Kama River (this is how the Udmurts, another name for the Votyaks appeared), and most got on boats and sailed down the river. At that time, it was easiest for peoples to move along the rivers.
During the movement, first along the Kama, and then along the Volga (to the West), the peoples of Yugra settled on the banks. So all the Finno-Ugric peoples of Russia today live along the banks of the Volga - these are the Mari, and the Mordvins and others. And now the people of Ugra reach the fork (marked on the map with the Red flag). This is the confluence of the Volga and Oka rivers. (now it is the city of Nizhny Novgorod).

Part of the people goes along the Volga to the North-West, where it reaches Finland and then Estonia, and settles there.
Part goes along the Oka to the South-West. Now in the Kaluga region there is a very large Ugra river (a tributary of the Oka) and evidence of the Vyatichi tribes (they are also Votyaks). The peoples of Yugra lived there for a little while and, carried along by the general current from the East, went further until they reached Hungary, where all the remnants of these peoples finally settled.

In the end, the peoples from the East came to Europe, to Germany, where there were their barbarians, there was an overabundance of peoples in Western Europe, and all this spilled over into the fact that in search of free land, the westernmost peoples in this migration are the barbarian Huns led by Attilla - invaded the Roman Empire, captured and burned Rome and Rome fell. Thus ended the 1200-year history of the Great Roman Empire and the Dark Ages began.
And the Finno-Ugric peoples also contributed to all this.
When everything settled down by the 5th century, it turned out that a tribe of Russians lives on the banks of the Dnieper, who founded the city of Kyiv and Kievan Rus. Where did these Russians come from - God knows them, they came from somewhere in the East, they followed the Huns. They definitely did not live in this place before, because several million people (toward Western Europe) passed through modern Ukraine - hundreds of different peoples and tribes.
What was the reason, the impetus for the start of this Great Migration of Peoples, which lasted at least 2 centuries, scientists still do not know, they only build hypotheses and conjectures.

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The peoples of the Finno-Ugric group have inhabited the territories of Europe and Siberia for more than ten thousand years, since the Neolithic. Today, the number of speakers of Finno-Ugric languages ​​exceeds 20 million people, and they are citizens of Russia and a number of European countries - modern representatives of the peoples of the Finno-Ugric group live in Western and Central Siberia, Central and Northern Europe. The Finno-Ugric peoples are an ethno-linguistic community of peoples, including the Mari, Samoyeds, Saami, Udmurts, Ob Ugrians, Erzya, Hungarians, Finns, Estonians, Livs, etc.

Some peoples of the Finno-Ugric group created their own states (Hungary, Finland, Estonia, Latvia), and some live in multinational states. Despite the fact that the cultures of the peoples of the Finno-Ugric group were significantly influenced by the beliefs of ethnic groups living on the same territory with them, and the Christianization of Europe, the Finno-Ugric peoples nevertheless managed to preserve a layer of their original culture and religion.

Religion of the peoples of the Finno-Ugric group before Christianization

In the pre-Christian era, the peoples of the Finno-Ugric group lived in isolation, on a vast territory, and representatives of different peoples practically did not contact each other. Therefore, it is natural that both dialects and nuances of traditions and beliefs among different peoples of this group differed significantly: for example, despite the fact that both Estonians and Mansi belong to the Finno-Ugric peoples, it cannot be said that their beliefs and traditions contain a lot general. The formation of the religion and way of life of each ethnic group was influenced by environmental conditions and the way of life of the people, therefore it is not surprising that the beliefs and traditions of the ethnic groups living in Siberia differed significantly from the religion of the Finno-Ugric peoples living in Western Europe.

There was no Finno-Ugric group in the religions of the peoples of the Finno-Ugric group, therefore, historians take all the information about the beliefs of this ethnic group from folklore - oral folk art, which was recorded in the epics and legends of different peoples. And the most famous epics, from which modern historians draw knowledge about beliefs, are the Finnish "Kalevala" and the Estonian "Kalevipoeg", describing in sufficient detail not only gods and traditions, but also the exploits of heroes of different times.

