Nizhnetoyemsky Selsoviet
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Nizhnetoyemsky Selsoviet (russian: Нижнетоемский сельсовет) is the low-level administrative division (a ''
selsoviet Selsoviet ( be, сельсавет, r=sieĺsaviet, tr. ''sieĺsaviet''; rus, сельсовет, p=ˈsʲelʲsɐˈvʲɛt, r=selsovet; uk, сільрада, silrada) is a shortened name for a rural council and for the area governed by such a cou ...
'') of Verkhnetoyemsky District of
Arkhangelsk Oblast Arkhangelsk Oblast (russian: Арха́нгельская о́бласть, ''Arkhangelskaya oblast'') is a federal subjects of Russia, federal subject of Russia (an oblast). It includes the Arctic Ocean, Arctic archipelagos of Franz Josef Land ...
, Russia. It was formed along with other fourteen selsoviets in April 1924 and occupied the territory of the former Nizhnetoyemskaya Volost of the former
Solvychegodsky Uyezd Solvychegodsky Uyezd () was one of the subdivisions of the Vologda Governorate of the Russian Empire. It was situated in the northern part of the governorate. Its administrative centre was Solvychegodsk. Demographics At the time of the Russian ...
of Northern Dvina Governorate. The administrative center of the selsoviet is located in the village of Burtsevskaya, at the confluence of the Nizhnyaya Toyma and the Northern Dvina. The volost had been attested through archive records since the 16th century, but its name, known since the 12th century, refers to ancient speakers of Uralic languages that were by then already extinct or assimilated. A station on the ancient trading route along the Northern Dvina River, in the end of the 17th century the volost became a hub of the
Old Believers Old Believers or Old Ritualists, ''starovery'' or ''staroobryadtsy'' are Eastern Orthodox Christians who maintain the liturgical and ritual practices of the Russian Orthodox Church as they were before the reforms of Patriarch Nikon of Moscow bet ...
flight to the north. The government suppressed the dissenters, the Russian Orthodox Church responded with continuous missionary activities, and in the 19th century the village was brought back into official Orthodoxy. The craftsmen of the volost developed a unique school of folk painting, notable for its use of black, red and
gilding Gilding is a decorative technique for applying a very thin coating of gold over solid surfaces such as metal (most common), wood, porcelain, or stone. A gilded object is also described as "gilt". Where metal is gilded, the metal below was tradi ...
over a white background. This art, limited to household artifacts like distaff boards and murals over log houses and Russian stoves, remained unknown to historians and collectors until Olga Kruglova rediscovered it in 1959.


Geography

A community in this area developed at the
confluence In geography, a confluence (also: ''conflux'') occurs where two or more flowing bodies of water join to form a single channel. A confluence can occur in several configurations: at the point where a tributary joins a larger river (main stem); o ...
of the Nizhnyaya Toyma and the Northern Dvina Rivers. The Nizhnyaya Toyma River freezes in November, thaws in late April or May, and allows commercial timber rafting.''Nizhnyaya Toyma River'' entry
in Russian in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia.
Its valley, with an area of 1740 square kilometers, is continuously covered with small hills and ridges. These terminal moraine ridges mark the southernmost extreme of the prehistoric glacier expansion. Yury Arbat, an ethnographer who studied the folk art of Arkhangelsk outback in the 1960s, described the place:
Nizhnyaya Toyma is not a village ... but a group of villages under a common title. An observer standing by the Nizhnyaya Toyma River, looking away from the Northern Dvina, sees a coastal village called ''Strelka'' (Spit) on a cape between two rivers. Further right is a boarding school and a diner, and the ''Krasnaya Gora'' (Red Hill) village behind them. Then there are ''Kholm'' (Hill) and ''Zagorye'' (Behind the Hill). Up on the crest are ''Navolotskaya'' and ''Vizhnitsa'', the administrative center, behind it. The ''Gorodishche'' on the opposite side of Nizhnyaya Toyma River, is quite likely an ancient fort ... Eleven such villages, in total, compose Nizhnyaya Toyma.
At least some of these villages, according to Arbat, sported traditional large, spacious Pomor type log houses with carved balconies and traditional exterior murals in local style.


