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Èrs people
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Èrs people : ウィキペディア英語版
Èrs people

The Èr people, also known as Èrsh or (in Georgian works) the Hers, are a little-known ancient people inhabiting northern modern Armenia, and to an extent, small areas of northeast Turkey, southern Georgia, and northwest Azerbaijan. Most of their history is constructed based on archaeological and linguistic (primarily based on placenames, with some elements) data, compared to historical trends in the region and historical writings, such as the Georgian Chronicles or the Armenian Chronicles, as well as a couple notes made by Strabo. They were a constituent of the state of Urartu, which either incorporated or conquered them during the 8th century BCE. Their relation to the main Urartians (who were probably ethnically separate from them, judging from place names) is unknown. Linguistically, based on placenames, they are thought to have been a Nakh people.
==Language and culture==
According to Amjad Jaimoukha, their language was a Nakh language.〔Jaimoukha, Amjad. ''The Chechens: A Handbook''. Routledge Curzon: Oxon, 2005.〕 The Urartian fortress Erebuni was named after them. According to Jaimoukha, ''buni'' is a Nakh root, meaning shelter or home, the same root which gave rise to the modern Chechen word ''bun'' (pronounced , meaning a cabin, or small house. Hence, Erebuni meant "the home of the Èrs". It corresponds to modern Yerevan〔See 〕 (''van'' is a common Armenian rendering for the root ''bun'').
According to the "Alarodian" hypothesis, which links the Nakh and other Northeast Caucasian languages with Hurrian and Urartian, and is advocated by some linguists such as Sergei Starostin, it would also be more distantly related to the language of the Ers' former rulers, the Urartians.〔Igor M. Diakonoff, Sergei A. Starostin. "Hurro-Urartian and East Caucasian Languages", Ancient Orient. Ethnocultural Relations. Moscow, 1988, pp. 164-207 http://starling.rinet.ru/Texts/hururt.pdf〕 However, these theories have not gained widespread acceptance or support.
In the ''Georgian Chronicles'', Leonti Mroveli refers to Lake Sevan as "Lake Ereta". The name of the Arax River is also attributed to the Èrs.〔 It is also called the Yeraskhi. The Armenian name is "Yeraskhadzor" (which Jaimoukha identifies as ''Èr'' + ''khi'' a Nakh water body suffix + Armenian ''dzor'' gorge).〔 Interestingly, in close proximity to the South is the "Nakhchradzor" gorge, perhaps an old home of the Dzurdzuks.〔 During the time of the kingdom of Urartu, there was a northern region near the Yerashkhadzor gorge and a little northwest of Erebuni called "Eriaki".

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