Despite the presence of a certain difference between the beliefs of different peoples of the Finno-Ugric group, there is much in common between them. All these religions were polytheistic, and most of the gods were associated either with natural phenomena or with cattle breeding and agriculture - the main occupations of the Finno-Ugric peoples. The god of heaven was considered the supreme deity, whom the Finns called Yumala, the Estonians - Taevataat, the Mari - Yumo, the Udmurts - Inmar, and the Saami - Ibmel. The Finno-Ugric peoples also honored the deities of the sun, moon, fertility, earth and thunder; representatives of each nation called their deities in their own way, but the general characteristics of the gods, in addition to names, did not have too many differences. In addition to polytheism and similar gods, all religions of the peoples of the Finno-Ugric group have the following common characteristics:

  1. ancestor cult - all representatives of the Finno-Ugric peoples believed in the existence of the immortal soul of man, and also that the inhabitants of the afterlife can influence the lives of living people and, in exceptional cases, help their descendants
  2. Cults of gods and spirits associated with nature and earth (A nimism) - since the subsistence of the majority of the peoples of Siberia and Europe directly depended on the offspring of farmed animals and the harvest of cultivated plants, it is not surprising that many peoples of the Finno-Ugric group had many traditions and rituals designed to appease the spirits of nature
  3. Elements of shamanism - as in, in the Finno-Ugric ethnic groups, the role of intermediaries between the world of people and the spiritual world was performed by shamans.

Religion of the peoples of the Finno-Ugric group in modern times

After the Christianization of Europe, as well as an increase in the number of adherents of Islam at the beginning of the first half of the second millennium AD, more and more people belonging to the Finno-Ugric peoples began to profess any of them, leaving the beliefs of their ancestors in the past. Now only a small part of the Finno-Ugric people profess traditional pagan beliefs and shamanism, while the majority adopted the faith of the peoples living with them on the same territory. For example, the vast majority of Finns and Estonians, as well as citizens of other European countries, are Christians (Catholics, Orthodox or Lutherans), and among the representatives of the peoples of the Finno-Ugric group inhabiting the Urals and Siberia, there are many adherents of Islam.

To date, the ancient animistic religions and shamanism have been preserved in their most complete form by the Udmurts, Mari and Samoyedic peoples - the indigenous inhabitants of western and central Siberia. However, it cannot be said that the Finno-Ugric peoples have completely forgotten their traditions, because they have preserved a number of rituals and beliefs, and even the traditions of some Christian holidays in the peoples of the Finno-Ugric group are closely intertwined with ancient pagan customs.

Considering the geographical map of Russia, one can notice that in the basins of the Middle Volga and Kama, the names of rivers ending in "va" and "ga" are common: Sosva, Izva, Kokshaga, Vetluga, etc. Finno-Ugrians live in those places, and translated from their languages "wa" And "ha" mean "river", "moisture", "wet place", "water". However, the Finno-Ugric toponyms{1 ) are found not only where these peoples make up a significant part of the population, form republics and national districts. Their distribution area is much wider: it covers the European north of Russia and part of the central regions. There are many examples: the ancient Russian cities of Kostroma and Murom; rivers Yakhroma, Iksha in the Moscow region; the village of Verkola in Arkhangelsk, etc.

Some researchers consider Finno-Ugric in origin even such familiar words as "Moscow" and "Ryazan". Scientists believe that Finno-Ugric tribes once lived in these places, and now ancient names keep their memory.

{1 } Toponym (from the Greek "topos" - "place" and "onyma" - "name") - a geographical name.

WHO ARE THE FINNO-UGRI

Finns called people inhabiting Finland, neighboring Russia(in Finnish " Suomi "), A acne in ancient Russian chronicles called Hungarians. But in Russia there are no Hungarians and very few Finns, but there are peoples who speak languages ​​related to Finnish or Hungarian . These peoples are called Finno-Ugric . Depending on the degree of proximity of languages, scientists divide Finno-Ugric peoples into five subgroups . In the first Baltic-Finnish , are included Finns, Izhors, Vods, Vepsians, Karelians, Estonians and Livs. The two largest peoples of this subgroup are Finns and Estonians- live mostly outside of our country. In Russia Finns can be found in Karelia, Leningrad region and St. Petersburg;Estonians - V Siberia, the Volga region and in the Leningrad region. A small group of Estonians - setu - lives in Pechorsky district of the Pskov region. By religion, many Finns and Estonians - Protestants (usually, Lutherans), setu - Orthodox . little people Vepsians lives in small groups Karelia, the Leningrad region and in the north-west of the Vologda, A vod (there are less than 100 people left!) - in Leningrad. AND Veps and Vod - Orthodox . Orthodoxy is professed and Izhorians . There are 449 of them in Russia (in the Leningrad region), and about the same number in Estonia. Vepsians and Izhors retained their languages ​​(they even have dialects) and use them in everyday communication. The Votic language has disappeared.

The biggest Baltic-Finnish people of Russia Karelians . They live in Republic of Karelia, as well as in the Tver, Leningrad, Murmansk and Arkhangelsk regions. In everyday life, Karelians speak three dialects: actually Karelian, Ludikovskiy and Livvikovskiy and their literary language is Finnish. It publishes newspapers, magazines, and the Department of Finnish Language and Literature operates at the Faculty of Philology of Petrozavodsk University. Karelians also know Russian.

