Mordvins

{{short description|Official Russian term for Erzya people and Mokshas}}

{{other uses|Mordvins (disambiguation)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2022}}

{{Infobox ethnic group

| native_name = Мордовский народ

| native_name_lang = ru

| group = Erzya and Moksha Mordvins

| image =

| image_caption =

| total = 806,000

| total_year = 2010

| total_source = 2010 Russian census

| region1 = {{flag|Russia}}

  • {{flag|Mordovia}} 290,750 (2021)

| pop1 = 484,450 (2021)

| ref1 = [http://rosstat.gov.ru/storage/mediabank/Tom5_tab1_VPN-2020.xlsx Ethnic groups of Russia in the 2021 census]. {{in lang|ru}}

| religions = Majority:
15px Orthodox Christianity
Minority:
15px Mordvin Native Religion
Molokans and Jumpers[http://www.molokane.org/places/FSU/Armenia/2002_Chuvash_Molokans.html Molokans and Jumpers are Russians, Ukrainians, Chuvashs, Mordvins, Armenians ...]

| languages = Primarily Russian, also Erzya, Moksha

| related = Uralic peoples (Mari, Permians, Mansi, Khanty, Finns, Samoyeds, Sámi, Estonians, Hungarians); Soviet peoples (Russians, Ukrainians, Belarusians, Kazakhs, Azerbaijani, Armenians, Georgians, Uzbeks, Kyrgyz, Tajiks, Turkmens, Latvians, Estonians, Lithuanians)

}}

Mordvins (also Mordvinians, Mordovians; {{langx|ru|мордва|Mordva|Mordvins}}; no equivalents in Moksha and Erzya) is an official term used in Russia and the Soviet Union to refer both to Erzyas and Mokshas since 1928.{{harvnb|Zamyatin|2022|page=88}}

Names

[[File:1551 Venice Gastaldi-Descriptione de la Moscouia.jpg|thumb|Mordva populi (Mordva people) shown on a 1550 map by

Giacomo Gastaldi as residing south of Kasimov and Nizhny Novgorod]]

While Robert G. Latham had identified Mordva as a self-designation, identifying it as a variant of the name Mari,{{Cite book|title=The Native Races of the Russian Empire |last=Latham |first=Robert Gordon |author-link=Robert Gordon Latham |year=1854 |publisher=H. Bailliere |url=https://archive.org/details/nativeracesruss02lathgoog|page=[https://archive.org/details/nativeracesruss02lathgoog/page/n111 91] }}{{Anachronism inline|date=May 2022}} Aleksey Shakhmatov in the early 20th century noted that Mordva was not used as a self-designation by the two Mordvinic tribes of the Erzya and Moksha. Nikolai Mokshin again states that the term has been used by the people as an internal self-defining term{{Dubious|date=November 2008}} to constitute their common origin.{{Cite book|title= Culture Incarnate: Native Anthropology from Russia |last= Balzer |first= Marjorie |author2=Nikolai Mokshin |year= 1995 |publisher= M.E. Sharpe |isbn= 978-1-56324-535-0 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=-t34nFqaiH0C&pg=PA31 }}{{Anachronism inline|date=May 2022}} The linguist {{ill|Gábor Zaicz|hu|Zaicz Gábor}} underlines that the Mordvins do not use the name 'Mordvins' as a self-designation.{{cite book|editor1-last=Janse|editor-first1=Mark|editor2-last=Tol|editor-first2=Sijmen|title=Language Death and Language Maintenance: Theoretical, Practical and Descriptive Approaches|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JdzVePSApMgC&pg=PA115|year=2003|publisher=John Benjamins Publishing|isbn=90-272-4752-8|page=115}} Feoktistov wrote "So-called Tengushev Mordvins are Erzyans who speak the Erzyan dialect with Mokshan substratum and in fact they are an ethnic group of Erzyans usually referred to as Shokshas. It was the Erzyans who historically were referred to as Mordvins, and Mokshas usually were mentioned separately as "Mokshas". There is no evidence Mokshas and Erzyas were an ethnic unity in prehistory".Feoktistov A. P. K probleme mordovsko-tyurkskikh yazykovykh kontaktov // Etnogenez mordovskogo naroda. – Saransk, 1965. – pp. 331–343 Isabelle T. Keindler writes:

Gradually major differences developed in customs, language and even physical appearance (until their conversion to Christianity the Erzia and Moksha did not intermarry and even today intermarriage is rare.) The two subdivisions of Mordvinians share no folk heroes in common – their old folksongs sing only of local heroes. Neither language has a common term to designate either themselves or their language. When a speaker wishes to refer to Mordvinians as a whole, he must use the term "Erzia and Moksha"{{cite journal |url=http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/article/cmr_0008-0160_1985_num_26_1_2030|title=A doomed Soviet nationality ?|author=Isabelle T. Keindler|date=1 January 1985|journal=Cahiers du monde russe et soviétique |volume=26|issue=1|pages=43–62|publisher=EHESS|doi=10.3406/cmr.1985.2030|access-date=22 October 2010}}

