-
grouped together as Mordvins) as well as
speakers of the
extinct Merya,
Muromian and
Meshchera languages. The
modern representatives of
Volga Finns live...
-
Muromian is an
extinct Uralic language formerly spoken by the
Muromian tribe, in what is
today the
Murom region in Russia. They are
mentioned by Jordanes...
-
Moksha is also
possibly closely related to the
extinct Meshcherian and
Muromian languages.
There is very
little historical evidence of the use of Moksha...
- have been
related to the
Mordvinic languages or to the
Permic languages)
Muromian (spoken by the Muroma, may have been a
language close to the
Merya and...
-
Forest Nenets Tundra Nenets Nganasan Selkup Yurats Others Merya Meshcherian Muromian Reconstructed Proto-Uralic
homeland Proto-Finnic Proto-Sámi Proto-Samo****ic...
- Novgorod-Rostov
areas were po****ted by
Finnic peoples,
including the Merya, the
Muromians, and the Meshchera. From the 7th
century onwards, the East
Slavs slowly...
- ****ociated[by whom?] with
these people. The north-western
neighbours were the
Muromians and
Merians who
spoke related Finno-Ugric languages. To the
north of the...
-
probably formed by Finno-Ugric peoples, such as the
ancestors of the Merya,
Muromian, Meshchera, and Veps tribes. All
regional toponyms and
hydronyms stem from...
- are the Finno-Ugric
languages of the
Chude and the "Volga Finns" (Merya,
Muromian, and Meshcheran):
while unattested,
their existence has been
noted in medieval...
-
evidence of a
number of
extinct languages of
uncertain affiliation:
Merya Muromian Meshcherian (until 16th century?)
Traces of Finno-Ugric substrata, especially...