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{{Infobox ethnic group
{{Infobox ethnic group
| group            = Saukanians
| group            = Saukanians
| native_name      = Saukani
| native_name      = Tokaura
| native_name_lang =  
| native_name_lang =  
| image            =  
| image            =  
Line 7: Line 7:
| image_alt        =  
| image_alt        =  
| image_upright    =  
| image_upright    =  
| total            = 27,000,000
| total            =  
| total_year      = 2020
| total_year      =  
| total_source    =  
| total_source    =  
| total_ref        =  
| total_ref        =  
| genealogy        =  
| genealogy        =  
| regions          =  
| regions          =  
| languages        = Saukanian
| languages        = Saukanian
| religions        = Predominantly Saukanian polytheism <br> Christian and Muslim minorities
| religions        = Predominantly Saukanian polytheism <br> Sizeable Buddhist minority <br> Smaller Christian and Muslim minorities
| related_groups  =  
| related_groups  =  
| footnotes        =  
| footnotes        =  
}}
}}


The '''Saukanians''' or '''Saukana''' are a diverse people native to [[Saukania]] and small, ancient communities in neighbouring countries. They are among the oldest continuously identified peoples in the world, with their language and identity going back to the [[wikipedia:Bronze_Age|Bronze Age]]. The Saukanians comprise a number of distinct and independent peoples, which nevertheless conceive of and agree upon their shared identity as Saukanians owing to their common use of the Saukanian languages, majority adherence of their traditional religion, and practice of the same (though regionally varied) customs and laws.
The '''Saukanians''', also known as the '''Tokaurans''', are a broad ethnocultural complex native to the country of [[Saukania]].
 
Originating from a synthesis of nomadic Tokauran pastoralists with indigenous sedentary agriculturalists of the [[Sauka Valley Civilization]], the Saukanians emerge as a distinct culture between 800-500 BC. The aridity of Saukania combined with its formidable physical geography led to significant differences among Saukanian populations, and the emergence of distinct ethnic identities. Of these, the ancient civilization of [[Saukiana]], which derives its name from the [[Sauka River]], is the source of the modern exonym "Saukanian". The Saukanians continue to identify themselves and one another as Tokauran, which has a primarily ethnolinguistic and ethnocultural as opposed to a political meaning. As a result, it is disputed as to whether the Saukanians constitute a "nation", an "ethnic group", or a "panethnicity". Tokauran identitarianism became stronger in the 19th and 20th centuries, coinciding with the founding of the Saukanian Alliance.
 
Today, Saukanians are largely limited to the territory of the Alliance, which is typically synonymous with the toponym "Saukania" as a geographical area. The [[Saukanian diaspora]] is much smaller than the Saukanian population of the Alliance, which is predominantly inhabited by those who identify as Tokauran. Tokauran peoples that once lived to their potential [[wikipedia:Linguistic_homeland|''Urheimat'']] west and south of the modern Alliance have long since been assimilated into neighbouring populations.


Their history goes back to the Bronze Age, when [[wikipedia:Nomad|nomadic]] and [[wikipedia:Pastoralism|pastoralist]] invaders from beyond the northern deserts occupied the fertile plains by the [[Laxad river]] and the foothills of the [[Ghuran Mountains]], founding [[wikipedia:City-state|city-states]] noted for their fierce independence and warlike nature. Having settled, Saukania has remained populated and ruled by Saukanians for the rest of its history, with brief interruptions of foreign rule or influence. They remain a people characterized by their stubbornness and hesitancy to co-operate. United for the first time in the 19th century into their modern Confederation, their cultural influence of independence and autonomy prevails, with the constituent political entities and communities of the Confederation exercising a great deal of authority.
Regional Saukanian identity is complex. Saukiana, alongside [[Apriana]] and [[Kriana]], continue to describe geographic subdivisions of Saukania and function as demonyms for their inhabitants. However, the traditional organisation of most Saukanians into politically independent city-states is a more relevant identity for Saukanian individuals, who are more likely to define themselves as Kulean, Khodanian, or Tushanian, than as an Aprianian or even a Saukanian or Tokauran. Among the population of Tokauran nomads, identity is more predominantly tribal and clan-based, a trait shared with a number of smaller Tokauran ethnic populations living in the isolated valleys of [[Ghuran Mountains]]. The diversity of economic lifestyles and methods of identification among the Saukanians have further complicated study of their people as a group.


