Kamchadal (Itelmen)
The
Kamchadal or
Itelmen people were the original inhabitants of the
Kamchatka Peninsula of eastern
Siberia. Earliest archaeological evidence of this people dates from 5200 years ago. When first contact was made with them by Russians circa 1697, they numbered some 12,500; less than fifty years later their numbers had dropped to fewer than 8500, reduced by introduced disease and forced assimilation. The
Itelmen language is unique, having relatively little similarity to that of the
Chukchi or the
Koryak, their nearest neighbours. Traditionally they were river fishermen, fur hunters and gatherers. They lived in semi-underground dwellings in extended family communities. Their religion was animistic; they believed that everything in the world and every event has a spirit. The remaining
Itelmen today live in the Koryak Autonomous Region on the west coast of
Kamchatkabetween Sedanka and Sopochnoye, mostly in the villages of Kovran, Tigil, Palana and Khiriuzovo.
Itelmen are anthropologically Mongoloid North-Asian like the
Koryak. They were first studied academically by
Vladimir G. Bogoraz and were described in his 1922 book on the
Chukchi.
External Link:
- Itelmens - Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire
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