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User:Fiveby/Chuchuna

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155: 194:" from 1868-1869 has been preserved. The author spoke about rumors about the existence of some wild people wandering through the region. They were very few in number, sometimes dressed in rags, had a bow, and left large tracks. They had run-ins with civilised people. They would throw stones at tje backs of Yakut women. The Yakuts were afraid when they saw these people. They lived on the coast of the Arctic Ocean in the 221:" . During the hunt for marine mammals in summer and autumn, the ice broke off and carried lone sea mammal hunters far to the west, to the shores of Yakutia. Separated from their relatives, they considered themselves outcast: the Chukchi custom forbade them to return to their homeland, where they were already considered dead. Finding themselves in new and unusual conditions, the Chukchi " 75: 129:. These wild men, with long hair and a furry face, were either much shorter or much taller than the average man, dressed in animal skins, and carried a bow and knife. Their speech was inarticulate, and presumably they lived in caves. They attacked people at night, firing arrows or throwing stones. They stole deer and food. The last time a 62:
wore long hair, dressed in animal skins, and carried bows and arrows. Their speech was inarticulate. They stole deer and food; attacked people at night, shooting them with arrows or throwing stones. Folklore accounts in the second half of the 20th century served as the basis for the construction of a
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It should also be noted that the archetype of malicious savages, secretly living in the tundra, in the mountains or forests, is very common in the mythologies of the peoples of the world. For example, in the folklore of the Greenland Eskimos there are cast-iron-like characters called "tuniit."
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still believed in the existence of the tundra spirit, which they called “sentushny” (from the “sendukh” - tundra, land, by analogy with woodland or water). He was tall, and took women as wives. Anyone who associated with the sentushny would go to Satan in the next world.
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The Russian Ustyins also remembered the "bad" Chukchi who came from the Chukchi Nose. Sometimes they stole horses at night; had a bow and were able to run fast. In the Yakut village of Allaikh, there were stories of “bad” Chukchi, who were also called
241:(d. 1972), who headed the Commission for the Study of the Bigfoot. During the expedition conducted by the commission, fossil paleoanthropes were not found. The result of the research was the publication by Porshnev in 1963 of the monograph " 154: 225:" were doomed to starvation, because they did not have tools for hunting wild deer. Therefore, they were forced to steal food, and in extreme cases, to attack fishermen and hunters, which often turned into death for them. 144:. In the review, the author attributed the stories about wild people to primitive beliefs: the Yakuts believed in the existence of spirits who lived in the mountains and forests. 137:" in the territory of Yakutia, which were on the verge of extinction. He also drew attention to the lack of information in these stories about women or children of wild people. 213:, the leading specialist in ethnography of the peoples of the Far North of the USSR Academy of Sciences (d. 1992), who collected and studied ethnographic data related to 181:
Chukchi, kak znayete, lyudi brodyachiye. Kochuyut po neskol’ko let v nash·ch storonu, potom opyat’ ukhodyat na Chukotku… Ikh ubivali — bol’no vrednyye. Oni tozhe ubivayut
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was published under the title "Dikiye lyudi myuleny i chuchuna" . It told about primitive people living in northeastern Siberia. The Ayan-Nelcan Tungus called them
254: 283: 179:. Russian Ustyins were considered enemies of these Chukchi. A local resident named Rozhin, who spoke Russian, gave the following story: " 106:
were tall and strongly built, with very long hair; they dressed in animal skins, could shoot a bow, and ran very fast. Two or three
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was killed was in 1913 by the Yakut. Having collected material about chuchun, Dravert came to the conclusion that there existed "