The second subgroup consists Saami , or Lapps . Most of them are settled in Northern Scandinavia, but in Russia Saami- inhabitants Kola Peninsula. According to most experts, the ancestors of this people once occupied a much larger territory, but over time they were pushed to the north. Then they lost their language and learned one of the Finnish dialects. The Saami are good reindeer herders (nomads in the recent past), fishermen and hunters. In Russia they profess orthodoxy .

In the third Volga-Finnish , the subgroup includes Mari and Mordovians . Mordva- indigenous people Republic of Mordovia, but a significant part of this people lives throughout Russia - in Samara, Penza, Nizhny Novgorod, Saratov, Ulyanovsk regions, in the republics of Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, in Chuvashia etc. Even before the accession in the XVI century. Mordovian lands to Russia, the Mordovians got their own nobility - "inyazory", "otsyazory", i.e., "masters of the earth." Inyazori they were the first to be baptized, quickly Russified, and later their descendants made up an element in the Russian nobility a little less than those from the Golden Horde and the Kazan Khanate. Mordva is divided into erzya and moksha ; each of the ethnographic groups has a written literary language - Erzya and Moksha . By religion, Mordovians Orthodox ; they have always been considered the most Christianized people of the Volga region.

Mari live mainly in Republic of Mari El, as well as in Bashkortostan, Tatarstan, Udmurtia, Nizhny Novgorod, Kirov, Sverdlovsk and Perm regions. It is generally accepted that this people has two literary languages ​​- meadow-eastern and mountain-Mari. However, not all philologists share this opinion.

More ethnographers of the 19th century. noted the unusually high level of national self-consciousness of the Mari. They stubbornly resisted joining Russia and being baptized, and until 1917 the authorities forbade them to live in cities and engage in crafts and trade.

In the fourth Permian , the subgroup includes proper Komi , Komi-Permyaks and Udmurts .Komi(in the past they were called Zyryans) form the indigenous population of the Komi Republic, but also live in Sverdlovsk, Murmansk, Omsk regions, in the Nenets, Yamalo-Nenets and Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrugs. Their primary occupations are farming and hunting. But, unlike most other Finno-Ugric peoples, there have long been many merchants and entrepreneurs among them. Even before October 1917. Komi in terms of literacy (in Russian) approached the most educated peoples of Russia - Russian Germans and Jews. Today, 16.7% of the Komi work in agriculture, but 44.5% in industry, and 15% in education, science, and culture. Part of the Komi - the Izhemtsy - mastered reindeer breeding and became the largest reindeer herders in the European north. Komi Orthodox (part of the Old Believers).

Very close in language to the Zyryans Komi-Permyaks . More than half of these people live in Komi-Perm Autonomous Okrug, and the rest - in the Perm region. Permians are mostly peasants and hunters, but throughout their history they have been factory serfs in the Ural factories, and barge haulers on the Kama and Volga. By religion Komi-Permyaks Orthodox .

Udmurts{ 2 } concentrated mostly in Udmurt Republic where they make up about 1/3 of the population. Small groups of Udmurts live in Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, the Republic of Mari El, in the Perm, Kirov, Tyumen, Sverdlovsk regions. The traditional occupation is agriculture. In cities, they most often forget their native language and customs. Perhaps that is why only 70% of Udmurts, mostly residents of rural areas, consider the Udmurt language their native language. Udmurts Orthodox , but many of them (including the baptized) adhere to traditional beliefs - they worship pagan gods, deities, spirits.

In the fifth Ugric , the subgroup includes Hungarians, Khanty and Mansi . "acne "in Russian chronicles they called Hungarians, A " yugra " - Ob Ugrians, i.e. Khanty and Mansi. Although Northern Urals and the lower reaches of the Ob, where the Khanty and Mansi live, are located thousands of kilometers from the Danube, on the banks of which the Hungarians created their state, these peoples are the closest relatives. Khanty and Mansi belong to the small peoples of the North. Mansi live mostly in Anty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, A Khanty - V Khanty-Mansiysk and Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrugs, Tomsk Region. Mansi are primarily hunters, then fishermen, reindeer herders. The Khanty, on the contrary, were first fishermen, and then hunters and reindeer herders. Both of them profess orthodoxy However, they did not forget the ancient faith. The traditional culture of the Ob Ugrians was greatly damaged by the industrial development of their region: many hunting grounds disappeared, rivers were polluted.

