The Meshchera (, Meshchyora) were a Finno-Ugric tribe which lived in the territory between the Oka River and the Klyazma river. It was a land of forests, bogs and lakes. The area is still called the Meshchera Lowlands.
The name may be related to mesh (meaning "bee" in the Mordvinian Moksha language), erzya (the self-designation of the Mordvinians speaking the Erzya language) and Eritsia (meaning "inhabitant" or "local" in the same language). Consequently, the name may mean "beekeepers", a fitting name considering the traditional importance of beekeeping in the area. Other scholars think the name derives from the ancient ancestor of the Russian people mentioned by the bible and Flavius Josephus: Meshech.
Ivan II, prince of Moscow, wrote in his will, 1358, about the village Meshcherka, which he had bought from the native Meshcherian chieftain Alexander Ukovich. The village appears to have been converted to the Christian Orthodox faith and to have been a vassal of Muscovy.
Several documents mention the Meshchera concerning the Kazan campaign by Ivan the Terrible in the 16th century. These accounts concern a state of Meshchera (known under a tentative name of Temnikov Meshchera, after its central town of Temnikov) which had been assimilated by the Mordvins and the Tatars.
Prince A. M. Kurbsky wrote that the Mordvin language was spoken in the lands of the Meshchera.
The graves of women have yielded objects typical of the Volga Finns, of the 4th-7th centuries, consisting of rings, jingling pendants, buckles and torcs. A specific feature was round breast plates with a characteristic ornamentation.
Some of the graves contained well-preserved copper oxides of the decorations with long black hair locked into small bells into which were woven pendants.
It appears from the remains that Slavic tribes arrived into Meshcheran territories in the period 10th-12th centuries.
In the marshy north, they appear to have stayed and to have been converted into the Orthodox faith. The Slavs were not as interested in the wetlands and allowed the Meshchera to stay for some time. The Meshchera nobility appears to have been converted and assimilated by the 13th century, but the common Meshchera huntsman and fisherman may have kept elements of their language and beliefs for a longer period. In the 16th century, the St Nicholas monastery was founded in Radovitsky in order to convert the remaining Meshchera pagans. It is possible that they still spoke their old language.
The princely family Meschersky in Russia derives its nobility from having originally been native rulers of some of these Finnic tribes.
Ancient peoples | Finnic peoples | Archaeological cultures | European archaeology | History of Russia | Ethnic groups in Russia | Indigenous peoples of Europe
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"Meshchera".
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