Posted on 12/21/2009 8:32:22 AM PST by BGHater
A Sami (Lapp) family in Norway around 1900
Photo: Library of Congress
In the freezing far northern reaches of Europe live an indigenous, semi-nomadic people of fishermen, fur trappers and reindeer herders. Like a thin but stubborn sheet of ice, these people have inhabited Sápmi, a large but sparsely populated area covering parts of northern Sweden, Norway, Finland and Russias Kola Peninsula for thousands of years. They remained closely tied to nature throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, as their clothes, dwellings and other trappings of culture bear witness here beautifully frozen in film. These people are the Sámi.
Sami family in front of their home, 1870s
Photo: Unknown photographer
This singular race is divided into three different groups: mountain, forest, and fisher Lapps. The first two are nomadic and almost entirely dependent upon reindeer. Nearly all the needs of the Lapps are supplied by this useful creature, which closely resembles a stag. The flesh provides his food; from its milk he obtains cheese; from the hide, clothes, leather, foot and tent covering, while the antlers yield material for knife blades, vessels, etc. Catholic Encyclopedia, 1913, Lapland and Lapps
Two persons in Sami dresses outside Jokkmokk Old Church, Sweden, c. 1860
Photo: Swedish National Heritage Board
Nomadic Sami people in Sapmi in front of two Lavvu Tents, 1900-1920
Photo: Granbergs Nya Aktiebolag
Two hundred years ago, the Sámi people lived in more or less peaceable co-existence with the societies surrounding them. However, as modern industrialism cranked its wheel throughout the rest of Europe, the Sámi began to feel the strain in the relationship with their neighbours, and the accelerating changes in their culture that would hit high gear during the second half of the 20th century became apparent. Yet the Sámi way of life refused to be buried.
Nicolas Nilsen and Kristin Mikkelsdatter from Kvalsund, 1884
Photo: R. Bonaparte
A people without a sovereign state, the Sámis have made the Arctic Area of the Nordic countries the land of a nomadic culture unique to Europe; a culture so much more in tune with its natural environment as to be almost unrecognisable to eyes dulled by consumerism and the computer. As motley as the many colours of their costumes, this diverse group of people a people with up to ten languages and more dialects spoken among them yet share some common characteristics and customs.
Three Sami men are exchanging tobacco in Lyngen, Troms, Norway, early 1900
Photo: Anne Margrethe Giæver
After breakfasting, those Sámi men who practiced reindeer husbandry would have gone about their daily routines feeding, milking and helping to tend their animals; driving them to fresh grazing lands; breeding and birthing when the season dictated. Their animals would provide them with many of the materials they needed: pelts to keep warm and for use as the walls in their dwellings; antlers to be employed alongside other bones and wood for crafting; and of course meat and milk for meals.
Photo, 1925: Richard Fleischhut
The Sámi are believed to be the first known culture to have herded animals, writes one scholar. To capture and train draft reindeer for pulling snow sleds, they lasso the wild reindeer, tie it to a tree, and slowly train it until it is domesticated. The reindeer sleds, as well as skis, are vital to Sámi life in the winter. The reindeer were cardinal, morning, noon and night.
Photo, 1925: Richard Fleischhut
A frugal lunch might have followed for a Sámi family especially during the long, dark winter while the mothers fed and cared for their young in cradles of wood and horn. Youths might have gathered berries or helped with repairs. Immaculately crafted tools would have hung from their waists, ready for everyday use or when needed in fishing and hunting. Sámi handicrafts, known as doudji, were born of a time when the Sámi people were isolated from the outside world and needed to be self-sufficient to survive.
Warm Hearts of the North, Sami mother, pre-1923
Photo: Borg Mesch
Made from wood, bone, horn, leather and roots, crafts ranged from knives and cases to womens bags and wooden cups, with the underlying belief that they should serve a purpose. That didnt mean objects couldnt be decorative; and while the Sámi women spent their afternoon making wares, embroidery with beads, tin thread, weaving and textiles would have been the treasures of their toil. By the 19th century, items could have been exchanged as well as used, and certainly there was an art to it all.