History


Etymology

The toponym ''Toyma'' is common to all northern Russian territories, from Toyma in
Karelia Karelia ( Karelian and fi, Karjala, ; rus, Каре́лия, links=y, r=Karélija, p=kɐˈrʲelʲɪjə, historically ''Korjela''; sv, Karelen), the land of the Karelian people, is an area in Northern Europe of historical significance for ...
to
Toyma River The Toyma (russian: Тойма; tt-Cyrl, Туйма, ''Tuyma'') is a river in Udmurtia and Tatarstan, Russian Federation, a right-bank tributary of the Kama. It is long, of which are in Tatarstan, and its drainage basin covers .
in the Republic of Tatarstan. It relates to an extinct Finnic ethnonym also known to the Novgorodians since (at least) the beginning of the 12th century. Janet Martin considered Toima (sic) the southern extreme of Novgorodian control over the Dvina basin in this period. The first mention of Toyma, paying tribute to Novgorodians, is dated 1137 but there is no evidence that the word ''Toyma'' relates to the present-day area or its neighbor,
Verkhnetoyemsky Selsoviet Verkhnetoyemsky District (russian: Верхнето́емский райо́н) is an administrative district ( raion), one of the twenty-one in Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russia.Law #65-5-OZ Municipally, it is incorporated as Verkhnetoyemsky Municipal ...
. The 1219 chronicle mentions
ethnonym An ethnonym () is a name applied to a given ethnic group. Ethnonyms can be divided into two categories: exonyms (whose name of the ethnic group has been created by another group of people) and autonyms, or endonyms (whose name is created and used ...
''toymokary'' (russian: ... И поиде тои зимö Семьюнъ Öминъ въ 4 стöх на Тоимокары ...). The 1237 '' Tale of the Death of the Russian Land'' mentions "Toyma
pagan Paganism (from classical Latin ''pāgānus'' "rural", "rustic", later "civilian") is a term first used in the fourth century by early Christians for people in the Roman Empire who practiced polytheism, or ethnic religions other than Judaism. ...
s" living between "the Karelians" and Veliky Ustyug (russian: ...от корöлы до Оустьюга, гдö тамо бяхоу тоимици погании...), a location roughly aligned with the Northern Dvina basin. Russian linguists argue whether the
ethnonym An ethnonym () is a name applied to a given ethnic group. Ethnonyms can be divided into two categories: exonyms (whose name of the ethnic group has been created by another group of people) and autonyms, or endonyms (whose name is created and used ...
Toyma relates to a specific tribe, a tribal group, a language or a whole
continuum Continuum may refer to: * Continuum (measurement), theories or models that explain gradual transitions from one condition to another without abrupt changes Mathematics * Continuum (set theory), the real line or the corresponding cardinal number ...
of Finno-Ugric languages. Evgeny Chelimsky applied ethnonym ''Toyma'' to the wide area in the southern part of Northern Dvina basin and wrote that it is equivalent to the ''Northern Finns'' in Aleksandr Matveyev's classification. Matveyev objected, writing that the Northern Finnish continuum was considerably wider than Toyma's, and that the hypothetical Toyma people occupied only a minor portion of it. He preferred to equate the Toyma with a particular tribe that lived in Nizhnaya Toyma area, and noted that it also could belong to Permic languages. At any rate, the Toymas disappeared before the 17th century, when their existence could be recorded in Muscovite sources, either through
russification Russification (russian: русификация, rusifikatsiya), or Russianization, is a form of cultural assimilation in which non-Russians, whether involuntarily or voluntarily, give up their culture and language in favor of the Russian cultur ...
or through earlier
assimilation Assimilation may refer to: Culture *Cultural assimilation, the process whereby a minority group gradually adapts to the customs and attitudes of the prevailing culture and customs **Language shift, also known as language assimilation, the progre ...
by other Finnic tribes.