=Early references=

The ethnonym Mordva is possibly attested in Jordanes' Getica in the form of Mordens who, he claims, were among the subjects of the Gothic king Ermanaric.(Getica XIII, 116) "Among the tribes he [Ermanarich] conquered were the Golthescytha, Thiudos, Inaunxis, Vasinabroncae, Merens, Mordens, Imniscaris, Rogas, Tadzans, Athaul, Navego, Bubegenae and Coldae" — The Origin and Deeds of the Goths (116). A land called Mordia at a distance of ten days journey from the Petchenegs is mentioned in Constantine VII's De administrando imperio.{{Cite book|title=The Linguistic Affinity of the Volgaic Finno-Ugrians and Their Ethnogenesis |last=Klima |first=László |year=1996 |publisher=Societas Historiae Fenno-Ugricae |isbn=978-951-97040-1-2 |url=http://mek.oszk.hu/01700/01794/01794.pdf}}

In medieval European sources, the names Merdas, Merdinis, Merdium, Mordani, Mordua, Morduinos have appeared. In the Russian Primary Chronicle, the ethnonyms Mordva and mordvichi first appeared in the 11th century. After the Mongol invasion of Rus', the name Mordvin rarely gets mentioned in Russian annals, and is only quoted after the Primary Chronicle up until the 15th–17th centuries.(Kirjanov 1971, 148–149) LasloKappeler (1982) Taagepera

=Etymologies=

The name Mordva is thought to originate from an Iranian (Scythian) word, mard, meaning "man" (Persian مرد). The Mordvin word mirde denoting a husband or spouse is traced to the same origin. This word is also probably related to the final syllable of "Udmurt", and also in {{langx|kv|mort}} and perhaps even in {{langx|chm|marij}}.{{Cite book|title=The Indo-Aryan Controversy |last=Bryant |first=Edwin |author2=Laurie L. Patton |year=2005 |publisher=Routledge |location=PA201 |isbn=978-0-7007-1463-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8VnAk14pODsC&q=marij&pg=PA201 }} Напольских В. В. Введение в историческую уралистику. Ижевск: УдмИИЯЛ, 1997. p. 37.

The first written mention of Erzya is considered to be in a letter dated to 968 AD, by Joseph, the Khazar khagan, in the form of arisa. More controversially, it is sometimes linked to the Aorsy and Alanorsi mentioned in the works of Strabo and Ptolemy. (However, the consensus view is that the Alans, a nomadic Iranian tribe from east Central Asia, were also known as the Aorsi/Alanorsi.) Estakhri, from the 10th century, has recorded among the three groups of the Rus people the al-arsanija, whose king lived in the town of Arsa. The people have sometimes been identified by scholars as Erzya, sometimes as the aru people, and also as Udmurts. It has been suggested by historians that the town Arsa may refer to either the modern Ryazan or Arsk In the 14th century, the name Erzya is considered to have been mentioned in the form of ardzhani by Rashid-al-Din Hamadani,(Sbornik... 1941, 96) see László and as rzjan by Jusuf, the Nogaj khan(Safargaliev 1964, 12) László In Russian sources, the ethnonym Erza first appears in the 18th century.(Mokshin 1977, 47) László

The earliest written mention of Moksha, in the form of Moxel, is considered to be in the works of a 13th-century Flemish traveler, William of Rubruck, and in the Persian chronicle of Rashid-al-Din, who reported the Golden Horde to be at war with the Moksha and the Ardzhans (Erzia){{Obsolete source|reason=dated translation again, the first mentioning of Moksha in Arab sources specified by Vladimir Minorsky, 1959|date=May 2022}}.

In Russian sources, 'Moksha' appears from the 17th century.(Mokshin 1977, 47)László

= Restoration of Erzya and Moksha ethnonyms =

{{Main|Boris Smirnov (ethnologist)#Letter to Kremlin regarding Mordovia renaming}}

Mokshas from Altä velä wrote a collective open letter to Literaturnaya Gazeta in 1991.

{{blockquote|The authors of a letter sent to Literaturnaia gazeta from the Moksha Altä velä, Mordovia, call this ethnonym "a very nonsensical parasite-word," "a slur," "an awkward nickname" that can be blamed for the fact that "people have come to renounce their true origin, and have rushed in droves (especially the young people) to become Russians. And perhaps history may soon witness that sorry time when the world's civilization, in an instant, will lose forever two remarkable nationalities, and Mordovia will be nothing more than the term for an administrative territory.…"{{harvnb|Mokshin|1991}}}}

