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==Etymology== ==Etymology==
The term ''nart'' comes from the ] ''Nartæ'', which is '']'' of ''nar''.<ref name="Abaev">] "Nart". ''''.</ref> The origin of the ] ''nar'' is of ] origin, from ] ''nar'' for 'hero, man', descended from ] '']''.<ref name=colarusso>]. . ''University of Toronto Quarterly''. Princeton University Press. pp. xxiv, 552.</ref> In ], the word ''nart'' means 'giant'. The term ''nart'' comes from the ] ''Nartæ'', which is '']'' of ''nar''.<ref name="Abaev">{{citation| editor-first = V.I.| editor-last = Abaev |editorlink=Vasily Abaev|at = p.158-9 "Nartae, Nart" | url = http://allingvo.ru/LANGUAGE/etimolog_slovar.htm |title = ИСТОРИКО-ЭТИМОЛОГИЧЕСКИЙ СЛОВАРЬ ОСЕТИНСКОГО ЯЗЫКА | trans-title = Historical-Etymological Dictionary of Ossetian language | volume = II (L-R) | year =1973 | language = russian }}</ref> The origin of the ] ''nar'' is of ] origin, from ] ''nar'' for 'hero, man', descended from ] '']''.{{sfn|Colarusso|2002|pp= xxiv, 552}} In ], the word ''nart'' means 'giant'.


==Characters== ==Characters==
Some of the characters who feature prominently in the sagas are: Some of the characters who feature prominently in the sagas are:


* ] (], ] and ] '''sawsərəqʷa''' (Саусырыкъо), ] '''Soslan''' (Сослан)), a hero who sometimes also appears as a ]; * ''''']''''' (], ] and ] : ''sawsərəqʷa'' (Саусырыкъо); ] : ''Soslan'' (Сослан)) - a hero who sometimes also appears as a ]
* ] (Ossetian: Батырадз) was the leader and greatest warrior of the Narts; * ''''']''''' (Ossetian: Батырадз) was the leader and greatest warrior of the Narts
* ] (Ubykh '''satanaja''', ] '''setenej''' (Сэтэнай), ] '''Satana''' (Сатана)), the mother of the Narts, a ] figure and matriarch; * ''''']''''' (Ubykh: ''satanaja''; Adyghe: ''setenej'' (Сэтэнай); Ossetian: ''Satana'' (Сатана)) - the mother of the Narts, a ] figure and matriarch
* ] (] and ] '''{{IPA-cau|ɬapʃʷ|}}''', Ossetian '''K<sup>w</sup>yrdalægon''' (Куырдалæгон)), a blacksmith deity;<ref>, Youtube.</ref> * ''''']''''' (Adyghe and Abaza: ''{{IPA-cau|ɬapʃʷ|}}''; Ossetian: ''K<sup>w</sup>yrdalægon'' (Куырдалæгон)) - a blacksmith deity
* ] (] '''Syrdon''' (Сырдон)) a trickster figure compared by ] to the ] ]. * ''''']''''' (Ossetian: ''Syrdon'' (Сырдон)) - a trickster figure compared by ] to the Norse ]. (see ])
* ] ({{lang-ce|'''Pẋarmat''' Пхьармат}}), in ] epos, a blacksmith figure who steals fire from the gods for the mortals.<ref>Tsaroïeva, Mariel. ''Anciennes Croyances des Ingouches et des Tchetchenes''. p.&nbsp;199. {{ISBN|2-7068-1792-5}}.</ref> * ''''']''''' (]: ''Pẋarmat'' (Пхьармат)) - in the ]' ], a blacksmith figure who steals fire from the gods for the mortals.{{sfn|Tsaroieva|2005|p= 199}}


==Study and significance== ==Study and significance==
The first written account of the material is due to the ]ian author Shora Begmurzin Nogma (who wrote in Russian 1835–1843, published posthumously in 1861, German translation by ] in 1866). The stories exist in the form of prose tales as well as epic songs. The first written account of the material is due to the ] author Shora Begmurzin Nogma, who wrote in Russian 1835–1843, published posthumously in 1861. A German by ] was published in 1866 {{harv|Berge|1866}}. The stories exist in the form of prose tales as well as epic songs.


