The Shoshoolog: Ethnonym and Ethnic History
https://doi.org/10.22162/2500-1523-2021-2-274-289
Abstract
Introduction. This article under takes a study of the clan name Shoshoolog (Šošōlog) in the context of ethnogenesis and ethnic history of the Mongolic and Turkic peoples of Inner Asia and Siberia. New historical and ethnographical data, including the evidence of ethnonymics as a part of the ethnic history of the Mongolic and Turkic peoples of the region will contribute to the knowledge of the migration and settlement history of the Shoshoolog people. The study aims at examining the etymology of the term šošōloγ, the area where it wasspread and theways of itsspread. Data and methods. The authors have taken into account written documents, ethnographical and folklore sources that contained references to the ethnonym in question. The written sources of the period between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries, mainly in Russian, such as Cossacks’ otpiski (reports), and, more recent, travel and census reports, contain various forms of the ethnonym, often incorrectly spelled but still of interest as evidence pointing at the settlement areas of the ethnic group, as well as a source for linguistic speculation. The ethnographical sources include references to the ethnic group in question based on the legends and sagas shedding light on the people’s origin and settlement patterns both in the Baikal area and in Mongolia. The folklore texts written down by N. N. Poppe, S. P. Baldaev, etc. Include the stories of the Shoshoolog as a Buryat clan with a strong Shamanic background, as well as various forms of the ethnonym. Granted the available knowledge of the historical patterns in the language evolution, the orthographical forms of the ethnonym contained in different records were used as the data for further phonetical reconstructions and localizations of the ethnonym’s phonetic shape in terms of chronological and geographical dimensions. This data, alongside other material on the ethnonymics and onomastics of Mongolic and Turkic peoples, contributes to the linguistic part of the database in the field. Conclusions. A comparative analysis of ethnonymic evidence contained in a variety of sources examined resulted in phonetic reconstructions of the ethnonym under study to finally shed new light on its etymology, as well as to project further developments of its phonetic shape.
Keywords
About the Authors
Bair Z. NanzatovRussian Federation
Cand. Sc. (History), Senior Research Associate
Vladimir V. Tishin
Russian Federation
Cand. Sc. (History), Senior Research Associate
References
1. State Archive of the Republic of Buryatia. (In Russ. and Mong.)
2. Baldaev S. P. The Buryats: Genealogical Tales and Legends. Ulan-Ude: Buryatia Book Publ., 1970. Part 1: The Bulagats and Ekhirits. 364 p. (In Russ.)
3. Basharin G. P. Yakutia: History of Agricultural Relations. In 2 vols. Moscow: Art-Fleks, 2003. Vol. 1: Agricultural Relations, from Ancient Times to the 1770s. 447 p. (In Russ.)
4. Budaev Ts. B. Buryat Dialects: A Diachronic Study. Novosibirsk: Nauka, 1992. 217 p. (In Russ.)
5. Buyandelger J. Ethnic history of the Barga, 15th–17th centuries. In: Cultural Heritage of Central Asian Peoples. Ulan-Ude: Buryat Scientific Center (Sib. Branch of RAS), 2012. Vol. 3. Pp. 183–205. (In Russ.)
6. Dolgikh B. O. Peoples of Siberia, 17th Century: Tribes and Clans. Moscow: USSR Academy of Sciences, 1960. 662 p. (In Russ.)
7. Ergis G. U. (comp.) Historical Tales and Stories of the Yakuts. A. Popov, N. Emelyanov (eds.). Moscow; Leningrad: USSR Academy of Sciences, 1960. Part 1. 322, [1] p. (In Russ. and Yak.)
8. Galdanova G. R. Pre-Lamaist Beliefs of the Buryats. Novosibirsk: Nauka, 1987. 114 p. (In Russ.)
9. Galdanova G. R. Zakamensk Buryats: Historical and Ethnographic Essays, Mid-19th to Mid-20th Centuries. Novosibirsk: Nauka, 1992. 182 p. (In Russ.)
10. Georgi J. G. Bemerkungen einer Reise im Russischen Reich im Jahre 1772. St. Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences, 1775. Vol. 1. [14], 506 p. (In Germ.)
11. Kałużyński S. Etymological studies of Yakut: disyllabic stems (III). Rocznik Orientalistyczny. 1979. Vol. XI. No. 2. Pp. 39–49. (In Russ.)
12. Kałużyński S. Etymological studies of Yakut: disyllabic stems (VII). Rocznik Orientalistyczny. 1985. Vol. XLIV. No. 2. Pp. 43–57. (In Russ.)
13. Korkina E. I. et al. Grammar of Literary Yakut. In 2 vols. Moscow: Nauka, 1982. Vol. 1: Phonetics and Morphology. 496 p. (In Russ.)
