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Mazanderani people

Ethnic group of Mazandaran, Iran

Mazanderani people

Ethnic group of Mazandaran, Iran

FieldValue
groupMazanderanis
flagFlag of Mazandarani.svg
flag_captionFlag of the Mazanderani people
imageNowruz eve mazanderani.jpg
image_captionMazandarani man and woman with Mazani clothing in Nowruz
population4.8 million (2023)
popplaceProvince of Mazandaran and parts of the provinces of Alborz, Golestan, Tehran and Semnan in Iran
langsMazandarani
rels**Majority:**
Shia Islam
**Minority:**
Sunni Islam, Baháʼí Faith
relatedIranian peoples

Shia Islam Minority: Sunni Islam, Baháʼí Faith

Mazanderanis (), also known as the Tabari people or Tabarestani people ( or تبری مردمون), are an Iranian people who are indigenous to the Caspian Sea region of Iran. They are also referred to as Mazanis for short. They inhabit the southern coast of the Caspian Sea and are part of the historical region known as Tabaristan. The Alborz Mountains mark the southern boundary of the area settled by the Mazanderani people.

Traditional clothing of the Mazanderani people depicted on two Iranian stamps (1978)

People

The population of Mazanderanis was 4,480,000 in 2019. As per a 2006 estimate, Mazandaranis numbered between 3Middle East Patterns: Places, Peoples, and Politics By Colbert C. Held, John Cummings, Mildred McDonald Held, 2005, page 119. and 4 million.

Mazanderani people are also known as the Tabari people, and traditionally call the Mazanderani language as Tabari. Their region was called Tapuria or Tapurestan, Land of Tapuris.

Most Mazanderanis live on the southeastern coast of Caspian Sea. Their traditional professions are farming and fishing. Mazandaranis are closely related to the neighboring Gilaki people as well as South Caucasian peoples (e.g. Georgians, Armenians).

History

Main article: Mazandaran#History

The origin of the Mazanderanis goes back to Tapuri people and Amardi people. The Mazandaran region has experienced a long reign of independent and semi-independent rulers in the centuries after the Arab invasion lasting until 1596, when Shah Abbas I incorporated Mazandaran into the Safavid Empire.

Language

Main article: Mazanderani language

thumb|300px|right|Percentage of Mazanderanis in Iran (2010) The Mazanderani language is a Northwestern Iranian language spoken by the Mazanderani people; however, most Mazandaranis are also fluent in Persian. The Gilaki and Mazanderani languages (but not other Iranian languages) share certain typological features with Caucasian languages.

Mazanderani is closely related to Gilaki and the two languages have similar vocabularies. They preserve more of the noun declension system characteristic of older Iranian languages than Persian does.With the growth of education and the media, the distinction between Mazanderani and other Iranian languages is likely to disappear.

Assistant professor Maryam Borjian of Rutgers University states that Mazanderani has different sub-dialects and there is high mutual intelligibility among Mazanderani sub-dialects.

The dialects of Mazanderani are Saravi, Amoli, Baboli, Ghaemshahri, Chalusi, Nuri, Shahsavari, Ghasrani, Shahmirzadi, Damavandi, Firoozkoohi, Astarabadi, and Katouli. The native people of Sari, Qaem Shahr, Babol, Amol, Nowshahr, Chalus, and Tonekabon are Mazanderani people and speak the Mazanderani language.

Genetics

The Mazanderanis and the closely related Gilaks occupy the south Caspian region of Iran and speak languages belonging to the North-Western branch of Iranian languages. It has been suggested that their ancestors came from the Caucasus region, perhaps displacing an earlier group in the South Caspian. Linguistic evidence supports this scenario, in that the Gilaki and Mazanderani languages (but not other Iranian languages) share certain typological features with Caucasian languages.

Based on mtDNA HV1 sequences, the Gilaki and Mazanderani most closely resemble their geographic and linguistic neighbors, namely other Iranian groups. However, their Y chromosome types most closely resemble those found in groups from the South Caucasus. Researchers have interpreted these differences as demonstrating that peoples from the Caucasus settled in the south Caspian area and mated with peoples from local Iranian groups, possibly because of patrilocality. The Mazanderani and Gilaki groups are closely related on the male side with populations from the South Caucasus such as Georgians, Armenians, and Azerbaijanis.

Haplogroups

Analysis of their NRY patrilines has revealed haplogroup J2, associated with the Neolithic diffusion of agriculturalists from the Near East, to be the predominant Y-DNA lineage among the Mazanderani (subclades J2a3h-M530, J2a3b-M67 and J2a-M410, more specifically.). The next most frequently occurring lineage, R1a1a, believed to have been associated with early Iranian expansion into Central/Southern Eurasia and currently ubiquitous in that area, is found in almost 25%,. This haplogroup, with the aforementioned J2, accounts for over 50% of the entire sample. Haplogroup G2a3b, attaining significant frequency together with G2a and G1, is the most commonly carried marker in the G group among Mazanderani men. The lineages E1b1b1a1a-M34 and C5-M356 comprise the remainder, of less than 10% sampled.