It is generally known that all the Nart corpora have an ancient Iranian core, inherited from the ], ], and ] (the Alans being the ancestors of the ]).<ref name=colarusso/><ref name=colarusso2> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070827153313/http://www.circassianworld.com/nartsagas.html |date=2007-08-27 }}, John Colarusso, Circassian World</ref> However, they also contain abundant local North Caucasian accretions of great antiquity, which sometimes reflect an even more archaic past.<ref name=colarusso/> It is generally known that all the Nart corpora have an ancient Iranian core, inherited from the ], ], and ] (the Alans being the ancestors of the ]).{{sfn|Colarusso|2002}} However, they also contain abundant local North Caucasian accretions of great antiquity, which sometimes reflect an even more archaic past.{{sfn|Colarusso|2002|pp= xxiv, 552}}


Based especially on the Ossetian versions, the sagas have long been valued as a window towards the world of the ]-speaking cultures of antiquity. For example, the philologist ] used the Ossetian division of the Narts into three ]s to support his '']'' that the ] were similarly divided into three castes—warriors, priests, and commoners. Based especially on the Ossetian versions, the sagas have long been valued as a window towards the world of the ]-speaking cultures of antiquity. For example, the philologist ] used the Ossetian division of the Narts into three ]s to support his '']'' that the ] were similarly divided into three castes—warriors, priests, and commoners.


The ] (], ]-] and ]) versions are also highly valuable because they contain more archaic accretions and preserve "all the odd details constituting the detritus of earlier traditions and beliefs", as opposed to the Ossetian ones, which have been "reworked to form a smooth narrative".<ref name=colarusso/><ref name=colarusso2/> The ] (], ]-] and ]) versions are also highly valuable because they contain more archaic accretions and preserve "all the odd details constituting the detritus of earlier traditions and beliefs", as opposed to the Ossetian ones, which have been "reworked to form a smooth narrative".{{sfn|Colarusso|2002|pp= xxiv, 552}}{{sfn|Colarusso|2002}}


==Connections to other mythology== ==Connections to other mythology==
Some motifs in the Nart sagas are shared by Greek mythology. The story of ] chained to ] or to ] in particular is similar to an element in the Nart sagas. These shared motifs are seen by some as indicative of an earlier proximity of the ] peoples to the ancient Greeks, also shown in the myth of the ], in which ] is generally accepted to have been part of modern-day ]. Some motifs in the Nart sagas are shared by Greek mythology. The story of ] chained to ] or to ] in particular is similar to an element in the Nart sagas. These shared motifs are seen by some as indicative of an earlier proximity of the ] peoples to the ancient Greeks, also shown in the myth of the ], in which ] is generally accepted to have been part of modern-day ].


In the book ''From Scythia to Camelot'', authors ] and ] speculate that many aspects of the ] are derived from the Nart sagas. The proposed vector of transmission is the ], some of whom migrated into northern ] at around the time the Arthurian legends were forming. As expected, these parallels are most evident in the Ossetian versions, according to researcher ].<ref name=colarusso2/> See '']'' ( in subsection ''Lucius Artorius Castus'' ) for more details. In the book ''From Scythia to Camelot'', authors ] and ] speculate that many aspects of the ] are derived from the Nart sagas. The proposed vector of transmission is the ], some of whom migrated into northern ] at around the time the Arthurian legends were forming. As expected, these parallels are most evident in the Ossetian versions, according to researcher ].{{sfn|Colarusso|2002}} See '']'' ( in subsection ''Lucius Artorius Castus'' ) for more details.


==Differences between Nart legends== ==Differences between Nart legends==
There are some differences between the various versions of the Nart legends. For example, the Ossetian versions depict the Nartic tribe as composed of three distinct clans who sometimes rival one another: the brave Æxsærtægkatæ (to whom the most prominent Narts belong), the rich Borætæ, and the wise Alægatæ; The Circassian versions do not depict such a division. The Abkhaz versions are unique in describing the Narts as a single ] composed of Satanaya's one hundred sons.<ref>''Mify narodov mira''. 1980. v.&nbsp;2. Narty</ref> Yet all of these versions describe the Narts as a single coherent group of (mostly) ‘good’ heroes. There are some differences between the various versions of the Nart legends. For example, the Ossetian versions depict the Nartic tribe as composed of three distinct clans who sometimes rival one another: the brave Æxsærtægkatæ (to whom the most prominent Narts belong), the rich Borætæ, and the wise Alægatæ; The Circassian versions do not depict such a division. The Abkhaz versions are unique in describing the Narts as a single ] composed of Satanaya's one hundred sons.<ref>{{citation| title = Mify narodov mira | trans-title = Myths of the World | year = 1980 | volume =2 (K-Ya)| at = Narty |editor-first = S.A.| editor-last = Tokarev | type = encyclopedia | language = Russian }}</ref> Yet all of these versions describe the Narts as a single coherent group of (mostly) ‘good’ heroes.