14. Ligeti L. Notes for a Mongolian dictionary from Istanbul. Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae. 1963. Vol. XVI. No. 2. Pp. 107–174. (In Fr.)
15. Lumbunov Yu. Tribes of the Selenga Buryats (ser. ‘Collecting Buryat Tales’). Zapiski Vostochno-sibirskogo otdela Imperatorskogo Russkogo geograficheskogo obshchestva. 1890. Vol. I. No. 2. P. 118. (In Russ.)
16. Nanzatov B. Z. Buryats of Transbaikalia, 19th Century: Ethnic Composition and Distribution. Ulan-Ude: Buryat Scientific Center (Sib. Branch of RAS), 2016. 290 p. (In Russ.)
17. Nanzatov B. Z. Ethnogenesis of the Western Buryats, 6th to 19th Centuries AD. Irkutsk: Radian, 2005. 160 p. (In Russ.)
18. Nanzatov B. Z. Irkutsk Buryats, 19th Century: Ethnic Composition and Distribution. Ulan-Ude: Buryat Scientific Center (Sib. Branch of RAS), 2018. 224 p. (In Russ.) DOI 10.31554/978-5-7925-0546-9-2018-4-222.
19. Nanzatov B. Z., Sodnompilova M. M. Tunka Buryats in the 19th century: ethnic composition and settlement. Vestnik akheologii, antropologii i etnografii. 2017. No. 3(38). Pp. 131–142. (In Russ.)
20. Nanzatov B. Z., Sodnompilova M. M. Zaqamina Buryats in the 19th century: ethnic composition and settlement. Bulletin of the Irkutsk State University. Geoarchaeology, Ethnology, and Anthropology Series. 2017. Vol. 19. Pp. 151–171. (In Russ.)
21. Natsagdorzh B. The Tsongool: Some Aspects of 17th-Century Mongolian-Russian Relations Revisited. Ulaanbaatar: Admon, 2013. 310 p. (In Mong.)
22. Nikolaev M. P. (ed.) Yakutsk Oblast in 1911: Reference Book. Yakutsk Oblast Statistical Committee. Yakutsk: Yakutsk Oblast Government, 1911. 118+13+68+10 p. (In Russ.)
23. Ochirov N. O. Among Astrakhan Kalmyks in the Summer of 1909: A Travel Report by N. Ochirov. Izvestiya Russkogo Komiteta dlya izucheniya Sredney i Vostochnoy Azii v istoricheskom, arkheologicheskom, lingvisticheskom i etnograficheskom otnosheniyakh. 1910, March. No. 10. St. Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences, 1910. Pp. 61–76. (In Russ.)
24. Okladnikov A. P. History of the Yakut ASSR. In 3 vols. Moscow; Leningrad: USSR Academy of Sciences, 1955. Vol. 1: Yakutia in the Pre-Russian Era. L. Potapov (ed.). 2nd ed., suppl. and rev. 1955. 430, [2] p. (In Russ.)
25. Pallas P. S. Sammlungen historischer Nachrichten über die Mongolischen Völkerschaften. St. Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences, 1776. Vol. 1: Sammlungen zur politischen, physikalischen und moralischen Geschichte der mongolischen Völkerschaften. XIV, 232, [13] p. (In Germ.)
26. Patkanov S. K. Non-Russian Populations of Siberia: Statistical Data on Their Tribal Composition, Languages, and Clans (Special Insights into the Census of 1897). In 3 vols. St. Petersburg: Sh. Bussel, 1912. Vol. III: Irkutsk Governorate, Transbaikal, Amur, Yakutsk, Primorskaya Oblasts and Sakhalin. Pp. 430–1002. (In Russ.)
27. Pekarsky E. K. Dictionary of the Yakut Language. 2nd ed. Moscow: USSR Academy of Sciences, 1959. Vol. II. Parts 5–9. Clm. 1281–2508, VIII p. (In Yak. and Russ.)
28. Pekarsky E. K. Dictionary of the Yakut Language. 2nd ed. Moscow: USSR Academy of Sciences, 1959. Vol. III. Parts 10–13. Clm. 2509–3858, VIII p. (In Yak. and Russ.)
29. Petrov K. I. Kyrgyz Migration to the Tian Shan and Their Relations with Oirats, 12th to 15th Centuries: A Historical Review. Frunze: Kirghiz SSR Academy of Sciences, 1961. 212 p. (In Russ.)
30. Poppe N. Grammar of Written Mongolian. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1954. XII, 195 p. (In Mong.)
31. Poppe N. Introduction to Mongolian Comparative Studies. Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura, 1955. 300 p. (In Eng.)