On the First Erzya and Moksha Peoples' Congress in 1989 the first point of the Congress Declaration was renaming Mordovia to the Erzya and Moksha Autonomous Republic and banning the term Mordva.{{cite journal|last1=Nadkin|first1=Dmitry|title=Erzya and Moksha Spiritual Culture and Issues of "Homeland" Society. Insights from the Report of the First Moksha and Erzya Congress

|url= https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/duhovnaya-kultura-mordvy-i-zadachi-obschestva-mastorava-tezisy-doklada-na-pervom-sezde-mordovskogo-kulturno-prosvetitelnogo-obschestva|journal=Engineering Systems and Technologies|year=1989 |issue=4 |pages=38–41 |access-date=15 May 2022 |language=ru}}

History

[[File:Muromian-map.png|thumb|Eastern Europe c. 9th century

{{legend|#F7E056|Volga Finns}}

{{legend|#C09D41|Slavs}}

{{legend|#776A52|Mordvins}}

{{legend|#F8D764|Khazars}}

]]

=Prehistory=

The Gorodets culture dating back to around 500 BC has been associated{{by whom|date=March 2016}} with these people. The north-western neighbours were the Muromians and Merians who spoke related Finno-Ugric languages. To the north of the Mordvins lived the Maris, and to the south the Khazars. The Mordvins' eastern neighbors, possibly remnants of the Huns, became the Bulgars around 700 AD.{{citation needed|date=March 2016}}

Researchers have distinguished the ancestors of the Erzya and the Moksha from the mid-1st century AD by the different orientations of their burials and by elements of their costumes and by the variety of bronze jewelry found by archaeologists in their ancient cemeteries. The Erzya graves from this era were oriented north–south, while the Moksha graves were found to be oriented south–north.

File:016 Description of all the Russian state-dwelling peoples.jpg

=Modern history=

Although the Mordvins were given an autonomous territory as a titular nation within the Soviet Union in 1928, Russification intensified during the 1930s, and knowledge of the Mordvin languages by the 1950s was in rapid decline.

After the fall of the Soviet Union, the Mordvins, like other indigenous peoples of Russia, experienced a rise in national consciousness. The Erzya national epic is called Mastorava, which stands for "Mother Earth". It was compiled by A. M. Sharonov and first published in 1994 in the Erzya language (it has since been translated into Moksha and Russian). Mastorava is also the name of a movement of ethnic separatism founded by D. Nadkin of the Mordovian State University, active in the early 1990s.Tatiana Mastyugina, Lev Perepelkin, Vitaliĭ Vyacheslavovich Naumkin, Irina Zviagelskaia, An Ethnic History of Russia: Pre-revolutionary Times to the Present, Greenwood Publishing Group (1996), {{ISBN|0-313-29315-5}}, p. 133; Timur Muzaev, Ėtnicheskiĭ separatizm v Rossii (1999), p. 166ff.

Finno-Ugric peoples, whose territories were included in the former USSR as well as many others, had a very brief period of national revival in 1989–1991. Finno-Ugric peoples of Idel-Ural were able to conduct their own national conventions: Udmurts (November 1991), Erzya and Moksha (March 1992),{{Cite journal |last=Zamyatin |first=Konstantin |date=2013-01-01 |title=Finno-Ugric Republics and Their State Languages: Balancing Powers in Constitutional Order in the Early 1990s |journal=Suomalais-Ugrilaisen Seuran Aikakauskirja |language=en |volume=2013 |issue=94 |pages=337–381 |doi=10.33340/susa.82605 |issn=1798-2987|doi-access=free }} Mari (October 1992), the united convention of Finno-Ugric folks of Russia in Izhevsk (May 1992). All these conventions accepted similar resolutions with appeals to democratize political and public life in their respective republics and to support the national revival of Finno-Ugric peoples. Estonia had a strong influence on moods and opinions that dominated these conventions, (especially among national-oriented intellectuals) because many students at the University of Tartu were from Finno-Ugric republics of Russia.

Languages

{{Main|Mordvinic languages}}The Mordvinic languages, a subgroup of the Uralic family, are Erzya and Moksha, with about 275,000 native speakers together. Both are official languages of Mordovia alongside Russian. The medieval Meshcherian language may have been Mordvinic, or close to Mordvinic.

Erzya is spoken in the northern and eastern and north-western parts of Mordovia, as well as in the adjacent oblasts of Nizhny Novgorod, Penza, Samara, Saratov, Orenburg, and Ulyanovsk, and in the republics of Chuvashia, Tatarstan, and Bashkortostan. Moksha is the majority language in the western part of Mordovia.

Due to differences in phonology, lexicon, and grammar, Erzya and Moksha are not mutually intelligible, to the extent that the Russian language is often used for intergroup communications. The two Mordvinic languages also have separate literary forms. The Erzya literary language was standardised in 1922 and the Mokshan in 1923.{{cite book

|title=The Peoples of the USSR |last=Wixman |first=Ronald

|year=1984 |publisher=M.E. Sharpe

|isbn=978-0-87332-506-6

|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WKrN10g4whAC&pg=PA137

|page=A137 }} Both are currently written using the standard Russian alphabet.

