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Tushetians

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ethnic subgroup of Georgians
Tushetians, 2006

TheTushetians (/tˈʃɛtiənz/;Georgian:თუშები,romanized:tushebi), orTush/ˈtʃ/, are a subgroup ofGeorgians who mainly live inTusheti. Tsova Tushetians speak theTsova Tushetian language and Chagma Tushetians speak the Chagma Tushetian dialect ofGeorgian.

Subgroups

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The Tush divide themselves into two groups, the Chagma-Tush, who speak the localGeorgian dialect and the Tsova-Tush, also known as Bats orBatsbi, who speak theBats language, aNakh language. Most Bats also speak Georgian, to which there is a continuing trend of linguistic assimilation.[1] Despite differences in language and culture (to a degree), both Chagma- and Tsova-Tush consider themselves to be part of the larger group of Tush, which in turn is considered a subgroup of Georgians.

Culture

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Keselo, Tusheti
Costume of a Tush man.

Traditionally, the Tushetians areshepherds. Tushetian Guda cheese (Not to be confused with EuropeanGouda cheese, with which it shares neither the features nor the making technique) and high quality wool was famous and was exported toEurope andRussia. Even today sheep and cattle breeding is the leading branch of the economy of highland Tusheti. The local shepherds spend the summer months in the highland areas of Tusheti but live in the lowland villages of Zemo Alvani and Kvemo Alvani in wintertime. Their customs and traditions are similar to those of other eastern Georgian mountaineers, such as theKhevsurs andPshavs.

Like most Georgian groups, they are mainlyGeorgian Orthodox Christian in religion.

Origins

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A Tushetian man byGrigory Gagarin, 1840s

The origin of the Tush themselves is a mysterious and debatable matter, with numerous theories regarding the origin of Tsova-Tush and of the Chagma-Tush. It also is uncertain whether the two groups have a common origin or not.

Theories regarding the origin of the Tsova-Tush include involving descent from South Caucasian Nakh tribes in ancient times (or aNakh people inhabiting areas of Kakheti and Tusheti[1][2]), North Caucasian Nakh tribes in the 16th century,[1][3][4] or Old Georgian tribes who were influenced by or intermixed with the Nakh.[1]

Anthropological studies on the Tsova-Tush found them to be somewhere in between the Chechen-origin Kists and the Chagma-Tush of the region, but significantly closer to the Chagma-Tush.[1]

Theories regarding the origin of the Chagma-Tush all include descent from Georgian tribes (possibly pagans fleeing Christianization in the 4th century CE), but variously involve influence or admixture from South Caucasian Nakh, Dagestani peoples, or none.[5]

History

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The region of Tusheti was first mentioned by its name in the 4th century BCE.[1]

The lands of the Tush have variously been under the rule of Caucasian Iberia, the medieval united kingdom of Georgia, theKingdom of Kakheti (which eventually fell under heavy influence from Persia), the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union and then independent united Georgia.

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdefThe Red Book of Peoples of the Russian Empire; Bats section.
  2. ^Jaimoukha, Amjad.The Chechens: A Handbook. Routledge Curzon: Oxon, 2005. Page 30. "The Kakh(etians), who used to call themselves Kabatsas and their territory Kakh-Batsa, were surrounded by Nakh tribes and were themselves thought to be Tushians of Nakh extraction. The eighteenth-century historian Vakhushti asserted that the Kakh considered the Gligvs, Dzurdzuks and Kist as their ethnic kin."
  3. ^Nichols, Johanna, "The Origin of the Chechen and Ingush: A Study in Alpine Linguistic and Ethnic Geography",Anthropological Linguistics, Vol. 46, No. 2, 2004.
  4. ^15 and 20(c) in ALLEN, W.E.D. (Ed.),Russian Embassies to the Georgian Kings – 1589–1605, The Hakluyt Society, Second Series No. CXXXVIII, Cambridge University Press, 1970
  5. ^"Batsav | the batsbi".

External links

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  • Media related toTush people at Wikimedia Commons
  • www.batsav.com, a site mainly dedicated to the Tsova-Tush with significant information on the Chagma-Tush as well as their neighbors in addition
Kartvelians
Other ethnicities
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