Photo, 1925: Richard Fleischhut
The traditional clothing worn by the Sámi is called gakti, a patchwork type of attire typified by a main colour adorned with contrasting bands, plaits and metal embroidery, often with a high collar to keep out the cold. The various different patterns and jewellery spoke of the persons marital status, where they hailed from, and other cultural variations of the different regions. Traditionally, gákti was made from reindeer leather, sinews and perhaps wool, with cotton and silk introduced later.
Photo, 1925: Richard Fleischhut
When the dogs had returned home and the reindeer shuffled together for warmth, when the day if it had even dawned began to darken, the Sámi families would return to their shelters the focal points around which their lives turned, even if their location was only temporary. Similar in design to the Native American tipi, but less vertical and more stable in high winds, the lavvu could be set up and taken down quickly, allowing the Sámi to follow their reindeer herds or otherwise move from place to place.
Sámi Lavvu tent, late 1800s Photo via Friman
Supported by evenly spaced, forked or notched poles arranged into a tripod, with other straight poles to give structure to the form, the lavvu were then covered in reindeer hides until inexpensive textiles were made available. Inside, a fireplace in the middle would have been used for heating and to keep mosquitoes at bay, the smoke escaping through a hole in the top. The goahti was a slightly larger construction, similar to a Sámi lavvu or a peat-covered version using the same base structure.
Nomad Sami settlement near Hävlingskällorna in Dalarne, Sweden, pre-1926
Photo: Svensk Turistforening
The handiwork of the Sámi people was supremely functional, but when the evenings and winters had closed in, their music and song was less practical in principle. The traditional Yoik is one of several modes of Sámi song listeners would have heard slow, chant-like, emotive singing expressive of personal attempts to touch on the spiritual essence of a subject, say an animal or bird in nature. Other styles may not have contained words, or might have told a story about a special person or event.
Photo, 1925: Richard Fleischhut
In truth, there were as many differences as similarities among the Sámi of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Different cultures that have been identified include the Forest Sámi, Fjeld or Mountain Sámi, Sea Sámi and Eastern Sámi. Yet such classifications were further complicated by other differences of language, livelihood and history that riddled the system of small, sometimes migratory groups of families or siidas like beautiful cracks in the ice.
Sámi girls from Telemark County in Southern Norway, late 1880
Photo: M. M. Lohne
The Sámi have lived in northern Europe since the last glacial ice sheets melted away, following herds of reindeer, living off the land, and adapting to the harsh winter winds and climate. However, they only became recognisable as their own distinct culture in the last few millennia. When the Black Death sank its teeth into Europe in 1349, it did not impact so heavily on the Sámis, who were less connected to the European trade routes and so were not infected and killed at nearly as high a rate as their neighbours.
Ivar Samuelsen, Sea Saami man from Finnmark in Norwegian Sapmi, 1884
Photo: Prins Roland Bonaparte
In the wake of the pandemic, those Sámi driven to fish off the north Norwegian coast became the Sea Sámi who, as they migrated and multiplied, settled Norways fjords and inland waterways, combining cattle raising with trapping and fishing. Meanwhile, a smaller minority of Mountain Sámi continued to hunt reindeer, and around the 1500s began taming the overhunted animals into herds, becoming the famed reindeer nomads a lifestyle portrayed as archetypically Sámi but in fact only pursued by about 10% of the people.
Storehouse and Sami women at Slugufjäll Settlement, Dalarne, Sweden, pre-1926
Photo: C. Fries
The Sámi felt the pressure of interest shown in their areas by the surrounding states of Denmark-Norway, Sweden-Finland and Russia not to mention instances of forced labour and the fact that all claimed the right to tax them. Yet for a long time, the Sámi way of life thrived in the north because of it was so supremely adapted to the harsh Arctic environment and was fit to survive independent of crises like the low fish prices and resulting depopulation Norwegians living up north suffered during the 18th century.