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published an article entitled "Chuchuna". The article recounted that as far back as tsarist Russia in the northern regions of
298: 304: 187: 245:" Despite the fact that his hypothesis did not find sympathy among specialists, he did not give up his beliefs. 219:
chuchuny, oni zhe — myuleny, dikiye ili «khudyye» chukchi — byli po svoyemu proiskhozhdeniyu beregovymi chukchami
301: 118: 210: 141: 95: 58:) — are names of a wild people in Yakut and Evenki folklore. According to ethnographic findings, 237:
The idea of the existence of a Neanderthal relic hominoid in North Asia was put forward by Professor
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Perhaps this is a mythologized memory of the earlier cultures and tribes that inhabited the area.
199: 195: 125:. They presented a grave danger to people crossing the Durumdur Range. The Yakuts feared the 167: 110:
were killed by "hunters" who hid the deed in fear of being held responsible for murder.
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there was a belief that "far to the north" there existed an unknown people called the
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scientific hypothesis about the existence of a relic hominoid in North Asia.
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In the second half of the 20th century, Russian old-timers from the village of
99: 94:. Every year they were to be seen in the Butantaysky settlement of the 74: 87: 153: 73: 259: 140:
In the same issue of the magazine a review was published by
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Sovremennoye sostoyaniye voprosa o reliktovykh gominoidakh
198:, as well as in Chistye, to the west. They were called in 282:
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svoyeobraznykh predstaviteley chelovecheskoy porody
8: 192:Kratkoye opisaniye Verkhoyanskogo okruga 270: 147:In the Yakut language there is a word 78:Environment of the Verhoyansk district 7: 56:chuchuna, chuchunaa, chuchna, muluön 113:In the sixth issue of the magazine 158:Clothing of the Chukchi, from 1880 31: 102:. According to witness accounts, 209:According to the conclusions of 82:On April 26, 1929 the newspaper 1: 299:Category:Mythological peoples 217:for more than thirty years: " 186:The manuscript of the exiled 188:Ivan Alexandrovich Khudyakov 166:in the lower reaches of the 117:' for 1933, an article by 320: 305:Category:Humanoid cryptids 55: 205:, which means "runaway." 151:: "Ghost, evil spirit.". 302:Category:Yakut mythology 278:Таинственный чучуна 1975 211:Ilya Samuilovich Gurvich 159: 79: 157: 96:Verkhoyansky District 77: 70:Ethnographic findings 98:in the direction of 84:Avtonomnaya Yakutiya 142:Gavriil Ksenofontov 24:User:EricR/Chuchuna 196:Zhigansky District 160: 80: 255:Wandering Chukchi 115:Budushchaya Sibir 22:(Redirected from 311: 288: 287: 275: 233:In cryptozoology 57: 27: 319: 318: 314: 313: 312: 310: 309: 308: 296: 291: 281: 276: 272: 268: 251: 235: 208: 72: 66: 29: 28: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 317: 315: 295: 292: 290: 289: 269: 267: 264: 263: 262: 257: 250: 247: 239:Boris Porshnev 234: 231: 164:Russkoye Ustye 71: 68: 30: 15: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 316: 307: 306: 303: 300: 293: 285: 279: 274: 271: 265: 261: 258: 256: 253: 252: 248: 246: 244: 240: 232: 230: 226: 224: 220: 216: 212: 206: 204: 201: 197: 193: 189: 184: 182: 178: 172: 169: 165: 156: 152: 150: 145: 143: 138: 136: 132: 128: 124: 120: 119:Peter Dravert 116: 111: 109: 105: 101: 97: 93: 89: 85: 76: 69: 67: 64: 61: 53: 49: 48: 43: 42: 37: 36: 25: 19: 297: 273: 242: 236: 227: 218: 214: 207: 202: 191: 185: 180: 176: 173: 161: 148: 146: 139: 134: 130: 126: 122: 114: 112: 107: 103: 91: 83: 81: 65: 59: 46: 45: 40: 39: 34: 33: 32: 18:User:Fiveby 294:References 223:robinsons 168:Indigirka 127:myulenami 123:myulenami 249:See also 215:chuchuny 203:Khuchana 200:Tunguska 149:chuuchus 131:myulyeny 108:chuchuny 104:chuchuny 100:Zhigansk 92:chuchuna 60:chuchuny 41:chuchuny 35:Chuchuná 177:Chuchun 88:Yakutia 47:myuleny 266:Notes 52:Yakut 16:< 284:help 260:Yeti 183:" 44:, 38:or 54:: 286:) 280:. 190:" 50:( 26:)

Index

User:Fiveby
User:EricR/Chuchuna
Yakut

Yakutia
Verkhoyansky District
Zhigansk
Peter Dravert
Gavriil Ksenofontov

Russkoye Ustye
Indigirka
Ivan Alexandrovich Khudyakov
Zhigansky District
Tunguska
Ilya Samuilovich Gurvich
robinsons
Boris Porshnev
Wandering Chukchi
Yeti
Таинственный чучуна 1975
help
Category:Mythological peoples
Category:Yakut mythology
Category:Humanoid cryptids

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