Kainuu Sámi Explained

Kainuu Sámi
States:Finland
Extinct:by 1800s[1]
Familycolor:Uralic
Fam2:Sámi
Fam3:Eastern Sámi
Fam4:Mainland
Iso3:none
Glotto:kain1277
Glottorefname:Kainuu Saami
Region:Kainuu
Ethnicity:Forest Sámi

Kainuu Sámi is an extinct Sámi language that was once spoken in Kainuu. It became extinct in the 18th century

In his review of Jaakko Anhava's book Maailman kielet ja kielikunnat ("Languages and language groups of the world", 1998), researcher of Finno-Ugric languages Tapani Salminen stated that the idea of the existence of a Kainuu Sámi language that is separate from Kemi Sámi is not well reasoned.[2]

The original inhabitants of Kainuu were Sámi hunter-fishers. In the 17th century, the Governor General of Finland Per Brahe fostered the population growth of Kainuu by giving a ten-year tax exemption to settlers. It was considered necessary at the time by Finnish authorities to populate Kainuu with Finnish farmers because control over the area was threatened from the east by Russians. Those who settled in Kainuu were mainly from Savonia.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Irja Seurujärvi-Kar. 2011. "We Took Our Language Back" – The Formation of a Sámi Identity within the Sámi Movement and the Role of the Sámi Language from the 1960s until 2008. 39. ...Kainuu Sámi (used until 16th–18th century in the area of the Forest Sámi people in central Finland and in the Republic of Karelia).. 1 October 2024.
  2. Salminen, Tapani (2000). Uusi suomenkielinen kokonaisesitys maailman kielistä. Virittäjä, No. 1. Page 154. PDF. Retrieved 2022-2-9.