Photo: Svensk Turistforening
However, the fortunes of the Sámi people began to waver in the 19th century when the Norwegian authorities began taking away Sámi rights in a bid to make the Norwegian language and culture universal. Although on the Swedish and Finnish sides the authorities were less militant in their efforts to assimilate the Sámi culture, in all three Scandinavian countries a strong drive towards settlement in the north led to a weakening of the Sámi peoples economic and cultural status.
Accommodation for nomad Sami visiting church, Västerbotten, Sweden, pre-1926
Photo: G. Bergstedt
Worse was still to come. The tightest grip exerted on the Sámi occurred in the years between 1900 and 1940, when Norwegian nationalism intensified to the point where the government invested considerable money and effort into wiping out their culture. Anyone who wanted to claim new land for agriculture had to prove they could speak good Norwegian. The earlier myths of the Sámi as somehow innocently primitive and poor had reached a new and frightening level under the banner of a dominant, civilising culture.
A Nordic Sami family in traditional costumes and a dog from Finland, pre-1936
Photo: Kortcentralen Helsingfors
In Sweden, Sámi areas were increasingly exploited by the burgeoning mining industry and the building of the Luleå-Narvik railway, and later some Sámis were subjected to a compulsory sterilisation project. Meanwhile, in Russia the nomadic Sámi way of life was brutally interrupted by the collectivisation of reindeer herding and farming in general, with most of the people rounded up in a kolkhoz in the middle of the Kola Peninsula and forced to accept this radical new ideology or face the concentration camp.
Soldier with Sámi buying a fox skin, Norway, 1940
Photo: Schwarz
Matters didnt improve any with the onset of WWII, when the eastern Sámi in north-eastern Finland and Russia found themselves fighting on opposing sides. When the Germans withdrew from the north of Finland and Russia, homes and other visible traces of history were laid to waste in a scorched earth policy. Many families were forced to evacuate, though some Sámi ended up in German prison camps. Areas like Finnmark county in Norway and all northern areas of Finland were left in smoking ruins.
Federal German Archive Photo, 1943: Rymas
After the War grew a renewed interest in the Sámi culture, the seeds of which had been sown in the late 1800s when the first Sámi newspapers were founded; the news spoken in Sámi on Norwegian national radio started in 1946. The construction of a hydro-electric dam on important grazing and calving areas in the Finnmark town of Alta in 1979 brought Sámi rights onto the political agenda. And since 1992, the Sámi have their own national day, which takes place on February 6.
Sami reindeer herder in Sweden, 2005
Photo: Mats Andersson
Today, the Sámi people remain among the largest indigenous ethnic groups in Europe. Only around 2,800 Sámi are actively involved with full-time reindeer herding, but its continued existence is the legacy of a beautiful culture founded on seasonal migrations and the cycles of life.
Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12
Note, on Taala, the ones I've known are from the Sa'ami areas in Northern Sweden, Eastern Norway, and Lapland County. What we are talking about here is a case where there's been a fair amount of vocabulary slopover from one language to another.
Until the finding that the Sa'ami were likely the OLDEST population in the Fenno-Scandian peninsula many philologists were of the opinion that the various Sa'ami languages arose out of a common background with Finnish and Estonian.
Once it was determined that the Sa'ami were the OLDEST population in the peninsula, they've gravitated to analysis showing the linguistic flow to be from the Sa'ami languages to the FennoScandian group.
Sapala is the surname of a famous Kven from Norway who had a dog named Balto in Alaska. He and the dog became heros. Regarding the Kvens, they are recent arrivals in the Arctic ~ almost forgot about them ~ but they have a name for the region where they went to fish on the Arctic back during the centuries when they just went up seasonally. They called it "Ruija" which is incredible ~ I had not noticed that before.