32. Poppe N. N. The Buryat-Mongols: Collected Folklore and Dialectal Materials. Moscow; Leningrad: USSR Academy of Sciences, 1936. 168 p. (In Russ. and Bur.)
33. Potapov L. P. The Koibal: origins and ethnic composition. Sovetskaya etnografiya. 1956. No. 3. Pp. 35–51. (In Russ.)
34. Radlov V. V. A Dictionary of Turkic Languages. St. Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences, 1911. Vol. IV. Part 1. Clm. 1–1116, 107 p. (In Russ., Turk., etc.)
35. Ramstedt G. J. Kalmükisches Wörterbuch. Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura, 1935. xxx, 560 p. (In Kalm. and Germ.)
36. Rassadin V. I. Buryat Language: Essays in Historical Phonetics. Moscow: Nauka, 1982. 199 p. (In Russ.)
37. Rassadin V. I. Buryatisms in the Yakut language. In: Korkina E. I., Petrov N. E. (eds.) O. N. Böhtlingk and His Work Titled ‘About the Yakut Language’. Jubilee conference proceedings. Yakutsk: USSR Academy of Sciences (Yakut Office of Sib. Branch), 1973. Pp. 167–179. (In Russ.)
38. Rumyantsev G. N. Selenga Buryats: origins, tribes, and clans. In: Transactions of Buryat Institute for Comprehensive Research. Ulan-Ude: Buryatia Book Publ., 1965. Vol. 16. Pp. 76–108. (In Russ.)
39. Sanzheev G. D. Comparative Grammar of Mongolic Languages. Moscow: USSR Academy of Sciences, 1953. Vol. 1. 240 p. (In Russ.)
40. Saγang Secěn. Erdeni-yin Tobči: a manuscript from Kentei Ayimaγ. E. Chiodo (ed., comment.); K. Sagaster (study of Tibetan glosses). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1996. 93 p. (In Mong. and Eng.)
41. Shipilov I. A. Academic Expeditions of the 18th Century: The Role of Ancillary Workers in Siberia’s Exploration Revisited. Cand. Sc. (history) thesis. Novosibirsk, 2021. 344 p. (In Russ.)
42. Shulunova L. V. Buryat toponyms: a sociolinguistic aspect. In: Rassadin V. I. et al. (eds.) Buryat Lexical and Grammatical Studies. Ulan-Ude: Buryat Scientific Center (USSR Acad. of Sc., Sib. Branch), 1989. Pp. 170–178. (In Russ.)
43. The Yellow Chronicle (Mong. Sir-a tuγuji). A. Tsendina (transl., foreword, etc.). Moscow: Nauka — Vostochnaya Literatura, 2017. 406 p. (In Russ.)
44. Tokarev S. A. The Yakuts, 17th–18th Centuries: Social Structure Revisited. Yakutsk: Yakutia State Publ., 1945. 416 p. (In Russ.)
45. Tserenkhand Gelegzhamtsyn. The Mongols: Ethnic Culture and Customs. Ulaanbaatar: Admon, 2005. 234 p. (In Mong.)
46. Tsydendambaev Ts. B. Buryat Historical Chronicles and Genealogies: A Historical and Linguistic Study. Ulan-Ude: Buryatia Book Publ., 1972. 664 p. (In Russ.)
47. Vladimirtsov B. Ya. Classical and Khalkha Mongolian: A Comparative Grammar. Introduction and Phonetics. Leningrad: USSR Academy of Sciences, 1929. XII, 436 p. (In Russ.)
48. Vostrov V. V., Mukanov M. S. The Kazakhs: Tribes, Clans, and Their Whereabouts, Late 19th – Early 20th Centuries. Alma-Ata: Nauka, 1968. 256 p. (In Russ.)
49. Yakhontova N. S. 17th Century Literary Oirat. Moscow: Vostochnaya Literatura, 1996. 152 p. (In Russ.)
50. Zatoplyaev N. Bones in the former Alar municipality (ser. ‘Collecting Buryat Tales’). Zapiski Vostochno-sibirskogo otdela Imperatorskogo Russkogo geograficheskogo obshchestva. 1890. Vol. I. No. 2. P. 89. (In Russ.)
51. Zatoplyaev N. Bulgata-ongon (ser. ‘Collecting Buryat Tales’). Zapiski Vostochno-sibirskogo otdela Imperatorskogo Russkogo geograficheskogo obshchestva. 1890. Vol. I. No. 2. P. 124. (In Russ.)
Review
For citations:
Nanzatov B.Z., Tishin V.V. The Shoshoolog: Ethnonym and Ethnic History. Mongolian Studies. 2021;13(2):274-289. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.22162/2500-1523-2021-2-274-289