Old Russian chronicles preserved the names of the Finno-Ugric tribes, now disappeared, - Chud, Merya, Muroma . Merya in the first millennium A.D. e. lived in the interfluve of the Volga and Oka, and at the turn of the I and II millennia merged with the Eastern Slavs. There is an assumption that the modern Mari are the descendants of this tribe. Murom in the 1st millennium BC. e. lived in the Oka basin, and by the XII century. n. e. mixed with the Eastern Slavs. Chudyu modern researchers consider the Finnish tribes who lived in antiquity along the banks of the Onega and the Northern Dvina. It is possible that they are the ancestors of the Estonians.

{ 2 ) Russian historian of the XVIII century. V. N. Tatishchev wrote that the Udmurts (formerly they were called votyaks) perform their prayers “under some good tree, but not under a pine and spruce, which have no leaf or fruit, but aspen is revered as a cursed tree ... ".

WHERE THE FINNO-UGRIANS LIVED AND WHERE THEY LIVE

Most researchers agree that the ancestral home Finno-Ugric was on the border of Europe and Asia, in the areas between the Volga and Kama and in the Urals. It was there in the IV-III millennium BC. e. a community of tribes arose, related in language and close in origin. By the 1st millennium A.D. e. the ancient Finno-Ugric peoples settled as far as the Baltic and Northern Scandinavia. They occupied a vast territory covered with forests - almost the entire northern part of present-day European Russia to the Kama in the south.

Excavations show that the ancient Finno-Ugric peoples belonged to Ural race: in their appearance Caucasoid and Mongoloid features are mixed (wide cheekbones, often a Mongolian section of the eye). Moving west, they mixed with Caucasians. As a result, in some peoples descended from the ancient Finno-Ugric peoples, Mongoloid signs began to smooth out and disappear. Now "Ural" features are characteristic to one degree or another of all Finnish peoples of Russia: medium height, broad face, snub-nosed nose, very blond hair, sparse beard. But in different peoples, these features manifest themselves in different ways. For example, Mordva-Erzya tall, blond, blue-eyed, and mordva-moksha and shorter in stature, and broader in face, and their hair is darker. At Mari and Udmurts often there are eyes with the so-called Mongolian fold - epicanthus, very wide cheekbones, a liquid beard. But at the same time (the Ural race!) Fair and red hair, blue and gray eyes. The Mongolian fold is sometimes found among the Estonians, and among the Vodi, and among the Izhors, and among the Karelians. Komi there are different ones: in those places where there are mixed marriages with the Nenets, they are black-haired and slanting; others are more like Scandinavians, with slightly wider faces.

Finno-Ugrians were engaged agriculture (to fertilize the soil with ashes, they burned out parts of the forest), hunting and fishing . Their settlements were far apart. Perhaps for this reason they did not create states anywhere and began to be part of neighboring organized and constantly expanding powers. One of the first mentions of the Finno-Ugric peoples contains Khazar documents written in Hebrew, the state language of the Khazar Khaganate. Alas, there are almost no vowels in it, so it remains to be guessed that "tsrms" means "Cheremis-Mari", and "mkshkh" - "moksha". Later, the Finno-Ugric peoples also paid tribute to the Bulgars, they were part of the Kazan Khanate, in the Russian state.

RUSSIAN AND FINNO-UGRI

In the XVI-XVIII centuries. Russian settlers rushed to the lands of the Finno-Ugric peoples. Most often, the settlement was peaceful, but sometimes indigenous peoples resisted the entry of their region into the Russian state. The most fierce resistance was provided by the Mari.

Over time, baptism, writing, urban culture, brought by the Russians, began to displace local languages ​​and beliefs. Many began to feel like Russians, and really became them. Sometimes it was enough to be baptized for this. The peasants of one Mordovian village wrote in a petition: "Our ancestors, the former Mordovians", sincerely believing that only their ancestors, pagans, were Mordovians, and their Orthodox descendants do not belong to Mordovians in any way.

People moved to cities, went far away - to Siberia, to Altai, where one language was common to all - Russian. The names after baptism were no different from ordinary Russians. Or almost nothing: not everyone notices that there is nothing Slavic in surnames like Shukshin, Vedenyapin, Piyashev, but they go back to the name of the Shuksha tribe, the name of the goddess of war Veden Ala, the pre-Christian name Piyash. So a significant part of the Finno-Ugric peoples was assimilated by the Russians, and some, having adopted Islam, mixed with the Turks. That is why the Finno-Ugric peoples do not make up the majority anywhere - even in the republics to which they gave their name.

But, having dissolved in the mass of Russians, the Finno-Ugric peoples retained their anthropological type: very blond hair, blue eyes, a "she-shek" nose, a wide, high-lying face. The kind that nineteenth-century writers called "Penza peasant", is now perceived as a typical Russian.