= Reconstruction of ''Mordvin'' language =

The Moksha and Erzya languages are closely related, therefore they are thought to share a common ancestry. As to the degree of the languages' proximity, Arnaud Fournet presumes that if Moksha and Erzya had been a single language, they started to diverge 1500 years ago—the same time as French and Italian divided.{{harvnb|Fournet|2011}} Serebrenikov proves that Moksha preserves more archaic forms than those existing in Erzya.{{harvnb|Serebrennikov|1967}}

= Classification =

Until ca. 2010s most Finnic linguists considered Mordvinic and Mari languages as a single subdivision of the so-called Volga-Finnic branch of the Uralic family. Currently, this approach is rejected by most scholars,Piispanen, Peter S. Statistical Dating of Finno-Mordvinic Languages through Comparative Linguistics and Sound Laws: Fenno-Ugrica Suecana Nova Series. 15 (2016). P. 1-18 and Mordvinic and Mari are considered distinct from each other: Mordvinic languages are believed to have a common ancestor with Balto-Finnic languages (Estonian and Finnish), while the Mari languages are closer to the Permic languages.{{citation needed|date=December 2024}}

Ethnic structure

{{multiple image|caption_align=center|total_width=350

| image1 = Erzya Flag.svg|caption1=Flag of the Erzya people

| image2 = Flag of the Moksha people.svg|caption2=Flag of the Moksha people

}}

The Mordvins are divided into two ethnic subgroups{{Cite book|title=Present-day Ethnic Processes in the USSR |last=Bromley |first=Julian |year=1982 |publisher=Progress Publishers |isbn=9780714719061 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aA6BAAAAMAAJ&q=%22The+Mordvin+ethnic+groups+(Erzya+and+Moksha)%22 }}{{Cite web|url=http://www.suri.ee/eup/mordvins.html |title=MORDVINS (Erzyas and Mokshas) |access-date=14 October 2008 |publisher=Information Center of Finno-Ugric Peoples }}{{Obsolete source|reason=DNA studies prove Moksha and Erzya of different ethnic ancestry|date=May 2022}} and three further subgroups:Mokshin (1995), p. 43. Latham in his account of the "Native Races of the Russian Empire" (1854) divided the Mordvins into three groups, viz. the Ersad, on the Oka River, the Mokshad, on the Sura River and the Karatai, in the neighbourhood of Kazan.{{Obsolete source|reason=Information from 19th c and from Soviet period is dubious because it is ideologically biased|date=May 2022}}

Mokshin concludes that the above grouping does not represent subdivisions of equal ethnotaxonomic order, and discounts Shoksha, Karatai and Teryukhan as ethnonyms, identifying two Mordvin sub-ethnicities, the Erzya and the Moksha, and two "ethnographic groups", the Shoksha and the Karatai."the ethnic structure of the Mordva people at present reveals two subethnoses – Erzia and Moksha – and two ethnographic groups – so-called Shoksha and Karatai" Mokshin (1995), p. 43{{Obsolete source|reason=Soviet term was used for Unted Mordvin people project, like 'Soviet people', the Soviet reign is over, information is obsolete for 30 years ago|date=May 2022}}

Two further formerly Mordvinic groups have assimilated to (Slavic and Turkic) superstrate influence:

  • The Meshcheryaks are believed to be Mordvins who have converted to Russian Orthodox Christianity and have adopted the Russian language.
  • The Mishars are believed to be Mordvins who came under Tatar influence and adopted the language (Mishar Tatar dialect) and the Sunni Muslim religion.Tengushevo Mordvins, Karatai Mordvins, Teryukhan Mordvins, Meshcheryaks, Mishars in {{Cite book|title=An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires |last=Stuart |first=James |year=1994 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=978-0-313-27497-8 |pages=A491,492, 545 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CquTz6ps5YgC&pg=PA491}} This however is only one theory; there is no consensus on the subject of Mishar ethnogenesis and some have heavily criticized given version.{{Cite web |last=Salakhova |first=E. H. |date=2016 |title=The origin of Mishar Tatars and Teptyars in the work of G.N. Akhmarov |url=https://historicalethnology.org/news/en-2016-t1-n2-7/}}

Demographics

File:Ареал расселения мордвы в Волго-Уральском регионе. По данным Всероссийской переписи населения 2010 года..png

Latham (1854) quoted a total population of 480,000. Mastyugina (1996) quotes 1.15 million.{{Cite book|title=An Ethnic History of Russia |last=Mastyugina |first=Tatiana |author2=Lev Perepelkin |year=1996 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=978-0-313-29315-3 |pages=A133 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xd3ZnfyRgncC&pg=PA133 }} The 2002 Russian census reports 0.84 million.

According to estimates by Tartu University made in the late 1970s,{{Citation needed|date=March 2010}} less than one third of Mordvins lived in the autonomous republic of Mordovia, in the basin of the Volga River.

