15 Fascinating Facts About The Ainu - Japan’s Indigenous People

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  • Опубліковано 1 лют 2024
  • 🎥 Who are the indigenous Ainu people of Japan, where did they come from, what do they look like, and where do they stand in the world today? 🇯🇵
    Welcome to our deep dive into the fascinating world of the Ainu, the indigenous people of northern Japan. In this video, we explore the unique aspects of Ainu culture, from their ancient history to their contemporary resurgence…
    00:26 - 🌿 Indigenous Heritage: Explore the history of the Ainu, the original inhabitants of Hokkaido, and their presence in Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands.
    01:54 - 📜 Unique Language: Discover the endangered Ainu language, distinct from other language families, with a dwindling number of fluent speakers.
    03:13 - 👘 Distinctive Clothing: Admire the intricate patterns and embroidery of traditional Ainu clothing, crafted from elm tree bark.
    04:43 - 🗣️ Oral Literature: Experience the 'yukar', the Ainu's rich oral literature tradition of epic sagas, recited in a unique rhythmic and singing style.
    06:21 - 🌌 Spiritual Beliefs: Explore Ainu animism, where spirits known as "kamuy" are believed to inhabit everything, from animals to inanimate objects.
    07:55 - 🖌️ Unique Tattoos: Learn about the tattoo culture among Ainu women, a tradition involving facial tattoos as a rite of passage and beauty symbol.
    09:24 - 🐻 Bear Worship: Learn about 'Iomante', the sacred Ainu bear-worshipping ritual involving the raising and sacrificing of a bear to honor its spirit.
    10:50 - 🏹 Skilled Hunters and Fishermen: Understand the Ainu's expertise in hunting and fishing, crucial skills for surviving their harsh environment.
    12:20 - 🌱 Cultural Resurgence: Witness the revival of Ainu culture and language as a response to historical assimilation policies.
    13:47 - ⚖️ Legal Recognition: Reflect on the recent recognition of the Ainu as an indigenous people by the Japanese government.
    15:02 - 🧬 Distinct Features: Note the unique physical characteristics of the Ainu, including thick wavy hair and more pronounced facial and body hair.
    16:10 - 🎨 Artistic Expression: Appreciate Ainu art, especially in wood carving and textile weaving, carrying deep symbolic and religious significance.
    17:36 - 🎵 Musical Heritage: Listen to the unique sounds of Ainu music, including instruments like the 'mukkuri' and the 'tonkori'.
    19:04 - 🍲 Cuisine: Savor the flavors of Ainu food, relying on ingredients like salmon, deer, and wild plants, rooted in their hunting and foraging traditions.
    20:22 - 🎉 Cultural Festivals: Celebrate Ainu culture at their festivals like 'Ainu Mosir', featuring traditional dances, music, and food.
    This journey into Ainu culture not only highlights their past struggles but also celebrates their enduring spirit and cultural revival. Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe for more content on the world’s rich cultural tapestry.
    #Ainu #AinuCulture #GoldenKamuy

КОМЕНТАРІ • 508

  • @UntoldHistoryYT
    @UntoldHistoryYT  4 місяці тому +31

    Which aspect of Ainu culture fascinates you the most? 🤩

    • @balazskiss985
      @balazskiss985 14 днів тому

      picture is a cultural genocide yoou comitted against ainu people with the albino mulatto girl
      shame on you

    • @roberttreborable
      @roberttreborable 14 днів тому +7

      The Stories and Music, I was lucky enough to see a Show by the Ainu Art Project a few years ago in Kutchan, Hokkaido and share some of their food, the evening ended with us all joining in with the singing and dancing together. It was a brilliant night well remembered.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  14 днів тому +6

      How wonderful, Robert! Surely an experience you will never forget! 😀

    • @jan-michele3546
      @jan-michele3546 13 днів тому +12

      All of them. They are close to the American Indigenous people. Though I am a white woman, I was raised around a lot of Indigenous people (different tribes/nations), so I learned a lot from them and their cultures. I grew up in the Pacific Northwest of the United States from Canada to Oregon. I got great history and cultural lessons when I was young. I never learned their languages, though. Wish I had.

    • @tatianayegovtseva9737
      @tatianayegovtseva9737 13 днів тому +4

      Ainu used to be Caucasian appearance with big beards - see photos. Also Japanese exterminated ainu...

  • @mnegi9522
    @mnegi9522 14 днів тому +287

    I am Japanese who was born and raised in a small town where is located 60 miles north of Tokyo. My physical characteristics are very close to Ainu people’s ones and I always looked differently from average Japanese. I have big eyes and light complexion, more hairy than average Japanese. I rather look more mix or Eurasian or Latinos. I had DNA test 10 years ago in the US and according to my test result, surprisingly, I am almost 100% Jomon/Ainu descendant which I always suspected.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  13 днів тому +21

      Fascinating - thank you for sharing!

    • @levivolaju883
      @levivolaju883 13 днів тому +3

      Pls share your ig or fb so we can see you

    • @user-dy2cg3hj6m
      @user-dy2cg3hj6m 12 днів тому +6

      ​@@levivolaju883 📸🤨

    • @benjauron5873
      @benjauron5873 12 днів тому +5

      You probably had an Ainu mailman about nine months before you were born...
      (Just kidding! It's just a joke, relax.)

    • @SB-qm5wg
      @SB-qm5wg 12 днів тому +2

      Can you grow a full beard?

  • @bob8284
    @bob8284 11 днів тому +53

    This is one reason I like the internet you can learn so much about the world that wasn't taught

    • @cinnamonstar808
      @cinnamonstar808 2 дні тому

      so is school about knowledge or indoctrination?

  • @ironjavs1182
    @ironjavs1182 5 днів тому +16

    Pre-christian Finnish people also had animism believes that everyhting had a soul (väki) and they believed that bear was a ancestor for people and that why it was treated like a god and they had similiar seremony as well called "Karhupeijainen". Where bear was sent back to heaven. Really interesting to see these similarities and it would be interesting to know more about Ainu culture.

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 5 днів тому +4

      Ainu are a Jomon race from South Asia (India, Bangladesh) but their culture was influenced by Siberians, so you are correct. Your information is vital to understanding the Jomon, whose ancestors migrated to Northeast Asia 45,000 years ago and settled Japan 30,000 years ago. They crossed over on landbridges when global sea levels dropped between the southern peninsula of Korea and Kyushu island, Japan. From Kyushu the Jomon expanded to the Shikoku, Honshu and Hokkaido islands of Japan. Ainu means "human" in the Ainuic language. Japanese called them Eizo (Yezo the old Japanese word for Hokkaido) and the Ainu Homeland also encompassed the northern Tohoku region of Honshu island. 14,000 years ago ice sheets formed connecting Siberia to Japan and the Hokkaido Ainu expanded into the Kuril islands of the Okhotsk Sea and the southern region of Sakhalin island adjacent to Siberia. Ainu oral histories recount warfare between Sakhalin Ainu and the indigenous Yakut people riding -- Reindeer! That means the Finnish🦌🦌🦌 culture extended latitudinally to Siberia and Sakhalin. Anthropologists describe the Ainu bear ritual as Siberian in origin -- which explains your Finnish bear ritual. A 2016 linguistic study classified Ainuic as a Sino Tibetan language, however, linguists classify the Okinawan language as Jomon, who settled Okinawa 9,000 years ago. 80% of Ainu men and 60% of Okinawan men carry Jomon D-M55 DNA and Jomon M7 mtDNA is common to both groups. So, same race yet different cultures due to geographic distance and isolation.
      But there are similarities as Jomon cultures. The principal deity of the Ainu is the fire goddess Fuji (like the volcanic mountain) and the Okinawan Noro religion worshipped the fire god of the hearth. Okinawan women were also ritually tattooed. Okinawan lacquerware uses the same red and black color scheme as Jomon lacquerware. The Jomon created the 1st lacquerware (the oldest lacquer tree is in Japan) and the world's oldest lacquerware was discovered in Hokkaido. Okinawans were also hunter gatherers until agriculture was introduced very late in 800 CE by Japanese farmers. The physical stereotype of Okinawans is "dark and hairy." From 1100 CE to the 1609 CE conquest of the Ryukyu Kingdom by the Japanese Satsuma Clan, Okinawa had a cultural and trade relationship with China. Much of Okinawan culture became Chinese: Patriarchical system of Kings and Clans, Written language, Shishi (lion dog imagery), Sanshin music, Martial arts ("Karate"), Andagi (Chinese pastry), Basho (banana fiber fabric), etc. The Jomon Ainu-Okinawa spectrum finds parallels in the Irish-Welsh, Hawaiian-Samoan, Chinese-Japanese, East Asian-Native American, Italian-Sicilian ethnic relationships.

