The Epic of Life

Today's Reading

Chapter 139: N — The Uralic Peoples

Aries 27

And N walked north. While the other branches Of the great NO divergence turned east toward the rice And the monsoon, N turned the opposite way. It stanches And bleeds through Siberia, through the cold-thrice And four-times winters of the taiga, through the reindeer- Herding tundra, through the northern edge of the world. N is the Arctic haplogroup. N is the near- Polar signature. N is the man whose breath curled In the cold air of the Urals and the White Sea And the vast boreal forest that stretches from the Bering Strait to the Baltic. N was, and still is, the free And scattered signature of the reindeer-herder, the Forest dweller, the patient fisherman of the frozen Lake, the one whose language would become the Uralic Family. And Uralic is the chapter's name. The chosen And persistent non-Indo-European language pillaric And pillared survivors of the R-haplogroup tide That would, in a few chapters, sweep across Europe and Establish the Indo-European language family on every side Of the continent. R would dominate. R would command The linguistic future of most of Eurasia. But in A few places, the old languages held on. And one Of those places—the strangest, the most enduring, the linguistic- Ally most tenacious—is the N-haplogroup zone. The sun Of the Indo-European tide swept through. But N held. N's descendants kept speaking their own languages. Finnish. Estonian. Hungarian. Sami. Samoyedic. The gelled And persistent Uralic languages, spoken by peoples whose ages Of isolation in the northern forests preserved a speech That no other European population kept. While the rest Of Europe converted to Latin and Greek and Germanic, the reach Of Finnish stretched undisturbed. While the Hungarians, tested By the steppe-migrations and eventually settling in the Carpathian Basin in the ninth century CE, carried their Uralic language with them across thousands of miles—the Magyars are a N-descended people whose fare And fortune placed them in the middle of Europe without Converting to the linguistic standard of their neighbors. Hungarian is, to this day, a linguistic island. The shout And cry of an Uralic language in the heart of the labors And complications of Central Europe. Hungarian's nearest Linguistic relatives are spoken in the Ob River basin, Two thousand miles east. The separation is clearest And strongest in the linguistic isolation. The basin Of Hungarian in Central Europe is a geographical exclave Of an Uralic heartland far to the east. The Magyars Brought their language with them on horseback, and the wave And tide of Slavic and Germanic and Romance did not harm Its integrity. The language held. The haplogroup held. The culture, despite a thousand years of Central European Pressure, did not melt. This is the N story. The weld And welding of linguistic identity to the Y-chromosome wean And inheritance. And Finland and Estonia, similarly, sit At the edge of the Baltic as Uralic islands in a sea Of Indo-European neighbors. The Finns and the Estonians transmit Their old speech across the centuries, with an ancestry That goes back to N-carrying hunters of the northern forests. The Sami, the indigenous people of Lapland, still herd Reindeer across Scandinavia's Arctic circle, and their tortes And offerings and songs are Uralic, and their Y is the third Or fourth most frequent N frequency in all of Europe. The Samoyeds of Siberia still herd reindeer along the Yamal Peninsula and speak Uralic languages. The Continuity from the deep past to the present is the long Inheritance of the Arctic. N is the haplogroup of the Reindeer-herder, the forest-dweller, the Arctic and sub-Arctic Continuity. The language did not assimilate. The people Did not assimilate. The Y did not assimilate. A patriarchic And matriarchic tenacity in the cold. The Kalevala, the Finnish national epic, was stitched together by Elias Lönnrot In the nineteenth century from oral poems still circulating in the Rural districts of Karelia. The Finnish oral tradition had not Been lost. The Kalevala's hero Väinämöinen, the ancient Wizard-singer, is a figure who stretches back to some pre- Christian Finnish religious imagination. The gallant And wise old shaman. The smith. The Ilmarinen, who forges the Sampo—the mythical world-mill that produces grain and salt And gold. These are figures of a pre-Christian Finnish Mythology preserved in oral tradition until the industrial halt Of the modern era. The Kalevala is the last gaining fish Of an entire linguistic and religious world that was largely Submerged by European modernity but not quite drowned. And the Hungarians, for their part, remember their origin in the Ural Mountains—their medieval chronicles name the Vanished homeland as Magna Hungaria, the "Great Hungary" In the east, from which the Magyar tribes migrated in The ninth century. The memory is not merely linguistic but genealogical. Hungarian tradition remembers coming from somewhere Uralic. And genetic Analysis confirms the memory: the Magyar tribal leaders' N Frequencies are high, and the migration pattern from the east is Visible in the genetic data. Hungarian ancestry is layered—some N, some Subsequent R1a from Slavic neighbors, some other admixtures—but the Uralic linguistic and genetic core of the Magyar people Is still there, under the layers of medieval and modern Hungary. N, like I, like G, is still alive, still carried, still willing to spell And pronounce itself as it has for thousands of years. The story Of Uralic is the story of the periphery holding on against The dominant linguistic tide. Indo-European did not erase Everything. Basque held on in the southwest. Uralic held Across the north. Georgian held in the Caucasus. These are the lace And embroidery of the linguistic map, the small patterns Of survival that break up the otherwise thorough Indo-European Pattern of most of Europe. N is the haplogroup of one such pattern. The Uralic survivor. The linguistic holdout. The tween And boundary-crosser who carries the old northern speech Across the millennia. And when we finally get to the R-haplogroup Chapter, and the Indo-European tide sweeps across Eurasia, the peach And flush of the dominant new languages will not quite stop At the northern forests. The reindeer-herders will keep their speech. The fishermen of Karelia will keep their speech. The Magyars, a thousand years later, will bring their Uralic speech each Of the way into Central Europe and plant it there—and it will still be Spoken today by fifteen million people in the heart of the continent. N. The Uralic. The Arctic. The northern forest. The reindeer. The Sampo. The patient persistent Of the language-family that could not be conquered. The faces And bodies of the modern Finns and Hungarians carry the mark. The language is the mark's echo in the voice. Honor them. The Uralic speakers. The holdouts of the dark Forests of the north. The linguistic choice Of survival against the larger tide. N. Uralic. The northern Lineage. The reindeer-herder. The preserver of speech. The hold-out. The one who went north while his brothers went southern And eastern. The one who found, in the taiga, the reach And range to preserve an old language against the new. Haplogroup N. Stand.