Some ] (]-]) legends include a group called the ''Nart-Orxustxoi'', which includes the most prominent Narts known from the other versions (e.g. Seska-Solsa corresponding to Sosruko/Soslan, Khamtsha-Patarish corresponding to Batraz/Batradz etc.). In contrast to the Ossetian and Abkhaz versions, the Nakh legends depict the Narts as warlike bandits, who fight against local good heroes such as Koloi-Kant and Qinda-Shoa<ref>{{cite book |author=Tsaroïeva, Mariel |year=2005 |title=Anciennes Croyances des Ingouches et des Tchetchenes |page=215 |ISBN=2-7068-1792-5}}</ref> (with Qinda-Shoa corresponding to Sawway/Shawey). Some ] (]-]) legends include a group called the ''Nart-Orxustxoi'', which includes the most prominent Narts known from the other versions (e.g. Seska-Solsa corresponding to Sosruko/Soslan, Khamtsha-Patarish corresponding to Batraz/Batradz etc.). In contrast to the Ossetian and Abkhaz versions, the Nakh legends depict the Narts as warlike bandits, who fight against local good heroes such as Koloi-Kant and Qinda-Shoa.{{sfn|Tsaroieva|2005|p=215}} (with Qinda-Shoa corresponding to Sawway/Shawey).


==See also== ==See also==
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|} |}


==Sources== ==References==
{{reflist|30em}}
<references />

===Sources===
*{{citation|title = Die Sagen und Lieder des Tscherkessen-Volks| trans-title = The legends and songs of the Circassian peoples | year = 1866| url = https://archive.org/details/diesagenundlied00nogmgoog| first = Schora Bekmursin | last = Nogmov| editor-first = Adolf | editor-last = Bergé | editor-link = Adolf Berge | language = german |ref = {{harvid|Berge|1866}} }}
*{{citation| title = Nart Sagas from the Caucasus: Myths and Legends from the Circassians, Abazas, Abkhaz, and Ubykhs| editor-first= John| editor-last = Colarusso| year = 2002 | isbn =9781400865284 }}
**Also published as {{citation| title = Nart Sagas: Ancient Myths and Legends of the Circassians and Abkhazians | isbn = 978-0-691-16914-9 | year = 2002}}, with an introduction by ]
*{{citation| last = Tsaroïeva | first = Mariel | title = Anciennes Croyances des Ingouches et des Tchetchenes | language= French | trans-title = Old beliefs of the Ingush and Chechens | year =2005 | isbn = 2-7068-1792-5 | ref={{harvid|Tsaroieva|2005}} }}

