Kir people: Difference between revisions
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*'''Lékaśran Kir''' - Traditionally associated with [[Váuadra]]. | *'''Lékaśran Kir''' - Traditionally associated with [[Váuadra]]. | ||
*'''Krakyerkir''' - Ethnic Kir {{wp|Shi'a Muslims}}. | *'''Krakyerkir''' - Ethnic Kir {{wp|Shi'a Muslims}}. | ||
==Culture== | |||
===Kinship=== | |||
The Kir have a {{wp|Iroquois kinship|merged bifurcate}} understanding of kinship reflected in the terminology of the Kiravic language. One's father and his brothers and one's mother and her sisters are referred to by the same base term (''stur'' and ''enna''), while one's father's sisters and one's mother's brothers . Accordingly, one's {{wp|parallel cousins}} - the offspring of one's father's brother or mother's sister - are referred to as siblings, differentiated by degree; while one's {{wp|cross-cousins}} - the offspring of one's father's sister or mother's brother - are referred to as cousins. Like all Coscivian groups, the Kir trace descent through the {{wp|patriline}}. An extended family unit sharing the same grandfather is known as a ''danrin'', while a larger kinship group claiming common descent from an arbitrarily higher-order ancestor (typically a great-grandfather or great-great-grandfather) is known as a ''dóntra''. | |||
Unlike [[South Coscivians|Southerners]] and [[Taństan Coscivians|Taństans]], the Kir have never practised {{wp|cross-cousin marriage}}. | |||
[[Category:Ethnic groups]] | [[Category:Ethnic groups]] |
Revision as of 00:21, 29 December 2022
Languages | |
---|---|
Kiravic Coscivian | |
Religion | |
Christianity, Coscivian religions, Islam |
The Kir people are an ethnic group traditionally inhabiting lowland areas across the upper-middle latitudes of Great Kirav. The most populous Coscivian ethnic group, Kir people have a common identity rooted in perceptions of shared ancestry, folkways, and use of the Kiravic language. The Kir people have played a central role in the history of Coscivian civilisation since the end of the Third Empire, and their culture is a primary influence on the wider national culture of Kiravia.
Distribution
Today Kir people can be found throughout the Kiravian Federacy, particularly in urban areas. However, most live in the Mid-Oceanic and Mid-Continental zones of Great Kirav. Kir account for an outright majority of the population in the states of Kernea, Vironat, and Karrakar.
Diaspora
Millions of Kir people and people of Kir descent live outside the Kiravian Federacy, whether as expatriates, immigrants, or native-born descendants of Kir migrants and settlers, a legacy of the historic and present influence of Kiravia overseas.
Many (perhaps most) of the Kiravian colonists who settled in what is now the Cape and Paulastra were ethnic Kir. However, due to the subsequent emergence of strong national identities in these countries and the greater salience of generalised Coscivian identity as a social category, it is believed that relatively few people of Kir descent in mainland South Crona would still identify specifically as Kir today.
Subgroups
- White Kir - Traditionally associated with Kastera
- Red Kir or Kandans - Native to the region of Kiygrava surrounding the city of Evira, but now settled across much of the hemiboreal belt from Śeridan to the Northwest Territories.
- Old Niyaskans - The traditional Kir inhabitants of Niyaska, now a small minority in their historic homeland.
- Svéarans - Originally from the Svéara Peninsula and adjacent Bissáv State, Svéaran Kir have scattered across the world as sailors, merchants, and pioneers.
- Lékaśran Kir - Traditionally associated with Váuadra.
- Krakyerkir - Ethnic Kir Shi'a Muslims.
Culture
Kinship
The Kir have a merged bifurcate understanding of kinship reflected in the terminology of the Kiravic language. One's father and his brothers and one's mother and her sisters are referred to by the same base term (stur and enna), while one's father's sisters and one's mother's brothers . Accordingly, one's parallel cousins - the offspring of one's father's brother or mother's sister - are referred to as siblings, differentiated by degree; while one's cross-cousins - the offspring of one's father's sister or mother's brother - are referred to as cousins. Like all Coscivian groups, the Kir trace descent through the patriline. An extended family unit sharing the same grandfather is known as a danrin, while a larger kinship group claiming common descent from an arbitrarily higher-order ancestor (typically a great-grandfather or great-great-grandfather) is known as a dóntra.
Unlike Southerners and Taństans, the Kir have never practised cross-cousin marriage.