Tagged: koryaks Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Ilya 3:32 pm on August 14, 2025 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , koryaks, , Veps, wedding   

    Blood Weddings, Walrus Heads, and Sky Burials: Five Unsettling Indigenous Traditions in Russia 

    Photo: TASS / Alexey Druzhinin

    Photo: TASS / Alexey Druzhinin

    In Russia, 195 ethnic groups live side by side. Each has its own traditions, passed down since ancient times. Some customs, however, are enough to make your blood run cold. Hard as it is to believe, some of them aren’t legends from the distant past but are very much part of 21st-century Russian reality. Here’s a closer look at some of the most vivid (and unsettling) traditions of the indigenous peoples from different corners of this vast land.

    Chukchi blood wedding straight out of Game of Thrones

    Life in Chukotka is harsh — it’s a cold, inhospitable land — yet people have lived there since time immemorial. Not only do they survive, herding reindeer and fishing, but they also marry — in a way that would impress George R. R. Martin himself. The beautiful bride, adorned with beads and furs, rides her own reindeer in the company of her entire family toward the groom’s tent. Behind the tent, special poles are prepared for blood sacrifices. To ensure a happy marriage, a reindeer must be sacrificed to both the sunset and the sunrise. The reindeer’s blood is used for several rituals: first, the groom and bride have the family symbol painted on their faces — marking the bride’s departure from her own family and her joining her husband’s. (Kind of like changing your last name, only more… intense.) Next, the bride smears the blood on the wedding sled — the narta — and places the animal’s bone marrow by the yaranga (tent) for good luck. The blood rites don’t end there — the new wife must light the sacred household fire. A handful of ash is mixed with reindeer blood, rubbed between her palms, and used to start the hearth, as she whispers: “Live well with me.”

    Why Chukchi keep walrus heads

    While we’re still in Chukotka — ever wondered why the locals keep walrus heads? For them, it’s like your box of Christmas ornaments in the attic. In summer, Chukchi bring up animal skulls from their cellars to celebrate the “Festival of Heads” — marking the end of seal-hunting season. The skulls are arranged in the center of the yaranga, with the largest tied to a rope to mimic pulling a walrus from the water. In autumn, they throw another celebration — this time honoring Kertekun, the master of sea creatures. They weave a net from reindeer sinew, fetch their most beautifully decorated “holiday oars,” and don costumes sewn from walrus intestines. This raucous festivity comes with dancing, music, and sacrifices. The event ends with the ceremonial burning of a Kertekun effigy — a gesture of respect, so to speak.

    Hospitable sex

    On Kamchatka, the coastal Koryaks — a small indigenous group — have had a very unusual tradition of hospitality for centuries. A stranger isn’t only offered shelter, dinner, and a bed — but also the mistress of the house. Among the Koryaks, this is considered a blessing and a great honor. If the woman becomes pregnant from the guest, the entire village holds a huge celebration. The reason for this tradition is simple: survival. Infant mortality was historically high among the Koryaks due to inbreeding, so this was their way of diversifying the gene pool and sustaining the population.

    Funeral celebration for the dead

    Among many indigenous groups — such as the Veps, who live in Karelia, Vologda, and Leningrad regions — there exists a peculiar ritual known as “cheering the dead.” If you didn’t know a funeral was taking place, you might mistake it for a festival: people dressed in their finest clothes, singing, dancing, and jingling bells. Traditionally, this send-off was reserved for those who died unmarried. In some cases, it was done according to the deceased’s last wish — for example, if a grandmother wanted to be buried “as a bride,” with songs, wheat, fish pie, and accordion music, her wish would be honored.

    Hanging the dead

    An even stranger burial practice was once widespread — from the Far North to the Caucasus. Yakuts, Nenets, Khanty, Mansi, Buryats, Khakas, Adyghe, Circassians, and Georgians practiced “sky burial.” Instead of being buried in the ground, the coffin was hung high in a tree, where it remained until the body completely decayed. Among some peoples, this was a special honor reserved for respected leaders; among others, it was simply the standard way of laying anyone to rest.

     
  • Ilya 9:40 am on August 9, 2025 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Aleuts, , , Enets, Eskimos, Evens, koryaks, Nganasans, Nivkhs, , Votes   

    Bald Brides, Wives for Rent, and Dates with the Dead: The Strangest Traditions of Russia’s Peoples 

    Today, Russia is home to 47 indigenous peoples, classified as “autochthonous” or small-numbered. These groups live on the ancestral lands of their forebears, preserving traditional lifestyles, crafts, and customs.