Trade route

The west-east trade route along the Northern Dvina from Scandinavia and Novgorod to Bjarmaland has been known since the early Middle Ages but then the name of Toyma disappeared from Russian records until 1552, when Ivan IV of Moscow subordinated Toyma lands to the chief of Vaginsky Uyezd. The travel along the Northern Dvina has been extensively documented by the 1663 Dutch embassy to Muscovy headed by Koenraad van Klenk. The complete travel from the Netherlands to Moscow via Nordcap and Arkhangelsk took 175 days (return route: 125 days). The upstream travel from Arkhangelsk to Nizhnyaya Toyma took 14 days, from Nizhnyaya Toyma to Veliky Ustyug 11 days (downstream: 5 and 5 days).


Raskol

According to the 1676–1681 population audit, Nizhnetoymenskaya Volost consisted of 34 villages with only 171 households (including 33 abandoned houses).History of Verkhaya Toyma land
(in Russian)
Local records attested significant decrease in population: some men were drafted into the troops, others left to seek fortune in Siberia, or simply disappeared. At the same time the Northern Dvina River became an escape route for the
Old Believers Old Believers or Old Ritualists, ''starovery'' or ''staroobryadtsy'' are Eastern Orthodox Christians who maintain the liturgical and ritual practices of the Russian Orthodox Church as they were before the reforms of Patriarch Nikon of Moscow bet ...
, prosecuted by the government. The first record of the dissidents settling in Permogorye is dated 1686.Shchipin 2008, chapter 1 In March 1690, 212 dissidents from different volosts burned themselves in
Cherevkovo Cherevkovo (russian: Черевково) is the name of several rural localities in Russia: * Cherevkovo, Arkhangelsk Oblast, a '' selo'' in Cherevkovsky Selsoviet of Krasnoborsky District of Arkhangelsk Oblast * Cherevkovo, Pskov Oblast, a villag ...
in protest against a punitive expedition searching the area. Self-immolations continued through the 18th century, police raids—until 1905. Cherevkovo, a village close to the Nizhnyaya Toyma, became a major Old Believers shrine and held its faith until the 1930s. The Nizhnyaya Toyma River hosted settlements of the ''Aaronovtsy'', a pro-marriage branch of the '' Filippovtsy'' sect established in the beginning of the 19th century. Two other denominations active in the region were the '' Fedoseevtsy'' and the '' Danilovtsy''.Shchipin 2008, chapter 2. The official church considered Nizhnyaya Toyma and Cherevkovo areas especially dangerous (as opposed to the "safe"
Verkhnyaya Uftyuga Verkhnyaya Uftyuga (russian: Верхняя Уфтюга) is a rural locality (a village) and the administrative center of Verkhneuftyugskoye Rural Settlement of Krasnoborsky District, Arkhangelsk Oblast Arkhangelsk Oblast (russian: Арха́ ...
nearby) and maintained active
missionaries A missionary is a member of a religious group which is sent into an area in order to promote its faith or provide services to people, such as education, literacy, social justice, health care, and economic development.Thomas Hale 'On Being a Mi ...
in the area until the October Revolution; the volost even hosted missionary conventions.Alekseyeva 2000 The grand mainstream Church of Theotokos Orans, now dilapidated after decades of neglect, was erected in 1818. The volost, once completely "dissident", firmly returned into communion with the official church in the second half of the 19th century; isolated communities of Old Believers survived in nearby forests into the 20th century.


