To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Voknavolok
Вокнаволок
Voknavolok
Voknavolok
Location of Voknavolok
Map
Voknavolok is located in Russia
Voknavolok
Voknavolok
Location of Voknavolok
Voknavolok is located in Karelia
Voknavolok
Voknavolok
Voknavolok (Karelia)
Coordinates: 64°57′6″N 30°33′12″E / 64.95167°N 30.55333°E / 64.95167; 30.55333
CountryRussia
Federal subjectRepublic of Karelia
Founded17th centuryEdit this on Wikidata
Population
 • Total427
 • Urban okrugKostomukshsky Urban Okrug[3]
Time zoneUTC+3 (MSK Edit this on Wikidata[4])
Postal code(s)[5]
186942
OKTMO ID86706000111

Voknavolok (Russian: Вокна́волок, Karelian: Vuokkiniemi) is a rural locality (selo) under the administrative jurisdiction of the Town of Kostomuksha of the Republic of Karelia, Russia. Population: 427 (2010 Russian census).[2]

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/3
    Views:
    2 033
    1 503
    2 414
  • Vuokkiniemi Kulttuurikylä 2015, Vuokkiniemi (Voknavolok) Capital of Culture 2015 finalist
  • Vuokkiniemen mummot
  • Карелия, д. Вокнаволок, д. Суднозеро (вокал - йойку)

Transcription

Nineteenth-century Vuokkiniemi

Demography and economy

The census of 1800 put the population of the parish of Vuokkiniemi at 853; by 1900, it stood at 3265. A large proportion of the population was, or was descended from, migrants from Finland: around 1890, 34% of the population descended from migrants from Ostrobothnia, 25% from Kainuu, and 18% from Finnish Karelia, while statistics from 1902 to 1908 show no evidence of people using Russian as their primary language or having Russian identity.[6]: 30  The economy of the parish was a mixed subsistence economy of a kind found widely in subarctic Eurasia. This included livestock-rearing, local freshwater fishing, and hunting (until an 1892 ban on trapping). It featured slash-and-burn agriculture (though this was circumscribed to varying degrees by law) and agriculture in the co-operative mir-system, focused on barley, rye, potatoes and turnips. And it included wage-labour for fishing companies on the Arctic Sea; itinerant begging; and itinerant trading, especially west into Finland, primarily selling furs, netting thread, hemp, mutton, fish, butter and birds and purchasing flour and salt.[6]: 30–35  A postal route between Vuokkiniemi and Suomussalmi commenced in 1898.[6]: 49 

Religion

An Orthodox Christian chapel (tsasouna) had been built in Vuokkiniemi by the 1780s, at which time the parish gained independent status within the organised Church. A church was built in 1804. By 1881, chapels had been built in other villages in the same parish—Vuonninen, Venehjärvi, Kivijärvi, and Latvajärvi.[6]: 38  However, official influence on the local religion was limited: it was common that there was no priest in the parish in the earlier nineteenth century, and even in the 1880s a priest might tour the surrounding chapels only twice a year. Official religion used the Russian language, which was the first language of few inhabitants. Many people in Vuokkiniemi thus belonged to various sects of the Old Believers.[6]: 37–39  Their Christianity was deeply infused with originally non-Christian traditions, including a prominent role for the sages known as tietäjät.[6]: 43–45  Laestadianism grew prominent around the 1890s.[6]: 39 

Traditional poetry

In 1832 Elias Lönnroth estimated that less than one percent of Vuokkiniemi's peasants could read.[6]: 50  Throughout the nineteenth century, however, they sustained a vigorous tradition of Karelian-language oral poetry, including epics, laments, incantations (including the aetiological myths known as synnyt). Indeed, Vuokkiniemi and its surrounding villages and parishes became the celebrated centre of much collecting of Finnic-language folklore, which inspired the Kalevala and much of the Finnish and Karelian nationalist movements.[6]: 53–72  In the century following the first written record of a poetic text from Vuokkiniemi, made by Zachris Topelius the Elder on 23 January 1821, inhabitants of Vuokkiniemi contributed at least 2960 folklore texts to the collections of the Finnish Literature Society, many later published in the voluminous Suomen kansan vanhat runot.[6]: 61  Key collectors were Elias Lönnroth, Axel Borenius, Samuli Paulaharju, and Iivo Marttinen.[6]: 62 

References

  1. ^ a b Law #871-ZRK
  2. ^ a b Russian Federal State Statistics Service (2011). Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года. Том 1 [2010 All-Russian Population Census, vol. 1]. Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года [2010 All-Russia Population Census] (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service.
  3. ^ Law #824-ZRK
  4. ^ "Об исчислении времени". Официальный интернет-портал правовой информации (in Russian). June 3, 2011. Retrieved January 19, 2019.
  5. ^ Почта России. Информационно-вычислительный центр ОАСУ РПО. (Russian Post). Поиск объектов почтовой связи (Postal Objects Search) (in Russian)
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Tarkka, Lotte (2013). Songs of the Border People: Genre, Reflexivity, and Performance in Karelian Oral Poetry. Folklore Fellows' Communications. Vol. 305. Helsinki: Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia. ISBN 9789514110917.

This page was last edited on 31 December 2023, at 03:02
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.