They are easily the largest ethnic group when taken collectively, though none of the Saukanian peoples holds an outright majority. By many Saukanologists and other observers, the Saukanians are traditionally divided into a number of relatively internally homogeneous cultural groups: Lower Laxadites, Central Laxadites, Upper Laxadites, Lower Rhonaites, Upper Rhonaites, Southern and Northern Ghuranian Lowlanders, Southern and Northern Ghuranian Highlanders, Southern Nomads, Central Nomads, and Northern Nomads. While all these categories share many things in common, they are in various ways different from each other. The categories have been criticised as at once overly simplistic and complicated, as internal variety from city-state to city-state or even village to village is well noted.
The Saukanians speak a group of closely related languages called the [[Saukanian languages]]. Their mutual intelligibility lies somewhere along an areal spectrum, in that distinct dialects close to one another will be more intelligible to each other than to another pair of dialects further away. Regarding their own languages as Tokaura, they merely differentiate regional variations as branches of the same tree, and so speaking a Saukanian language, even one difficult for another Saukanian to understand, remains a core marker of Saukanian identity. In general, following the geography of Saukania, dialects can be classified at both a city-state level and a wider regional level. Religion has also historically played a significant role in Tokauran identity. To be Tokaura was to honour the same gods, performing the same rites, and following the same customs. This is a source of tension for modern Saukanians, most of whom follow their traditional religion, but with significant religious minorities of Buddhists, Christians, and Muslims. Some classify followers of these foreign religions as fundamentally non-Tokauran ''(aratokaura)'', regardless of their lineage or language.


The Saukanians are an [[wikipedia:Agrarian_society|agrarian]] society, practicing agriculture and pastoralism in many traditional ways, while the urban centres are the core of industry. About half of the total population is urbanized and slowly growing. They are quite a young population, with high though declining fertility rates.
Despite all regional variations and identities, there are some common cultural threads uniting the Saukanian city-states and peoples. A high regard for personal and familial honour permeates their society, with adherence to an informal code that mandates hospitality, generosity, courage, and retaliation. Blood feuds are a common phenomenon especially in mountainous regions or among nomadic communities. The cultural emphasis on family manifests as a patriarchal patron-client system with strict gender norms and a culture of vertical reciprocity, similar to a feudal system, where noble families and clans dominate politically with the support of a network of 'vassals' and clients. Many holidays and festivals are common to the majority of Saukanians, and cultural facets such as cuisine and fashion are broadly similar with regional deviations and innovations.


==Name==
==Name==
The name "Tokaura" is an ancient self-designation of the Saukanian peoples. Its etymology has no consensus, but leading theories suggest either "those who speak the same language" (supported by the identity's continued linguistic relevance) or "bright".
After settling in modern Saukania, several distinct Tokauran civilizations emerged. One of these was concentrated along the [[Sauka River]], and is known to modern historians as [[Saukiana]]. This Saukiana is the origin of the name Saukania and the demonym Saukanian. While they are thus of Saukanian linguistic origin, they are not themselves Saukanian designations. Their use commenced from the latter half of the 2nd millennium, likely due to the disproportionate cultural influence and political power held by states in Saukiana, gradually becoming a synecdoche for the wider region of Tokauran-speakers, and finally a synonym.


