As a hungarian, I feel some proximity to manysi music and I noticed that manysi folklore, the drawings are somewhat similar to indian totems! Anyway indians in the USA came from Siberia, about 10-20 thousand years ago!... Manysi culture must be preserved!
You can find two other youtube videos featuring this instrument: Khanty-Mansy dances and songs, Kurinka - the Mansi dance. If you click "more info" you can find the link where I took this music from, and here you can listen to some Khanty music (thir language and culture are very similar to the Mansi) played on a very similar instrument, too.
Now I just found this video. The site in the description is no longer working properly, the songs are not available anymore :( If you see this, can you help me find more info about these songs? (Titles, sources, how can I find them, in best case written notes etc.)
Over a thousand years ago, there was a third Ugrian people . They began to wander westward for many years and mixed with Turkic people along the way . At the end of the 9th century AD they arrived in what is now Hungary and conquered the local Europeans, mainly Slavic peoples . They were quickly absorbed into the European population, but their language, Magyar, survived .
Beautiful music! I feel it in my veins. Altough there are many theories of our origination (Magyar,Hungarian) some sais we are turkic and related to the huns.(If i know well there are no findings how was the hun language sounded like) Others sais we are ugric people,when i heard Khanty and Mansi im sure they are our relatives. In my family from my fathers branch there are many relatives who carries the signs of the east. The first woman in 3:59 in the blue scarf really similar looking to my grandmothers mother. Interesting...Thanks for the upload and greetings brothers and sisters.
We khanty and mansi have clan names similar to old hungarian tribes like Yurmaty,Tarkan,Nyekmen and Yeni which sounds like hungarian Kurt-Gyarmati,Tarjan,Nyek and Jeno. cheers!
@@teovu5557 Also the name of the principality of Konda means a weird thing in hungarian. It means 'drove' or 'herd'. I hate to say it but we use that word exclusively for pigs.
Following from my previous comment -- the CD "Handi Hullus" by Ro Toro includes some field recordings of Khanty musicians, including a very short section that may be the naras-juk (but perhaps it is on the harp, I'm not sure).
The clothes, homes, swinging cradle board, and many other familiar images show there was trading between these peoples and the Alaskan/ Canadian indigenous peoples. Even the art work, hair ornaments are similar. People forget that while there were specific areas that different tribes lived in, many tribes migrated not only east and west, but north and south depending on the seasons. The Dine` / Navajo people were PUT in Arizona areas by the government. There are Dine` in Canada too.
Isn't it far more likely and exciting that the similarities are due to a shared cultural and genetic heritage than to trade across thousands of miles to a landlocked region like Khanty-Mansi? Another example is that the art of the Namgis Eskimos is very similar to that of Kazakh Turks, yet they have not had any contact for thousands of years. The art and culture is so marvelous and enduring that it has survived for thousands of years in multiple places! (For more info, see Prof. Spencer Wells' research on the genetic connections between indigenous Americans and Eurasian peoples).
That you mention the Dine people, there is a group in Siberia which goes by a very similar name, the De'ŋ, okay I lied about this. They are not called De'ŋ, but Ke't. (De'ŋ is the plural form of Ke't, but I found the similarity interesting.) They live right next to the Mansi people in Central Siberia. There are many theories that the Ket and the Dene-Dine people of North America are related. Their language is certainly different from Mansi, from Evenk or any Turkic language around it.
Yes, I've read about the Ket, thanks. Incidentally, I think I was told that the art work I referenced is not Kazakh, but Sakha. There are many interesting cultures in Eurasia.
its a similar lifestyle and they are probably related to american natives. remember those societies are very slow or "cold" and certain patterns continue
The CD "Music of the Eastern Khanty" has a song (track 4) accompanied on the naras-juk, which is basically the same instrument as the Mansi sangkultap. A very small photo is provided. I think this is probably a modern instrument with no "hole" by the tuning pegs.
It's crazy to think that the hungarians abandoned their original homeland and made a thriving new home in Europe. The mansi stayed there (they shouldn't have) and now they have less than 1,000 native speakers. Mind-blowing
Sorry, i didnt know that, well I'm not an expert on the topic. I surfed the net, and found this "Southern Selkups had a seven stringed musical instrument called lebed (swan). Northern Selkups only musical instrument was shamans tambourine." Perhaps it is some Khanty influence, the khants and the southern selkups are neighbours.
@kaikkinimetvarattu2 onpahan, kyllä ne on suomalaisugrilainen kansa. siksi tätä kamaa ei opeteta kouluissa koska se ei sovi tähän valtiomme haluun mieltää suomi kulttuurisesti länsieurooppalaiseksi maaksi. eihän sinne mitkään vinkuintiaanit sovi.
