'Ubykh people' are a group who spoke the
Northwest Caucasian Ubykh language, until other local languages displaced it and its last speaker finally died in
1992.
The Ubykh used to inhabit an area just northwest of
Abkhazia in the
Caucasus. They were probably one of the populations to inhabit the ancient nation of
Colchis. Outside of mythology, the probable ancestors of the Ubykh were mentioned in book IV of
Procopius' ''De Bello Gotico'' (''The Gothic War''), under the name 'βροῦχοι' (''Brouchoi'') , a corruption of the native term 'tʷaχ'. The Ubykhs were semi-
nomadic horseback people, and the Ubykh language still contains a finely differentiated vocabulary related to horses and tack. Some Ubykhs also practised
favomancy and
spatulamancy.
However, the Ubykh people gained more prominence in modern times. By
1864, during the reign of
Tsar Alexander II, the Russian conquest of Northwestern Caucasus had basically been completed. The
Adyghe and
Abkhaz peoples were decimated, and the
Abaza people were partially driven out of the Caucasus. Faced with the threat of subjugation by the Russian army, the Ubykh people, as well as
other Muslim peoples of Caucasus, left their homeland ''en masse'' beginning on March 6, 1864. By May 21, the entire Ubykh nation had departed from the Caucasus. They eventually settled in a number of villages in western
Turkey around the municipality of
Manyas.
In order to avoid discrimination, the Ubykh
elders encouraged their people to assimilate into Turkish culture. Having abandoned their traditional nomadic culture, they became a nation of farmers. The Ubykh language was rapidly displaced by
Turkish and
Circassian; the last native speaker of Ubykh,
Tevfik Esenç, died in 1992.
Today, the Ubykh diaspora has been scattered about Turkey and—to a much lesser extent—
Jordan. The Ubykh nation ''per se'' no longer exists, although those who are of Ubykh ancestry are proud to call themselves Ubykh, and a couple of villages are still found in Turkey where the vast majority of the population is Ubykh by descent.
Ubykh society was
patrilineal; many Ubykh descendants today know five, six, or even seven generations of their
agnatic ancestry. Nevertheless, as in other Northwest Caucasian cultures, women were especially venerated, and the Ubykh language retains a special second person pronoun prefix used exclusively with women (-).
References
Links
★
Bagrat Shinkuba. ''The Last of the Departed'' on Adyghe Library