==History==
==History==


===Origins and early history===
===Origins and early history===
Proto-Saukanians first arrived in Saukania c. 3300 BC, and in a series of migratory waves lasting a millennium, dominated or replaced the already present Bronze Age population. These invasions saw the settlement of Saukanian-speaking peoples along the Laxad river, which had supported [[wikipedia:Agriculture|agricultural]] communities for thousands of years, as well as further south along the coast of the [[Argan Sea]] and southwest in the foothills and highlands of the Ghuran Mountains. Many Saukanians embraced farming, or settled as rulers over an indigenous agricultural population that was subsequently 'Saukanized'. Others retained their nomadic-pastoral traditions, living in and around the desert and arid grasslands less suitable for cultivation to graze their cattle, sheep, and goats. Properly speaking, the Saukanian ethnogenesis is considered to be the fusion of the Proto-Saukanian-speaking pastoralists and the indigenous agricultural inhabitants.
The Saukanians have their origins in the [[Old Tokauran]]-speaking [[wikipedia:Nomadic_pastoralism|semi-nomadic pastoralists]] who are believed to have dwelt west of and within the [[Ghuran Mountains]] prior to 800 BC. Based on evidence from later Saukanian states and civilizations, it has been possible to reconstruct an image of this Old Tokauran society. They appear to have been socially stratified, with an established ruling class of warriors, a priestly class, and then the free men and women who performed a myriad of economic roles. The Tokauran tribes were led by hereditary chiefs or kings, though it is possible some were ruled by leaders elected from within the martial caste. Councils of respected nobles served as advisors and retainers to the chief, while an assembly of the free people appears to have been convened on an irregular basis to decide matters of great importance. These institutions are indirectly attested through later, more developed forms of monarchy, republicanism, and civic participation in later periods, which bear a high degree of similarity to one another.
 
Though their separation across a significant distance and different modes of economy produced local variety, the [[Lukenean civilization]] developed along the Laxad river from source to mouth from c. 1750 BC. Named for the site of [[Luken]], near the village of the same name in the [[Central Laxad Region]], this civilization was an advanced and sophisticated material culture leaving a large volume of pottery, art, and other remains across many sites. Though not a politically united civilization, already divided into rival [[wikipedia:City-state|city-states]] and townships, there was a strong unity in artistic expression and cultural outlook. Simultaneous cultures thrived in the Southern Ghuran Mountains, though these were less sophisticated than those cities in the North, which were part of or significantly influenced by the Laxadite Lukenean culture.


The collapse of this culture remains very much a mystery, but may have involved wars against the nomadic Saukanians from the [[Hendelar Desert]] and other harsh regions. Conflict between settled and nomadic Saukanians would remain a feature of their history right up to the modern period.
By the 9th century BC, the [[Sauka Valley Civilization]] (SVC) was in decline, after over a millennium of prosperity. The cause of decline for this enigmatic civilization are as mysterious as their rise, though an increasingly arid environment is thought to have played a role, harming their agricultural-focused economy. Within the same century commences the earliest archaeological evidence for Tokauran migration into present-day Saukania. This [[Black Band Ware culture]] (BBW) continued for several centuries, diversifying as it expanded outward. The Tokauran migration is thought to have comprised of several waves, with later movements driving the initial waves further out. Whether this movement constitutes an "invasion" of the SVC, or was responsible for its end, is controversial. Some scholars hypothesise that early, smaller waves of Tokaurans were largely assimilated into the SVC, with their elites potentially employed as mercenaries or auxiliaries, and their pastoralist economy used to supplement the declining wealth potential of the native farming economy. This assimilation may be the basis for SVC cultural influence in later Saukanian civilizations, with the secondary waves of Tokaurans assimilating their culturally modified kin back into their own cultural and social spheres.


The Bronze Age Saukanians proved themselves a militaristic, warlike people. Weaponry is abundant in Lukenean and pre-Lukenean sites, with axes, swords, daggers, spearheads, composite bows, and war chariots all having been unearthed. From their earliest days they had formed themselves into stratified social orders, with city-states dominated by a hereditary warrior elite under a king or city-lord, supported by his companion class. Evidence of a middle class of artisans, landowners, and levy soldiers emerges in this period as well, though this would take greater shape in the subsequent ages, as the infrequent Lukenean inscriptions largely differentiate between a binary of the warrior elite and everyone else. It can be inferred that the farming population may have been called to arms for raiding expeditions or larger war efforts at certain times of the year to seize control of satellite towns and villages, obtain plunder, or force a rival state into some system of vassalage.
Other scholars argue for a conquest theory, arguing that the decline in large urban areas (both in quantity and in actual geographical size) was the consequence of warfare, with Tokauran invaders razing large settlements and forcing a dispersal of the SVC population to smaller, more widely dispersed settlements. These peoples then supposedly became sedentary vassals to the Tokaurans, who slowly assimilated the SVC population through their complex patron-client network and dissemination of their religion and cultural practises.