@@Jeremyrollers Kanssamme Unkarissa kaikki tietävät, että olemme kielellä sukulaisia suomalaisten, hanten ja mansyn kanssa. Valitettavasti Unkari riitti islamin (turkkilaisen), itävaltalaisen ja venäläisen kolonisaation aikana. Aivan kuten khanit ja mansi Stalinin alla. Setäni taisteli toisen maailmansodan aikana suomalais-venäläisessä sodassa venäläisiä vastaan. Pahoittelen Unkarin huonoa käännöstä, ystävällisiä terveisiä.
And you can buy "The Music of the Eastern Khanty" CD, there is no sangkvyltap music on that CD, but a 9-string harp and a 1-string "violin", jew's harp, drum and vocals. I don't think the Selkups use similar instruments.
2:21 What is that artifact, I can't find it by google graphics. Regards from Poland! Apologize for our slavic neighbors from west for the slavicization of the Finno-Ugric nation and people. We know this feeling when we were Germanized, ha tfu!
@@Supernimo735i know they're not related, but share similar art styles and culture due to coincidence. Hell, the baskets they make look similar to native ones and the tents they build look vaguely similar to a teppee
köszönöm szépen, nagyon érdekkel !! ... tudja e hogy ezeken a képekken lévö tárgyak onnan-származó arkeológíai találmánjak e ? (= "Khanty-Mansiysk" " autonomous region " körül" van ?)
Finno-Ugric nations are not related to turkish language group and language is the main criteria of the ethnic bounds. Interesting theory is that mongol tribes moved to the territory which is Turkey nowadays and that is how the relation between Tatars and Turks was established.
Does anyone know what that symbol means 20 seconds in? When I went to my homeland in Eastern Europe (near Hungary) it was everywhere but nobody would tell me or didn’t know. Thanks for the beautiful video!
if you ment the symbol on thaz colorful pouch and at the beginning of the video then its one of their gods that they have. the khanty and mansi gods usually are depicted on riding horses
@Faravid666 Eipä taida mansit kuulua suomensukuisiin kansoihin jos pilkkua ruvetaan viilaamaan. Äidinkielen tuntien yhteydessä kyllä käsitellään uralilaiset kielet, johon siis mansin kieli kuuluu. Eli kyllä ne nykyään ainakin mainitaan.
@A hétfejű sárkány Lol, Ugric is not related any of Turkic people not only Oghuz Turks. I'm an Altai Turk, and I can say Ugric people maybe can have relation with Chuvash Turkic people but this relation is limited with just marrying. They don't have any relation with Magyars as well.
Nagyon szép zene!Megegyezik a moldvai csángó zenével!!!!
Greetings all the mansi brothers and sisters, from Hungary!
Hauntingly beautiful. The melody and the sounds is very familiar, "homelike" for me- as a hungarian. Greetings all the mansi brothers and sisters ! :)
Greetings from urals!
greetings! I an a Khanty(hunti) from Yugra I am from Jurmaty tribe from the Kurt clan(wolf) I love hungary our relatives!
@@teovu5557 I'm glad to hear that you my brothers are alive, I Will visit you soon as I can. Greetings from Hungary!
@@teovu5557Are you Turkic?Kurt means wolf in Turkish too.
As a hungarian, I feel some proximity to manysi music and I noticed that manysi folklore, the drawings are somewhat similar to indian totems! Anyway indians in the USA came from Siberia, about 10-20 thousand years ago!... Manysi culture must be preserved!
Amazing photos of the archaeological finds, the drawings and the footage, thank you so much for spreading awareness of this ancient Uralic culture.
Music of my Soul sooooo beautiful!
You can find two other youtube videos featuring this instrument: Khanty-Mansy dances and songs, Kurinka - the Mansi dance. If you click "more info" you can find the link where I took this music from, and here you can listen to some Khanty music (thir language and culture are very similar to the Mansi) played on a very similar instrument, too.
Now I just found this video. The site in the description is no longer working properly, the songs are not available anymore :( If you see this, can you help me find more info about these songs? (Titles, sources, how can I find them, in best case written notes etc.)
So this is what black metal without distortion sounds like.
Over a thousand years ago, there was a third Ugrian people . They began to wander westward for many years and mixed with Turkic people along the way . At the end of the 9th century AD they arrived in what is now Hungary and conquered the local Europeans, mainly Slavic peoples . They were quickly absorbed into the European population, but their language, Magyar, survived .
Maybe with iranians
This is wrong and you are liar dipshit.
@@mustanaamiotto3812 OK , provide the evidence I am a "dipshit liar ".
@@robertberger4203 Hungarians (Magyars) still exist and are uralian.
Aha...nagyon hasonlít a citerára. Köszi!
Очень и очень красиво звучит мелёдия на восхитительном мансийском инструменте! Как мне это нравится!!!! ВОЛШЕБНО!!!
