Ostyak

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File:023 Description of all the Russian state-dwelling peoples - Ein Ostiakischer Hermelin-Fänger, 1790 (crop).jpg
Illustration of an "Ostyak" stoat-hunter (1793)
File:View of Beryozovo, 18th century.jpg
18th century view of Beryozovo, including "Ostiac" canoes.

Ostyak (Template:Langx) is a name formerly used to refer to several Indigenous peoples and languages in Siberia, Russia. Both the Khanty people and the Ket people were formerly called Ostyaks, whereas the Selkup people were referred to as Ostyak-Samoyed.

Khanty

Template:Main The Khanty people, who also call themselves Khanti, Khande, or Kantek were known to the Russians as Yugra in the eleventh century, with the name Ostyak first appearing in the sixteenth century. The Soviet Union began using the endonym Khant or Khanty during the 1930s.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Template:As of some 28,000 people identify as Khanty, primarily in Tyumen Oblast, which includes the Khanty–Mansi Autonomous Okrug.<ref name="Census">Template:Cite web Template:In lang</ref>

The Khanty languages, also known as Hanty, Khant, Xanty, or Ostyak, are a Uralic language group with about 9,500 native speakers.<ref name="Ethnologue">Template:Cite book</ref>

Ket

File:P170b At Levinski Pesok. A civilized Yenisei Samoyede and a Yenisei-Ostiak.jpg
1913 photograph of "A civilized Yenisei Samoyede and a Yenisei-Ostiak."

Template:Main The Kets historically lived near the Yenisei River in the Krasnoyarsk Krai district of Russia. The Imperial Russians originallyTemplate:When called them Ostyak, and later Yenisei Ostyak.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Fewer than 1,500 people identified themselves as Ket during the 2002 Russian census.<ref name="Census" />

The Ket language, also known as Imbatski-Ket or Yenisei Ostyak, is a Yeniseian language. It is considered severely endangered to moribund.<ref name="Ethnologue" />

Selkup

File:Selkup man.jpg
Selkup man

Template:Main The Selkup people were known as Ostyak-Samoyeds until the 1930s. They are descended from both Yeniseian and Samoyedic peoples, and live in the northern parts of the Siberian plain. About 4,000 people identified as Selkup during the 2002 Russian census.<ref name="Census" />

The Selkup language, also known as Selkups, Chumyl' Khumyt, Shöl Khumyt, Shösh Gulla, Syusugulla, or Ostyak Samoyed, is a Uralic Samoyedic language with perhaps two thousand or more native speakers. The northern dialect is taught in some schools.<ref name="Ethnologue" />

See also

References

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Further reading

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