Notable figures

Main article: List of Mazanderanis

Historic

  • Abu Jafar Muhammad ibn Jarir ibn Yazid ibn Kathir al-Tabari (838–923) was a Mazanderani historian and theologian (the most famous and widely influential person called al-Tabari).
  • Abu Jafar Muhammad ibn Jarir ibn Rustom al-Tabari was a Shia thinker who is commonly confused with the former. He is the author of the book Dala'il al-Imamah (Proofs of the Imamate)
  • Ali ibn Sahl Rabban al-Tabari, "Ali the scholar from Tabiristan" (838–870 A.D.), was the writer of a medical encyclopedia and the teacher of the scholar physician Zakariya al-Razi.
  • Abul Hasan al-Tabari, a 10th-century Iranian physician
  • Al-Tabarani (c. 821–918 AD), author of numerous hadith
  • Amir Pazevari, poet
  • Maziar, Iranian aristocrat of the House of Karen

Contemporary

  • Reza Shah, Shah of Iran (Persia) from 1924 to 1941
  • Nima Yooshij, poet, 1941
  • Mina Assadi, poet
  • Emamali Habibi, Olympic and world champion of free-style wrestling/Babr e Mazandaran
  • Ali Larijani, former member of the Supreme National Security Council of Iran and Speaker of the Majlis of Iran
  • Simin Ghanem, Iranian classical and pop singer
  • Hassan Yazdani, wrestler
  • Komeil Ghasemi, wrestler
  • Mohammad Javad Larijani, mathematician and former member of the Majlis
  • Sadegh Larijani, former head of the judiciary of the Islamic Republic of Iran
  • Mohammad Zohari, poet
  • Mohsen Bengar, footballer
  • Delkash, singer
  • Ali Pahlavan, singer
  • Ehsan Tabari, Marxist theoretician
  • Noureddin Kianouri, politician
  • Parinaz Izadyar, actress
  • Parviz Natel-Khanlari, writer/translator
  • Reza Allamehzadeh, director
  • Behdad Salimikordasiabi, Olympic weightlifter
  • Abdollah Movahed, freestyle wrestler - Olympic champion
  • Abbas-Ali Soleimani, Shia cleric and politician
  • Mohammad-Ali Taskhiri, Shia cleric and diplomat
  • Yasubedin Rastegar Jooybari, Shia marja
  • Abdollah Javadi-Amoli, Shia marja and politician
  • Shahab ud-Din Mar'ashi Najafi, Arab-descended Mazanderani Iranian Shia cleric
  • Mirza Hashem Amoli, Shia marja
  • Alireza Firouzja, chess super grandmaster and the youngest player to have surpassed a FIDE rating of 2,800

Assimilated populations in Mazandaran

In the Safavid, Afsharid, and Qajar eras Mazandaran was settled by large numbers of Georgians, Armenians, and other peoples of the Caucasus, whose descendants still live across Mazandaran. The names of many towns, villages and neighbourhoods in Mazandaran reflect this legacy by bearing variations of the name "Gorji" (i.e., Georgian), although most of the Georgians are assimilated into the mainstream Mazanderanis. The history of Georgian settlement is described by Iskandar Beg Munshi, the author of the 17th century History of Alam Aray Abbasi. In addition, European travelers such as Chardin and Della Valle have written about their encounters with the Georgian, Circassian and Armenian Mazanderanis.

References

References

  1. {{e28. mzm
  2. ''Area handbook for Iran'', Harvey Henry Smith, American University (Washington, D.C.), Foreign Area Studies, page 89
  3. Academic American Encyclopedia By Grolier Incorporated, page 294
  4. Dalb, Andrew. (1998). "Dictionary of Languages: The Definitive Reference to More Than 400 Languages". Columbia University Press.
  5. [http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=mzn Ethnologue report for language code:mzn]
  6. (27 February 2020). "Mazandarani". Ethnologue.
  7. [http://www.statoids.com/uir.html Iran Provinces]
  8. Borjian, Habib. (2004). "Māzandarān: Language and People". [[Brill Publishers.
  9. Iran, Encarta Encyclopedia [http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761567300_3/Iran.html Iran]. {{webarchive. link. (2009-10-28 2009-10-31.)
  10. Windfuhr, G. L. 1989. New Iranian languages: Overview. In Rüdiger Schmitt, ed., ''Compendium linguarum Iranicarum''. Wiesbaden: L. Reichert. pp. 246–249.
  11. Borjian, Maryam. (2005). "Bilingualism in Mazandaran: Peaceful Coexistence With Persian". Columbia University.
  12. "Spoken L1 Language: Mazanderani".
  13. Windfuhr, G. L.. (1989). "Compendium linguarum Iranicarum". L. Reichert.
  14. (2006). "Concomitant Replacement of Language and mtDNA in South Caspian Populations of Iran". Current Biology.
  15. (2012). "Ancient Migratory Events in the Middle East: New Clues from the Y-Chromosome Variation of Modern Iranians". PLOS ONE.
  16. R. Spencer Wells et al., "The Eurasian Heartland: A continental perspective on Y-chromosome diversity," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (August 28, 2001)
  17. "Georgian communities in Persia".
  18. ^ Muliani, S. (2001) Jaygah-e Gorjiha dar Tarikh va Farhang va Tammadon-e Iran. (The Georgians' position in the Iranian history and civilization.) Esfahan: Yekta
  19. (2006). "Pietro della Valle's Latin Geography of Safavid Iran (1624-1628): Introduction". Journal of Early Modern History.
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