Others are scattered (2002) over the Russian oblasts of Samara (116,475), Penza (86,370), Orenburg (68,880) and Nizhni Novgorod (36,705), Ulyanovsk (61,100), Saratov (23,380), Moscow (22,850), Tatarstan (28,860), Chuvashia (18,686), Bashkortostan (31,932), Siberia (65,650), Russian Far East (29,265).{{Citation needed|date=March 2010}}

Populations in parts of the former Soviet Union not now part of Russia are: Kyrgyz Republic 5,390, Turkmenistan 3,490, Uzbekistan 14,175, Kazakhstan, (34,370), Azerbaijan (1,150), Estonia (985), Armenia (920).{{Citation needed|date=March 2010}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align: right;"

|+Mordvins in Russia (1926–2021)

!Census

!1926

!1939

!1959

!1970

!1979

!1989

!2002

!2010

!2021

align=left|Population

|1,306,798

|1,375,558

|1,211,105

|1,177,492

|1,111,075

|1,072,939

|843,350

|744,237

|484,450

align=left|Percentage

|1.41%

|1.27%

|1.03%

|0.91%

|0.81%

|0.73%

|0.59%

|0.54%

|0.37%

Cultures, folklores and mythologies

{{See also|Mastorava|Music in Mordovia}}

File:Etno Kudo Toramasj terdi DSC 0941.jpg, Mordovia]]

According to Tatiana Deviatkina, although sharing some similarities, no common Mordvin mythology has emerged, and therefore the Erza and Moksha mythologies are defined separately.{{Cite web|url=http://www.folklore.ee/Folklore/vol17/mordmyth.pdf |title=Some Aspects of Mordvin Mythology |access-date=13 October 2008 |last=Deviatkina |first=Tatiana |year=2001 |publisher=Folk Belief and Media Group of ELM }}

In the Erza mythology, the superior deities were hatched from an egg. The mother of gods is called Ange Patiai, followed by the Sun God, Chipaz, who gave birth to Nishkepaz; to the earth god, Mastoron kirdi; and to the wind god, Varmanpaz. From the union of Chipaz and the Harvest Mother, Norovava, was born the god of the underworld, Mastorpaz. The thunder god, Pur’ginepaz, was born from Niskende Teitert, (the daughter of the mother of gods, Ange Patiai).

The creation of the Earth is followed by the creation of the Sun, the Moon, humankind, and the Erza. Humans were created by Chipaz, the sun god, who, in one version, molded humankind from clay, while in another version, from soil.

In Moksha mythology, the Supreme God is called Viarde Skai. According to the legends, the creation of the world went through several stages: first the Devil moistened the building material in his mouth and spat it out. The piece that was spat out grew into a plain, which was modeled unevenly, creating the chasms and the mountains. The first humans created by Viarde Skai could live for 700–800 years and were giants of 99 archinnes. The underworld in Mokshan mythology was ruled by Mastoratia.

Latham reported strong pagan elements surviving Christianization. The 1911 Britannica noted how the Mordvins:

{{blockquote|… still preserve much of their own mythology, which they have adapted to the Christian religion. According to some authorities, they have preserved also, especially the less russified Moksha, the practice of kidnapping brides, with the usual battles between the party of the bridegroom and that of the family of the bride. The worship of trees, water (especially of the water-divinity which favours marriage), the sun or Shkay, who is the chief divinity, the moon, the thunder and the frost, and of the home-divinity Kardaz-scrko{{Dubious|date=October 2008}} still exists among them; and a small stone altar or flat stone covering a small pit to receive the blood of slaughtered animals can be found in many houses. Their burial customs seem founded on ancestor-worship. On the fortieth day after the death of a kinsman the dead [one] is not only supposed to return home, but a member of his household represents him, and, coming from the grave, speaks in his name...

They are also masters of apiculture, and the commonwealth of bees often appears in their poetry and religious beliefs. They have a considerable literature of popular songs and legends, some of them recounting the doings of a king Tushtyan who lived in the time of Ivan the Terrible{{Obsolete source|reason=Ivan the Terrible might not live in the time of Indo-Iranian unity. See Tyushtya article|date=May 2022}}.}}

=Religion=

{{main|Erzyan native religion}}

Erzya practices Christianity (Eastern Orthodox and Lutheranism brought by Finnish missionaries in the 1990s) and a native religion.{{cn|date=October 2023}}

