The Bats people or the Batsbi,
romanized
In linguistics, romanization is the conversion of text from a different writing system to the Roman (Latin) script, or a system for doing so. Methods of romanization include transliteration, for representing written text, and transcription, ...
: ''batsbebi'', sing. , romanized: ''batsbi''; , , romanized: ''fäppi-batsoy'', ''batsoy'', sing. , romanized: ''batso''. are
Nakh-speaking
Tushetians
The Tushetians (; ka, თუშები, tr), or Tush , are a subgroup of Georgians who mainly live in Tusheti. Tsova Tushetians speak the Bats language, Tsova Tushetian language and Chagma Tushetians speak the Chagma Tushetian dialect of Georgi ...
in the country of
Georgia
Georgia most commonly refers to:
* Georgia (country), a country in the South Caucasus
* Georgia (U.S. state), a state in the southeastern United States
Georgia may also refer to:
People and fictional characters
* Georgia (name), a list of pe ...
. They are also known as the Ts’ova-Tush (წოვათუშები) after the Ts’ova Gorge in the historic Georgian mountain region of
Tusheti. The group should not be confused with the neighbouring
Kists – also a Nakh-speaking people who live in the nearby
Pankisi Gorge.
Language and customs
Part of the community still retains its own
Bats language ("batsbur mott"), which has adopted many Georgian loan-words and grammatical rules and is
mutually unintelligible
In linguistics, mutual intelligibility is a relationship between different but related language varieties in which speakers of the different varieties can readily understand each other without prior familiarity or special effort. Mutual intellig ...
with the two other Nakh languages,
Chechen and
Ingush. As Professor
Johanna Nichols
Johanna Nichols (born 1945, Iowa City, Iowa) is an American linguist and professor emerita in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of California, Berkeley.
Career
She earned her Ph.D. in Linguistics at the Univer ...
put it, "
he Batsburlanguage is related to Chechen and Ingush roughly as Czech is related to
Russian
Russian(s) may refer to:
*Russians (), an ethnic group of the East Slavic peoples, primarily living in Russia and neighboring countries
*A citizen of Russia
*Russian language, the most widely spoken of the Slavic languages
*''The Russians'', a b ...
nd the Batsbi donot belong to vai naakh nor their language to vai mott, though any speaker of Chechen or Ingush can immediately tell that the language is closely related and can understand some phrases of it. The Batsbi have not traditionally followed Vainakh customs or law, and they consider themselves Georgians." Batsbur is unwritten and the Batsbi have used Georgian as a language of literacy and trade for centuries.
The Georgian ethnographer Sergi Makalatia wrote in his study of Tusheti about the Tsova-Tush language (Batsbur):
John F. Baddeley also considered the origins of the Tsova-Tush language
Ingush.
Nowadays, all Batsbi speak Georgian (usually with a Tushetian or Kakhetian accent). Only a handful speak Batsbur with any kind of proficiency.
The Batsbi have retained very little of their separate cultural traits, and their customs and traditions now resemble those of other
Eastern Georgian mountaineers, particularly those of the Tush. There are also deeper pagan-religious links between the Tush and the neighbouring Khevsur).
Origins
Descent from Ingush
According to some authors, Batsbi are descended from the
Ingush. According to
Sir Richard Phillips
Sir Richard Phillips (13 December 1767 – 2 April 1840) was an English schoolteacher, author, publisher and vegetarianism activist.
Life
Phillips was born in London on 13 December 1767. Following some political difficulties in Leicester w ...
and , the Batsbi are an Ingush tribe. The origin of the Tsova-Tushins from the Ingush (
Galgai) was also acknowledged by the first Tsova-Tushino writer I. Tsiskarov. The data of the Ingush and Batsbi folk legends also testify that the Batsbi came from the area of Vabua (
Fappi) in mountainous Ingushetia. According to some information, the resettlement of a part of the
Ingush-Fyappins to
Tusheti occurred at the end of the 16th century or at the beginning of the 17th century.
Descent from Old Georgian tribes
According to some historians Bats are descended from Old Georgian tribes who adopted a Nakh language. According to this theory, the Batsbi are held to have originated from Georgian pagan tribes who fled the Christianization being implemented by the Georgian monarchy. A couple of these tribes are thought to have adopted a Nakh language as a result of contact with Nakh peoples.
Tsovata and migration to Kakheti
The Batsbi's villages in the Ts'ova Gorge (''Tsovata'') were
Ts'aro,
Shavts'qala,
Nazarta,
Nadirta,
Mozarta,
Indurta,
Sagirta and
Etelta. Each was inhabited by one or several extended families who believed they shared a common ancestor. In the early nineteenth century, following the destruction of two of their villages by landslides and an outbreak of the
plague, the Batsbi abandoned their eight villages in the Ts'ova Gorge in western Tusheti and began to migrate down to the lowlands on the left bank of the
Alazani
The Alazani ( ) is a river that flows through the Caucasus. It is the main tributary of the Kura in eastern Georgia, and flows for . Part of its path forms the border between Georgia and Azerbaijan, before it meets the Kura at the Mingəçevir ...
river in western Kakheti.
