WAS BEDEUTET CHEREMISS AUF ENGLISCH
Mari Leute
Die Mari, eine finnisch-ugrische Volksgruppe, die traditionell an den Flüssen Wolga und Kama in Russland gelebt hat. Fast die Hälfte von Maris leben heute in der Mari-El-Republik mit bedeutenden Bevölkerungsgruppen in den baschkortostanischen und tatarstanischen Republiken. In der Vergangenheit wurden die Mari auch als die Cheremis auf Russisch und die Çirmeş in Tatar bekannt. Das Mari-Volk besteht aus drei verschiedenen Gruppen: der Meadow Mari, die am linken Ufer der Wolga wohnen, der Berg Mari, der am rechten Ufer der Wolga und dem östlichen Mari wohnt, der in der baschkortostischen Republik wohnt. In der russischen Volkszählung 2002 identifizierten sich 604.298 Menschen als "Mari", mit 18.515 von denen, die besagen, dass sie Berg Mari und 56,119 als Eastern Mari waren. Fast 60% von Mari lebten in ländlichen Gebieten.
Definition von Cheremiss im Wörterbuch Englisch
Die Definition von Cheremiss im Wörterbuch ist -miss, -mis. ein Mitglied eines ugrischen Volga-Volkes, vor allem der Republik Mari El. Andere Definition von Cheremiss heißt auch: Mari. die Sprache dieses Volkes, das der finno-ugrischen Familie angehörte.
10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «CHEREMISS» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
Cheremiss in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
Cheremiss im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
The Mainz Meeting: Proceedings of the Seventh International ...
this view was based on the fact that the ethnonym Cheremiss occurred in
Russian chronicles as early as the 12th century. Hence researchers
automatically considered the population named Cheremiss in the sources to be
the predecessors of ...
There are on the whole more points of affinity between Mordvin and, say, Finnish
than between Cheremiss and Finnish. Cheremiss, which was the mother-tongue
of nearly half a million persons in 1939, has two dialects—the Lower (koz'la ...
3
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland
Cheremiss. To the north of the country of the Mordvin, and on the left border of
the river Volga, live tribes belonging to the Cheremiss group. They form a
connecting link between the Mordvin and Perm populations, both geographically
and ...
Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland,
1889
sixteen years ago about a hundred tunes of a Volga-people, called Cheremiss,
were published in Russia. Later, in Vienna, Professor Lach also published
several dozen Cheremiss tunes collected from prisoners of war. A considerable
number ...
B‰la Bart¢k, Benjamin Suchoff,
1976
5
Exploring the Caucasus in the 21st Century: Essays on ...
Budenz must have felt personally offended by Bálint de Szentkatolna because
the Székely linguist questioned Budenz' study of Cheremiss. Gábor, who had
checked Budenz' Cheremiss language study, on his request, with Cheremiss ...
Françoise Companjen, László Károly Marácz, Lia Versteegh,
2010
6
Rude and Barbarous Kingdom: Russia in the Accounts of ...
There are divers other Tatars that border upon Russia, as the Nogais, the
Cheremiss, the Mordvinians, the Circassians, and the Shalcans,“ which all differ
in name more than in regimen or other condition from the Krym Tatar, except the
...
Lloyd E. Berry, Robert O. Crummey,
2012
7
Aftermath: A Supplement to The Golden Bough
Ordinary mortals are forbidden to set foot within a sacred grove. They think that
such a sacrilegious intruder would be killed by the spirit of the grove.1 The
Cheremiss of Russia have many sacred groves, some of which cover large areas
of the ...
James George Frazer,
2013
The Cheremiss tribesmen living nearby were suitably impressed by the speed
with which the Russians were able to build a fortress so close to Kazan. Here on
the right bank of the Volga many tribesmen of many diflerent origins were living ...
Robert Payne, Nikita Romanoff,
2002
9
Portrait of a Russian Province: Economy, Society, and ...
Then, we can calculate that Tatars constituted 11 percent of the population of
those particular districts; Mordvinians 6 percent of theirs; Cheremiss, 3 percent.
Thus, in the southern districts, tending toward the east, these various groups
made ...
10
Death, Mourning, and Burial: A Cross-Cultural Reader
Among the Cheremiss, some groups believe that the deceased dies only once,
but others – for example, the Cheremiss of Vyatka – say that a man may die
seven times and pass from one world to another and that he is then changed into
a ...
Antonius C. G. M. Robben,
2009