[[wikipedia:Razzia_(military)|Raiding]] and [[wikipedia:River_pirate|river piracy]] were well-established customs at this time. Piracy along the Laxad and Rhona rivers is mentioned repeatedly in the limited available inscriptions, particularly from [[Acha]] and [[Dathan]]. Land-based [[wikipedia:Banditry|banditry]] and raiding could be undertaken by settled populations either in the Laxadite plains or in the Ghuran Mountains, or by the nomads migrating with their herds from pasture to pasture. Settled and nomadic populations both frequently came into contact with neighbouring populations and regions, sometimes as traders or migrants, but just as often if not more as hostile aggressors.
Whatever the case, the Tokauran tribes spread throughout the northwest [[Argan Basin]], occupying most habitable land in modern Saukania by the end of the 6th century BC. The [[Sauka River|Sauka valley]] itself became the centre of the BBW and the succeeding [[Sauka-Ardash culture]] (SAc), and was potentially a core vector for the movement of Tokauran tribes. The individual tribes became associated with individual territories as the migration period came to an end, and neighbouring or closely-related tribes began forming unions that would become the basis of the classical city-states and kingdoms. As these realms developed in the Sauka, [[Kria River|Kria]], and [[Apria River|Apria]] valleys, they became more regionally distinctive, laying the foundation for the civilizations of Saukiana, [[Kriana]], and [[Apriana]] respectively. Urbanization commenced again for the first time since the SVC from approximately 450 BC, as the Tokauran ruling classes centralised their rule in fortified strongholds and strategic centres, attracting trade and specialist crafts.


=== Classical period ===
=== Classical period ===
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===Symbols===
===Symbols===
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===Naming conventions===
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===Riverfaring===
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===Nomadism===
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==Physical appearance and genetics==
==Physical appearance and genetics==
A phenotypical study from 2002 assessing hair and eye colour of the Saukanian people showed that the self-reported frequencies according to hair and eye colour categories was as follows: 217 individuals – hair colour, 34 [[wikipedia:Blond|blond]], 62 dark blond/[[wikipedia:Brown_hair|light brown]], 68 [[wikipedia:Brown_hair|dark brown]], 23 brown red/[[wikipedia:Auburn_hair|auburn]] and 30 had [[wikipedia:Black_hair|black hair]]; eye colour, 86 with blue, 21 with green,  and 110 had brown eye colour. Curly hair is quite common.
TBA
 
In general the Saukanians are a tall people, with an average male height of 5 feet 11 inches, and an average female height of 5 feet 3 1⁄2 inches. Heights vary however between different populations of Saukania, such as region, settled or nomadic lifestyle, and even class, making the mean average of questionable reliability in an insightful assessment. In addition to being tall, Saukanians are also typically quite lean. This is especially true for the nomads and rural settled people, whose more active lifestyle of movement, herding, and farm work burns calories. Obesity is uncommon. The height disparity between males and females is also variable, though on average quite high, due to a combination of genetic and environmental factors.
 
In skin tone Saukanians vary from light to bronzed, and generally have a warm complexion. As in most populations, Saukanian females are lighter than males, further exacerbated in many communities by men engaging in fieldwork and other outdoor activity, with women keeping more to housework and indoor activity.
 
Along with eye and hair colour, these differences are thought likely due to variations in genetic ancestry from the indigenous Pre-Saukanian agriculturalists and the pastoralist Proto-Saukanians. DNA studies have revealed a wide variety in [[wikipedia:Autosome|autosomal DNA]] heritage among modern Saukanians, with some having close to 50-50 ancestry and others having majority Pre-Saukanian ancestry. Saukanian nomads have the highest overall ancient pastoralist ancestry. The overwhelming majority of modern Saukanian [[wikipedia:Human_Y-chromosome_DNA_haplogroup|Y-DNA haplogroups]] originate from the ancient pastoral invader communities, as indigenous male lines were largely replaced. Saukanian [[wikipedia:Human_mitochondrial_DNA_haplogroup|mitochondrial DNA lineages]] are far more varied, indicating [[wikipedia:Interethnic_marriage|interbreeding]] between males of the pastoral invaders and females of the indigenous agriculturalists. [[wikipedia:Polygyny|Polygyny]] among the Proto-Saukanian elite may have driven bands of males to seek wives in foreign lands, either by peaceful intermarriage or [[wikipedia:Raptio|violence]]. Many Saukanologists believe this constituted the first of the migratory waves, with the secondary and tertiary waves bringing a greater number of Saukanian females and complete family units, bringing further mixing to an already hybridized pool.


