Institute of Philology of the Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences
ISSN 2713–3133 [6+]
Founder — Institute of Philology, SB RAS
Studies in Theory of Literary Plot and Narratology
Digital network scientific journal
For specialists in literature and folklor
DOI: 10.25205/2410-7883
Roskomnadzor certificate number Эл № ФС 77-84792 
 
Syuzhetologiya i Syuzhetografiya
По-русски
Archive
Editorial board
Submission Requirements
Process for Submission & Publication
Our ethical principles
Search:

Author:

and/or Keyword:

Editorial Office Address: Institute of Philology of the Siberian Branch of the RAS. 8 Nikolaeva St, Novosibirsk, 630090, Russian Federation; zhurnal.syuzhet@yandex.ru +7-(383)-330-47-72

Article

Name: Plots and Motives of Altai Myths about the 12-year Animal Calendar

Authors: Nadezhda R. Oinotkinova

Institute of Philology of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk, Russian Federation

In the section The Plot in Literature and Folklore

Issue 3, 2024Pages 14-26
UDK: 398.222: 821.512.1DOI: 10.25205/2713-3133-2024-3-14-26

Abstract:

The purpose of this article is to identify the plot-motivational features of Altai etiological myths about the appearance of the 12-year eastern calendar. Analysis of historiography on the problem of the origin of this animal cycle allowed the author to come to the conclusion that the animal calendar existed among the Turkic peoples already in the distant past. Based on the material of the narrative folklore of the Altai people, the plots and motives about the appearance of the 12-year animal calendar are considered. The main research method is plot-motive analysis of the text. The novelty of the research lies in identifying the plots and characteristics of the characters in the myths about the 12-year calendar cycle. The animals present in the calendar – dragon, tiger and monkey – indicate the influence of the mythology of other eastern peoples. The results of a comparative analysis of Altai myths about the 12-year animal calendar with the myths of the Kazakhs, Mongols and Chinese showed a difference in the main characters: among the Altai people the creator of the calendar is the deity Kudai (theonym variants: Dayuchi / Dayaachy), the mythical character Dyylchy, others among the southeastern peoples are Buddha, and in particular among the Chinese – Yu Di. A chronological feature of Altai myths is the relationship between the appearance of the calendar and the mythological time after the flood. In the folklore of the Altai people, based on the plot of competitions between animals wishing to enter the calendar, independent plots of an etiological nature also arose. Independent motifs include the mythological motifs “who will see the sun first” (about a camel and a mouse), “thunder is an animal” (about a dragon), “the cloven hoof of a cow” (about a cow and a monkey). The Altaians have developed certain mythological ideas about the characters of each of the twelve years, repeating in a cycle, which they associate with the behavioral characteristics of animals. Using this calendar, people figured out what the coming year would be like.

Keywords: Altai folklore, mythology, myths, plots and motifs, calendar, animals

Bibliography:

Sadalova T. M. (comp.). Altayskie narodnye skazki [Altai folk tales]. Novosibirsk, Nauka, 2002, 455 p., ill. and CD. (Pamyatniki fol'klora narodov Sibiri i Dal'nego Vostoka [Monuments of folklore of the peoples of Siberia and the Far East]. Vol. 21) (in Alt. and Russ.)

Bakaeva E. P. Kalendar' [Calendar]. In: Bakaeva E. P., Zhukovskaya N. L. (eds.). Kalmyki [Kalmyks]. Moscow, Nauka, 2010, pp. 282–289. (in Russ.)

Burykin A. A. Kalendarnyy 12-letniy zhivotnyy tsikl v fol'klore kalmykov i drugikh narodov Azii [Folklore of Kalmyks and Other Asian Peoples: 12-Year Animal Calendar Cycle]. Mongolovedenie [Mongolian Studies (Elista)], 2020, vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 679–691. (in Russ.)

Daurenbekov T. (comp.). Kazakhskie narodnye skazki [Kazakh folk tales]. Alma-Ata: Zhalyn, 1979. 415 p. (in Russ.)

Enchinov E. V. Kalendar' i kalendarnaya obryadnost' [Calendar and calendar ritual]. In: Transformatsii v obshchestve i tsennosti traditsionnoy kul'tury v Respublike Altay (konets XX – nachalo XXI veka) [Transformations in society and the values of traditional culture in the Altai Republic (late 20th – early 21st century)]. Gorno-Altaisk, 2018, pp. 175–188. (in Russ.)

Garf A., Kuchiyak P. Tanzagan – otets altaytsev. Altayskie skazki [Tanzagan is the father of the Altaians. Altai fairy tales]. Moscow, Detskaya Literatura Publ., 1978, 286 p. (in Russ.)