National representative bodies

On 1 May 2020 the Aťań Eźem approved new system of national representative bodies. Statute on creation and functioning of national representative bodies of Erzya people consists of six chapters, describing aims and tasks of Erzya national movement, its governing bodies, their plenary powers and structure. According to the document, national movement directed by Promks – convention of delegates from Erzya political parties and public organizations. Convention forms Aťań Eźem, that is operative between Promks sessions and elects Inyazor, who presents Erzya people and speaks on behalf of all the nation. In the event that there are any legal limitations for creation and operation of national parties (such prohibition exists in Russian Federation nowadays), then plenary powers of Promks are carried by Aťań Eźem. The main objective of Promks, Aťań Eźem and Inyazor, is to provide and defend national, political, economic and cultural rights of Erzya, including right to national self-determination within national Erzya territories.Erzya approved structure of their national representative bodies http://idel-ural.org/en/archives/erzya-approved-structure-of-their-national-representative-bodies/

Genetics

Autosomally, Mokshas and Erzyas show homogeneity.{{Cite journal |last1=Tambets |first1=Kristiina |last2=Yunusbayev |first2=Bayazit |last3=Hudjashov |first3=Georgi |last4=Ilumäe |first4=Anne-Mai |last5=Rootsi |first5=Siiri |last6=Honkola |first6=Terhi |last7=Vesakoski |first7=Outi |last8=Atkinson |first8=Quentin |last9=Skoglund |first9=Pontus |last10=Kushniarevich |first10=Alena |last11=Litvinov |first11=Sergey |last12=Reidla |first12=Maere |last13=Metspalu |first13=Ene |last14=Saag |first14=Lehti |last15=Rantanen |first15=Timo |date=2018 |title=Genes reveal traces of common recent demographic history for most of the Uralic-speaking populations |journal=Genome Biology |language=en |volume=19 |issue=1 |page=139 |doi=10.1186/s13059-018-1522-1 |issn=1474-760X |pmc=6151024 |pmid=30241495 |doi-access=free }} About 11% of their ancestry is Nganasan-like.{{Cite journal |last1=Jeong |first1=Choongwon |last2=Balanovsky |first2=Oleg |last3=Lukianova |first3=Elena |last4=Kahbatkyzy |first4=Nurzhibek |last5=Flegontov |first5=Pavel |last6=Zaporozhchenko |first6=Valery |last7=Immel |first7=Alexander |last8=Wang |first8=Chuan-Chao |last9=Ixan |first9=Olzhas |last10=Khussainova |first10=Elmira |last11=Bekmanov |first11=Bakhytzhan |last12=Zaibert |first12=Victor |last13=Lavryashina |first13=Maria |last14=Pocheshkhova |first14=Elvira |last15=Yusupov |first15=Yuldash |date=2019 |title=The genetic history of admixture across inner Eurasia |journal=Nature Ecology & Evolution |language=en |volume=3 |issue=6 |pages=966–976 |doi=10.1038/s41559-019-0878-2 |issn=2397-334X |pmc=6542712 |pmid=31036896|bibcode=2019NatEE...3..966J }} This East Eurasian component is typical for Uralic-speaking populations. They also have high level of Steppe-related admixture, as it can be modelled to be about half of their ancestry.{{Cite journal |last1=Lamnidis |first1=Thiseas C. |last2=Majander |first2=Kerttu |last3=Jeong |first3=Choongwon |last4=Salmela |first4=Elina |last5=Wessman |first5=Anna |last6=Moiseyev |first6=Vyacheslav |last7=Khartanovich |first7=Valery |last8=Balanovsky |first8=Oleg |last9=Ongyerth |first9=Matthias |last10=Weihmann |first10=Antje |last11=Sajantila |first11=Antti |last12=Kelso |first12=Janet |last13=Pääbo |first13=Svante |last14=Onkamo |first14=Päivi |last15=Haak |first15=Wolfgang |date=2018-11-27 |title=Ancient Fennoscandian genomes reveal origin and spread of Siberian ancestry in Europe |journal=Nature Communications |language=en |volume=9 |issue=1 |page=5018 |doi=10.1038/s41467-018-07483-5 |issn=2041-1723 |pmc=6258758 |pmid=30479341|bibcode=2018NatCo...9.5018L }}

Appearance

File:Erzya women.jpg dressed in traditional costumes]]

The 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica{{cite EB1911| wstitle = Mordvinians | volume=18 |pages=820–821 |first=Charles Norton Edgcumbe |last=Eliot|author1-link= Charles Eliot (diplomat)|short=1}} noted that the Mordvins, although they had largely abandoned their language, had "maintained a good deal of their old national dress, especially the women, whose profusely embroidered skirts, original hair-dress large ear-rings which sometimes are merely hare-tails, and numerous necklaces covering all the chest and consisting of all possible ornaments, easily distinguish them from Russian women."

Britannica described the Mordvins as having mostly dark hair and blue eyes, with a rather small and narrow build. The Moksha were described as having darker skin and darker eyes than the Erzya, while the Qaratays were described as "mixed with Tatars".

Latham described the Mordvins as taller than the Mari, with thin beards, flat faces and brown or red hair, red hair being more frequent among the Ersad than the Mokshad.

