Northwestern Mari people


The Northwestern Mari are a subgroup of the Mari people and the indigenous people of the Kirov and Nizhny Novgorod Oblasts of Russia. As other Mari subgroups they belonging to the Volgaic branch of the Finno-Ugric peoples. Their native language is Northwestern Mari, one of the four surviving members of the Mari branch of the Uralic language family.

History

The origin of the Northwestern Maris belongs to a big Mari people history. Most scientists, based on linguistic and archaeological data, associated them with descendants of north-western part of an Iron Age Gorodets culture. It was localized between the middle Volga's right tributaries Oka and Sura. In the 6th century AD Gorodets population moved to the north bank of Volga up to Vetluga and Bolshaya Kokshaga rivers. There they was greatly influenced by the Ananyino culture. The differences between Northwestern and other groups of Mari appeared in the 9th-10th centuries. In the 10th-13th centuries some related upper Volga Dyakovo tribes joined to Northwestern Maris and were assimilated by them. During the unification of Russian principalities around Moscow the part of Northwestern Mari became a part of Moscovian State.