Fantasztikus videó, gyönyörű zene, megy is a kedvencekbe! :)
5*****
Молодцы, здорово. Умащ хулатыя 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Beautiful music! I feel it in my veins. Altough there are many theories of our origination (Magyar,Hungarian) some sais we are turkic and related to the huns.(If i know well there are no findings how was the hun language sounded like) Others sais we are ugric people,when i heard Khanty and Mansi im sure they are our relatives. In my family from my fathers branch there are many relatives who carries the signs of the east. The first woman in 3:59 in the blue scarf really similar looking to my grandmothers mother. Interesting...Thanks for the upload and greetings brothers and sisters.
We khanty and mansi have clan names similar to old hungarian tribes like Yurmaty,Tarkan,Nyekmen and Yeni which sounds like hungarian Kurt-Gyarmati,Tarjan,Nyek and Jeno. cheers!
@@teovu5557 Also the name of the principality of Konda means a weird thing in hungarian. It means 'drove' or 'herd'. I hate to say it but we use that word exclusively for pigs.
@@lampsight8403 pigs in my language is Sartaasika n herd is Soorda
@@lampsight8403 drove in mansi is myája while konda is a turkic word it means beaver skins lol
@@teovu5557 drove in hungarian is: nyáj (or rather herd, since we only use it for sheep)
Beautiful song.
На персидскую или турецкую музыку очень похоже. Молодцы, дай Бог вам всего наилучшего и всех благ. 👍💪✌️
Beautiful, moving music and superb images
Following from my previous comment -- the CD "Handi Hullus" by Ro Toro includes some field recordings of Khanty musicians, including a very short section that may be the naras-juk (but perhaps it is on the harp, I'm not sure).
The clothes, homes, swinging cradle board, and many other familiar images show there was trading between these peoples and the Alaskan/ Canadian indigenous peoples. Even the art work, hair ornaments are similar. People forget that while there were specific areas that different tribes lived in, many tribes migrated not only east and west, but north and south depending on the seasons. The Dine` / Navajo people were PUT in Arizona areas by the government. There are Dine` in Canada too.
Isn't it far more likely and exciting that the similarities are due to a shared cultural and genetic heritage than to trade across thousands of miles to a landlocked region like Khanty-Mansi? Another example is that the art of the Namgis Eskimos is very similar to that of Kazakh Turks, yet they have not had any contact for thousands of years. The art and culture is so marvelous and enduring that it has survived for thousands of years in multiple places! (For more info, see Prof. Spencer Wells' research on the genetic connections between indigenous Americans and Eurasian peoples).
That you mention the Dine people, there is a group in Siberia which goes by a very similar name, the De'ŋ, okay I lied about this. They are not called De'ŋ, but Ke't. (De'ŋ is the plural form of Ke't, but I found the similarity interesting.) They live right next to the Mansi people in Central Siberia. There are many theories that the Ket and the Dene-Dine people of North America are related. Their language is certainly different from Mansi, from Evenk or any Turkic language around it.
Yes, I've read about the Ket, thanks. Incidentally, I think I was told that the art work I referenced is not Kazakh, but Sakha. There are many interesting cultures in Eurasia.
its a similar lifestyle and they are probably related to american natives. remember those societies are very slow or "cold" and certain patterns continue
@@Flozone1 the ket live close to the khanty and the selkups but not the mansi, the mansi are right on the eastern edges of the urals
Хор даро кушт бигон джохон. Фаргои кошави джалхарон дейе. Хардемез дехрон дардаганент. Джеломи о хазрот Али шах. Бангарант джигузстам харродейе менош джамам хаддус.
The CD "Music of the Eastern Khanty" has a song (track 4) accompanied on the naras-juk, which is basically the same instrument as the Mansi sangkultap. A very small photo is provided. I think this is probably a modern instrument with no "hole" by the tuning pegs.
Amazing music❤❤❤greetings from Serbia
It's crazy to think that the hungarians abandoned their original homeland and made a thriving new home in Europe. The mansi stayed there (they shouldn't have) and now they have less than 1,000 native speakers. Mind-blowing
Sorry, i didnt know that, well I'm not an expert on the topic. I surfed the net, and found this "Southern Selkups had a seven stringed musical instrument called lebed (swan). Northern Selkups only musical instrument was shamans tambourine." Perhaps it is some Khanty influence, the khants and the southern selkups are neighbours.
Great
1:14-től tisztára "Tente baba, tente"
Ó te jó ég.. tényleg o____o
Csìnom Palkò, Csìnom Jankò
Reminds me of the eskimos.
Спасибо
beautiful music,it sounds like hungarian or turkish music,and mongolian too
Long live all hun peoples!
