AN OIRAT ETHNOGENETIC MYTH IN WRITTEN AND ORAL TRADITIONS Cover Image
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AN OIRAT ETHNOGENETIC MYTH IN WRITTEN AND ORAL TRADITIONS
AN OIRAT ETHNOGENETIC MYTH IN WRITTEN AND ORAL TRADITIONS

Author(s): Ágnes Birtalan
Subject(s): Cultural history, Customs / Folklore, Theoretical Linguistics, Oral history, Translation Studies, Theory of Literature
Published by: Akadémiai Kiadó
Keywords: Oirat (Western Mongol) mythology; legitimisation; literary and folklore tradition;

Summary/Abstract: According to the oldest tradition of the Inner Asian steppe, the nomadic empires legitimised their rules by ethnogenetic myths, in which the zoomorphic phenomena played a determinative role. The Chinggisid Empire followed the traditional wolf-deer ancestorship as means for strengthening their power over the Inner-Asian nomads. At the time of the decline of the Eastern Mongolian (Chinggisid) empire the Western Mongolian tribal confederation came to power and tried to extend its power over the whole traditional Mongolian territory. The attempt to turn the political rule required a new mythical ideological background, which, in the case of the Oirats, also roots in an ancient Inner- Asian tradition. The motives of the myth of the Coros (Cors), the Junghar ruling clan spread in the folklore as well and became a common Oirat ethnogenetic tradition. The paper discusses different literary and lore variants of the myth and its main motives, indicating the possible political role of them.

  • Issue Year: 55/2002
  • Issue No: 1-3
  • Page Range: 69-88
  • Page Count: 20
  • Language: English