James Bryce described "the peculiar Finnish physiognomy" of the Mordvin diaspora in Armenia, "transplanted hither from the Middle Volga at their own wish", as characterised by "broad and smooth faces, long eyes, a rather flattish nose".{{Cite book

|title=Transcaucasia and Ararat: being notes of a vacation tour in the autumn of 1876

|last=Bryce

|first=James

|author-link=James Bryce, 1st Viscount Bryce

|orig-year=1877|year=2005

|publisher=Macmillan and Co. → Adamant Media Corporation

|location=London

|isbn=1-4021-6823-3

|page=172

|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PFi83nFdKp8C&pg=PA172}}

List of notable Mordvins

=Erzyans=

  • Alyona Erzymasskaya (died 1670), 17th-century Erzyan female military leader, the heroine of civil war.{{citation needed|date=October 2018}}
  • Stepan Erzya (Stepan Nefedov) (1876–1959), sculptor{{citation needed|date=October 2018}}
  • Fyodor Vidyayev (1912-1943), World War II submarine commander and war hero{{citation needed|date=October 2018}}
  • Aleksandr Sharonov (born 1942), philologist, poet, writer{{citation needed|date=October 2018}}
  • Kuzma Alekseyev, leader of Teryukhan unrest in 1806-1810 {{citation needed|date=October 2018}}
  • Vasily Chapayev (1887–1919), a Russian soldier and Red Army commander
  • Nadezhda Kadysheva (born 1959) singer

=Mokshans=

  • Mikhail Devyatayev (1917–2002), a Soviet fighter pilot, escaped from a Nazi concentration camp {{citation needed|date=October 2018}}
  • Andrey Kizhevatov (1907–1941), a Soviet border guard commander, a leader of the Defence of Brest Fortress during Operation Barbarossa.
  • Oleg Maskaev (born 1969), Russian former boxer
  • Vasily Shukshin (1929–1974), Soviet writer and actor.[http://www.vsar.ru/14227_%C2%ABMy_procentov_na_90_-_mordva___%C2%BB «Мы процентов на 90 - мордва...»] [We are 90% Mordvin] - Vecherniy Saransk, 29 April 2016. Quote from Shukshin's daughter:

«Почему Саранск? Мы мордва. Предки Василия Макаровича из Мордовии, мы знаем, что сначала они переселились в Самарскую область, а затем в Алтайский край.»

["Why Saransk? Because we are Mordvin. The ancestors of Vasily Shukshin came from Mordovia; we know they first settled in Samara Oblast and then in Altai Krai"]

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

= Bibliography =

  • {{Cite book|title=Pre- and Proto-historic Finns |last=Abercromby |first=John |author-link=John Abercromby, 5th Baron Abercromby |year=1898 |publisher=D. Nutt |url=https://archive.org/details/preandprotohist01abergoog }}
  • {{citation|last1=Fournet|first1=Arnaud|title=Le moksha, une langue ouralienne: Présentation, Idiolectes, Phonologie, Attestations et Textes anciens, Glossaire|location=Saarbrücken|publisher=Editions Universitaires Européennes|date=2011-01-06|isbn=978-6131557514|language=fr}}
  • {{citation|editor-last1=Grekov|editor-first1=B.D.|editor2-last=Lebedev|editor2-first=V.I.|publisher=Mordovian Research Institute of Language, Literature, History and Economics|title=Documents and Materials on History of Mordovian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic|url=https://rusneb.ru/catalog/000199_000009_008291945/|volume=1|page=182|year=1940|language=ru}}
  • {{cite journal|last=Kozlov|first=V.I.|title=Mordva Resettlement|journal=Soviet Ethnography|issue=2|year=1958|language=ru}}
  • {{Citation|last=Martyshkin|first=N.V|title=Mordvin Charismatic Person, Timofey Vasilyev. Patriot, Lawyer Enlighter. First International Lawyer to Gredat Britain|url=https://vs.mor.sudrf.ru/modules.php?name=press_dep&op=4&did=1|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230228192033/https://vs.mor.sudrf.ru/modules.php?name=press_dep&op=4&did=1|url-status=dead|archive-date=28 February 2023|publisher=Supreme Court of Mordovian Republic Press Centre|date=2014-10-02|language=ru}}
  • {{cite journal|last=Mokshin|first=Nikolay|title=Ethnonym or Ethnopholism?|journal=Anthropology & Archeology of Eurasia|volume=31|issue=1|url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.2753/AAE1061-1959310110|year=1991|pages=10–23|doi=10.2753/AAE1061-1959310110 |url-access=subscription}}
  • Mokshin, Nikolai F. "[https://books.google.com/books?id=-t34nFqaiH0C&pg=PA31 The Mordva – Ethnonym or Ethnopholism]", chapter 5 of Marjorie Mandelstam Balzer (ed.),Culture Incarnate: Native Anthropology from Russia, M.E. Sharpe (1995), {{ISBN|978-1-56324-535-0}}, 29–45 (English translation of a 1991 Sovetskaia etnografiia article).
  • {{Citation |last1=Mokshin |first1=Nikolay|title= At Sources Of The Mordovian-Jewish Ethnocultural Ties |url= https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/u-istokov-mordovsko-evreyskih-etnokulturnyh-svyazey |journal=Social and Political Science|date=2012 |issue=4 |pages=6–8 |language=ru}}
  • {{cite book|last1=Serebrennikov|first1=V.A.|title=Historical Morfology of Mordvinic Languages|location=Moscow|year=1967|language=ru}}
  • {{Cite book|title=The Finno-Ugric Republics and the Russian State |last=Taagepera |first=Rein |year=1999 |publisher=Routledge |pages=147–196 |isbn=978-0-415-91977-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QGqWcZu42hUC&pg=PA147 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Vasilyev |first=Timofey |title=Mordovia |url=http://www.niign.ru/knigi/vasilev-t.-v.-mordoviya.pdf |publisher=Mordovian Research Institute of Language, Literature, History and Economics |year=2007 |location=Saransk |language=ru}}
  • {{Cite book| chapter = Mordovia