==Notable people==
==Notable people==
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Latest revision as of 10:49, 23 November 2024

Saukanians
Tokaura
Languages
Saukanian
Religion
Predominantly Saukanian polytheism
Sizeable Buddhist minority
Smaller Christian and Muslim minorities

The Saukanians, also known as the Tokaurans, are a broad ethnocultural complex native to the country of Saukania.

Originating from a synthesis of nomadic Tokauran pastoralists with indigenous sedentary agriculturalists of the Sauka Valley Civilization, the Saukanians emerge as a distinct culture between 800-500 BC. The aridity of Saukania combined with its formidable physical geography led to significant differences among Saukanian populations, and the emergence of distinct ethnic identities. Of these, the ancient civilization of Saukiana, which derives its name from the Sauka River, is the source of the modern exonym "Saukanian". The Saukanians continue to identify themselves and one another as Tokauran, which has a primarily ethnolinguistic and ethnocultural as opposed to a political meaning. As a result, it is disputed as to whether the Saukanians constitute a "nation", an "ethnic group", or a "panethnicity". Tokauran identitarianism became stronger in the 19th and 20th centuries, coinciding with the founding of the Saukanian Alliance.

Today, Saukanians are largely limited to the territory of the Alliance, which is typically synonymous with the toponym "Saukania" as a geographical area. The Saukanian diaspora is much smaller than the Saukanian population of the Alliance, which is predominantly inhabited by those who identify as Tokauran. Tokauran peoples that once lived to their potential Urheimat west and south of the modern Alliance have long since been assimilated into neighbouring populations.

Regional Saukanian identity is complex. Saukiana, alongside Apriana and Kriana, continue to describe geographic subdivisions of Saukania and function as demonyms for their inhabitants. However, the traditional organisation of most Saukanians into politically independent city-states is a more relevant identity for Saukanian individuals, who are more likely to define themselves as Kulean, Khodanian, or Tushanian, than as an Aprianian or even a Saukanian or Tokauran. Among the population of Tokauran nomads, identity is more predominantly tribal and clan-based, a trait shared with a number of smaller Tokauran ethnic populations living in the isolated valleys of Ghuran Mountains. The diversity of economic lifestyles and methods of identification among the Saukanians have further complicated study of their people as a group.

The Saukanians speak a group of closely related languages called the Saukanian languages. Their mutual intelligibility lies somewhere along an areal spectrum, in that distinct dialects close to one another will be more intelligible to each other than to another pair of dialects further away. Regarding their own languages as Tokaura, they merely differentiate regional variations as branches of the same tree, and so speaking a Saukanian language, even one difficult for another Saukanian to understand, remains a core marker of Saukanian identity. In general, following the geography of Saukania, dialects can be classified at both a city-state level and a wider regional level. Religion has also historically played a significant role in Tokauran identity. To be Tokaura was to honour the same gods, performing the same rites, and following the same customs. This is a source of tension for modern Saukanians, most of whom follow their traditional religion, but with significant religious minorities of Buddhists, Christians, and Muslims. Some classify followers of these foreign religions as fundamentally non-Tokauran (aratokaura), regardless of their lineage or language.

Despite all regional variations and identities, there are some common cultural threads uniting the Saukanian city-states and peoples. A high regard for personal and familial honour permeates their society, with adherence to an informal code that mandates hospitality, generosity, courage, and retaliation. Blood feuds are a common phenomenon especially in mountainous regions or among nomadic communities. The cultural emphasis on family manifests as a patriarchal patron-client system with strict gender norms and a culture of vertical reciprocity, similar to a feudal system, where noble families and clans dominate politically with the support of a network of 'vassals' and clients. Many holidays and festivals are common to the majority of Saukanians, and cultural facets such as cuisine and fashion are broadly similar with regional deviations and innovations.

