Circassia


Circassia is a region and ex-country in the and along the northeast shore of the Black Sea. It is the ancestral homeland of the Circassian people.

Name

The name Circassia is a Latinisation of Cherkess, the Turkic name for the Adyghe people and according to R. G. Latham originated in the 15th century with medieval Genoese merchants and travellers to Circassia. Another opinion is that "Circassia" and "Cherkess" are distorted variants of Kerketh or Toreatae, one of the names of the tribes of the Adyghe people. The name Cherkess is traditionally applied to the Adyghe by neighbouring Turkic peoples.
Another historical name for the country was Zyx or the Zygii, who were described by the ancient Greek intellectual Strabo as a nation to the north of Colchis.
At the end of the 15th century, a detailed description of Circassia and of its inhabitants was made by Genoese traveller and ethnographer Giorgio Interiano.

Geography

Circassia was located in Eastern Europe, near the northeastern Black Sea coast. Before the Russian conquest of the Caucasus, it covered the entire fertile plateau and the steppe of the northwestern region of the Caucasus, with an estimated population of between 3 and 4 million.
Circassia's historical great range extended from the Taman Peninsula in the west, to the town of Mozdok in today's North Ossetia–Alania in the east. Historically, Circassia covered the southern half of today's Krasnodar Krai, the Republic of Adygea, Karachay-Cherkessia, Kabardino-Balkaria, and parts of North Ossetia–Alania and Stavropol Krai, bounded by the Kuban River on the north which separated it from the Russian Empire.
On the Black Sea coast the climate is warm and humid, while being moderate in the lowlands and cooler in the highlands. Most of Circassia is frost free for more than half the year. There are steppe meadows in the plains, beech and oak forests in the foothills, and pine forests and alpine meadows in the mountains.
Sochi is considered by many Circassians as their traditional capital city. According to Circassians, the 2014 Winter Olympic village is built in an area of mass graves of Circassians after their defeat by the Russians in 1864.

History

The earliest definite evidence in the history of Circassia shows that the Greeks established colonies and traded along the Circassian coast of the Black Sea, leaving behind a clear influence. Nevertheless, Circassia remained relatively independent until the 12th and 13th centuries, when it became a province of Georgia. However, in 1234 the Caucasus region was overrun by the Mongols, and the region came under the rule of the Crimean Tatars.
As part of its conquest of the Caucasus, the Russian empire became involved in a series of wars and battles in Circassia, starting in the late Eighteenth Century and building in intensity to 1864, when the war was declared over. From the 1860s the Russian policy became one of ethnic cleansing and mass expulsion of the population from their country to the neighboring Ottoman Empire, events that have become known as the Circassian genocide.
Among the main Circassian tribes that were affected by death or deportation were the Shapsugs, Kabardins, Abzakhs and Natukhajs. It is estimated that the population of Kabardins in Circassia was reduced from 500,000 to 35,000; the Abzakhs from 260,000 to 14,600; and the Natukhajs from 240,000 to merely 175 persons. The Shapsugh tribe which numbered some 300,000 were reduced to 3,000 people. Calculations, including those taking into account the Russian government's own archival figures, have estimated a loss of 90%, 94% or 95–97% of the original Circassian population.

Population

There are twelve historic Adyghe princedoms or tribes of Circassia ; Abdzakh, Besleney, Bzhedug, Hatuqwai, Kabardian, Mamkhegh, Natukhai, Shapsug, Temirgoy, Ubykh, Yegeruqwai and Zhaney,
Today, about 700,000 Circassians remain in historical Circassia in today's Russia. The 2010 Russian Census recorded 718,727 Circassians, of which 516,826 are Kabardians, 124,835 are Adyghe proper, 73,184 are Cherkess and 3,882 Shapsugs. The largest Circassian population resides in Turkey. A Circassian population also exists in other countries, including Jordan, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Serbia, Egypt and Israel, but is considerably smaller.

Circassian nationalism

Under Russian and Soviet rule, ethnic and tribal divisions between Circassians were promoted, resulting in several different statistical names being used for various parts of the Circassian people. Consequently, Circassian nationalism has only recently developed and there is an effort among Circassians to unite under the name Circassian in Russian Censuses to reflect and revive the concept of the Circassian nation. Circassian nationalism also calls for a restoration of the native homelands. The majority of the diaspora already tends to call itself "Circassian".