News
October 9, 2024
Karelian scientists survey villages in the Kondopoga District of Karelia

Scientists at the Karelian Research Center RAS continue their work on stuffing the audio map of the VepKar language corpus. At the end of September they visited 12 settlements in the Kondopoga District of Karelia. During the expedition they recorded 10 hours of audio fragments of Karelian and Russian speech, collected material on folk beliefs, and investigated the tourist potential of the areas. The activities were conducted within a project supported by the Russian Geographical Society.
Scientists from Institute of Linguistics, Literature and History (ILLH) KarRC RAS continue implementing the project “Stuffing the audio map of Karelian and Veps dialects” supported by the Russian Geographical Society. On September 23-27, linguists and ethnologists went on an integrated expedition together with a researcher from the Department for Regional Institutional Development of the Institute of Economics KarRC RAS. The scientists surveyed 12 settlements in the Kondopoga District of Karelia. More than 30 residents of Spasskaya Guba, Terek, Deknavolok, Tivdia, Nelgomozero, Vokhtozero, Pyalozero, Yustozero, Elmus, Svyatnavolok, Sopokha, and Koikar were interviewed.

– Some villages are unique, they are located at the interface of all three dialects of the Karelian language, reflecting not only dialectal differences, but also self-perception within groups - noted Yulia Litvin, Senior Researcher at the Ethnology Section of the Institute of Linguistics, Literature and History (ILLH KarRC RAS).

The Institute's linguists Alexandra Rodionova, Natalia Pellinen and Svetlana Nagurnaya recorded over 10 hours of audio fragments in Karelian and Russian. The bulk of it is autobiographical and daily-like stories about folk foods, weaving, fishing, harvesting oleoresin and the likes. Also, lyrical and lyro-epic folk and authored songs in Russian and Karelian were recorded.


Talking with a women living in the village of Yustozero. Photo by A. Morozov


Expedition participants recording an interview with Svetlana Fyodorovna Kondratyeva, a Karelian language teacher and resident of Vokhtozero village

– The language situation in the district was surveyed. A significant part of the informants who can speak Karelian are passive bilinguals,- noted Svetlana Nagurnaya, Head of Linguistics Section ILLH KarRC RAS.

At the same time, in most of the surveyed settlements the researchers managed to record unique samples of Karelian speech, fragments of which will be linked to the Audio Map of Balto-Finnic Languages of Karelia and adjacent regions in VepKar corpus.

Ethnology Section staff explored folk beliefs, necroculture, and collected material on identity.

– People in the villages we visited still remember travel prayers and healing incantations and use them in daily life. Some interlocutors recalled the Old Believer past of their area. Narratives were recorded about ritual specialists - senior aged women who in Soviet times conducted funeral rites and performed the functions of priests. The custom of waffing the deceased with a piece of cloth or a handkerchief during viewing (Kar. pyyhkiä paikal) proved to be quite persistent in the area. All the informants interviewed recalled it, - said Sergey Minvaleev, Researcher at the Ethnology Section ILLH KarRC RAS.

Six cemeteries were examined during the expedition, and almost all of them shared a distinctive common feature - an abundance of textiles tied to grave railings and tables, trees and crosses (Kar. tuulipaikka 'wind scarf'). In some cases, “wind scarves” are still used in ritual waffing of the grave when visiting the cemetery.


Tuulipaikka ‘wind scarves’ in Svyatnavolok village cemetery. Photos by Yu. Litvin and S. Minvaleev

– The identity of Karelians in the surveyed communities is characterized by high plasticity, which is due, on the one hand, to the dynamic boundary between dialects of the Karelian language and, accordingly, to the perception of speech even from neighboring villages as different (“we wouldn't put it this way here”), and on the other hand, to the fact that many settlements were located in or near former high roads, along trade routes. The latter created grounds for a smoother linguistic and cultural convergence with the Russian population and facilitated marital contacts, for example, with inhabitants of the neighboring Zaonezhye area. Industrial development of the Kondopoga District in Soviet times attracted workers from different regions of the USSR. The multiethnic environment influenced the language shift situation, as well as the self-perception of Karelians and their identity, – added Yulia Litvin.

The expedition was joined by Junior Researcher at the Department for Regional Institutional Development, Institute of Economics KarRC RAS, Arseniy Morozov. He studied the tourist potential of the territory. The specialist noted that the key to the communities' tourism appeal is their cultural and natural aspects. The villages are located near highways and can be integrated into the general tourist traffic by becoming part of larger routes.


Arseniy Morozov, employee of the Institute of Economics KarRC RAS, taking pictures of a bathhouse and floor mats in the village of Tivdia. Photo by Yu. Litvin

See also:

June 23, 2025
Citizen science and web technologies help researchers study insects of Karelia

More than 30 insect species not encountered in Karelia previously have been revealed by entomologists from KarRC RAS during their expeditions and using data communicated by active participants of the iNaturalist portal – an open platform for collecting biodiversity data.
June 20, 2025
Application process for 2025/2026 Doctoral Studies started at KarRC RAS

On June 20, Karelian Research Centre RAS began accepting papers from applicants for its Doctoral Courses. This year, university graduates can choose from ten academic specialties in the STEM, natural sciences, humanities, and social sciences.
June 17, 2025
An important phase of the KarRC RAS Director General election procedure completed

The Electoral Commission has summarized the results of the voting for the election of the Director General of KarRC RAS. The turnout exceeded 80% of the Center's employees. The majority of votes, 391, were cast for Alexander Kryshen, Director of the Forest Research Institute. Acting Director General Olga Bakhmet was supported by 252 voters, and Deputy Director General Yuri Zaika received 17 votes. The Electoral Commission documented these results in its report, which will be submitted to the HR Policy Department of the Federal Ministry of Science and Higher Education. The candidacies will now undergo the procedure of approval by federal agencies, after which the employment contract will be signed with the winner of the competition.
June 11, 2025
Posseidon research vessel is back from this season’s first integrated expedition

Employees of the Northern Water Problems Institute KarRC RAS completed an expedition around Lake Onego on board the Posseidon research vessel. The expedition covered 19 sites in bays, Central Onego, and Kizhi Skerries region. Scientists have sampled water for chemical and biological analyses.