A significant proportion of the village's women work in Europe and in America, sending money home to the village. Many men still work as shepherds or cowherds, most of them wintering the animals in the Shiraki lowlands (south-eastern
Georgia
Georgia most commonly refers to:
* Georgia (country), a country in the South Caucasus
* Georgia (U.S. state), a state in the southeastern United States
Georgia may also refer to:
People and fictional characters
* Georgia (name), a list of pe ...
, on the border with neighbouring
Azerbaijan
Azerbaijan, officially the Republic of Azerbaijan, is a Boundaries between the continents, transcontinental and landlocked country at the boundary of West Asia and Eastern Europe. It is a part of the South Caucasus region and is bounded by ...
) and then taking them up to summer pastures in Tusheti (a two- to three-week journey).
According to a study written and published by Professor Roland Topchishvili as part of the University of Frankfurt's ECLING project, the Batsbi only lived in temporary dwellings around Alvani in winter. In the summer, the men and their families would lead their flocks of sheep up to summer pastures around Tbatana and in Tsovata, returning to Alvani in the autumn.
Professor
Johanna Nichols
Johanna Nichols (born 1945, Iowa City, Iowa) is an American linguist and professor emerita in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of California, Berkeley.
Career
She earned her Ph.D. in Linguistics at the Univer ...
also wrote about the migration of the Batsbi in her article on "The Origin of the Chechen and Ingush":
Batsbi tradition as recorded by Desheriev (1953, 1963) preserves memory of a two-stage descent: first, abandonment of the original highland area in northern Tusheti, settling of villages lower in the mountains, and a period of transhumance plus permanent descents of a few families; then, complete abandonment of the highlands and year-round settlement in the lowlands after a flood destroyed one of the secondary mountain villages in the early nineteenth century. That is, Batsbi lowland outposts were established by a combination of transhumance and individual resettlements, and some time later there was a sizable migration into an established outpost.
Most of the Batsbi currently live in the village of Zemo ("Upper") Alvani in the eastern Georgian province of
Kakheti
Kakheti (; ) is a region of Georgia. Telavi is its administrative center. The region comprises eight administrative districts: Telavi, Gurjaani, Qvareli, Sagarejo, Dedoplistsqaro, Signagi, Lagodekhi and Akhmeta.
Kakhetians speak the ...
, close to the town of
Akhmeta
Akhmeta ( ) is a town in Kakheti, Georgia, and is the administrative centre of Akhmeta Municipality. It is situated on the left side of Alazani, close to the Pankisi Gorge. The town is situated at 567 m. In 1966, it received the status of '' Kala ...
(at the mouth of the
Pankisi Gorge). Around half of Zemo Alvani's c.7,000 inhabitants are of Bats origin.
Historical population figures
The first reference to the Batsbi in European ethnographical literature is in the chapter on the Tush and Tusheti in
Johannes Güldenstädt's ''Reisen durch Rußland und im Caucasischen Gebürge''
Travels through Russia and in the Mountains of the Caucasus" published posthumously by
Peter Simon Pallas
Peter Simon Pallas Fellow of the Royal Society, FRS FRSE (22 September 1741 – 8 September 1811) was a Prussia, Prussian zoologist, botanist, Ethnography, ethnographer, Exploration, explorer, Geography, geographer, Geology, geologist, Natura ...
between 1787 and 1791, although Güldenstädt does not mention them by name, merely pointing out instead that "Kistian and Georgian are spoken equally in the 4 first-named villages
n the Ts'ova Gorge Their inhabitants could also more easily be descendants of the Kists than the other Tush."
Figures from the Russian imperial census of 1873 given in Dr. Gustav Radde's ''Die Chews'uren und ihr Land — ein monographischer Versuch untersucht im Sommer 1876''
[Radde, Dr. Gustav, ''Die Chews'uren und ihr Land — ein monographischer Versuch untersucht im Sommer 1876'', Cassel: 1878] include the Bats villages in the Ts'ova Gorge (dividing them into the "Indurta" and "Sagirta" communities):
* Indurta community: 191 households, consisting of 413 men and 396 women, totalling 809 souls
* Sagirta community: 153 households (Sagirta proper: 79; Ts'aro: 26; Etelta: 48), consisting of 372 men and 345 women, totalling 717 souls
1873 TOTAL: 344 households, consisting of 785 men and 741 women, in all 1,526 souls.
Dr. Radde adds:
"The members of
hese two communitieshave largely emigrated to the lowlands along the Alazani River, to the east of Akhmeta; they move up in summer to the rich pastures of Tbatana at the southern end of the Massara mountain range (see Itinerary), but still consider Indurta as their property and even leave 2-3 families living there in winter.
he Ts'ova Gorge is situatedBy the north-western spring of the Tusheti Alazani River.
..Together, these two communities made up the Ts'ova community until 1866."
The decline of the Bats/Tsova-Tush language
Concerning the slow decline of Batsbur as a language, Professor Topchishvili writes:
Notes
References
Bibliography
English sources
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Russian sources
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External links
Batsav.Com a site mainly dedicated to the Tsova-Tush with significant information on other Caucasian peoples.
YouTube a video recording of a song in Batsbur.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bats People
Ethnic groups in Georgia (country)
Nakh peoples