@kaikkinimetvarattu2 onpahan, kyllä ne on suomalaisugrilainen kansa.
siksi tätä kamaa ei opeteta kouluissa koska se ei sovi tähän valtiomme haluun mieltää suomi kulttuurisesti länsieurooppalaiseksi maaksi. eihän sinne mitkään vinkuintiaanit sovi.
@@Jeremyrollers Kanssamme Unkarissa kaikki tietävät, että olemme kielellä sukulaisia suomalaisten, hanten ja mansyn kanssa. Valitettavasti Unkari riitti islamin (turkkilaisen), itävaltalaisen ja venäläisen kolonisaation aikana. Aivan kuten khanit ja mansi Stalinin alla. Setäni taisteli toisen maailmansodan aikana suomalais-venäläisessä sodassa venäläisiä vastaan. Pahoittelen Unkarin huonoa käännöstä, ystävällisiä terveisiä.
klassz
And you can buy "The Music of the Eastern Khanty" CD, there is no sangkvyltap music on that CD, but a 9-string harp and a 1-string "violin", jew's harp, drum and vocals. I don't think the Selkups use similar instruments.
2:21 What is that artifact, I can't find it by google graphics. Regards from Poland! Apologize for our slavic neighbors from west for the slavicization of the Finno-Ugric nation and people. We know this feeling when we were Germanized, ha tfu!
They look ironically similar to Native Americans
Exactly...
@@Supernimo735i know they're not related, but share similar art styles and culture due to coincidence. Hell, the baskets they make look similar to native ones and the tents they build look vaguely similar to a teppee
@@kristerophaphleck3883they’re related. Back then (in ice age i think) the ppl from asia walked across to america and settled there
Хостан байраи джейед хододе ходжедадие. Барайи кустагхан бийо рахунде рахан. Чигиваи боше дарьяйе моузан. Бигон дарходжод е хиистан. Абудо рахамод джемедейеш фагарат. Кишиф Абад. Джердерем хеддедие реузи хойдошие. Бойегендез олло сафидеш сарееземед. Джоллон хойедж о фихим.
köszönöm szépen, nagyon érdekkel !! ... tudja e hogy ezeken a képekken lévö tárgyak onnan-származó arkeológíai találmánjak e ? (= "Khanty-Mansiysk" " autonomous region " körül" van ?)
Nagyon jó kérdés ha valaki megfejtette kérem kommenteljen
@@peternagy6067 Ханты Мансийский Автономный Округ , Российская Федерация
@@peternagy6067 переведите и поищите в гугле
@Todote8
да, да...
from the forests to the steppes on the horse, the Ugric nation formed a brotherhood with Iranian and Turk...
No
Finno-Ugric nations are not related to turkish language group and language is the main criteria of the ethnic bounds. Interesting theory is that mongol tribes moved to the territory which is Turkey nowadays and that is how the relation between Tatars and Turks was established.
@@neutrality8447 lol mongol tribes wasn't a lot in anatolia. Mostly Turkmen tribes had moved to anatolia.
Does anyone know what that symbol means 20 seconds in? When I went to my homeland in Eastern Europe (near Hungary) it was everywhere but nobody would tell me or didn’t know. Thanks for the beautiful video!
Could you precisely timestamp it please?
if you ment the symbol on thaz colorful pouch and at the beginning of the video then its one of their gods that they have. the khanty and mansi gods usually are depicted on riding horses
18 seconds in, the Y shaped symbol
Are you talking about the quilt symbols at 0:25?
@@kristerophaphleck3883 it’s the Y shaped thing 16-18 seconds in.
Beautiful song, and is there any way to verify these pictures are authentic?
Do you know if this music is in the public domain and ok to play on a podcast?
@Faravid666 Eipä taida mansit kuulua suomensukuisiin kansoihin jos pilkkua ruvetaan viilaamaan. Äidinkielen tuntien yhteydessä kyllä käsitellään uralilaiset kielet, johon siis mansin kieli kuuluu. Eli kyllä ne nykyään ainakin mainitaan.
yüce büyük türk milleti! Azerbaycandan salamlar tüm dünya türklerine ❤️ Great Turkish people. Tenqri biz mennen!
@A hétfejű sárkány Lol, Ugric is not related any of Turkic people not only Oghuz Turks. I'm an Altai Turk, and I can say Ugric people maybe can have relation with Chuvash Turkic people but this relation is limited with just marrying. They don't have any relation with Magyars as well.
Mansi and magyar are related
Selamlar ulu TÜRK milletine Azerbaycan'a tüm dünya türk ailesine
İts sound like " bağlama"
Engem erre emlèkeztet
th-cam.com/video/AjnwZX38lJ4/w-d-xo.html
Igen, de ez állítólag úgy emlékszem nyugat-európai "volta ritmus" (Kis kece lányom).
it sounds like karelian 'kantele', i think it is kantele:D