Many Finno-Ugric words have entered the Russian language: "tundra", "sprat", "salaka", etc. Is there a more Russian and everyone's favorite dish than dumplings? Meanwhile, this word is borrowed from the Komi language and means "bread eye": "pel" - "ear", and "nyan" - "bread". There are especially many borrowings in the northern dialects, mainly among the names of natural phenomena or landscape elements. They give a peculiar beauty to local speech and regional literature. Take, for example, the word "taibola", which in the Arkhangelsk region is called a dense forest, and in the Mezen River basin - a road that runs along the seashore next to the taiga. It is taken from the Karelian "taibale" - "isthmus". For centuries, peoples living nearby have always enriched each other's language and culture.

Patriarch Nikon and Archpriest Avvakum were Finno-Ugric by origin - both Mordvins, but irreconcilable enemies; Udmurt - physiologist V. M. Bekhterev, Komi - sociologist Pitirim Sorokin, Mordvin - sculptor S. Nefyodov-Erzya, who took the name of the people as his pseudonym; Mari - composer A. Ya. Eshpay.

ANCIENT CLOTHING V O D I I J O R C E V

The main part of the traditional women's costume of the Vodi and Izhorians - shirt . Ancient shirts were sewn very long, with wide, also long sleeves. In the warm season, the shirt was the only clothing of a woman. Eshyo in the 60s. 19th century after the wedding, the young woman was supposed to walk in one shirt until her father-in-law gave her a fur coat or caftan.

The Votic women for a long time preserved the ancient form of unsewn waist clothing - khursgukset worn over a shirt. Hursgukset looks like Russian ponyova. It was richly decorated with copper coins, shells, fringe, bells. Later, when he entered the life of the driver sundress , the bride put on a hursgukset for a wedding under a sundress.

Peculiar unsewn clothes - annua - worn in the central part Ingermanland(part of the territory of modern Leningrad region). It was a wide cloth that reached to the armpits; a strap was sewn to its upper ends and thrown over the left shoulder. Annua diverged on the left side, and therefore they put on a second cloth under it - khurstut . It was wrapped around the waist and also worn on a strap. The Russian sarafan gradually replaced the ancient loincloth among the Vodi and Izhori. Belted clothes leather belt, cords, braided belts and narrow towels.

In ancient times, water women shaved head.

TRADITIONAL CLOTHING KHANTOV I M A N S I

Khanty and Mansi clothes were sewn from skins, furs, fish skins, cloth, nettle and linen canvas. In the manufacture of children's clothing, the most archaic material was also used - bird skins.

Men put on in winter oar fur coats from deer and hare fur, squirrel and fox paws, and in summer a short dressing gown made of coarse cloth; collar, sleeves and right half were turned off with fur.Winter shoes was fur, and wore it with fur stockings. summer They were made from rovduga (suede from deer or elk skin), and the sole from elk skin.

Men's shirts they sewed from nettle canvas, and pants from rovduga, fish skin, canvas, and cotton fabrics. Over the shirt must be worn woven belt , to which hung beaded bags(they held a knife in a wooden sheath and a steel).

women put on in winter fur coat deer skin; the lining was also fur. Where there were few deer, the lining was made from hare and squirrel skins, and sometimes from duck or swan down. In summer wore cloth or cotton robe ,decorated with stripes of beads, colored fabric and pewter plaques. These plaques were cast by women themselves in special molds made of soft stone or pine bark. The belts were already masculine and more elegant.

Women covered their heads in both winter and summer shawls with a wide border and fringe . In the presence of men, especially older relatives of the husband, according to tradition, it was supposed to be the end of a scarf cover one's face. There were Khanty and beaded headbands .

Hair before it was not customary to cut. Men, dividing their hair into a straight parting, collected it in two tails and tied it with a colored cord. .Women braided two braids, decorated them with colored lace and copper pendants. . At the bottom of the braid, so as not to interfere with work, they were connected with a thick copper chain. Rings, bells, beads and other ornaments were hung from the chain. Khanty women, as usual, wore a lot copper and silver rings. Beaded jewelry was also widespread, which was imported by Russian merchants.

HOW THE MARIANS WAS DRESSED

In the past, Mari clothing was exclusively home-made. Upper(it was worn in winter and autumn) was sewn from home cloth and sheepskin, and shirts and summer kaftans- Made of white linen.

women wore shirt, caftan, pants, headdress and bast bast shoes . Shirts were embroidered with silk, wool, cotton threads. They were worn with belts woven from wool and silk, decorated with beads, tassels and metal chains. One of the types headdresses of married Marieks , similar to a cap, was called shymaksh . It was sewn from thin canvas and put on a birch bark frame. An obligatory part of the traditional Mariek costume was considered jewelry made of beads, coins, pewter plaques.