    • @Elora445
      @Elora445 2 дні тому +2

      They also have a lot in common with the Sami in the north of Sweden, Norway, Finland and Russia. They too had animism. Well, until the Swedish state did to them what the Japanese state did to the Ainu.

  • @artawhirler
    @artawhirler 15 днів тому +68

    Ainu very little about this until now. Thanks! 😅

  • @2551987ezio
    @2551987ezio 2 місяці тому +161

    I met a Japanese missionary from Japan. Ask if he knew the manga/anime series Golden Kamuy, which he responded very surprised, as no one in the West has ever mentioned that series to him. When I brought up the topic of the Ainu's, he told me, that him himself didn't know of their existence till he watched the anime.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  Місяць тому +9

      Very interesting - thank you for sharing!

    • @KanjiMadeEasy
      @KanjiMadeEasy 17 днів тому +28

      You're kidding! My first WEEK as a missionary in Japan I was invited to an annual celebration to a town in Hokkaido. The mayor was AINU. and he was in complete formal AINU garb!!
      They let me, a stranger, sit right next to him during the celebration. He was drunk....

    • @monikagrosch9632
      @monikagrosch9632 15 днів тому +11

      Those clothing made of tree ‘bark’ reminds me of the ‘taps’ clothes of the Polynesians. Is there a connection?? Genetically??

    • @genkideguire
      @genkideguire 14 днів тому +12

      Unless they personally care about something Japanese are not well versed in their country history. Just like every other person from every other country.

    • @ashmorris4067
      @ashmorris4067 13 днів тому +3

      Good anime can't wait for the last series. Some crazy characters in it. Are they based of real characters?

  • @ericv7720
    @ericv7720 12 днів тому +28

    I was in the Marines stationed in Japan in the mid-90s. We did a two-week training exercise on Hokkaido. We had a night out in Sapporo, and I noticed how many of the locals were taller, stockier and, well, just plain more Caucasian looking than the mainland Japanese, and I remembered hearing about the Ainu. Assimilation cuts both ways!

  • @th-uh2oo
    @th-uh2oo 16 днів тому +83

    Polish ethnographer Bronisław Piłsudski for his participation in the plot to assassinate tsar Nicolas III was sentenced by the tsarist regime for 15 years of exile to the Far East, the southern part of Sakhalin. He was the first to research and describe in detail the Ainu language, customs and culture. After the 1904 outbreak of the Japanese-Russian war, through Japan and the USA returned to Poland, where in 1912 he published Materials for the Study of the Ainu Language and Folklore. BTW, he was brother of Józef Piłsudski, one of the most important persons in the last 120 year of the Polish history.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  16 днів тому +13

      Super interesting - thanks so much for sharing! 🙏

    • @projectreracccty4764
      @projectreracccty4764 11 днів тому +3

      Studying biblical history is crucial for understanding the connections to Noah's son, whose name, Japheth-Nese, bears a resemblance to the Japanese name, suggesting he could be an ancestor of the Japanese people. His son, Meshech, also known as Mosoch, is believed to have influenced the naming of the Yauza River, derived from his son Ya and daughter Vuza. Similarly, Moscow's Russian name, Moskva, is thought to be derived from Mosoch and his wife Kva. Additionally, the name Yakuza is said to originate from Meshech's son Ya, his nephew Ashkenaz, also known as Ashkuz, and Vuza, Meshech's daughter.

    • @th-uh2oo
      @th-uh2oo 11 днів тому +4

      @@projectreracccty4764 I hate to disappoint you, but you are wrong. In accordance with official Ukraine historical state policy, children in schools are taught that the Ukrainian state is 140 000 years old, and all the people you are talking about with the entirety of humanity have their origins in Ukraine. If you have any questions about interpretation and the origins of any names in the Bible, contact Ukrainian scientists. Since Ukrainians wrote the Bible, they will know the best and will provide you with a correct interpretation. LMHO, it is sarcasm on my side, but it isn't a joke at all; you can check Ukrainian history text books.

    • @LecherousLizard
      @LecherousLizard 10 днів тому +5

      @@projectreracccty4764 What kind of bullshit is this?
      The word "Japan" is the result of Marco Polo's... I have honestly no idea what. He called Japan "Chipangu", which later evolved into "Japan" of today. The Japanese meanwhile have never used anything like that, instead they called their country "Yamato", "Wakoku", "Oyashima" and more recently "Nippon" or "Nihon", none of which has any resemblance to that "Japheth-Nese" thing you mentioned. Instead of reading fantasy books, you should study some actual history.

    • @LecherousLizard
      @LecherousLizard 9 днів тому

      @@projectreracccty4764 I don't think you got the message.
      The word "Japan" was made up by an Italian in the 16th century. It has NOTHING to do with Bible.

  • @0therun1t21
    @0therun1t21 День тому +2

    They better be celebrated, they're beautiful and cool as hell!

  • @kyotosal
    @kyotosal 14 днів тому +34

    I really enjoyed this video. I love Japan and have traveled there several times. It's great to hear that the Ainu are completely part of greater Japan now.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  14 днів тому +2

      Thank you! 🙏 Which part of Japan did you enjoy most?

  • @birdieberry
    @birdieberry 14 днів тому +26

    Prince Ashitaka comes from the Ainu tribe in the movie "Mononoke-hime".

    • @dorolicious
      @dorolicious 12 днів тому

      I knew it! As soon as I've seen the video title I was like "wasn't Ashitaka one of this tribe?"

    • @jamesyamauchi5657
      @jamesyamauchi5657 11 днів тому +3

      He was actually Emishi. The Emishi were related to the Ainu people.

    • @feliad6401
      @feliad6401 6 днів тому +2

      ​@@jamesyamauchi5657From my understanding and knowledge of japanese, "Emishi" has a meaning of "barbarian" and was a pejorative word used to described the one that came from the north, which were the Ainu.

  • @KP11520
    @KP11520 10 днів тому +6

    Preserving their past is going to be a pillar in all of Japan's future. Their very deliberate harmony is a very significant way of life that will help work with Earth for all to exist without greed, which would sabotage that balance. Make room for it and let it flow naturally. All will benefit.

