Jassic people

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The Jassic people or Jász (from Iranic: Iyasi<Asi > Os> Ossetian) are an ethnic group of Hungarians which mostly live in the Jász-Nagykun-Szolnok county of the Republic of Hungary. They are of Ossetic origin and originally spoke the Jassic dialect of the Ossetic language. Today, they speak Hungarian and consider themselves to be ethnic Hungarians, but a sense of the "Jassic identity" is also preserved among them.

Jazygia (Jászság) within modern Hungary
Jazygia (Jászság) within modern Hungary
The main church in the center of Jászberény
The main church in the center of Jászberény
Jazygia (in Maroon) of the Eighteenth Century within the Kingdom of Hungary
Jazygia (in Maroon) of the Eighteenth Century within the Kingdom of Hungary

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[edit] Geography

The Jassic people live in the region known as "Jászság" (Jazygia), which comprise the north-western part of the Jász-Nagykun-Szolnok county. Their cultural and political center is the town of Jászberény.

[edit] History

The Jász (Jassic) people were a nomadic tribe which settled in the Kingdom of Hungary during the Thirteenth Century. Their name is almost certainly related to that of the Iazyges, one of the Sarmatian Alanic tribes which, along with the Roxolani, reached the borders of Dacia during the late First Century BC. Residual elements of these tribes, ancestors of the Jász, remained behind in the central North Caucasus, mingling with Caucasian peoples to form the present-day Ossetes.

The Jász came to Hungary, together with the Cumanians from the East, including Moldavia (see Jaszvasar/Iasi), chased by the Mongol-Tatars. They were admitted by the Hungarian king, Béla IV Árpád, hoping that the Jassics would assist in resisting a Mongol-Tatar invasion. Shortly after their entry, the relationship worsened dramatically between the Hungarian nobility and the Cumanian-Jassic tribes, which then abandoned the country. After the end of the Mongol-Tatar occupation they returned and settled in the central part of the Hungarian Plain.

Initially, their main occupation was animal husbandry. During the next two centuries they were fully assimilated into the Hungarian population, their language largely disappeared, but they preserved their "Jassic" identity and their regional autonomy was preserved up until the year 1876. Over a dozen settlements in Central Hungary (eg. Jászberény, Jászárokszállás, Jászfényszaru,Jaszalsoszentgyorgy) still hold their name.

[edit] Language

The only literary record of the Jász language was found in the 1950s in the Hungarian National Széchényi Library. The language was reconstructed with the help of various Ossetian analogies.

[edit] See also

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