Name

The name "Tokaura" is an ancient self-designation of the Saukanian peoples. Its etymology has no consensus, but leading theories suggest either "those who speak the same language" (supported by the identity's continued linguistic relevance) or "bright".

After settling in modern Saukania, several distinct Tokauran civilizations emerged. One of these was concentrated along the Sauka River, and is known to modern historians as Saukiana. This Saukiana is the origin of the name Saukania and the demonym Saukanian. While they are thus of Saukanian linguistic origin, they are not themselves Saukanian designations. Their use commenced from the latter half of the 2nd millennium, likely due to the disproportionate cultural influence and political power held by states in Saukiana, gradually becoming a synecdoche for the wider region of Tokauran-speakers, and finally a synonym.

History

Origins and early history

The Saukanians have their origins in the Old Tokauran-speaking semi-nomadic pastoralists who are believed to have dwelt west of and within the Ghuran Mountains prior to 800 BC. Based on evidence from later Saukanian states and civilizations, it has been possible to reconstruct an image of this Old Tokauran society. They appear to have been socially stratified, with an established ruling class of warriors, a priestly class, and then the free men and women who performed a myriad of economic roles. The Tokauran tribes were led by hereditary chiefs or kings, though it is possible some were ruled by leaders elected from within the martial caste. Councils of respected nobles served as advisors and retainers to the chief, while an assembly of the free people appears to have been convened on an irregular basis to decide matters of great importance. These institutions are indirectly attested through later, more developed forms of monarchy, republicanism, and civic participation in later periods, which bear a high degree of similarity to one another.

By the 9th century BC, the Sauka Valley Civilization (SVC) was in decline, after over a millennium of prosperity. The cause of decline for this enigmatic civilization are as mysterious as their rise, though an increasingly arid environment is thought to have played a role, harming their agricultural-focused economy. Within the same century commences the earliest archaeological evidence for Tokauran migration into present-day Saukania. This Black Band Ware culture (BBW) continued for several centuries, diversifying as it expanded outward. The Tokauran migration is thought to have comprised of several waves, with later movements driving the initial waves further out. Whether this movement constitutes an "invasion" of the SVC, or was responsible for its end, is controversial. Some scholars hypothesise that early, smaller waves of Tokaurans were largely assimilated into the SVC, with their elites potentially employed as mercenaries or auxiliaries, and their pastoralist economy used to supplement the declining wealth potential of the native farming economy. This assimilation may be the basis for SVC cultural influence in later Saukanian civilizations, with the secondary waves of Tokaurans assimilating their culturally modified kin back into their own cultural and social spheres.

Other scholars argue for a conquest theory, arguing that the decline in large urban areas (both in quantity and in actual geographical size) was the consequence of warfare, with Tokauran invaders razing large settlements and forcing a dispersal of the SVC population to smaller, more widely dispersed settlements. These peoples then supposedly became sedentary vassals to the Tokaurans, who slowly assimilated the SVC population through their complex patron-client network and dissemination of their religion and cultural practises.

Whatever the case, the Tokauran tribes spread throughout the northwest Argan Basin, occupying most habitable land in modern Saukania by the end of the 6th century BC. The Sauka valley itself became the centre of the BBW and the succeeding Sauka-Ardash culture (SAc), and was potentially a core vector for the movement of Tokauran tribes. The individual tribes became associated with individual territories as the migration period came to an end, and neighbouring or closely-related tribes began forming unions that would become the basis of the classical city-states and kingdoms. As these realms developed in the Sauka, Kria, and Apria valleys, they became more regionally distinctive, laying the foundation for the civilizations of Saukiana, Kriana, and Apriana respectively. Urbanization commenced again for the first time since the SVC from approximately 450 BC, as the Tokauran ruling classes centralised their rule in fortified strongholds and strategic centres, attracting trade and specialist crafts.

Classical period

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Middle Ages

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Early modern period

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Modern period

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Contemporary period

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Definition and identity

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Culture

Language

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Religion

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Arts

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Symbols

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Society

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Physical appearance and genetics

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Notable people

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