  • @qhuizatlantis8484
    @qhuizatlantis8484 14 днів тому +20

    I'm curious to hear about their native language so fascinating

  • @David-gh6vp
    @David-gh6vp 3 місяці тому +78

    There are similarities between the Ainu people and the Native American cultures of the Pacific Norhtwest and coastal Canada. The use of native materials in clothing and homes is especially apparent. Carvings in posts and sticks are also similar. Much of the similarities may be due to comparable climates of both regions, but one wonders if there isn't a direct genetic trace, as well.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  3 місяці тому +11

      Thanks for your comment - I can absolutely see the similarities. You very well may be right!

    • @veroboro4035
      @veroboro4035 16 днів тому +9

      Well the native americans decend from people who wandered from the region of Yakutia in nowadays russia and then they crossed the now sunken path to Alaska. There is genetic evidence for this thesis, but also the culture is quite similar to yakutian people. So it may be the Yakutians came down there, too.

    • @hansspadvii
      @hansspadvii 15 днів тому +19

      Maybe, the words "Ainu" and "Inuit" are etymologically related?

    • @veroboro4035
      @veroboro4035 15 днів тому +6

      @@hansspadvii I mean, I dont know. Its was a guess,cause david said native amaricans have a similar culture.
      But Yakutians and native amaricans are certainly related.

    • @veroboro4035
      @veroboro4035 15 днів тому +8

      Wikipedia says:
      "The Ainu are regarded as having descended from the indigenous Japanese hunter-gatherers who lived in Japan during the Jōmon period (c. 14,000 to 300 BCE).[72]
      The exact origins of the early Ainu remain unclear, but it is generally agreed to be linked to the Satsumon culture of the Epi-Jōmon period, with later influences from the nearby Okhotsk culture.[73] The Ainu culture may be better described as an "Ainu cultural complex", taking into account the regional variable subgroups of Ainu peoples. "
      "There is also evidence that Ainu speakers lived in the Amur region through Ainu loanwords found in the Uilta and Ulch language"

  • @thoughtank1019
    @thoughtank1019 15 днів тому +48

    It is amazing how similar so many native cultures are. All very connected with nature and spirits, stories, songs and dance

    • @raifandreev
      @raifandreev 15 днів тому +2

      Humans still do all that, it's just that big citys amplify everything I think, the good the bad the ugly hehe 🖖

    • @JohnAvillaHerpetocultural
      @JohnAvillaHerpetocultural 7 днів тому

      All cultures started there.

  • @melissapinol7279
    @melissapinol7279 3 місяці тому +28

    Back in the 90's I saw a fascinating film by a Russian filmmaker about the Ainu on the Shaklin islands. They lived in communal log houses and used sled dogs, who lived in the house with them. I think it was an effort to preserve a lost culture, as these people were kind of a northern offshoot more like the Inuit, they wore fur clothing and had the sled dogs, but were Ainu. I wish I could remember the title, it had English subtitles.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  3 місяці тому +6

      Fascinating! If you ever remember the title, please let me know! 🙂

    • @RadenWA
      @RadenWA 14 днів тому +3

      Do the Russian Ainus write their language in Cyrilic?

    • @feliad6401
      @feliad6401 6 днів тому +1

      ​​@@RadenWA Nowaday's Ainu language is mostly written using Katakana (or Rōmaji) which is from japanese writing system.

    • @RadenWA
      @RadenWA 5 днів тому

      @@feliad6401 I mean the ones living in Russia

    • @feliad6401
      @feliad6401 5 днів тому +2

      ​@@RadenWA Well, what's Russia today was Japan yesterday. I don't know how well the Ainus are recognized in today's Russia. I speak japanese not russian, thus I would be eager to ear anything you would learn about the one living in today's russia. But the cyrilic alphabet may not fit the Ainu language that well when it comes to phonetics. Just my humble thoughts 🙌

  • @maverickfox4102
    @maverickfox4102 15 днів тому +38

    As someone who loves history I’m glad that Japan 🇯🇵 is addressing it’s past mistakes. By making sure the Ainu People would keep their cultural identity alive.

    • @nicolaspetit6718
      @nicolaspetit6718 14 днів тому +5

      Next stape War crime during ww2

    • @RadenWA
      @RadenWA 14 днів тому +6

      And what about Russia, what preservation efforts have they done for the Ainus in their jurisdiction?

    • @AllanMogensen
      @AllanMogensen 13 днів тому +4

      Too often a culture is destroyed and then we go: Oh, what a loss, how sad - but NOW we can really study it :) YaY!. If only the living was as important as the dead

    • @apelsinuke
      @apelsinuke 12 днів тому +4

      now, Okinawan or Ryukyuan people should not be forgotten either. used to be a whole separate kingdom. have their own culture and language too.

  • @larrymyers6327
    @larrymyers6327 16 днів тому +11

    I look similar to the Yupik Eskimo in Alaska. I lived with them for 4 years.

  • @stormygcannon1229
    @stormygcannon1229 14 днів тому +7

    Thank you for explaining some I knew already I think Japan was out of line not to allow them their personal freedom. Indigenous people should be recognized, enough said.

  • @charlesarmstrong5292
    @charlesarmstrong5292 15 днів тому +11

    Truly fascinating. I never knew about the Ainu until now. Many thanks.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  15 днів тому +1

      Thank you, Charles. Really glad you enjoyed the video! 🙂

  • @EmilyTienne
    @EmilyTienne 4 місяці тому +26

    Assimilation is a two-edged sword. You gain something and you lose something too. Once the culture and language is lost, there’s no going back.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  4 місяці тому +3

      So true and thank you for sharing. Thankfully Ainu culture survived this!

    • @David-gh6vp
      @David-gh6vp 3 місяці тому +5

      Almost never in Life do you gain anything, without losing something else. If cultural changes are done with care and through time [not abruptly] the best of both worlds may be saved.

    • @usnchief1339
      @usnchief1339 13 днів тому +1

      It's the way of the world

    • @quentinmac.5579
      @quentinmac.5579 11 днів тому +1

      A prime example and a more current one is the 1800’s United States the conflicts between the Native American’s & European American’s and what it done to the Native American’s in the long run.

    • @EmilyTienne
      @EmilyTienne 11 днів тому

      @@quentinmac.5579 Agreed. Native Americans have lost so much in terms of culture, language, knowledge of living off the land. In the process of losing their identity, they were brutalized as well.

  • @Raja-bz4yw
    @Raja-bz4yw 12 днів тому +6

    I just wanna know how the fudge do you make clothes out of tree bark????

  • @alinaanto
    @alinaanto 14 днів тому +9

    It’s remarkable and I for one am glad that we still have a window into this different culture - fascinating in itself, and also full of meaning when we make connections with other people around the world!