Men's suit consisted of canvas embroidered shirt, pants, canvas caftan and bast shoes . The shirt was shorter than women's, it was worn with a narrow belt made of wool and leather. On head put on felt HATS and SHEARLING caps .

WHAT IS THE FINNO-UGRIAN LANGUAGE RELATIONSHIP

The Finno-Ugric peoples differ from each other in their way of life, religion, historical destinies and even appearance. They are combined into one group based on the relationship of languages. However, linguistic affinity is different. The Slavs, for example, can easily come to an agreement, each explaining himself in his own dialect. But the Finno-Ugric peoples will not be able to communicate with their brethren in the language group just as easily.

In ancient times, the ancestors of modern Finno-Ugric peoples spoke in one language. Then its speakers began to move, mixed with other tribes, and the once single language broke up into several independent ones. The Finno-Ugric languages ​​diverged so long ago that there are few common words in them - about a thousand. For example, "house" in Finnish is "koti", in Estonian - "kodu", in Mordovian - "kudu", in Mari - "kudo". It looks like the word "oil": Finnish "voi", Estonian "vdi", Udmurt and Komi "vy", Hungarian "vaj". But the sound of languages ​​- phonetics - remained so close that any Finno-Ugric, listening to another and not even understanding what he is talking about, feels: this is a related language.

FINNO-UGRIC NAMES

Finno-Ugric peoples have been confessing for a long time (at least officially) orthodoxy , so their names and surnames, as a rule, do not differ from Russians. However, in the village, in accordance with the sound of local languages, they change. So, Akulina becomes Okul, Nikolai - Nikul or Mikul, Kirill - Kyrlya, Ivan - Yivan. At Komi , for example, often the patronymic is put before the name: Mikhail Anatolyevich sounds like Tol Mish, that is, Anatoly's son Mishka, and Rosa Stepanovna turns into Stepan Rosa - Stepan's daughter Rosa. In the documents, of course, everyone has ordinary Russian names. Only writers, artists and artists choose the traditional village form: Yivan Kyrlya, Nikul Erkay, Illya Vas, Ortjo Stepanov.

At Komi often found surnames Durkin, Rochev, Kanev; among the Udmurts - Korepanov and Vladykin; at Mordovians - Vedenyapin, Pi-yashev, Kechin, Mokshin. Especially common among Mordovians are surnames with a diminutive suffix - Kirdyaikin, Vidyaikin, Popsuikin, Alyoshkin, Varlashkin.

Some Mari , especially the unbaptized chi-mari in Bashkiria, at one time they accepted Turkic names. Therefore, chi-mari often have surnames similar to Tatar ones: Anduganov, Baitemirov, Yashpatrov, but their names and patronymics are Russian. At Karelian there are surnames both Russian and Finnish, but always with a Russian ending: Perttuev, Lampiev. Usually in Karelia by last name can be distinguished Karelian, Finn and Petersburg Finn. So, Perttuev - Karelian, Perttu - Petersburg Finn, A Pertgunen - Finn. But the name and patronymic of each of them can be Stepan Ivanovich.

WHAT THE FINNO-UGRIANS BELIEVE

In Russia, many Finno-Ugric peoples profess orthodoxy . In the XII century. the Vepsians were crossed, in the XIII century. - Karelians, at the end of the XIV century. - Komi. At the same time, to translate the Holy Scripture into the Komi language, a Permian writing - the only original Finno-Ugric alphabet. During the XVIII-XIX centuries. Mordvins, Udmurts and Mariyi are christened. However, the Mariys did not fully accept Christianity. To avoid conversion to a new faith, some of them (they called themselves "chi-mari" - "true Mari") went to the territory of Bashkiria, and those who remained and were baptized often continued to worship the old gods. Among Mari, Udmurts, Saami and some other peoples were distributed, and even now preserved, the so-called dual faith . People revere the old gods, but recognize the "Russian God" and his saints, especially Nicholas the Pleasant. In Yoshkar-Ola, the capital of the Republic of Mari El, the state took under protection the sacred grove - " kyusoto", and now pagan prayers are taking place here. The names of the supreme gods and mythological heroes among these peoples are similar and probably go back to the ancient Finnish name for the sky and air -" ilma ": Ilmarinen - the Finns Ilmailin - Karelians,Inmar - among the Udmurts, Yong -Komi.

