Svans

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is about a people in the Caucasus. For other meanings, see Svans (disambiguation).

Contents

Svans
Svans

The Svans are an ethnographic group of Georgians that mostly live in Svaneti region of Georgia. They speak the Svan language.

[edit] History

The Svans are usually identified with the Soanes mentioned by Strabo, who placed them more or less in the area still occupied by the modern-day Svans.

Until the 1930s Mingrelians and Svans had their own census grouping, but were classified under the broader category of Georgian thereafter. They are Georgian Orthodox Christians, and were Christianized in the 4th-6th centuries. However, some remnants of old paganism have been maintained. Saint George (known as Jgëræg to the locals), a patron saint of Georgia, is the most respected saint. The Svans have retained many of their old traditions, including blood revenge. Their families are small, and the husband is the head of his family. The Svan really respect the older women in families.

[edit] Language

Typically bilingual, they use both Georgian and their own, unwritten Svan language, which together with the Georgian, Megrelian, and Laz languages constitute the Kartvelian, or South Caucasian language family. The Svan language is being largely replaced by the Georgian proper.

[edit] Culture

Svan culture survives most wonderfully in its songs and dances. Svaneti boasts the most complex form of Georgian polyphonic singing, traditional to Georgian vocal music.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links