This "ruija" is part of the name applicable to the bottom lands near Seymour, Columbus and North Vernon Indiana. Our word is Ama-roosia or Ama-ruija (so maybe you can tell me what the Ama means). The capital city of Lapland County in Finland, in Skolt, is very nearly the same word group but "backwards".
But going beyond Leonard Sappala, I've met many other Sappala surnamed people over the years and they were Sa'ami. Not ruling out a few of them selfidentifying as Norwegian or Finnish, but how about the Keppel family?
It's only worse in the United States where anyone of any origin may be named anything anyone wishes to be named.
I gather we got this tradition from the Scandinavians.
For the last 5 years it has been clear that naming traditions, linguage usage, or citizenship did not necessarily identify the people known as Sa'ami. Check: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1199377/
Subsequently Swedish medical researchers have had a field day discovering more differences ~ not just in a bit of mtDNA here and there, or the frequency of occurrence of different sub-haplogroups within the different Scandinavian populations, but also in Chromosome 6 (I believe that's the one that controls building livers, etc. which are foundational to the human digestive system).
Being Sa'ami doesn't mean you can't be Finnish, or Swedish, or Norwegian, or that you MUST speak one of the old languages ~ not anymore ~ it's a medical question of as much seriousness as whether or not you have blue, or gray, eyes and a Finnish background of any degree anywhere in the world (which has been studied, and found to be related to cholesterol levels).
As everybody on this thread knows you can't just assimilate away distinct genetically transmitted functions ~
Did this start with someone wanting to know what were typical Sa'ami names? I think it did. I suggested some I've found associated with Sa'amis. In the United States Smith and Fisher, Jones, Brown, Williams, and so on are associated with them, and then there are the Keppels!
Took a minute for me to get why that photo was there, but when it sunk in it was hilarious, the delayed reaction was perfect ... Well done
The fact that this word is so short, and so universal suggests it dates from a time in the distant past ~ during the Ice Age, when the Cro-Magnon people moved into Europe (35,000 BC).
In the Indo European group it almost invariably means someting very flat ~ a sheet ~ which may be woven, or processed from leather, or bark, or any other substance.
In Ladino, which preceeded the German based Yiddish used by the Jews, the trades name "Schmidlap" (spelled numerous ways) derives from the Latin base Schmei, meaning "smear" and "de" meaning from or on top of or derivative of, and "lap" meaning sheet, or cloth, or paper. A Schmidlap thereby is the name for a PAPER MAKER.
It's only in Sweden that people have gotten hung up on the "lap" root word having connotations of "rags". Fur Shur, it means nothing but "flat pieces of cloth", or maybe even "birch veneer"!
This same sort of nonsense has taken hold in the United States when it comes to the word "squaw" or "squa". It's is simply the feminine personal form used by the Abenaki and Iriquoian languages. The issue behind the campaign to suppress the term "squaw" is the question of "payments to tribes". The United States every year pays money to all recognized American Indian tribes. The Abenaki, who were the FIRST tribe of Indians to meet Europeans in the Northeast have not yet been fully recognized as a tribe. The ones who are recognized by the government fear that adding the Abenaki to the official lists will deplete the annual allocation for themselves.
People who tell you not to say "squaw" because that means "whore" are either misinformed or they are part of the disinformation campaign designed to exclude the Abenaki Indians from official federal recognition.
I'm sure that eventually the Swedes will figure out that the "Lap" thing was pretty much part of a similar campaign to portray the Lapland people as being "dirty".
My dad's mother's name is Smith and her mtDNA is haplogroup U5a (as are many of the Sa'ami).
My mother, whose maiden name is Strength, has mtDNA haplogroup 'V', as do 52% of the Skoat Sa'ami.
Now, during reading various articles about Sa'ami's, I came across a Sa'ami name Streng (minus the 'th' of Strength).
