特留特人史诗“Keziyke”中与狗有关的葬礼仪式的一集:关于突厥语(Oghuz)和印度-伊朗文化遗产的问题

E. Yamaeva
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引用次数: 0

摘要

狗在世界神话中扮演着重要的角色。特留特人的叙事诗“Keziyke”呈现了一只狗在葬礼上被杀死的主题。此外,这一主题可以在“阿维斯塔”的文本中看到,讲述了带一只狗参加葬礼仪式,以帮助灵魂安全到达死者的世界。特留特人被认为是古奥古兹人的后裔,奥古兹人是一个起源于突厥的民族。口述民间传说给我们提供了狗的状态和生来就有狗的身体和人的头的想法。对中国编年史的分析可以假设,人们从盘子里喂狗的习惯被突厥腾格里教的官方宗教代表所鄙视。这些信息可以作为一个时间标记,自信地表明,在六世纪左右的土耳其人的宗教神话中,狗不是神。然而,土耳其人有邻居,甚至可能是说土耳其语的人,非常尊重他们。在特留特史诗中,狗崇拜的痕迹出现在来世表征的背景下。奥古斯史诗中对狗的崇拜表明了他们对这种生物的崇拜。他们也接近西伯利亚人,他们的狗崇拜最为突出。与伊朗人相似的图案及其民族志来源表明,几个阿尔泰民族(Tele / Oguz)的祖先是古代突厥-伊朗文化社区的一部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
On an episode of a funeral ritual associated with a dog in the Teleut epic “Keziyke”: To the problem of Turkic (Oghuz) and Indo-Iranian cultural heritage
A dog plays a significant role in the world mythology. The Teleut epos “Keziyke” presents the motif of a dog being killed during the funeral ceremony. Also, this motif can be seen in the text of “Avesta” telling about bringing a dog to the funeral ceremony to help the soul reach the world of the dead safely. Teleuts are considered descendants of the ancient Oguz, an ethnic group of Turkic origin. The oral folklore provided us with the idea of a dog state and people born with a dog body and a human head. The analysis of the Chinese chronicle allows assuming that a habit of people’s feeding the dogs from their plate was despised by representatives of the official religion of the Turkic Tengrism. This information can serve as a chronological marker, suggesting confidently that the dog was not a deity in the religious-mythological pantheon of the Turks around the sixth century. Nevertheless, the Turks had neighbors, perhaps even Turkish-speaking people, greatly respecting. In the Teleut epic, the traces of the dog cult appear in the context of afterlife representations. The presence of the dog cult in the epic of Oguz indicates their worship of this creature. They were also close to the Siberian peoples with the most prominent dog cult. The motifs similar to the Iranian and their ethnographic sources indicate that the ancestors of several Altai ethnic groups (Tele / Oguz) were part of the ancient Turkic-Iranian cultural community.
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