Spear - All

A fisherman with a spear. Mansi, Sverdlovsk Region, Verkhotursky District, 1908. Author: I. K. Zelenov.

Photo from the album "The Kunstkamera Archive: Rites, Daily Life,

A fisherman with a spear. Mansi, Sverdlovsk Region, Verkhotursky District, 1908. Author: I. K. Zelenov. Photo from the album "The Kunstkamera Archive: Rites, Daily Life, and Faces of Ancestors in Old Photographs” Mansi is a small Finno-Ugric people in Russia, the indigenous population of the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug — Yugra. They speak the Mansi language. They are the closest linguistic relatives of the Khanty, and they are also related to the Hungarians. Mansi belong to the Uralic race. The total population is 12,228 people (according to the 2021 census). About 200 Mansi people live in the north of the Sverdlovsk Region. A few live in the northeast of the Perm Region (the Vishersky State Nature Reserve). The combined name of the Mansi and the closely related Khanty people is the Ob Ugra. It is believed that the Mansi ethnos emerged as a result of the fusion of local Neolithic tribes, as well as Ugric and Indo-Iranian tribes that migrated from the south through the steppes and forest-steppes of Western Siberia and Northern Kazakhstan[19]. The two-component nature of the Mansi culture (a combination of taiga hunter-fisherfolk and steppe nomadic pastoralists) has persisted to the present day. In the early Middle Ages, the Mansi-related ancestors of the Hungarians (the Kushnarenkovskaya culture) migrated to the Danube. The Mansi people are associated with the Yudin culture. The Mansi are Orthodox Christians, but they also practice traditional shamanism, the cult of patron spirits, ancestors, and the bear (bear festivals). The Mansi have a rich folklore and mythology. The Mansi are divided into two exogamous phratries: Por and Mos, which have different origins and customs. Marriages were only allowed between members of the opposite phratries: Mos men married Por women, and vice versa. The ancestor of the Por phratry is the bear, and the ancestor of the Mos phratry is the woman Kaltash, who could appear as a goose, a hare, or a butterfly. In the folk art of the Mansi, the main focus is on ornamentation, which is similar to that of the related Khanty and Selkup peoples. These include geometric shapes such as deer antlers, diamonds, wavy lines, meanders similar to the Greek pattern, and zigzag lines, often arranged in a strip-like pattern. Among the bronze casting, images of animals, such as eagles and bears, are more common. The traditional occupations of the Mansi include hunting, fishing, reindeer herding, farming, and cattle breeding. Fishing is common on the Ob and the Northern Sosva. In the upper reaches of the Lozva, Lyapina, and Northern Sosva, reindeer herding was adopted from the Khanty in the 13th and 14th centuries. Farming was adopted from the Russians in the 16th and 17th centuries. The most developed areas of livestock farming among the Mansi include the breeding of horses, as well as cattle and small livestock. In addition, poultry farming was developed. The commercial fish included grayling, bream, pike, roach, burbot, crucian carp, sturgeon, sterlet, nelma, muksun, shchokur, pyzhyan, and syrk, and the Northern Sosva was also home to freshwater herring, a gourmet delicacy. Fishing tools included spears and nets. Fish were also caught by damming streams. The Siberian cedar was of great importance in the everyday life of the Mansi, who harvested a huge crop of cedar nuts. In addition, household items such as dishes, boxes, and baskets (known as "kornevatiki") were made from woven cedar roots. Beresta products, such as boxes, tubs, wooden dishes, spoons, troughs, and ladles, as well as simple furniture, were also widely used. Pottery items were also employed. In ancient times, the Mansi used dugout boats, skis, and sleds (with dog, reindeer, or horse teams) for transportation. They also used bows and arrows, spears, and various types of blades as weapons. For hunting, they employed various traps (chirkans) and crossbows. Women's clothing consisted of a dress, a loose-fitting robe made of cloth or satin, a double deer fur coat (yagushka or sak), a headscarf, and a large amount of jewelry (rings, beaded necklaces, etc.).Men wore trousers and a shirt, a hooded coat made of cloth, or a deer skin coat (malitsa or gus) for reindeer herders, or a hooded coat with unsewn sides (luzan). Food: fish, meat (dried, dried-out, fried, frozen), berries. Mushrooms were not consumed, as they were believed to summon evil spirits.

Post: 16 August 07:41

Animal welfare organisations speak out against German outdoor cat ban

Cat owners in the German town of Walldorf have been ordered this week to keep their pets indoors un

Animal welfare organisations speak out against German outdoor cat ban Cat owners in the German town of Walldorf have been ordered this week to keep their pets indoors until the end of August to protect a rare bird during its breeding season. The decree is designed to help save the crested lark, which makes its nest on the ground and is therefore easy prey for feline hunters. The bird’s population in Western Europe has declined sharply in recent decades. Although it is listed as a species of least concern in Europe by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). "Among other things, the survival of the species depends on every single chick," authorities in Walldorf said. The rule applies to all cats in the southern part of the town and will be repeated for the next three years from April to August. Should I keep my cat indoors? If you live in Walldorf the decision is no longer in your hands. But for those elsewhere the answer may not be so clear-cut. “Suddenly preventing cats that are used to going outside from doing so, means immense restrictions and stress for the animals,” Deutscher Tierschutzbund, Germany’s largest animal welfare organisation, said in a statement to Euronews Green. "The negative influence of cats on the population of songbirds is in any case controversial and, to our knowledge, has not yet been proven for the crested lark in Walldorf." The organisation supports measures to protect the crested lark but believes no animal can be treated as second class. “Defining domestic cats as 'culprits' for the endangerment of certain bird species also means letting them take the blame for the fact that humans have destroyed habitats and food supplies for wild species over a long period of time, thus threatening their existence,” the statement concludes. This sentiment is echoed by Daniela Schneider, a campaigner for Four Paws Germany. “The influence of intensified agriculture, monocultures, insect mortality, and increasing land development is probably greater than that of some cats hunting birds,” she tells Euronews Green. “These causes are caused by humans. It would be better to fight the actual causes than to blame cats for this.” Are cats a danger to wildlife? The debate over whether cats should be free to roam can be a controversial one. The European Pet Food Industry found that 26 per cent of all households in Europe own at least one cat. This inevitably leads to a quarter of the population having strong feelings on the matter. A study in 2013 estimated that free-ranging domestic cats in the US alone kill around 2.4 billion birds and 12.3 billion mammals annually. However, the authors acknowledged that unowned cats cause the majority of this mortality. The most recent figures from the Mammal Society say that cats in the UK catch up to 100 million animals over spring and summer, including 27 million birds. The most frequently caught species of bird according to them are house sparrows, blue tits, blackbirds and starlings. Despite these statistics, the UK’s largest conservation charity, RSPB, says that there is no clear scientific evidence that this is causing bird populations to decline. “Many millions of birds die naturally every year, mainly through starvation, disease or other forms of predation,'' they state on their website. “It is likely that most of the birds killed by cats would have died anyway from other causes before the next breeding season, so cats are unlikely to have a major impact on populations.” In Walldorf, regional newspaper Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung reported on Wednesday that the head of the local animal protection association plans to take legal steps to challenge the "disproportionate" order. Cat owners affected by the new decree can exercise their right to object to it until mid June.

Post: 18 October 10:20

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