  • @oscarmet9029
    @oscarmet9029 14 днів тому +6

    Hi there!
    It's an interesting video you uploaded here, with various facts about the Ainu people. However, I would like to add to some things you mentioned in the video.
    The Ainu people consist of various groups with similar traditions. One example is that the patterns of their clothing may vary. The Ainu population around Akan Lake is also mixed between the Ainu people who lived there and the Ainu population who moved there from Sakhalin Island by the Japanese. Another example is where you mentioned Yukar as performed by older women. If I remember correctly, in south-western Ainu tradition, young women also participate in the singing.
    Regarding instruments. The Tonkori was for a long time a dead instrument with no players. The musician Oki Kano resurrected the instrument through ethnographic recordings and descriptions of the instrument.
    Also, you mentioned that they were skilled hunters with bows and arrows. However, due to a long tradition of trade with the Japanese (which also included revolutions and wars against them), they also gained access to firearms that they used.
    I hope this adds information for people interested in knowing more. Also, please continue making videos like this and spreading awareness about minorities.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  14 днів тому

      Fascinating! Thanks so much for sharing this added information. 🙏

  • @MaliciousMollusc
    @MaliciousMollusc 10 днів тому +3

    The Ainu reminds me of the native Filipino tribes. There's a lot of very interesting parallels. 😊

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 10 днів тому

      Ainu are Jomon, an ancient race from South Asia (India, Bangladesh) who migrated to Northeast Asia 45,000 years ago and settled Japan 30,000 years ago. Filipinos are a mixture of indigenous Black Pygmies ("Negrillos") from Malaysia, Austronesians (Southeast Asians), Chinese and Spanish.

  • @lechatdeluna8472
    @lechatdeluna8472 5 днів тому +2

    Love this great information❤❤❤

  • @schelin1447
    @schelin1447 16 днів тому +46

    like all indigenous people they should be protected and preserved

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  16 днів тому +3

      Absolutely!

    • @catherder6
      @catherder6 15 днів тому +8

      Everyone is indigenous somewhere.

    • @user-gs7ev5hk3v
      @user-gs7ev5hk3v 15 днів тому +1

      非現実的だ

    • @JohnAvillaHerpetocultural
      @JohnAvillaHerpetocultural 7 днів тому

      Like all indigenous people and every other culture that has ever or will ever exist, the Ainu will disappear. All cultures (and everything else) are impermanent.

  • @shashimenon1000
    @shashimenon1000 14 днів тому +2

    Well made video. Good info. Just saw Golden Samuy last night. Very interesting. Thank you.

  • @Koncs86
    @Koncs86 7 днів тому +1

    Golden Kamuy is the show that introduced me to the Ainu, and I definitely recommend it to anyone interested in late 19th century Japanese history. It is a more mature anime tho, not a little kid cartoon. Just something to keep in mind…

  • @susanbergquist3550
    @susanbergquist3550 3 місяці тому +11

    Very informative and well-presented.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  3 місяці тому +1

      Thank you, Susan! So glad you enjoyed it. 😊

  • @timking2459
    @timking2459 14 днів тому +2

    Fascinating - thankyou

  • @brokebanshee92
    @brokebanshee92 2 дні тому

    The Tonkori reminds me of a harp.🍀 (I am glad I watched this and learned a lot!)

  • @vbressner
    @vbressner 16 днів тому +13

    You should do one on the Sami peoples.

    • @79klkw
      @79klkw 15 днів тому +2

      Such a beautiful, indigenous people.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  15 днів тому +4

      Thank you for the suggestion - I've added them to our research list.

    • @suutra3
      @suutra3 13 днів тому +1

      Yes, but please without the musac and swishh sounds!

  • @michelleboyle6497
    @michelleboyle6497 11 днів тому +3

    The mukkuri sounds so very much like the Jaws Harp used in Appalachian folk music

    • @jwlavasse
      @jwlavasse 4 дні тому

      ya it does, I just got a jaw harp and am trying to play but the origins of mine are Turkic from Altai mountain they think. 🤔

  • @erwinordonez3662
    @erwinordonez3662 12 днів тому +2

    it was horo horo of shaman king that introduced me to the ainu people . . .😊

  • @mangthanghaokip
    @mangthanghaokip 6 днів тому

    Great educational

  • @ryomai8063
    @ryomai8063 13 днів тому +1

    Those images are beautiful... Are these for sale somewhere?

  • @coursii
    @coursii 13 днів тому +3

    The anime Golden Kamoy has an amazing Ainu main character in it.

  • @haroldshull6848
    @haroldshull6848 3 дні тому

    I've read other sources relating to the Ainu and the one characteristic not mentioned here was their red hair. There was a reference to it by Admiral, Commodore, Perry whose crew sailed around all the Japanese Islands. One of the first European Americans to explore the Western reaches of the Louisiana Purchase wrote of an extended conversation with an Indian native about the red scalps on his tee pee. He explained that his and other Indian tribes had, over generations, wiped them out. His grandfather was at the last battle and took many scalps. When British settlers began settling New Zeland the Maori who met them with unsheathed weapons told of "the first people" who were there when the Maori arrived and killed almost all of them. They were white skinned, red haired sailors with connections to South America. We don't know as much about history as we imagine.
    This was a very enjoyable program well presented.

  • @suechandler8162
    @suechandler8162 13 днів тому +3

    The tattoos, house construction, clothes and decorative designs and even the look of the people is a lot like the Maori people of New Zealand who are mostly Polynesian.

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 12 днів тому

      Polynesians have Austronesian (Southeast Asian) and Papuan New Guinea Melanesian (Black Asian) Y DNA ancestries. Their mtDNA is B4, a rare East Asian (Chinese) DNA also common among Native Americans.
      Ainu are Jomon descendants: D-M55 Y DNA and M7 mtDNA, an ancient South Asian race from Arabia via Africa. They migrated from India and Bangladesh over 45,000 years ago and settled Northeast Asia -- making them an older race than East Asian Mongoloids (Native Americans). 30,000 years ago the Jomon crossed over to Japan on land bridges when sea levels dropped and after 13,000 years of geographic isolation created the world's 1st pottery culture 16,500 years ago. (They also created the 1st lacquerware.) Jomon means "cord marked" and was coined in 1882 by renowned American zoologist Edward Morse who discovered intricately designed sherds in Japan shell middens.
      2015 DNA research of Ainu discovered European and Middle Eastern genetic alleles associated with the formation of facial features, which explains why 19th century accounts described Ainu as a non-mongoloid race with Caucasian features. However, assimilation by Japan and the Ainu custom of adopting Japanese orphans have changed their appearance into East Asian Mongoloids.

  • @robertlyon8876
    @robertlyon8876 10 днів тому

    Very interesting article

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  9 днів тому

      Thank you, Robert. Glad you enjoyed the video! 🙂

  • @stewartthomas2642
    @stewartthomas2642 14 днів тому +3

    Love your stuff kick on love it ❤️❤️🧡💛💚💙💜🤍

  • @kpreno
    @kpreno 9 днів тому +1

    WOW! Amazing... ALL of it! Thank you

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  8 днів тому +1

      You are very welcome. So glad you enjoyed the video! 😊

  • @stevenwarner7348
    @stevenwarner7348 15 днів тому +1

    Thank you so much for this. 〰✨〰

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  15 днів тому

      You are most welcome, Steven. So glad you enjoyed it!

  • @AndrewHibberd
    @AndrewHibberd 12 днів тому +1

    Thank you. Arigatou. Ainu,

  • @louisefarber7573
    @louisefarber7573 11 днів тому +1

    Thank you for this video. I had heard of the Ainu but knew nothing about them. Hopefully the Japanese government will allow and support their cultural resurgence.

  • @ananamu2248
    @ananamu2248 12 днів тому +1

    I have always been attracted to the ainu tribes .similar beliefs and connected to some native American tribes

  • @JohnAvillaHerpetocultural
    @JohnAvillaHerpetocultural 7 днів тому +5

    I’m pretty sure the original Japanese were the Jomon.