CULTURAL HERITAGE OF THE FINNO-UGRI

Writing many Finno-Ugric languages ​​of Russia was created on the basis Cyrillic, with the addition of letters and superscripts that convey the peculiarities of sound.Karely , whose literary language is Finnish, is written in Latin letters.

Literature of the Finno-Ugric peoples of Russia very young, but oral folk art has a long history. Finnish poet and folklorist Elias Lönro t (1802-1884) collected the tales of the epic " Kalevala "among the Karelians of the Olonets province of the Russian Empire. The final edition of the book was published in 1849. "Kalevala", which means "the country of Kaleva", in its rune songs tells about the exploits of the Finnish heroes Väinämöinen, Ilmarinen and Lemminkäinen, about their struggle against the evil Loukhi , mistress of Pohjola (the northern country of darkness). In a magnificent poetic form, the epic tells about the life, beliefs, customs of the ancestors of the Finns, Karelians, Veps, Vodi, Izhorians. This information is unusually rich, they reveal the spiritual world of farmers and hunters of the North. "Kalevala" stands along with the greatest epics of mankind.There are epics and some other Finno-Ugric peoples: "Kalevipoeg"("Son of Kalev") - at Estonians , "Feather-bogatyr"- at Komi-Permyakov , preserved epic tales Mordovians and Mansi .


1. Name

The Finno-Ugric peoples were an autochthonous population of the Oka-Volga interfluve, their tribes were Ests, all, Merya, Mordvins, Cheremis were part of the Gothic kingdom of Germanarich in the 4th century. The chronicler Nestor in the Ipatiev Chronicle indicates about twenty tribes of the Ural group (Ugrofiniv): Chud, Livs, waters, yam (Ӕm), all (even North of them on the White Lake sit Vѣt Vѣs), Karelians, Yugra, caves, Samoyeds, Perm ), cheremis, casting, zimgola, kors, nerom, mordvinians, measuring (and on Rostov ѡzere Merѧ and on Kleshchin and ѣzer sѣdѧt mѣrzh same), murom (and Ѡtsѣ rѣtsѣ where to flow into the Volga ҕzyk Svoi Murom) and Meshchery. The Muscovites called all the local tribes Chud from the indigenous Chud, and accompanied this name with irony, explaining it through Moscow weird, weird, strange. Now these peoples are completely assimilated by Russians, they have disappeared from the ethnic map of modern Russia forever, having replenished the number of Russians and leaving only a wide range of their ethnic place names.

These are all the names of the rivers with ending-va: Moscow, Protva, Kosva, Silva, Sosva, Izva, etc. The Kama River has about 20 tributaries whose names end with na-va, means "water" in Finnish. Muscovite tribes from the very beginning felt their superiority over the local Finno-Ugric peoples. However, Finno-Ugric toponyms are found not only where these peoples today make up a significant part of the population, form autonomous republics and national districts. Their distribution area is much larger, for example, Moscow.

According to archaeological data, the settlement area of ​​the Chud tribes in Eastern Europe remained unchanged for 2 thousand years. Beginning in the 9th century, the Finno-Ugric tribes of the European part of present-day Russia were gradually assimilated by Slavic colonists who came from Kievan Rus. This process formed the basis for the formation of modern Russian nation.

The Finno-Ugric tribes belong to the Ural-Altai group and a thousand years ago they were close to the Pechenegs, Polovtsians and Khazars, but were at a much lower level of social development than the rest, in fact, the ancestors of the Russians were the same Pechenegs, only forest. At that time, these were the primitive and culturally most backward tribes of Europe. Not only in the distant past, but even at the turn of the 1st and 2nd millennia, they were cannibals. The Greek historian Herodotus (5th century BC) called them androphagi (devourers of people), and Nestor the chronicler already in the period of the Russian state - Samoyeds (Samoyed) .

The Finno-Ugric tribes of a primitive gathering and hunting culture were the ancestors of the Russians. Scientists argue that the Muscovite people received the greatest admixture of the Mongoloid race through the assimilation of Finno-Ugric peoples who came to Europe from Asia and partially absorbed Caucasoid admixture even before the arrival of the Slavs. A mixture of Finno-Ugric, Mongolian and Tatar ethnic components led to the ethnogenesis of Russians, which was formed with the participation of the Slavic tribes Radimichi and Vyatichi. Due to ethnic mixing with the Finns, and later the Tatars and partly with the Mongols, the Russians have an anthropological type that is different from the Kievan-Russian (Ukrainian). The Ukrainian diaspora jokes about this: "The eye is narrow, the nose is plush - completely Russian." Under the influence of the Finno-Ugric language environment, the formation of the Russian phonetic system (akanye, gekanya, ticking) took place. Today, "Ural" features are inherent to one degree or another in all the peoples of Russia: medium height, broad face, snub-nosed nose, and a sparse beard. The Mari and Udmurts often have eyes with the so-called Mongolian fold - epicanthus, they have very wide cheekbones, a thin beard. But at the same time blond and red hair, blue and gray eyes. The Mongolian fold is sometimes found among Estonians and Karelians. Komi are different: in those places where there are mixed marriages with growing up, they are dark-haired and braced, others are more like Scandinavians, but with a slightly wider face.

