Soqotri people
السقطريون | |
---|---|
Total population | |
71,400[1] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Yemen | |
Languages | |
Soqotri and Yemeni Arabic | |
Religion | |
Islam | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Other Semitic-speaking peoples Especially Harasis, Mehri, and other Modern South Arabian-speaking peoples |
The Soqotri people, sometimes referred to as Socotran, are a South Arabian ethnic group native to the Gulf of Aden island of Socotra. They speak the Soqotri language, a Modern South Arabian language in the Afroasiatic family.
General
[edit]The Soqotri primarily inhabit the Socotra Archipelago, on Socotra island and the Abd al Kuri, Darsah and Samhah districts of the Amanat Al Asimah governorate, Yemen.[1]
According to Ethnologue, there are an estimated 71,400 Soqotri. As of the last 1990 Socotra census, they numbered around 57,000.[1]
Most Soqotri are Sunni Muslim.[1] Historically, Soqotri were Nestorian Christians, from the Christianization of the island between the 4th and 6th centuries up until the 15th century, when the island was occupied by the Mehri Sultanate in 1480.[2] This led to slow Islamisation of the Soqotri.[3]
Language
[edit]The Soqotri speak the Soqotri language (also known as Saqatri, Socotri, Sokotri and Suqutri). It belongs to the Modern South Arabian languages which are closer to the Ethiopian Semitic languages than to Arabic (Central Semitic languages). Despite historical contacts with the Arabic language, there is no mutual understanding between native speakers of the Modern South Arabian languages and native speakers of Arabic. Moreover, there is no mutual understanding between the speakers of the Modern South Arabian languages themselves, and the Soqotri language is only spoken on the island of Socotra.[4]
Soqotri has several dialects, which consist of ’Abd Al-Kuri, Central Soqotri, Northern Soqotri, Southern Soqotri and Western Soqotri. North Soqotri comprises North Central and Northwest Central (highland) Soqotri.[1]
The language is written using the Naskh variant of the Arabic script. Soqotri is also transcribed with the Latin script.[1]
Genetics
[edit]Most Soqotri belong to the paternal haplogroup J, bearing the basal J*(xJ1,J2) clade at its highest frequencies (71.4%). The remaining individuals mainly carry the J1 subclade (14.3%).[5] YFull[6] and FTDNA[7] however, failed to find J* people anywhere in the world although there are 2 J2-Y130506 persons and 1 J1 person from Soqotra Island.
Maternally, the Soqotri primarily belong to the haplogroups N (24.3% N*; 6.2% N1a) and R0 (17.8% R0a1b; 13.8% R0a; 6.2% R0a1). The basal N* clade occurs at its highest frequencies among them. The next most common mtDNA lineages borne by Soqotri individuals are the haplogroups J (9.2% J*; 3.1 J1b), T (7.7% T2; 1.2% T*), L3 (4.3% L3*), H (3.1%), and R (1.2 R*).[5]
A 2024 study sampled whole-genomes from 39 Soqotri inhabitants from 650-1750 CE, and found that the individuals had a strong genetic relation to Hadhrami Arabs, another Southern Arabian population. These Medieval Soqotri inhabitants were said to derive 86% of their ancestry from Arabs of the Hadramawt region in Yemen, with the Soqotri genome remaining stable over a millennium. The deep ancestry of both the Soqotra and Hadramawt groups was said to be similar to that of Natufians, rather than being from the later Levantine/Anatolian farmers.[8]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f "Soqotri". Ethnologue. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
- ^ Jansen van Rensburg, Julian (December 2018). "Rock Art of Soqotra, Yemen: A Forgotten Heritage Revisited". Arts. 7 (4): 99. doi:10.3390/arts7040099. ISSN 2076-0752.
- ^ Loimeier 2013, p. 181.
- ^ Simeone-Senelle 2003, p. 2.
- ^ a b Černý, Viktor; et al. (2009). "Out of Arabia—the settlement of island Soqotra as revealed by mitochondrial and Y chromosome genetic diversity" (PDF). American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 138 (4): 439–447. doi:10.1002/ajpa.20960. PMID 19012329. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 October 2016. Retrieved 18 May 2017.
- ^ "J YTree".
- ^ "Y-DNA J Haplogroup Project". FamilyTreeDNA.
- ^ Sirak, Kendra; Jansen Van Rensburg, Julian; Brielle, Esther; Chen, Bowen; Lazaridis, Iosif; Ringbauer, Harald; Mah, Matthew; Mallick, Swapan; Micco, Adam; Rohland, Nadin; Callan, Kimberly; Curtis, Elizabeth; Kearns, Aisling; Lawson, Ann Marie; Workman, J. Noah (April 2024). "Medieval DNA from Soqotra points to Eurasian origins of an isolated population at the crossroads of Africa and Arabia". Nature Ecology & Evolution. 8 (4): 817–829. doi:10.1038/s41559-024-02322-x. ISSN 2397-334X. PMC 11009077.