===Further Reading ===


==External links==
;Circassian Nart sagas ;Circassian Nart sagas
*{{citation| title = Nart Sagas from the Caucasus: Myths and Legends from the Circassians, Abazas, Abkhaz, and Ubykhs| editor-first= | editor-last = John Colarusso| year = 2002 }}
*{{citation| url = http://www.reocities.com/Eureka/Enterprises/2493/nartsaga3.htm | archiveurl =https://web.archive.org/web/20170113170919/http://www.reocities.com/Eureka/Enterprises/2493/nartsaga3.htm | title = More Nart Tales | archivedate = 13 Jan 2017 |}} , English translations *{{citation| url = http://www.reocities.com/Eureka/Enterprises/2493/nartsaga3.htm | archiveurl =https://web.archive.org/web/20170113170919/http://www.reocities.com/Eureka/Enterprises/2493/nartsaga3.htm | title = More Nart Tales | archivedate = 13 Jan 2017 |}} , English translations
*{{citation| url = http://www.circassianlibrary.org/lib/html/Nart_epos_1/contents.html | title =Нарты. Адыгский эпос| language =Russian | }} , Russian translations *{{citation| url = http://www.circassianlibrary.org/lib/html/Nart_epos_1/contents.html | title =Нарты. Адыгский эпос | trans-title = Narta. The Adyghe epic | language =Russian | }} , Russian translations
*Articles including some texts of Nartic legends: *Articles:
*{{citation| archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070211132440/http://circassianworld.com/colarusso_3.html | url =http://circassianworld.com/colarusso_3.html | archivedate = 11 Feb 2007 | title = Myths from the Forests of Circassia | first = John | last = Colarusso | work = The World & I | date = Dec 1989 }} **{{citation| archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070211132440/http://circassianworld.com/colarusso_3.html | url =http://circassianworld.com/colarusso_3.html | archivedate = 11 Feb 2007 | title = Myths from the Forests of Circassia | first = John | last = Colarusso | work = The World & I | date = Dec 1989 }}
*{{citation| archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20110524131405/http://www.circassianworld.com/colarusso_4.html | url **{{citation| archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20110524131405/http://www.circassianworld.com/colarusso_4.html | url
=http://www.circassianworld.com/colarusso_4.html | archivedate =24 May 2011 | title = Prometheus among the Circassians | first = John | last = Colarusso | work = The World & I | date = Dec 1989 }} =http://www.circassianworld.com/colarusso_4.html | archivedate =24 May 2011 | title = Prometheus among the Circassians | first = John | last = Colarusso | work = The World & I | date = Dec 1989 }}
*{{citation| url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070927003600/http://www.circassianworld.com/Satanaya_Cycle.pdf| url =http://www.circassianworld.com/Satanaya_Cycle.pdf | archivedate = 27 Sep 2007 | title = The Woman of the Myths: the Satanaya Cycle| first = John | last = Colarusso | journal = The Annual of the Society for the Study of Caucasia | volume =2 | pages = 3-11| year = 1989 }} **{{citation| archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070927003600/http://www.circassianworld.com/Satanaya_Cycle.pdf| url =http://www.circassianworld.com/Satanaya_Cycle.pdf | archivedate = 27 Sep 2007 | title = The Woman of the Myths: the Satanaya Cycle| first = John | last = Colarusso | journal = The Annual of the Society for the Study of Caucasia | volume =2 | pages = 3-11| year = 1989 }}

'''Ossetian Nart sagas''': ;Ossetian Nart sagas
*
* *{{citation| url = http://biblio.darial-online.ru/text/narts/index_rus.shtml | language = Russian | editor-first = Б.А. | editor-last = Калоева | editor-first2 = Ю. | editor-last2 = Либединского | title =СКАЗАНИЯ О НАРТАХ | trans-title = Notes of Narta }}
* *{{citation | url = http://biblio.darial-online.ru/catalog_os.html | language = Ossetian | title = КАТАЛОГ | trans-title=Catalog}} , collection of legends
* *{{citation| url = http://titus.uni-frankfurt.de/texte/etcs/iran/niran/oss/nart/nart.htm | title = Ossetic Nartic Tales |work = TITUS (Thesaurus Indogermanischer Text- und Sprachmaterialien) }}


;Abkhaz Nart sagas ;Abkhaz Nart sagas
*{{citation | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070928014519/http://kolhida.ru/index.php3?path=_etnography%2Fbook%2Fnart&source=index | url =http://kolhida.ru/index.php3?path=_etnography%2Fbook%2Fnart&source=index | archivedate = 28 Sep 2007 ||editor-first = Ш.Д. | editor-last = Инал-ипа |editor-first2 = К.С.| editor-last2 = Шакрыл |editor-first3 = Б.В. | editor-last3 = Шинкуба |editor-first4 =Ш.Д. | editor-last4 = Инал-ипа |editor-first5 = Г. | editor-last5 = Гулия |editor-first6 = В. | editor-last6 = Солоухина | title =Приключения нарта Сасрыквы и его девяноста девяти братьев | trans-title = The Adventures of the Sasrykva Nart and His Ninety-nine Brothers | language = Russian }}
*
'''Karachay-Balkar Nart sagas''':
* Contains a brief outline of Karachay-Balkar Nartic legends (in English).
*
*
*
'''Chechen-Ingush Nart sagas''':
* Contains discussion of Chechen and Ingush Nartic legends (in English).
* at the ]. Contains Nartic legends.
* at the ]. Contains Nartic legends.
*, many of which are about the Narts.


