Besermyan

Permian ethnic group in Udmurtia, Russia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Besermyan

The Besermyan, Biserman, Besermans or Besermens (Russian: бесермяне, besermyane singular: besermyanin, Udmurt: бесерманъёс, Tatar: бисермәннәр, romanized: bisermännär) are a numerically small Permian people in Russia.[2]

Quick Facts Regions with significant populations, Russia ...
Besermyan
Thumb
Regions with significant populations
Udmurtia (Russia)
 Russia2,036 (2021)[1]
Languages
Udmurt (Besermyan dialect)
Religion
Majority: Sunni Islam
Minority: Russian Orthodoxy
Related ethnic groups
Udmurts, Chepetsk Tatars
Close

The Russian Empire Census of 1897 listed 10,800 Besermans. There were 10,000 Besermans in 1926, but the Russian Census of 2002 found only 3,122 of them.[3]

The Besermyan live in the districts of Yukamenskoye, Glazov, Balezino, and Yar in the northwest of Udmurtia. There are ten villages of pure Besermyan ethnicity in Russia, and 41 villages with a partial Besermyan population.

Thumb
A map of Udmurtia with highlighted regions where the Besermyan live.

History

The Besermyan are of Turkic origin,[4][5] and are probably the result of a group of Tatars who were assimilated by the Udmurts.[6][7][8] In the 13th century during his travel to Mongolia, papal envoy Plano Carpini claimed that the Besermyan were subjects of the Mongols. Russian chronicles sometimes made mention of the Besermyan but it's unclear whether the term was meant to denote the modern group as it was a common derivation of the term "musulman" (Muslim).[4] It is likely that the term had broader usage before it became an ethnonym.[4]

Culture

The language of the Besermyan is a dialect of the Udmurt language with Tatar influences.[9] Although they speak a dialect of Udmurt, the Besermyan consider themselves a distinct people.[10]

The Besermyan used to historically practice their own indigenous religion.[2] According to scholar Shirin Akiner, most current Besermyan practice Sunni Islam.[11] Some Besermyan also practice Christianity.[10] The Russians began converting the Besermyan to Christianity around the middle of the 18th century.[2]

Genetics

Summarize
Perspective

In a mtDNA research which was done on Besermyans there were 41 tested persons from the village of Yozhovo in Yukamenskovo raion of Udmurtia. The proportion of Eastern Eurasian haplogroups, primarily of haplogroup C, turned out to be significantly higher than that of the Udmurts. According to this indicator, the Besermyans genetically stand out against the background of the Volga-Ural region and are closer to the Turkic-speaking peoples of Southern Siberia.[12]

A study was conducted of the Y-chromosome haplogroups of 53 Besermyans from the villages of Yukamenskoye and Yozhevo, as well as the village of Shamardan, Yukamensky district of Udmurtia. It turned out that more than half of the samples belong to haplogroup N, which may indicate the predominance of the Finno-Ugric component in the formation of the Besermyans along their male line.[13]

Genetically, Besermayns seem to be descended mostly from Udmurts on their paternally and from the sub-group of Kazan Tatars - Chepetsk Tatars, maternally.[citation needed]

The data from lexicostatistics also did not reveal a noticeable Bulgar (Old Chuvash) substrate in the Besermyan dialect. Only Tatar adstrate, associated with the Chepetsk Tatars, can be traced.[citation needed]

According to a 2019 study, the Besermyan's autosomal genetic admixture can be modeled as mostly Srubnaya-like and about 25 percent Nganasan-like.[14]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.