Wui-Beigo ( Chinese trade. 北 烏伊 別 國 , control 北 乌伊 别 国 , pinyin : běiwūyybiéguó , pall .: Beihuibego , literally: “Northern Wui is a separate state; Northern Wui”) is a state of South Siberian and Ural Ugrians in Chinese chronicles of the 3rd century n e. It was located near modern Omsk . [1] . Mentioned in the San Dzhi Dynasty History. They had their own organization, which the Chinese geographers called Wu-Beigo (Wu-Beigo) - the Ugric Northern State [2] .
Searches for the ancestral home of the Ugrians and Hungarians in Siberia
The founder of uralism, M. A. Castren, considered the starting point for the search for the ancestral home of the Finno-Ugric Altai . In the 1860s Finnish archaeologist I.R. Aspelin tried to find archaeological evidence of a compatriot hypothesis, deriving the Ural-Altai bronze culture in the Altai and Sayan regions. From this culture, the Finno-Ugricans stood out in the northern and western directions [3] .
In 1951 , V.N. the allocation of ancient Hungarians , V. I. Moshinskaya also joined the same point of view [4] .
Hungarian researcher Eric Molnar in the middle of the 20th century. supported the hypothesis of M. A. Castren and I. R. Aspelin.
Bibliography
- ↑ Gumilev L.N. Huns in Asia and Europe
- ↑ Bichurin N. Ya. (Iakinf). Collection of information about the peoples who lived in Central Asia in ancient times T. III. M .; L. , 1953. adj. Map 3 (San Go time); Sat "Following the traces of ancient cultures." T. II. M., 1954.P. 191.
- ↑ Castren MA Vorlesungen die finniche Mythologie. Nordiche Reisen und Forschungen. 1853-1862. Fromm H. Kalevala. Kommentar. Műnhen. 1967.
- ↑ Chernetsov V.N., Moshinskaya V.I. In search of the ancient homeland of the Ugric peoples // In the footsteps of ancient cultures. From the Volga to the Pacific Ocean. M., 1954.P. 163-192.