Civil War

In 1919, the volost, as part of the whole upper Northern Dvina, became the site of a final battle between the British occupation forces and the Bolshevik troops. In the beginning of the 1919 campaign the area was used by the air wing of the Red North Dvina flotilla. Wheeled planes were stored in canvas tents on the coast, seaplanes on barges equipped with slipway ramps (leaky floats forced the Reds to pull their seaplanes out of water after each flight).Shirokorad 2006
part IV chapter 2
/ref> In May–June the Red airplanes relocated to Puchuga; on June 17 the British airplanes attacked the Puchuga airfield and destroyed 11 Red airplanes on the ground. Naval action also concentrated around Puchuga and gradually moved upstream. The British employed river monitors ( M27, M31, M33, Humber and ''Saikala''), fast small boats and Fairey-IIIB seaplanes, one of which was shot down on July 14; local peasants caught the crew and gave them to the Reds. The Bolsheviks operated makeshift gunboats carrying guns up to 130-mm
caliber In guns, particularly firearms, caliber (or calibre; sometimes abbreviated as "cal") is the specified nominal internal diameter of the gun barrel Gauge (firearms) , bore – regardless of how or where the bore is measured and whether the f ...
(the gunboats equipped in
Petrograd Saint Petersburg ( rus, links=no, Санкт-Петербург, a=Ru-Sankt Peterburg Leningrad Petrograd Piter.ogg, r=Sankt-Peterburg, p=ˈsankt pʲɪtʲɪrˈburk), formerly known as Petrograd (1914–1924) and later Leningrad (1924–1991), i ...
with 203-mm guns were not yet ready for action). They harassed their enemy with anchored and free-floating naval mines but the British easily recovered these mines and reused them against the Reds. On August 10, the British routed the Bolshevik ground forces near Borok (Boretskaya); the remaining Bolsheviks broke through the woods to the villages near the Nizhnyaya Toyma. Their flotilla was temporarily split into two screening units guarding the villages of Puchuga and Sludka; ground forces marched forward to intercept the British. On the night of August 13–14, the British secretly moved their ground artillery in the rear of the Bolshevik gunboats and shelled them down at close distance; Bolshevik infantry, again, retreated to the Nizhnyaya Toyma. They were not aware that the British action was merely a diversion covering their general evacuation from Northern Russia.Shirokorad 2006
part IV chapter 3
/ref> The Bolshevik flotilla on the Northern Dvina existed until May 1920; minesweeping of the river was not completed until 1921.


Painting school


Discovery

The volost was a center of traditional wood painting crafts discovered only in 1959 by ethnographers from the Zagorsk Museum.Arbat 1968, chapter 1 The Zagorsk Expedition, led by Olga Kruglova, looked for the survivors of the Permogorye tradition of painting in black and red colours over a yellow background. Their favorite motifs were the Sirin Bird and the black horses, symbols of a wealthy household. Historians found plenty of these artifacts in and around Permogorye and Mokraya Yedoma (both names refer to clusters of villages rather than standalone communities), and as they traveled some 150 kilometers downstream the Northern Dvina River, to the Nizhnyaya Toyma, they discovered a yet unknown and completely different type of painting.


Motifs and colours

Toyma artists employed cinnabar painting over either white or
gilded Gilding is a decorative technique for applying a very thin coating of gold over solid surfaces such as metal (most common), wood, porcelain, or stone. A gilded object is also described as "gilt". Where metal is gilded, the metal below was tradi ...
background, and their signature motif was a festive marriage ride hauled by two horses.Arbat 1968, chapter 2 Two notable families of painters, the Tretyakovs and the Menshikovs, employed black, red, green, rarely blue and pink paint over a white background; one horse in their marriage rides was uniformly gilded, another was red or green with silver trim. These families produced folk artists and Orthodox icon painters, and the folk line of their art reused the motifs and layout found in icons. They Leonid Latynin also noted the tree motif, common to all Northern Russian folk art. Similar motifs were practiced in nearby
Borok Borok (russian: Борок) is the name of several rural localities in Russia. Altai Krai As of 2010, one rural locality in Altai Krai bears this name: * Borok, Altai Krai, a settlement in Borkovsky Selsoviet of Pospelikhinsky District Arkha ...
and Puchuga. Victor Vasilenko classified Nizhaya Toyma painting under '' Shenkursk art'' heading (after the nearby town of Shenkursk) although, according to Yury Arbat, a ''Toyma-Borok art'' would be more descriptive. The latter name, however, is ambiguous because the village of Toyma in Komi Republic had its own distinct painting tradition based on the Mezen school and unrelated to Nizhnaya Toyma.Utkina 2003. A typical spinning distaff from Toyma is divided vertically into three parts. The lower third features the trademark marriage ride, usually with only one human figure—the bridegroom. The middle third is filled with a complex floral ornament, sometimes with mythical birds. The upper and the most standardized part of the board is split horizontally into three "windows". Two side windows are adorned with images of pot flowers, in between them was a central tree of life motif. Yury Arbat linked strict geometric division of the Toyma board to the Orthodox
iconostasis In Eastern Christianity, an iconostasis ( gr, εἰκονοστάσιον) is a wall of icons and religious paintings, separating the nave from the sanctuary in a Church (building), church. ''Iconostasis'' also refers to a portable icon stand t ...
design.


