Besermyan

The Besermyan, Biserman, Besermans or Besermens (Russian: бесермяне, besermyane singular: besermyanin, Udmurt: бесерманъёс, Tatar: Cyrillic бисермәннәр, Latin bisermännär) are a numerically small Finnic people in Russia.

Besermyan
Regions with significant populations
Udmurtia (Russia)
 Russia2,201 (2010)[1]
Languages
dialect of the Udmurt language
Religion
Sunni Islam and Russian Orthodoxy
Related ethnic groups
Udmurt people, Komi

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.[2]

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.

History

According to one theory, the Besermyan are of Turkic origin, possibly being descendants of the Volga Bolgars. 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 uncertain whether the term had the same meaning to denote the group as it was a common derivation of the term "musulman" (Muslim).[3] It is likely that the term had broader usage before it became an ethnonym.[3]

Culture

The language of the Besermyan is a dialect of the Udmurt language with Tatar influences.

Some Besermyan traditions differ from other Udmurtian customs due to the Islamic influence during the Volga Bulgaria and Khanate of Kazan periods.

According to scholar Shirin Akiner, most Besermyan practice Sunni Islam.[3]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.