    • @PalaeoJoe
      @PalaeoJoe 2 дні тому +2

      Both groups are indigenous to Japan, and are related. But the Jomon are an extinct culture, unlike the Ainu.

    • @JohnAvillaHerpetocultural
      @JohnAvillaHerpetocultural 2 дні тому

      @@PalaeoJoe my understanding was that we didn’t know where the Jomon originated or how long ago they got to Japan. Are the Ainu considered to be an offshoot? It’s been a while since I really looked at this topic but if I remember correctly fairly recent dna analysis has shown that the Jomon never disappeared but contributed as much to the current population of Japan as the Han. I would be surprised if none of their culture survives in contemporary Japan. Some of the stories and traditions in contemporary western culture go all the way back to the Ice Age. Hamlet’s Mill showed this by examining precessional information recorded in old myths. It also seems to me, though I can’t prove it now, that the events recorded in the story of Noah’s flood (actually most cultures share some form of this myth) took place roughly 12,500 years ago when some comet fragments did cause global flooding and massive climate change (Firestone and West). I bet there is still some Jomon cultural heritage in Japan.

  • @mjean6762
    @mjean6762 3 дні тому +1

    Im always impressed by indiginous cultures. It makes me sad to hear of decline in traditions, beliefs, way of life, language, territories and population. However it's encouraging to hear that there are efforts at preservation.
    I'm also always amazed (and rather curious) at how indiginous cultures from different regions of the world and different time periods even can be so similar! How people who had never interacted and experienced different challenges and such, could have so many aspects of their culture that are seen in other cultures. It's one of the things I find most interesting when learning about a new indiginous group. Don't get me wrong, I find it all fascinating and truly exciting. I have a great respect for the ancestors of this world. It has also shaped how I view people in today's world. I look at each person as a human being and treat everyone neighborly. We may look different, talk different, etc but I bet we are more common than you think! It makes people so much more approachable as I don't shy away from those that are "different". We can all be friendly. 😊

  • @moosedahlheim8401
    @moosedahlheim8401 13 днів тому +1

    They remind me greatly of the Pacific Northwest native peoples of Alaska and Washington.

    • @roboparks
      @roboparks 10 днів тому +1

      They are probably Genetically related.

  • @erichpizer1
    @erichpizer1 12 днів тому

    great video. I knew of the Ainu but till now did not find a lot of info. I found out of the Ainu because i was curious about Sakhalin island occupied by Russia , the very Northern Japanese Island geographically speaking .

  • @richarddamasco4979
    @richarddamasco4979 10 днів тому +1

    Good evening Japan😊❤😊

  • @roivosemraiva
    @roivosemraiva 4 дні тому

    I just Learned SOMETHING--Ainu Culture !! i I even studied Japanese Language and never did i know... I would like to hear Music from the Ainu musicians. what type of scales in music do they use.?? WOW !! DO they use any type of percussion instruments? I instantly became a subscriber.

  • @PalaeoJoe
    @PalaeoJoe 2 дні тому +1

    I am curious how similar Shino is to Ainu's spiritual beliefs. Like the Shinto "Kami" sounds very similar to the Ainu's concept of the "Kamuy"

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 2 дні тому

      A 2024 linguistic study found that kami is derived from the Ainuic kamuy, however, Shinto is a Yamato religion instituted in 400 CE. Its cosmology states that the Yamato gods created the Japan islands and that the 1st Yamato emperor Jimmu was the grandson of the sun goddess Amaterasu, who brought the Rising Sun over the darkened Japan islands. The Ainu have a saying that refutes Shintoism: The people of the sun (Yamato Japanese) have been in Japan for a 1,000 years but we (Jomon Ainu) have been here for a 100,000 years! The Yamato were the Han Chinese conquerors who invaded Japan during the Kofun ("ancient grave" ) Period 250-550 CE and also created the modern Japanese language (Nihongo: a composite language of the Korean Yayoi and Han Chinese) circa 500 CE, the Imperial Family, the Yamato Dynasty and the 1st State called Yamato. They are the 1st ethnic Japanese people group. The Chronicles of Japan recorded a 701 CE Yamato military campaign to eliminate the last Jomon tribes in Japan. A 1,000 years later in 1869 the "Foreign Frontier" of Hokkaido was annexed, but not declared an official Prefecture until 1947.

  • @davidjacobs8558
    @davidjacobs8558 12 днів тому +1

    Ainu people (or related people) occupied the entire Japanese Archipelago, not just Hokkaido.
    They entered the archipelago during the Ice Age, when Japan was connected to the Contienent by land bridges.
    After the Ice Age was over, the sea level rose, and people could no longer enter Japan,
    until the people of Continent developed ships that can cross the strait.

  • @NorthernThaiGardenGuy
    @NorthernThaiGardenGuy 2 дні тому +2

    Sounds like the many Hill Tribe peoples we have here in Thailand.

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 2 дні тому

      Interestingly, 12% of Thai have M7a Jomon mtDNA, which branched off in Northeast Asia 30,000 years ago. Ainu are a tribe of the Jomon, the ancient race from South Asia (India, Bangladesh) who settled Japan 30,000 years ago. So, did the M7a disperse on a Continental route to Southeast Asia -- or--did it arrive from the Jomon seafarers of Okinawa, which was settled by the Kyushu Jomon 9,000 years ago? Perhaps both routes? Only geneticists can answer those questions, however, it appears that they have yet to ask those questions.

  • @eyeswideopen7777
    @eyeswideopen7777 15 днів тому +1

    Ainu were taught by their custodians.. I'm not surprised.

  • @Elora445
    @Elora445 2 дні тому +1

    I know that some Swedish Sami connected with the Ainu. They apparently got along really, really well. Tried on each others clothes and such. Exchanged cultures galore. Funnily enough, when they wore the other person's clothes, it was hard to see which one was Sami and who was Ainu. So they might not look like the average Japanese, but at least there are some people out there they look similar to.
    Sadly, the Sami and the Ainu have a lot in common, and not only in their beliefs, but in how they were treated by their respective states. Sad but true.

    • @theantifachannel.2771
      @theantifachannel.2771 2 дні тому

      oh gawd, cry us a river.

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 2 дні тому

      ​@@theantifachannel.2771 The Ainu are the sole surviving Jomon tribe. The Jomon were the indigenous people of Japan from South Asia (India, Bangladesh) who settled Japan 30,000 years ago. The Chronicles of Japan recorded a Yamato (Han Chinese Conquerers, 250-550 CE Kofun Period) military campaign to eliminate the last Jomon tribes in Yamato Japan. The Jomon were extinct by 800 CE. A 1,000 years later in 1869 the "Foreign Frontier" of Hokkaido was annexed and a forced assimilation policy was instituted banning the Ainuic language, hunting, salmon fishing and the tatooing of women. In 1947, Hokkaido was finally designated an official Prefecture of Japan. The Genocide of the Jomon in Japan is the only complete genocide of a people group and culture in Common Existence (CE). The Jews survived the Holocaust and other groups survived genocide: Native Americans, Armenians, Rwandans, Cambodians, Rohingyans, et al. The English didn't exterminate the Scots and Welsh.

    • @theantifachannel.2771
      @theantifachannel.2771 2 дні тому

      @@Jomon50 Are you Ainu?

