The Filmans : Nomads at a Dead End

A group of Norwegian Sami moved to live on the Kola peninsulaa fter the border treaty of 1826 between Norway and Russia. For some, the parisho f Inari in Finland served as an interim point. They were called the Filmans by the Russians. Their appearance, language and material culture differed from th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Leinonen, Marja
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Department of General Lingustics, University of Helsinki, Finland 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-43268
Description
Summary:A group of Norwegian Sami moved to live on the Kola peninsulaa fter the border treaty of 1826 between Norway and Russia. For some, the parisho f Inari in Finland served as an interim point. They were called the Filmans by the Russians. Their appearance, language and material culture differed from the Russian East Sami, and a few descriptions appeared in the Russian press. During the nineteenth century, the Finnish clergy kept records of the reindeer herders and the Sea Sami who fished on the Murman coast along with the Finnish and Norwegian colonists. In Russia, the exonym Fil’man (< Finmark) still appeared in the first Soviet census in 1926. The group seems to have vanished in the purges and evacuations in the 1930s and 1940. On the Finnish side, a few nomads had come over when the Petsamo area became part of Finland. Apparently they assimilated to the Sami or Finns. The situation in Norway remains unclear; several Sami families are known to have stayed in Kola, although some returned to Norway. Now there is no trace of the Filmans, except in the memories of the oldest living Skolt Sami generation.