    Below are some of the most fascinating and unusual traditions from these communities. Learn why Ingrian brides shaved their heads, why the Nganasans left their deceased tribespeople in the tundra, how Enets shamans “brought a drum to life,” and why some northern peoples practiced sexual hospitality.

    Chukchi and Koryaks – Ancient Customs Around Death

    Photo by Paul Niedieck

    Photo by Paul Niedieck

    Among the Chukchi, according to travelers’ accounts, dying a natural death was long considered “dishonorable” and “befitting only women.” It was believed that those who ended their own lives would enjoy a more blissful afterlife. Elderly people who no longer wished to live and young people with incurable illnesses could even ask relatives to help them pass away. If refused, they might pay someone else to do it.

    Researcher Zelenin noted: “On the eve of death, the Chukchi is in the best of spirits; he is genuinely cheerful, rejoices, and openly shows his joy to everyone who comes to say goodbye.”

    Nivkhs – Meetings with the Dead

    The Nivkhs of the Amur region and Sakhalin held regular “meetings” with deceased relatives through shamans. These sessions involved conversations, offerings of food and clothing, and other gifts for the afterlife—essentially “second funerals.”

    They also practiced the “raising of the tree” ritual, transferring the soul into a small wooden figurine carved from larch during cremation. The figurine, dressed and equipped with flint, food, and belongings, was placed in a family burial house facing west.

    Evens and Eskimos – Sexual Hospitality

    Among some northern and Far Eastern peoples, it was customary to offer a guest one’s wife or daughter for the night. Acceptance was considered a great honor. If a woman became pregnant from such a union, the whole village celebrated, believing the child would bring fresh genes into the lineage. Among the Eskimos, wives could even be “rented” to another man during a husband’s hunting trip, serving both as partner and cook.

    Nganasans and Tubalars – Mythic Storytelling

    Photo by Sergei Ivanovich Borisov (1867–1931)

    The Nganasans told dyryms (narratives) and sitabs (stories about spirits and animals) using expressive gestures, dances, and songs. These solo performances could last several evenings.

    The Tubalars of Altai shared similar storytelling traditions, often performed during hunts and accompanied by sacrifices to appease the spirit of the mountains and ensure good game.

    Ingrians – Tobacco and Bald Brides

    In the Leningrad region, the Ingrians had a unique wedding custom: everyone present during matchmaking smoked tobacco. They said, “If smoke rises over the house, it’s either a fire or an engagement!” The wedding itself was called tupakat—from “tobacco.”

    After the celebration, the bride shaved her head completely and remained bald until the birth of her first child. Later, the custom shifted to simply cutting hair short.

    Votes – Trial Marriages

    Votes, a small indigenous Finno-Ugric people living in the Leningrad region of Russia

    Votes, a small indigenous Finno-Ugric people living in the Leningrad region of Russia
    Photo by nazaccent.ru

    The Votes practiced trial marriages, allowing a young man to live with a girl for weeks or months before deciding to wed. Relationships allowed considerable freedom: a man could have multiple wives, and women could also live with other partners.

    Aleuts – Sitting Dances

    In totemic ceremonies, Aleuts used dance to communicate with the gods, transforming into sea animals and birds. Ancient sitting dances involved only the upper body—head, arms, and face—while men began with drumming and singing and women joined in.

    Nganasans – Leaving the Dead in the Tundra

    The Nganasans once placed deceased relatives on sleds with belongings and left them in the tundra. Approaching such sleds was considered dangerous due to the sacred items inside.

    They believed the “pure” half of a person went to the land of the dead beneath seven layers of underground ice, while the “impure” half remained at the grave. If a bear disturbed the grave, it was seen as a favorable sign for the deceased’s journey.

    Enets and Selkups – Bringing the Drum to Life

    Northern shaman beats tambourine performing a rite calls spring

    Northern shaman beats tambourine over his head performing a rite calls spring
    Photo by depositphotos.com

    For the Enets and Selkups, a shaman’s drum symbolized a reindeer carrying the shaman to the sky. Before any journey, the drum had to be “brought to life” so spirits could see it. The stronger the shaman, the stronger the spirits the drum could attract.

    The ritual ended with a communal feast and “feeding” wooden ancestor idols.

    Source: mir24.tv


     
c
Compose new post
j
Next post/Next comment
k
Previous post/Previous comment
r
Reply
e
Edit
o
Show/Hide comments
t
Go to top
l
Go to login
h
Show/Hide help
shift + esc
Cancel