;Karachay-Balkar Nart sagas
*{{citation| url = http://www.adigha.com/Culture/Custom_Traditions/NARTS_01.htm | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20120301194108/http://www.adigha.com/Culture/Custom_Traditions/NARTS_01.htm | archivedate = 1 Mar 2012 |title = A Good Sample For Cultural Diffusion - A Hero Who Carries The Characteristics Of Prophet David In The Nart Epos Of Karachay-Balkar People - Nart Debet, The Smith | first = Ufuk | last = Tavkul | work = The International Symposium of "NART EPOS" | year = 2000 }}
*{{citation| archiveurl =https://web.archive.org/web/20070930111524/https://balkaria.info/library/d/dzhurtubaev/epos/0_narti.htm | archivedate = 30 Sep 2007 | title = Героический эпос о нартах | language = Russian | editor-first =Джуртубаев Махти | editor-last = Чиппаевич | trans-title = The heroic epic of Narta | url =https://balkaria.info/library/d/dzhurtubaev/epos/0_narti.htm }} , detailed set of tales
*Russian translations from {{citation| title =Дебет златоликий и его друзья| language =Russian | year =1987| editor-first= С.| editor-last= Липкина | trans-title = Debet the golden haired and his friends }}
**{{citation| url = http://www.elbrusoid.org/content/liter_theatre/p171557.shtml | archiveurl =https://web.archive.org/web/20060228163522/http://www.elbrusoid.org/content/liter_theatre/p171557.shtml |archivedate = 28 Feb 2006 | title =Нарты РАЧИКАУ, СЫН ЧУЖЕЗЕМЦА | trans-title = | language = Russian }} , (part 1)
**{{citation| url = http://www.elbrusoid.org/content/liter_theatre/p171548.shtml | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20110726211752/http://www.elbrusoid.org/content/liter_theatre/p171548.shtml | archivedate = 26 Jul 2011 | title = Наш героический эпос о нартах - КАК ЁРЮЗМЕК УБИЛ КРАСНОЛИКОГО РЫЖЕБОРОДОГО ФУКА }} , (part 2)

;Chechen-Ingush Nart sagas
*{{citation | url = http://chechnya.unesco.ru/books/culofchechnyaeng.pdf | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20091015030706/http://chechnya.unesco.ru:80/books/culofchechnyaeng.pdf | archivedate = 15 Oct 2009 | chapter = 18. The Inception of Chechen artistic writing: ethni-historical and aesthetic prerequisites | first = Kh.R. | last = Abdulayeva |title = The Culture of Chechnya: History and Modern Problems | year = 2002 | pages = 129-147 }}
*Accounts of Chechen and Ingush beliefs by Ch.E.Akhriev
**{{citation | archiveurl =
https://web.archive.org/web/20080401040418/http://www.ingushetiya.ru/culture/ce_akhriev/87.html | url =http://www.ingushetiya.ru/culture/ce_akhriev/87.html | archivedate = 1 Apr 2008 | title = | first = Ch.E. | last = Akhriev| language = Russian }}
**{{ citation| archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20080402101529/http://www.ingushetiya.ru/culture/ce_akhriev/89.html | url = http://www.ingushetiya.ru/culture/ce_akhriev/89.html | archivedate = 2 Apr 2008 | title = | first = Ch.E. | last = Akhriev | language = Russian }}
*{{citation| url = http://constitutions.ru/archives/1738 | archiveurl =https://web.archive.org/web/20120301194323/https://constitutions.ru/archives/1738| archivedate = 1 Mar 2012 | language = Russian | title = ЧЕЧЕНСКИЕ СКАЗАНИЯ | trans-title = Chechen Tales }}

;Miscellaneous
*{{citation| url = http://vroegemiddeleeuwen.weblog.leidenuniv.nl/category/caucasus/ | language = English | title = | work = Wanana sculun Frankon - Linguistics, History, Mythology and More}} , Causcasian folklore articles

==External links==
{{Authority control}} {{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Nart Saga}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Nart Saga}}

Revision as of 20:47, 15 August 2018

"Nart" redirects here. For other uses, see Nart (disambiguation).

The Nart sagas (Template:Lang-ady; Abkhaz: Нарҭаа ражәабжьқәа; Template:Lang-krc; Template:Lang-os; Narty kaddžytæ; Template:Lang-ce) are a series of tales originating from the North Caucasus. They form the basic mythology of the tribes in the area, including Abazin, Abkhaz, Circassian, Ossetian, Karachay-Balkar, and Chechen-Ingush folklore.

Etymology

The term nart comes from the Ossetian Nartæ, which is plurale tantum of nar. The origin of the root nar is of Iranian origin, from Proto-Iranian nar for 'hero, man', descended from Proto-Indo-European *h₂nḗr. In Chechen, the word nart means 'giant'.

