Zandkhoy

Zandkhoy, Zandakhoy (Chechen: Зандакъой, Зандкъой[1], Zandaq̇oy, Zandq̇oy) is a Chechen teip (clan) from the historic region of Ichkeria[2] and belongs to the tukkhum Nokhchmakhkakhoy. The centre of the teip is the village Zandak, which is located in the Nozhay-Yurtovsky District.

Zandkhoy
Zandq̇oy
Total population
70,000
Regions with significant populations
Chechnya, Dagestan
Languages
Nokhchmakhkakhoy and Arar-Aukhov dialect of the Chechen language
Religion
Islam

Geography

Members of the teip live all across the Chechen Republic and the Aukh region of todays Dagestan. They either make up the majority or founded the following villages[3]

  • Baytarki (Байтарки)
  • Gamiyakh (Гамиях)
  • Gilyani (Гиляны)
  • Mazhgara (Мажгара)
  • Simsir (Симсир)
  • Zandak-Ara (Зандак-Ара)

The teip also had historical settlements in other parts of Chechnya which were named after their native village Zandak, like on the right side of the Gums (a tributary of the Sunzha) and one between the Gekhi and Valerik[4]. These were burned down during the Russian conquest of the Caucasus.

Etymology

The origin of the word Zandak is unknown, although historians believe it possibly derived from the word sona/sana, which means angle, and duk, meaning ridge.[5] There is also the common belief that the name derives from Zana, who according to a legend was the founder of the teip (Zana + duk, Zanas ridge).[6]

History

The village is the name giverfor the Zandak culture, an archaeological culture spanning from the 11th to the 7th century BC. The burial ground of the culture was accidentally discovered in 1952 and was made up of 66 burials in which they found several arrowheads, spear tips, a brush, a bracelet and other things.[7]

During the Caucasian War, members of the teip supported the Caucasian Imamate and fought consistently against the Russian conquerors. Among them was Gheza-Hadzhi Zandakskiy, a Sufi preacher and spiritual leader of the Chechens.[8]

In 1877, inhabitants of Zandak and other mountain villages in Eastern Chechnya, started an uprising under the fellow Zandkhoy Alibek-Hadzhi Aldamov. The uprising lasted until 27 November, when Aldamov decided to surrender and put an end to the suffering Chechens went through. During the uprising, many Chechen villages were burned down by Russian forces, including Zandak, Baytarki and Alibeks home village, Simsir, on 17 May. Inhabitants of these villages were then pushed to the planes or deported to Dagestan.[9]

In the course of the Chechen-Ingush deportation in 1944, Zandak was renamed Dagbash and resettled with people from Dagestan. After the restoration of the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, the village returned to its former name Zandak and the Dagestanis resettled back to Dagestan.[10]

Branches

The teip is split into 11 branches (некъи, neq̇i): the Zaghash neq, Ghoytk neq, Ghurma neq, Baci/Be neq, Le neq, Mentig neq, Arzin/Khaghashan neq, Ghadalan neq, Daki neq, Khornin neq, and Khokhcala neq.[11]

Genetics

All members of the teip that have tested so far belong to the J1 and J2 haplogroup. 2 families of the Ghurma neq and Daki neq are J1, while the rest are J2, which include one Ghoytk family, one Ghadalan family, one Zaghash family and one Ghurma family.[12]

Notable Zandkhoy

gollark: <@319753218592866315>
gollark: This is how "gaydar" works.
gollark: As you should know, high levels of gay increase chromatic aberration in most materials, causing rainbows.
gollark: The increased gay field strength is actually a problem for long-distance fibre-optic links.
gollark: People should be forced to be gay to solve overpopulation?

References

  1. Сулейманов (2006). Топонимия Чечни.
  2. Мамакаев, М. (1973). Чеченский тайп (род) в период его разложения.
  3. "Ножай-Юртовский". chechenia.8bb.ru. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  4. Berzhe, A. P. (Adolʹf Petrovich), 1828-1886. (2008). Чечня и чеченцы : сочинение Правителя дел Кавказского отдела Императорского Русского Географического общества, Тифлис, 1859. Knizhnoe izd- vo. ISBN 978-5-98896-081-2. OCLC 424455251.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. Ахмадов, Я. З. "Очерк исторической географии и этнополитического развития Чечни в XVI—XVIII веках. Благотворительный фонд поддержки чеченской литературы" (PDF).
  6. "Зандак". chechenia.8bb.ru. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  7. "ЗАНДАК • Большая российская энциклопедия - электронная версия". bigenc.ru. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  8. Ахмадов, Муса. Чеченская традиционная культура и этика. p. 24.
  9. "Газават.ру :: История - Восстание 1877 года - ХРОНОЛОГИЯ ВОССТАНИЯ 1877 г". www.gazavat.ru. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  10. "Краткая историческая справка об административно-территориальном делении Чечено-Ингушетии". Archived from the original on |archive-url= requires |archive-date= (help).
  11. Сулейманов, А. С. Топонимия Чечни. p. 342.
  12. "Зандкъой - J1 - Гаплогруппа - Тайпнаш - Орамаш". oramash.ru. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  13. Ибрагимова, Зарема. Мир чеченцев. XIX век.
  14. Ахмадов, Муса. Чеченская традиционная культура и этика. p. 24.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.