Decline

By the 1960s, the craftsmen of the selsoviet still remembered their best painters of the 19th century (Ivan Tretyakov the elder, 1837–1922) and maintained their traditions. The oldest painter witnessed by Arbat, a 95-year-old spinster from
Borok Borok (russian: Борок) is the name of several rural localities in Russia. Altai Krai As of 2010, one rural locality in Altai Krai bears this name: * Borok, Altai Krai, a settlement in Borkovsky Selsoviet of Pospelikhinsky District Arkha ...
, was still painting spinning distaffs, but most active craftsmen had already switched to interior murals over Russian stoves and into painting handmade wallpaper. This placed them at disadvantage to artists from
Khokhloma Khokhloma (also Hohloma, russian: хохлома; ) or Khokhloma painting (, ''Khokhlomskaya rospis'') is the name of a Russian wood painting handicraft style and national ornament, known for its curved and vivid mostly flower, berry and leaf p ...
or Palekh who produced small, portable and marketable artifacts: the art of Toyma remained locked in peasant houses until they crumbled or burnt down, unknown even to collectors from Arkhangelsk.


References


Notes


Sources

*O. V. Alekseyeva (2000).
Mastera uftyugskoy rospisi
' (Мастера уфтюгской росписи). Proceedings of the III Ryabinin memorial conference (1999), Petrozavodsk. * Yury Arbat (in Russian) (1968). ''Puteshestvie za krasotoy'' (Путешествие за красотой).
Kultura ''Kultura'' (, ''Culture'')—sometimes referred to as ''Kultura Paryska'' ("Paris-based Culture")—was a leading Polish-émigré literary-political magazine, published from 1947 to 2000 by ''Instytut Literacki'' (the Literary Institute), in ...
, Moscow
Chapter 1
* Evgeny Helimski (2006).
Severno-zapadnaya gruppa finno-ugorskih yazykov
' (Северно-западная группа финно-угорских языков). ''Voprosy Onomastiki'', No 3, 2006. pp. 38–51. *Demidov, Houmark-Nielsen, Kjaer, Larsen, Lysa, Funder, Lunkka and Saarnisto (2004)
Late Pleistocene stratigraphy and sedimentary environment of the Arkhangelsk area, northwest Russia
in: ''Quaternary glaciations: extent and chronology, Volume 1'' (2004). Elsevier. , . *Leonid Latynin (in Russian) (2006).

(Основные сюжеты русского народного искусства). Glas, Moscow. . * Janet Martin (2004)
Treasure of the Land of Darkness: The Fur Trade and Its Significance for Medieval Russia
Cambridge University Press. , . * Aleksandr Matveyev (in Russian) (2007).
K probleme klassifikatsii yazukov substratnoy toponimii russkogo severa
' (К вопросу классификации языков субстратной топонимии Русского Севера. ''Voprosy Onomastiki'', No 4, 2007. pp. 14–27. *V. I. Shchipin (in Russian) (2008). ''Staroobryadchestvo v verkhnem techenii Severnoy Dviny'' (Cтарообрядчество в верхнем течении Северной Двины)



* Aleksandr Shirokorad (in Russian) (2006).
Velikaya Rechnaya Voyna
' (Великая речная война). Veche, Moscow. {{ISBN, 5-9533-1465-5. *I. M. Utkina (in Russian) (2003).

(Коллекция прялок из собрания музея республики Коми). Proceedings of the IV Ruabinin memorial conference (2003), Petrozavodsk.


External links


Schools of Northern Russian folk painting (in Russian)






Arkhangelsk Oblast Russian art Old Believer communities in Russia