Kaskabasov S. A., Kostyukhin E. A., Smirnova N. S., Tursunov E. D. Kazakhskie skazki o zhivotnykh (legendy, predaniya, bytovye rasskazy, skazki i basni) [Kazakh tales about animals (legends, traditions, everyday stories, fairy tales and fables)]. Alma-Ata, Nauka, 1979, 272 p. (in Russ.)

Katash S. S. Mify, legendy Gornogo Altaya [Myths, legends of the Altai Mountains]. Gorno-Altaysk, Altai Book Publ., 1978, 112 p.

Marsadolov L. S. Novaya semantika zoomorfnykh obrazov na sarkofage iz kurgana Bashadar-2 na Altae [New semantics of zoomorphic images on the sarcophagus from the Bashadar-2 mound in Altai]. Nations and Religions of Eurasia, 2020, no. 3 (24), pp. 127–150. (in Russ.)

Mongush B. B. Istoki dvenadtsatiletnego zhivotnogo kalendarya i ego svyaz' s prazdnovaniem Shagaa [Origins of 12-year animal calendar and its connection with Shagaa festival]. Novye issledovaniya Tuvy [The New Research of Tuva], 2015, no. 1, pp. 105–111. (in Russ.) URL: https://www.tuva.asia/journal/issue_25/7782-mongush-bb.html (accessed 29.05.2024).

Mukhambetova A. Tengrianskiy kalendar' (mushel') kak osnova kochevoy tsivilizatsii kazakhov [Tengrian calendar (mushel) as a basis of the Kazakh nomadic civilization]. In: Mezhdunarodnyy fond issledovaniya Tengri. 26 maya 2012 [International Tengri Research Foundation (official website). May 26, 2012]. (in Russ.) URL: http:// tengrifund.ru/tengrianskij-kalendar-mushel-kak-osnova-kochevoj-civilizacii-kazaxov.html (accessed 09.05.2024).

Neklyudov S. Yu. Lu [Lu]. In: Mify narodov mira [Myths of the peoples of the world]. Moscow, Sovetskaya entsiklopediya Publ., 1988, vol. 2, p. 73. (in Russ.)

Oinotkinova N. R., Shinzhin I. B., Yadanova K. V., Yamaeva E. E. (comp.). Neskazochnaya proza altaytsev [Non-fairy tale prose of the Altai people]. Novosibirsk, Nauka, 2011, 576 p.; ill. + CD. (Pamyatniki fol'klora narodov Sibiri i Dal'nego Vostoka [Monuments of folklore of the peoples of Siberia and the Far East]. Vol. 30) (in Alt. and Russ.)

Potanin G. N. Ocherki Severo-Zapadnoy Mongolii [Essays on Northwestern Mongolia. St. Petersburg, Printing house of V. Kirshbaum, 1883, iss. 4, 1026 p. (in Russ.)

Riftin B. L. (comp., preface, comments). Kitayskie narodnye skazki [Chinese folk tales]. Moscow, Khudozhestvennaya Literatura Publ., 1972, 334 p. (in Russ.)

Shinzhin I. B., Yamaeva E. E. (comp.). Altay kep-kuuchyndar [Altai legends]. Gorno-Altaysk, Ak Chechek, 1994. (in Alt.)

Skorodumova L. G. Skazki i mify Mongolii [Tales and Myths of Mongolia]. Ulaanbaatar, Monsudar, 2003, 141 p. (in Russ. and Mong.)

Yadanova K. V. Obraz Ulu / Uluu v altayskoy fol'klornoy traditsii [The image of Ulu / Uluu in the Altai folklore tradition]. In: Kulikov F. I. (ed.). Istoriya i kul'tura narodov Yugo-Zapadnoy Sibiri i sopredel'nykh regionov (Kazakhstan, Mongoliya, Kitay) [History and culture of the peoples of South-Western Siberia and adjacent regions (Kazakhstan, Mongolia, China)]. Materials of the International. scientific-practical conf. (April 20–23, 2014)]. Gorno-Altaisk, GASU Press, 2014, pp. 232–239. (in Russ.)

Zakharova I. V. Dvenadtsatiletniy zhivotnyy tsikl u narodov Tsentral'noy Azii [Twelve-year animal cycle among the peoples of Central Asia]. In: Proceedings of the Institute of History, Archeology and Ethnography of the Academy of Sciences of Kazakh SSR. Alma-Ata, 1960, vol. 8, pp. 32–65. (in Russ.)

© 2013-2023 Institute of Philology