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 2 дні тому

      @@theantifachannel.2771 No I'm a Jomon descendant, related to the Ainu. My Mom and i did our ancestral DNA tests in 2016 since we had questions about our racial heritage, and found that our mtDNA is M7b2: a 7,000 year old Jomon branch of the 50,000 year old M SuperGroup in India via Arabia out of Africa. So i did a deep dive into the Jomon (and Ainu) DNA and history.

  • @nholmes86
    @nholmes86 14 днів тому +3

    its really fascinating to me to see full blowing beard in asiatic people

  • @thedarktitangaming6350
    @thedarktitangaming6350 3 місяці тому +8

    The ainu gives you a unique perspective on "japanese" people.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  3 місяці тому +3

      They certainly do! 👍 Thanks for watching.

  • @taktktk5240
    @taktktk5240 14 днів тому +2

    縄文人が北海道の先住民
    アイヌさんは択捉島から来たと聞きましたが

  • @catholiccrusader5328
    @catholiccrusader5328 13 днів тому +1

    The short girl in frame 12:29 is a real hottie! I love those robes in fact I'm wearing one right now. Years ago I used to travel yearly to visit and live with Japanese friends. Much love from Chicago.

  • @LadyLeda2
    @LadyLeda2 3 місяці тому +30

    37 years ago I had a Japanese high school exchange student. I knew about the Ainu people and asked her about them. She had a very violent reaction toward them, describing them as filthy, dirty people the scum of Japan. I knew the Japanese people did not like the Ainu very much, but, that violent reaction really surprised me. I am glad to hear that they are being more accepted today.
    So at that time, I bought a book on the Ainu people. It was very thin so not a lot of information but it said that the Ainu people had blue eyes. Since you did not mention blue eyes, I think this blue eyed thing in the book was wrong.

    • @UntoldHistoryYT
      @UntoldHistoryYT  3 місяці тому +17

      It's very interesting yet also rather sad to read this. I'm sure the girl's life involved a lot of conditioning, and the reaction you witnessed was simply a result of that. I, too, am glad to see that the Ainu people are far more accepted today.
      Regarding the Ainu having blue eyes, although it is uncommon, I believe there is a higher prevalence of this trait compared to other Asian populations.
      Thank you very much for sharing your story, and I hope you enjoyed the video! 🙂

    • @2551987ezio
      @2551987ezio 2 місяці тому +12

      Satoru Noda's manga called Golden Kamuy has a Ainu character with blue eye's. So I don't think, it's entirely false.

    • @oqqaynewaddingxtwjy7072
      @oqqaynewaddingxtwjy7072 2 місяці тому +6

      That same as Zionist treat Gazans

    • @user-jk6ed9ux1t
      @user-jk6ed9ux1t Місяць тому +10

      ​@UntoldHistoryYT Ainu having blue eyes or that kind of remarks suggesting they were of Caucasian origin are completely debunked by the recent most advanced genetic tests. They were just other kind of ancient Jomon people who were completely of Asian origin.

    • @GroundbreakGames
      @GroundbreakGames 16 днів тому +13

      @@oqqaynewaddingxtwjy7072 There is no such thing as Gazans. There are 6 different Tribes living in the area you call Gaza, and they normally hate and kill each other when not focused on attacking Israel.

  • @glengreen362
    @glengreen362 12 днів тому

    I wonder if any genetic studies were ever made to see if there were any ancestral links between the Ainu and other ancient indigenous races. For example, would it be possible that there might be distant links to the ancestor of the American native tribes that migrated across the land bridge during the ice ages. The Ainu seem to be a very beautiful and unique culture.

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 12 днів тому +2

      Ainu are Jomon descendants whose ancestral Y DNA is D-M55 and mtDNA is M7, an ancient South Asian race that split off in Arabia from out of Africa. The Jomon (named for the world's 1st pottery culture 16,500 years ago) migrated from India and Bangladesh over 45,000 years ago and became the 1st people of Northeast Asia -- making them an older race than East Asian Mongoloids who are the ancestors of Native Americans.
      2015 DNA research of Ainu revealed genetic alleles of Europeans and Middle Easterners associated with the formation of facial features, which explains why 19th century historical accounts described Ainu as a non-mongoloid race with Caucasian features. However, due to assimilation by Japan and the Ainu custom of adopting Japanese orphans they began to resemble East Asians as they do today.
      After 15,000 years in Northeast Asia, these indigenous hunter gatherers crossed over to Japan 30,000 years ago on land bridges when global sea levels dropped. They settled Okinawa 9,000 years ago. 80% of Ainu men and 60% of Okinawan men carry D-M55 DNA and M7 DNA is common.
      Japanese are descendants of the Korean "Yayoi" rice farmers who arrived in Japan 1,000 - 300 BCE and the Han Chinese "Yamato" conquerors of Japan who invaded during the Kofun "ancient grave" period 250 - 550 CE. The Chronicles of Japan recorded the Yamato military campaign in 701 CE to eliminate the last surviving tribe of Jomon in Japan. By 800 CE the Jomon people and culture were extinct. The "Foreign Frontier" of Hokkaido was annexed 1,000 years later in 1869, but not designated an official Prefecture until 1947.

  • @Monstacheeks
    @Monstacheeks 14 днів тому +2

    Ainu? I didn’t knew.

  • @TubeYouTakashi
    @TubeYouTakashi 16 днів тому +4

    I am Japanese staying 25 years at Hokkaido. I am not so familiar about Ainu, but have some basic knowledges and history, I respect Ainu culture, but I feel this documents in particular those graphics are not correct. giving wrong information

    • @alinaanto
      @alinaanto 14 днів тому +2

      Could you please tell us some of the details you see that are incorrect? I just want to learn, thank you!

  • @mangthanghaokip
    @mangthanghaokip 6 днів тому

    There’s a tribal known as Chin-Kuki-Mizo by the British and outsiders presently residing in modern day Burma, Bangladesh and North East India borderline. It could be nice if there’s anything you can shine about their past culture and their origins. They are blood relatives but divided into 3 countries after the Second World War by the British Empire. They have no written history record but just oral records passing through generations

  • @jorgegonzalez-larramendi5491
    @jorgegonzalez-larramendi5491 14 днів тому +1

    Pls try Oki's Ainu Dub Band. Traditional songs reinterpreted in rock dub,,, w tonkori. Great stuff in youtube, several CDs.

  • @Jagdtyger2A
    @Jagdtyger2A 11 днів тому

    What is the level, if any, og Fenisovan DNA in the AInu genome??

  • @LG-bs1rs
    @LG-bs1rs 14 днів тому +1

    Great video

  • @MakerBoyOldBoy
    @MakerBoyOldBoy 14 днів тому

    There is another lesser known nomadic ethnic group also driven to undesirable lands. The Sanka who tend to roam the mountains of Honshu.

  • @afro_souledits2382
    @afro_souledits2382 13 днів тому

    I learn of them because of samurai champloo episode

  • @joyhill7315
    @joyhill7315 16 днів тому +4

    Background music is very intrusive,

  • @ojisan4220
    @ojisan4220 14 днів тому +4

    Some of their ornament and hats remind of Central Asia - specifically Bashkir, Tatar, Kazakh people though it is obvious Ainu people moved to Far East long (at least a thousand years) before formation of modern Bashkir, Kazakh people. According to Ainu wiki page, DNA research partly confirms this

    • @smonline631
      @smonline631 9 днів тому

      in Kazakhstan we have same music instruments, and in Latin America they tattooed married women

  • @stevoplex
    @stevoplex 15 днів тому +2

    I knew an Ainu native who was the first to be fitted with a prosthetic eye new from the clinic.

