YAKUTİSTAN |


Yakutlar, coğrafik ve ekonomik bakımıdan başlıca iki gruba
ayrılırlar. Güney Yakutları çiftçilik ve hayvancılıkla uğraşırken kuzey
Yakutları geleneksel olaraka yarı göçebe, avcılık, balıkçılık ve ren geyiği
yetiştiriciliği ile uğraşmaktadırlar.
Yakutlar, geleneksel animist inanca ait unsurlarla birlikte ortodoks
hristiyandır.
Yakutça, Türk dil grubundandır. Saha özerk cumhuriyeti ileKhabarovsk kray'ında yaşamaktadırlar.
History:
The Yakuts are most likely descended from a mixture of peoples from the area of Lake
Baykal, Turkish tribes from the steppe and Altay mountains, and indigenous peoples of
Siberia, particularly the Evens and Evenks.
When ethnic Russians first arrived in the region of Yakutiya in the 1620s, the Yakuts were
living along the Lena and other rivers, functioning in a semi-nomadic, subsistence
economy. They were organised in roughly 80 feudal-like patriarchal clans, but a broader
sense of ethnic identity was already developing.
Russia annexed Yakutiya in the 1620s, and immediately imposed the fur tax. Soldiers and
merchants poured into the area in order for the Russians to take control over Yakutiya and
the numerous Yakuts. The Yakuts answered with several uprisings between 1634 and 1642, but
the revolts were all crushed. The fighting, together with a variety of European diseased
brought by the Russians, led to a decrease in the Yakut population. Many also tried to
escape the Russians by migrating further east.
But during the 18th c., the Russians annexed more and more territories to the east -
Kamchatka, the Chukchi peninsula, the Aleut islands, and Alaska. Yakutiya became a
thoroughfare, and more and more Russians settled in the area. Other major events that
changed the life in Yakutia, were the completion of the mailroute in 1773, construction of
convict camps, discovery of gold in Yakutiya in 1846, construction of the Trans-Siberian
Railway in the 1880s and -90s, and the development of commercial shipping on the Lena
river. These developments contributed to the commercialisation of the region, and brought
in "hordes" of Russian settlers.
Orthodox missionaries were also active in Yakutiya, and by the early 1800s, virtually all
of the Yakuts were registered as Eastern Orthhodox Christians. But substantial elements of
their folk religion survived.
After the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, the Soviet government issued the "Declaration
of the Rights of the Peoples of Russia", including a wide range of rights of
self-determination, that largely remained on paper, as policies of
"modernisation" later were put through. In 1924, a Committee of Assistance of
Peoples of the North was established. They first proposed creating large reservations
where the indigenous populations could continue their traditional life-styles. But
instead, the Soviet government decided to integrate these peoples into the larger social,
political and economic body of the country. In 1922, the Yakut ASSR was established.
Inside the territory of the Yakut ASSR, several smaller national districts were
established for the Evens, Evenks and Yukagirs, but, in most cases, Yakuts were placed in
all politically important positions. The Yakuts were very numerous, and they were
assimilating surrounding ethnic groups - even some ethnic Russians (Yakutyans are Russians
who adopted Yakut customs, Kolymchans are Russians who adopted both customs and language
from the Yakuts).
Yakut nationalism met with tolerance until 1928, when Stalin launched his ruthless
collectivisation campaign. Tens of thousands of Yakuts disappeared, and not until the late
1960s had the Yakut population recovered to pre-collectivisation levels.
With Gorbachov's Glasnost and Perestroyka policies, Yakut nationalism again found
expression. Mounting conflicts between Moscow and the peoples of the far north, culminated
in the creation of the Association of Peoples of the North (APN) in March 1990.
On August 15th, 1991, the Supreme Soviet of Yakutiya declared the sovereignty of the Yakut
Republic. This was not popular with Moscow, and demography was on the Russian side in the
dispute. The Russians outnumber the Yakuts by 2 to 1 in Yakutiya, and their loyalty was
with Moscow. So, independent Yakutiya did not become reality.
| Group | Number | % off total |
Own language | Russian | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 1094065 | 100% | 977762 (89,37%) | 96068 (8,78%) | 20235 (1,85%) |
| Russian | 550263 | 50,30% | 548615 (99,70%) | -- | 1648 (0,30%) |
| Yakutian | 365236 | 33,38% | 347286 (95,09%) | 17895 (4,90%) | 55 (0,02%) |
| Ukrainian | 77114 | 7,05% | 38103 (49,41%) | 38860 (50,39%) | 151 (0,20%) |
| Tatarian | 17478 | 1,60% | 9684 (55,41%) | 7640 (43,71%) | 154 (0,88%) |
| Evenk | 14428 | 1,32% | 1226 (8,50%) | 1291 (8,95%) | 11911 (82,55%) |
| Even | 8668 | 0,79% | 3010 (34,73%) | 926 (10,68%) | 4732 (54,59%) |
| Others | 1024 | 0,09% | 730 (71,29%) | 239 (23,34%) | 55 (5,37%) |
| Yukagiri | 697 | 0,06% | 245 (35,15%) | 233 (33,43%) | 219 (31,42%) |
LİNKLER:
| http://cei.sund.ac.uk/sakha/index.htmlYakutsk State University | |
| http://www.sakha.ru/ |