| last = Zamyatin | first = Konstantin| year = 2022

| title = The Oxford Guide to the Uralic Languages. Oxford Guides to the World's Languages

| editor1-last = Bakró-Nagy | editor1-first = Marianne

| editor2-last = Laakso | editor2-first = Johanna

| editor3-last = Skribnik | editor3-first = Elena

| publisher = Oxford University Press

| chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=sJtjEAAAQBAJ&dq=unified+mordvin&pg=PA88

| pages = 88

| isbn = 978-0191080289

}}

Further reading

  • Devyatkina, Tatiana. Mythology of Mordvins: Encyclopaedia. Saransk, 2007. ({{langx|ru|link=no|Девяткина Т. П. Мифология мордвы: энциклопедия. - Изд. 3-е, испр. и доп. - Саранск: Красный Октябрь, 2007. - 332 с.}})
  • {{Cite book|title=One Europe, Many Nations: A Historical Dictionary of European National Groups |last=Minahan |first=James |year=2000 |isbn=978-0-313-30984-7 |pages=489–492 |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NwvoM-ZFoAgC&pg=PA489}}
  • Petrukhin, Vladimir. Mordvins Mythology // Myths of Finno-Ugric Peoples. Moscow, 2005. p. 292 - 335. ({{langx|ru|link=no|Петрухин В. Я. Мордовская мифология // Мифы финно-угров. М., 2005. С. 292 - 335.}})
  • {{Cite book|title=The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia |last=Sinor |first=Denis |year=1990 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-24304-9 |pages=251|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ST6TRNuWmHsC&q=Mordvins&pg=RA1-PA151 }}
  • {{Citation |last1=Akchurin |first1=Maksum |last2=Isheev |first2=Mullanur |title= Temnikov: The Town of a Tümen Commander. The History of Towns of The "Mordovian Peripheries" In The 15th–16th centuries|location=Kazan |journal=Golden Horde Review |date=2017 |volume=5 |issue=3 |pages=629–658 |doi=10.22378/2313-6197.2017-5-3.629-658|doi-access=free }}
  • {{Citation |last1=Akchurin |first1=Maksum |title= The Burtas in the Documents of the 17th century |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/320140805|location=Kazan |publisher=Ethnological Research in Tatarstan. Sh. Marjani Institute of History of Tatarstan Academy of Sciences Publ. |date=2012}}
  • {{cite journal|last1= Mayorov |first1=Aleksandr |title= Woman, Diplomacy and War. Russian Princes In Negotiations With Batu Before Mongol Invasion|journal=Шаги/Steps |date=2021 |volume=7 |issue=3 |pages=124–199 |url= https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/zhenschina-diplomatiya-i-voyna-russkie-knyazya-v-peregovorah-s-batu-nakanune-mongolskogo-nashestviya |publisher = Steps Journal}}
  • {{Citation|last1=Shtereshis|first1=Michael|title=Tamerlane and the Jews|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XUb8AQAAQBAJ|publisher=Routledge|location=London and New York|year=2013|isbn=9781136873669 }}
  • {{Citation|last1= Stavitsky |first1=Vladimir|title= Main Concepts of Ancient Mordva Ethnogenesis. Historiography Review|journal=Известия Самарского Научного Центра Российской Академии Наук |year=2009 |volume=11 |issue=6–1 |pages=261–266 |url= https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/osnovnye-kontseptsii-etnogeneza-drevney-mordvy-istoriograficheskiy-obzor|publisher = Penza State Pedagogical University}}
  • {{cite web|last1= Balanovsky |first1=Oleg |title= Peoples' Panorama On The Background Of Europe. Non-Slavic Peoples of Eastern Europe. Series 3|date=2015-11-12 |url= http://genofond.rf/?page_id=5500 |publisher = Genofond.rf}}