  • @nphipps9406
    @nphipps9406 12 днів тому

    thank you i didn't know it had Ainu people in Russia, but the resembles Japanese, or did the Japanese integrated with them

  • @ramondelgado4927
    @ramondelgado4927 9 днів тому

    What i find super interesting is that people often make comparisions between Ainu and the natives from North and South america , while the treatment may seem similar , the context is very diferent , natives in america were subjugated by eropeans that arrived less than 200yrs ago at best , very recent history , while the ainu were subjegated by Yamato and Jomon people that have been living in the japanese archipelago since around 2K yrs ago , they were not opressed by "invaders/conquerors" like most others , but by the very people already living there , they are all japanese , none are more or less japanese than the other
    A closer comparison i think , would be like macedonia subjugating (assimilating) greece and Rome later on doing the same to them and so on thru history , the issue here is than japan isolation cause it to endure into modern times
    I always had a love for their clothing , ever since an uncle gifted me a book about japan which had (unexpectedly) a chapter dedicated to them , im glad they are having a resurgance in life

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 9 днів тому

      Ainu were absolutely not subjugated by the Jomon because they are the northernmost and sole surviving tribe of Jomon (D-M55 Y DNA and M7 mtDNA), an ancient South Asian race (India, Bangladesh) who migrated to Northeast Asia 45,000 years ago and settled Japan 30,000 years ago. A 2010 DNA study found that 80% of Ainu men carry D-M55 DNA. The Ainu were called "Eizo" (or Yezo, old Japanese meaning Hokkaido). The Eizo (Ainu) homeland encompassed Hokkaido and the adjacent Tohoku region of Northern Honshu island (Japan). Some scientists believe the Ainu lived throughout Japan and their DNA (with the specific G mtDNA marker, a late 500 BCE migration from Central Asia) is even found far south among Okinawans, who are also Jomon descendants.
      Other Jomon tribes were the Emishi, Kumaso and Hayato. The Chronicles of Japan recorded a 701 CE Yamato military campaign to eliminate the last Jomon tribes. The "Foreign Frontier" of Hokkaido was annexed 1,000 years later in 1869, but not designated an official Prefecture until 1947. So, the Hokkaido Ainu survived the Jomon Genocide of Japan.

  • @nativeeurope1299
    @nativeeurope1299 2 дні тому

    While I dont really care about the Ainu people or their future or their past, I will say that its interesting that they have such thick beards. Even by Arab standards that would be considered a thick beard.

  • @yeqingzhu6028
    @yeqingzhu6028 10 днів тому

    That is funny! Since when Panda bear lives in Japan? And is connected to Ainu people?

  • @amazinggrace5692
    @amazinggrace5692 14 днів тому +4

    Those beards and starches are certainly impressive. Do they seem to be unusually robust compared to general Japanese?

  • @famitsus987
    @famitsus987 4 дні тому +1

    The jomon are the original natives of Japan who are caucsoid aniu are their kids they adopted many mongliod orphans mostly girls and mixed with East Asian woman

  • @eyeswideopen7777
    @eyeswideopen7777 15 днів тому

    They were guardians of the land japan

  • @TheShamwari
    @TheShamwari 13 днів тому

    Would be far more interesting if there were lots of details - pictures of the actual people today to compering to the Japanese,

  • @JoeDuke-PhD
    @JoeDuke-PhD 15 днів тому

    My mom, did the same.

  • @jerrysstories711
    @jerrysstories711 12 днів тому

    Are the Ainur named after them?

  • @Fotosynthesis858
    @Fotosynthesis858 15 днів тому +8

    My ex-gf was Japanese & she said that a lot of Japanese are racist towards Ainu & treat them like crap

    • @TimmyT-ri5lo
      @TimmyT-ri5lo 14 днів тому +2

      That was in the past nowadays nobody cares. But yes some ainu do get stares when they walk in the city because they look different then 98% of the population

    • @MakerBoyOldBoy
      @MakerBoyOldBoy 14 днів тому +1

      The Japanese culture at its core is based upon racism and xenophobia. Their national metrics and demographics are declining and dying sharply. The best and least racist are making plans to emigrate perhaps to world genetic Japanese enclaves as Brazil. Their treatment of Ainu is cosmetic and token. Japanese are incapable of inclusion. The Ainu similar to native Hawaiians strongly desire a separate enclave, reservation or large island away from the destructive dominating culture. The Ainu like the San or Bushmen of the Kalahari desert. Both were widely dispersed peoples who were hunted and killed and finally driven into undesirable lands by the dominate culture. The Ainu adapted to Hokkaido (Yuki Kuni or Snow Country). There is a Japanese movie with subtitles which dramatizes the Japanese intrusion into Hokkaido to colonize it. It's title is Year One in the North. There are many popular movies set in Hokkaido today. It is fun to collect them. I live in Tucson AZ next to the Tohono O'Odham reservation. Since the Ainu and these reservation people share such a similar history, it would be grand to arrange a high school student swap for a year or a steady arrangement. Goodreads.com has a list of popular Ainu books.

    • @shaunmaree6493
      @shaunmaree6493 12 днів тому

      My best friend is Japanese and he discounts the existence of the Ainu, or their place in Japan, this saddens me .

  • @siomokof3425
    @siomokof3425 15 днів тому

    Is it me , or is Princess Mononoke inspired by these Ainu ?

  • @restlessfae2407
    @restlessfae2407 8 днів тому

    The animism part reminds me of the indigenous of north America. They believe animals, trees,etc had spirits.

    • @famitsus987
      @famitsus987 4 дні тому

      Yh no ish it’s from ancient north Eurasians Europeans central Asians and native Americans jomon etc all have similar beliefs

  • @radwest86406
    @radwest86406 8 днів тому

    The Ainu people were probably one of the first peoples of The Americas.

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 8 днів тому

      Ainu are Jomon, the 1st people of Northeast Asia and Japan who migrated from South Asia (India, Bangladesh) 45,000 years ago. Their ancestral DNAs (D and M Haplogroups) are 50,000 - 65,000 years old. Native Americans are the descendants of Central Asians (C and D4 DNAs) and East Asians (B2 DNA) who crossed over from Siberia. A 2015 Ainu DNA study found genetic alleles (mutations) of Europeans and Middle Easterners associated with forming facial features, which explains why 19th century accounts described the Ainu as a non-mongoloid race with Caucasian features. However, due to assimilating surrounding Mongoloid races and the Ainu custom of adopting Japanese orphans (especially girls), Ainu features began to resemble Mongoloid races as they do today. So, that explains their mistaken identity.

  • @graemedalgleish8944
    @graemedalgleish8944 7 днів тому

    There was a skeleton recovered in a river Bank. It was first designated as Caucasian but carbon dating showed it was 9000 years old. I believe it was called the Kennewick man.

  • @DDDothager
    @DDDothager 8 днів тому

    Are they realated to the inuet, of Alaska?

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 8 днів тому +1

      No. Ainu are Jomon, an ancient race from South Asia (India, Bangladesh) with genetic alleles (mutations) of Europeans and Middle Easterners. However, the Ainu also settled the Kuril Islands in the Okhotsk Sea and admixed with Kamchatkan peoples who are related to Inuit. So, Kuril Ainu are not related ancestrally to Kamchatkans but are related through racial interbreeding. The Ainu of Sakhalin island admixed with Siberian Yakut people and East Asians.

