Arrows-Jebe and the Noghaic-Kazakh Heroic Epos

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Author(s)
en Agatay, Оtkirbay M.
en Sabitov, Zhaxylyk M.
en Dossymbetov, Nurlybek A.
Агатай, Уткирбай Мылтыкбайулы
Сабитов, Жаксылык Муратович
Досымбетов, Нурлыбек Айдарбекович
Title
Arrows-Jebe and the Noghaic-Kazakh Heroic Epos
Alternative Title
Стрелы-джебе в ногайлинско-казахском героическом эпосе
Publication Type
Journal Article
Language
rus
Number of Pages
32
Location
Kazakhstan
Keywords
oral tradition
combat weapon
epic
others
Relevance to ICH Safeguarding
identification
transmission
promotion
awareness raising
ICH Genre
oral tradition
others
ICH transmission
Description
The article amasses accounts from the Noghaic-Kazakh heroic epos which enable new insights in the variability of names and phrases describing ranged weapons (arrows-jebe). Formerly, these accounts have not yet been the scope of a focused scholarly study and were not even translated into foreign languages, including Russian. Now, when analyzing folklore, artifacts and written sources in detail, an attempt is made to identify the original names and constructive merits and decorative systems in jebe arrows of the Turkic warriors of the Great Steppe in the Middle Ages and the Modern Era. Using the research database from accumulated, systemized and analyzed records, basic terms and phrases were found and attributed in the Noghaic-Kazakh heroic epos denoting parts of ranged weapons, the arrows-jebe. It has been established that during the Middle Ages and the Modern Era, in Dast-i Qipčaq — the Crimean steppe, Lower Volga Region, West Kazakhstan, and Western Siberia — as well as in Aral — Syr-Darya Region, Zhetysu, Altai, and elsewhere, the ranged weapons were used by the nomadic warriors, including oq (an arrow), jebe (a jebe-arrowhead), qasalaq (a qasalaq-arrow). A variety of the arrow-related terms and phrases includes sauīt būzar oq (an armor-piercing arrow), ajal oq (‘an arrow of death’), qozī jauīrīn oq (an arrow in the shape of a lamb’s scapula), salalī sausaq jebe (an arrow in the shape of two-forked fingers), aj oq (‘a moon-shaped’ arrow), masaq oq (a arrowhead), sajkez oq (a sajkez-arrow), ulī oq (a poisoned arrow), beren oq (a beren-arrow), sūr jebe (a grey jebe), kök jebe (a blue jebe), aq jebe (a white jebe), altī qīrlī jebe (a hexagonal jebe), segїz qīrlī jebe (an octagonal jebe), qīrīq kez oq (an arrow of forty yards), on ekї tūtam oq (an arrow of twelve fists), küşїgen jündї oq (an arrow with vulture’s feathers), qanattī oq (a winged arrow), etc. The matching of the epic descriptions of the arrows-jebe with various written records and genuine samples from archeological sites reveals a high level of correlation between folklore and narratives and artifacts. The focus on a comprehensive analysis of the accounts under study testifies that the Noghaic-Kazakh heroic epos is highly applicable to studying military-cultural heritage of the Turk and Mongol peoples of Eurasia during the Late Middle Ages and the Modern Era.
Book/Journal Title
Материалы по археологии и истории античного и средневекового Причерноморья(Proceedings in Archaeology and History of Ancient and Medieval Black Sea Region)
Publisher
Kimmeria Publishing
Place of Publication
Ness Ziona, Israel
Date of Publication
2023
Issue
15
Pages
665-686
ISSN
2713-2021 (e-ISSN)
Usage
copyright cleared
Academic Field
Epic tradition
Combat weapon
Community/Ethnic Group
Kazakhstan
Active Contribution
Kazakhstan, FY 2024

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