Anyone have any insight into this name Streng/Strength?
FYI, 9,000 year old Cheddar Man is haplogroup U5.
My yDNA is R1b (wide spread) and my mtDNA is 'V' (rare).
Then, they moved further North, or, as I suspect, the migrating Norse ate them (snork, snork ~ a joke guys).
I have a couple of friends that are German that have the same last name, one spelled the same, an other with a vowel substitution. Then I ran across another person, German, who had my name, pronounced the same, but spelled closer to the original Middle English, beats the hell out of me.
German word streng=strong, hard.
Common surname in Germany ,Scandinavia,Finland .
Yup.
My family name is concentrated around York.
Thanks. No revelations here.
I am not surprised, a lot of Scandinavian influence in that area.
My own surname arrived in the area (Ireland) about 700 BC (It's a tribal name and some of them are very old). By King Arthur's time their name/tribal identity applied to a part of Britain now known by various forms of Essex and Wessex.
Arthur is reported to have traded their property to the Saxon invaders for military service.
Folks with my surname hightailed it to Brittany, then the upper reaches of the Rhone Valley. I found an expert in the Gallo languages who lived in one of the old ducal towns in that area and he reported to me that every conceivable spelling of the surname occurred there ~ that I'd found the last place they landed before getting bought out by the Bourbons, some of whom then used their surname when they moved to Scandinavia in the 1500s.
That's when somebody decided some chickeeboo with a lot of Sa'ami ancestry looked really good. Her daddy was the Vassa King ~ and I don't know if he was a Sa'ami but he did a 200+ mile cross country skiing journey to escape Danish assassins!
I suspect he was more Sa'ami than anything else.
What I learned most about doing the study was simple ~ Nobles traveled with an entourage otherwise they always ended up dead. So your surname could end up in some cultural venue you would not have imagined just because some ancestors job was to take along, or to actually be the noble doing the moving.
BTW, even the Vassa King had Bourbon ancestors through one of his Great Grandmothers ~ who arrived in Scandinavia in the late 1400s.
Wow!
Many of our ancestor's surnames were just the name of the farm they worked.
bump
These records were not known to exist until most of the source materials regarding New Sweden had been assembled and prepared for further reference.
What is most important is that at that time "FIN" didn't mean "FINLAND" ~ it simply meant someone from the Sapma, or who spoke a language from the Sapma.
I suppose some of them could have been rounded up in what we today call Finland, but they had plenty of these guys following reindeer South into Southern Sweden back in those days.
Swedish Army units simply went out and grabbed FAMILY GROUPS, tents and all. Fur Shur the Kalmar N. was one stinky boat with nearly 300, maybe even 400 people aboard!
By 1700 almost all of the Swedes, Finns, Norwegians ~ whether Norse or Sa'ami ~ had relocated to York County PA to get away from the Quakers and Germans.
The maps you provide show extensive Scandinavian settlement (by all groups) was by the late 1600s.
Now, regarding those log cabins, the Sa'ami, Finns, Swedes and Norwegians all built pretty much the same sort of buildings, still, the oldest extant Scandinavian structures have the "windows" up at the roofline ~ I suspect because of the greater snowloads expected in Scandinavia than were commonly the case in America. The Church of the First Born still puts the windows at the roofline.
There's a later Scandinavian surge that occurs in the 1800 to 1812 period when the Swedes lost control of Finland. Virtually all the Swedish/Finnish noble families controlling Finland EVACUATED to Sweden, or even to America.
I've found one fellow purchasing about 180,000 acres in Southern Indiana then selling bits of it off to his relatives. The New Sweden colony managed to foster numerous daughter colonies in the Long March West in a straight line right out US 50 ~ and they actually met up with this Scandinavian (ELCA) territory ~ Seymour, Indiana for a time had 7 different synods of Lutherans! This always denotes substantial Northern European multi-ethnic settlement.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.