    • @famitsus987
      @famitsus987 4 дні тому

      No inuet are mongliods unmixed jomon we’re Caucsiods

  • @shaolindreams
    @shaolindreams 14 днів тому +3

    What i find interesting is the genetics.. West Africans & East Africans (including many Med/Europeans) both come under different subclades of YDNA haplogroup E. Now what is cool is Ainu mainly come under haplogroup D.. And E and D both come from the split of DE. We didn't go that far, but D went all the way to Japan!

  • @Tomoesong
    @Tomoesong 14 днів тому

    Golden Kamuy

  • @petergarcia8225
    @petergarcia8225 11 годин тому

    For some reason, I am more attracted to Hokkaido than any part of Japan.??....weird right

  • @DuelingBongos
    @DuelingBongos 12 днів тому

    If you knew Ainu like I know Ainu. Who knew Ainu?

  • @Jomon50
    @Jomon50 13 днів тому +4

    A 2019 DNA study revealed that the Ainu have 79% Jomon DNA. The Jomon are an ancient South Asian race whose ancestors migrated from what is now India and Bangladesh over 45,000 years ago and settled Northeast Asia. After 15,000 years, sea levels dropped and these hunter gatherers crossed over on land bridges connecting South Korea to Kyushu island (Japan). For the next 13,000 years in Japan they were geographically isolated and 16,500 years ago they created the world's 1st pottery culture which was called Jomon ("cord marked"). The Jomon also created the world's 1st lacquerware.
    The Ainu were called "Eizo" (Yezo) by the Japanese which is their old term for Hokkaido. The Eizo also lived in the adjacent Tohoku region of Northern Honshu island. Other Jomon tribes included the Emishi, Kumaso and Hayato. The Jomon settled Okinawa 9,000 years ago.
    DNA research in 2015 found genetic alleles of Europeans and Middle Easterners in the Ainu DNA that are associated with the formation of facial features. This explains why 19th century Westerners described the Ainu as a non-mongoloid race with Caucasian features. Archival photos of unassimilated Ainu confirm those accounts. However, due to assimilation by the Japanese and the Ainu tradition of adopting Japanese orphans, their features began to resemble East Asian Mongoloids (due to "genetic drift") as they do today.
    The last remaining Jomon tribes in Japan were exterminated by Yamato military campaigns around 800 CE. The "Foreign Frontier" of Hokkaido was annexed by Japan 1,000 years later in 1869, but was not designated an official Prefecture until 1947.

    • @Bloodspeake8
      @Bloodspeake8 12 днів тому

      This is false and contradictory. First you say that they are desendent fron an ancient south asian race and then you say that they were described as caucasians which is actually true.

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 12 днів тому +1

      ​@@Bloodspeake8Thank you for replying! Yes the Ainu have genetic alleles (mutations) that give instructions to create Caucasian features. Geneticists don't know where or when they acquired these mutations and some dismiss the Jomon Ainu as "faux" (fake) Europeans. Since Ainu don't have European DNA in their autosomal profile, which comes when different groups interbreed for many generations, it must have been a brief encounter along their journey through Central Asia where ancient Europeans and Middle Easterners (Turkic) lived before the Mongoloid expansion out of East Asia (China) 20,000 years later. A small traveling party with unmarried females who got impregnated (geneticists say this is common practice for ancient migratory groups) would then bear kids with this adaptation into their new homeland 9 months later. The successful mutation would be retained while the European DNA would eventually be drowned out ("genetic drift") over thousands of years.
      So, if you look carefully at the pics (excluding the East Asian Mongoloid admixtures) you will notice dark skin, coarse dark hair, high brow ridges, deep-set eyes (all South Asian features) with Caucasian faces. Some Ainu have white skin.
      I hope that clears things up.

    • @LeonGaban
      @LeonGaban 10 днів тому

      @@Bloodspeake8 South Asians are of the Caucasoid race, there are 3 main divisions of humans, biggest difference is bone structure.

  • @PortugalCarp
    @PortugalCarp 9 днів тому

    There seem to be many similarities between the Ainu and the indigenous Pacific North West American people. In some of the men you could even go as far as saying they have some similarities with the indigenous Australian's.

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 9 днів тому

      Ainu are Jomon, a 50-65,000 year old South Asian (India, Bangladesh) race who settled Northeast Asia 45,000 years ago and Japan 30,000 years ago-- making them an older race than East Asian Mongoloids, who are the ancestors of Northwestern Native Americans (D4, B2 DNAs). A DNA study of the Ainu found genetic alleles (mutations) of Europeans and Middle Easterners associated with forming facial features, which explains why 19th century accounts described the Ainu as a non-mongoloid race with Caucasian features. (Archival photos of unassimilated Ainu corroborate Caucasian features.) However, due to later admixtures and assimilation -- and the Ainu custom of adopting Japanese orphans (mainly girls), Ainu began to exhibit Mongoloid features as they do today.
      Australian Aborigines have ancient DNA from the migration out of Africa into Arabia and along the coast of South Asia (Southern India still has ancient Black races) into Malaysia before splitting off into 3 DNA related groups of ancient Black races: Australian Aborigines, Black Pygmies of the Philippines ("Negrillos" on the island of Negros) and Melanesians of Papua, New Guinea.

  • @patp3800
    @patp3800 7 днів тому

    Ainu Naki

  • @rogerphelps1798
    @rogerphelps1798 15 днів тому +2

    Lets hope the resurgence does not lead the Ainu becoming a caricature of what a modern person thinks they were/are like , as is seen around the world with revival of indigenous cultures.

  • @jenniferbreaux7385
    @jenniferbreaux7385 8 днів тому +1

    Assimilation sounds more like cultural eradication

    • @Jomon50
      @Jomon50 8 днів тому

      You hit the nail on its head! The Japanese proverb is: The nail that sticks up gets pounded down. In 701 CE, the Chronicles of Japan recorded a Yamato military campaign to eliminate the last Jomon tribes: descendants of ancient South Asians (India, Bangladesh) who settled Northeast Asia 45,000 years ago and Japan 30,000 years ago. By 800 CE the Jomon are no longer mentioned in historical records and to this day their culture is extinct in Japan (about 5 Jomon words exist in Japanese).
      However, the Ainu are the last remaining Jomon tribe who survived the Genocide because Hokkaido was not part of Yamato Japan. (A 2019 Ainu DNA study found 79% Jomon DNA. A 2010 study found that 80% of Ainu men carry Jomon D-M55 Y DNA. Jomon M7 Maternal DNA is also common.) Other Jomon tribes included the Emishi, Kumaso and Hayato. (The Jomon also settled Okinawa 9,000 years ago.) The Japanese called the Ainu "Eizo" (or Yezo which is old Japanese meaning Hokkaido) and the Ainu Homeland encompassed the adjacent northern Tohoku region of Honshu island, Japan.
      1,000 years after the Jomon Genocide, Japan annexed the "Foreign Frontier" of Hokkaido in 1869 and instituted a forced assimilation policy to solve its "Ainu problem." Measures included banning the Ainu language, the tatooing of women, hunting and salmon fishing. Because of assimilation and the traditional Ainu custom of adopting Japanese orphans (girls were favored) Ainu began to resemble Japanese as they do today. Hokkaido was finally designated an official Prefecture in 1947.