According to the studies of the Meryanist Orest Tkachenko, "In the Russian people, on the maternal side associated with the Slavic ancestral home, the father was a Finn. On the paternal side, the Russians descended from the Finno-Ugric peoples." It should be noted that according to modern studies of the Y-chromosome halotypes, in fact, the situation was the opposite - Slavic men married women of the local Finno-Ugric population. According to Mikhail Pokrovsky, the Russians are an ethnic mixture, in which the Finns belong to 4/5, and the Slavs - 1/5. , men's shirt-kosovorotka, bast shoes (bast shoes) in the national costume, dumplings in dishes, the style of folk architecture (tented buildings, porch), Russian bath, sacred animal - bear, 5-tone scale of singing, a-touch and vowel reduction, pair words like stitches, paths, arms and legs, alive and well, such and such, turnover I have(instead of I, characteristic of other Slavs) a fabulous beginning "once upon a time", the absence of a mermaid cycle, carols, the cult of Perun, the presence of a cult of birch, not oak.

Not everyone knows that there is nothing Slavic in the surnames Shukshin, Vedenyapin, Piyashev, but they come from the name of the Shuksha tribe, the name of the goddess of war Vedeno Ala, the pre-Christian name Piyash. So a significant part of the Finno-Ugric peoples was assimilated by the Slavs, and some, having adopted Islam, mixed with the Turks. Therefore, today ugrofins do not make up the majority of the population, even in the republics to which they gave their name. But, having dissolved in the mass of Russians (Rus. Russians), the Ugrofins have retained their anthropological type, which is now perceived as typically Russian (Rus. Russian ) .

According to the overwhelming majority of historians, the Finnish tribes had an extremely peaceful and meek disposition. By this, the Muscovites themselves explain the peaceful nature of the colonization, stating that there were no military clashes, because written sources do not remember anything like that. However, as the same V.O. Klyuchevsky notes, "in the legends of Great Russia, some vague memories of the struggle that flared up in some places survived."


3. Toponymy

Toponyms of Meryan-Yerzyans origin in Yaroslavl, Kostroma, Ivanovo, Vologda, Tver, Vladimir, Moscow regions account for 70-80% (Veksa, Voksenga, Elenga, Kovonga, Koloksa, Kukoboy, lekht, Meleksa, Nadoksa, Nero (Inero), Nuks, Nuksha, Palenga, Peleng, Pelenda, Peksoma, Puzhbol, Pulokhta, Sara, Seleksha, Sonohta, Tolgobol, otherwise, Sheksheboy, Shehroma, Shileksha, Shoksha, Shopsha, Yakhrenga, Yahrobol(Yaroslavl region, 70-80%), Andoba, Vandoga, Vokhma, Vokhtoga, Voroksa, Lynger, Mezenda, Meremsha, Monza, Nerekhta (flicker), Neya, Notelga, Onga, Pechegda, Picherga, Poksha, Pong, Simonga, Sudolga, Toyehta, Urma, Shunga, Yakshanga(Kostroma region, 90-100%), Vazopol, Vichuga, Kineshma, Kistega, Kokhma, Ksty, Landeh, Nodoga, Paksh, Palekh, Scab, Pokshenga, Reshma, Sarokhta, Ukhtoma, Ukhtokhma, Shacha, Shizhegda, Shileksa, Shuya, Yukhma etc. (Ivanovsk region), Vokhtoga, Selma, Senga, Solokhta, Sot, Tolshmy, Shuya and others. (Vologda region), "" Valdai, Koi, Koksha, Koivushka, Lama, Maksatikha, Palenga, Palenka, Raida, Seliger, Siksha, Syshko, Talalga, Udomlya, Urdoma, Shomushka, Shosha, Yakhroma etc. (Tver region), Arsemaky, Velga, Voininga, Vorsha, Ineksha, Kirzhach, Klyazma, Koloksha, Mstera, Moloksha, Motra, Nerl, Peksha, Pichegino, Soima, Sudogda, Suzdal, Tumonga, Undol etc. (Vladimir region), Vereya, Vorya, Volgusha, Lama,



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