Characters

Some of the characters who feature prominently in the sagas are:

Study and significance

The first written account of the material is due to the Kabardian author Shora Begmurzin Nogma, who wrote in Russian 1835–1843, published posthumously in 1861. A German by Adolf Berge was published in 1866 (Berge 1866). The stories exist in the form of prose tales as well as epic songs.

It is generally known that all the Nart corpora have an ancient Iranian core, inherited from the Scythians, Sarmatians, and Alans (the Alans being the ancestors of the Ossetians). However, they also contain abundant local North Caucasian accretions of great antiquity, which sometimes reflect an even more archaic past.

Based especially on the Ossetian versions, the sagas have long been valued as a window towards the world of the Iranian-speaking cultures of antiquity. For example, the philologist Georges Dumézil used the Ossetian division of the Narts into three clans to support his Trifunctional Hypothesis that the Proto-Indo-Europeans were similarly divided into three castes—warriors, priests, and commoners.

The Northwest Caucasian (Circassian, Abkhaz-Abasin and Ubykh) versions are also highly valuable because they contain more archaic accretions and preserve "all the odd details constituting the detritus of earlier traditions and beliefs", as opposed to the Ossetian ones, which have been "reworked to form a smooth narrative".

Connections to other mythology

Some motifs in the Nart sagas are shared by Greek mythology. The story of Prometheus chained to Mount Kazbek or to Mount Elbrus in particular is similar to an element in the Nart sagas. These shared motifs are seen by some as indicative of an earlier proximity of the Caucasian peoples to the ancient Greeks, also shown in the myth of the Golden Fleece, in which Colchis is generally accepted to have been part of modern-day Georgia.

In the book From Scythia to Camelot, authors C. Scott Littleton and Linda A. Malcor speculate that many aspects of the Arthurian legends are derived from the Nart sagas. The proposed vector of transmission is the Alans, some of whom migrated into northern France at around the time the Arthurian legends were forming. As expected, these parallels are most evident in the Ossetian versions, according to researcher John Colarusso. See Historical basis for King Arthur – Sarmatian hypothesis ( in subsection Lucius Artorius Castus ) for more details.

Differences between Nart legends

There are some differences between the various versions of the Nart legends. For example, the Ossetian versions depict the Nartic tribe as composed of three distinct clans who sometimes rival one another: the brave Æxsærtægkatæ (to whom the most prominent Narts belong), the rich Borætæ, and the wise Alægatæ; The Circassian versions do not depict such a division. The Abkhaz versions are unique in describing the Narts as a single nuclear family composed of Satanaya's one hundred sons. Yet all of these versions describe the Narts as a single coherent group of (mostly) ‘good’ heroes.

Some Nakh (Chechen-Ingush) legends include a group called the Nart-Orxustxoi, which includes the most prominent Narts known from the other versions (e.g. Seska-Solsa corresponding to Sosruko/Soslan, Khamtsha-Patarish corresponding to Batraz/Batradz etc.). In contrast to the Ossetian and Abkhaz versions, the Nakh legends depict the Narts as warlike bandits, who fight against local good heroes such as Koloi-Kant and Qinda-Shoa. (with Qinda-Shoa corresponding to Sawway/Shawey).

See also

References

  1. Abaev, V.I., ed. (1973), ИСТОРИКО-ЭТИМОЛОГИЧЕСКИЙ СЛОВАРЬ ОСЕТИНСКОГО ЯЗЫКА [Historical-Etymological Dictionary of Ossetian language] (in Russian), vol. II (L-R), p.158-9 "Nartae, Nart" {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |editorlink= ignored (|editor-link= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ Colarusso 2002, pp. xxiv, 552.
  3. Tsaroieva 2005, p. 199.
  4. ^ Colarusso 2002.
  5. Tokarev, S.A., ed. (1980), Mify narodov mira [Myths of the World] (encyclopedia) (in Russian), vol. 2 (K-Ya), Narty
  6. Tsaroieva 2005, p. 215.

Sources

Further Reading

Circassian Nart sagas
Ossetian Nart sagas
Abkhaz Nart sagas
Karachay-Balkar Nart sagas
Chechen-Ingush Nart sagas
Miscellaneous
  • "[Category: Causcasus]", Wanana sculun Frankon - Linguistics, History, Mythology and More , Causcasian folklore articles

External links

Categories:
Nart saga: Difference between revisions Add topic