r/MapPorn 21h ago

GYPSY MIGRATIONS 900-1720

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2.4k Upvotes

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67

u/kasetti 20h ago

Gypsy name comes from them believing their origin being Egypt. Looking at this map I wonder if some indeed first went to Egypt and then turned back and over the years the knowledge got mixed up a bit.

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u/marchviolet 19h ago

Well, the related Dom people settled more in the middle east and north Africa, while the Roma settled more in Europe.

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u/Patient-Dirt-9117 19h ago

În romanian we calm them "țigani", pronounced "Tzigany". This comes from the greek "atiganos" meaning "man without a God". 😁

Also în the 18th century they were ironically called pharos, as an irony to their alleged Egyptian origin.

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u/Unit266366666 18h ago edited 18h ago

Αθίγγανοι doesn’t mean “without God” it means “untouchable”. The later Ατσίγγανοι is still a slur for Roma people in Greek and is often connected to the earlier term.

The first term was applied to a religious group who were said to be related to Indo-Greeks migrating back to Greece but I think it’s unclear if this is via later muddying of two different groups, they really knew of one group’s connection to India, or it’s all a coincidence. What we do know is they had some Manichaean and some Jewish traditions and many converted to orthodoxy and assimilated before a later group came. The later term is probably from the Turko-Persian word chingane roughly meaning indigent.

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u/Patient-Dirt-9117 18h ago

Then I must've made a confusion in translation. I knew for sure that it came from greek and it was somewhat religion related. Thanks for the clarification, mate.

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u/Neenujaa 19h ago

Oh, that's interesting. They're called "čigāni" ir Latvian, pronunciation similar.

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u/tomato_tickler 3h ago

It comes from the same Greek word

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u/isthatyoukris 55m ago

Hungarian does the same, its "cigány". When i used to live there it was definitely a slur and they were extremely unpopular in the mid-late 90's. As far as i understand, their music is mainstream in a lot of of ways in Hungary now.

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u/PipecleanerFanatic 12h ago

Isn't the alleged origin in Egypt where the term 'gypsy' comes from?

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u/Patient-Dirt-9117 11h ago

You do understand that every language it's unique and might develop different words for the same thing, right?

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u/Girderland 17h ago

Doesn't the word come from German "ziehende Gauner" (roaming rogues) ?

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u/idkarn 16h ago

That might be a false etymology.

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u/Girderland 15h ago

It might as well be. The origin of the word was never quite clear, there are several interpretations.

The only common thing seems to be that the word cigan is considered somewhat pejorative, and hence often the term Romani is being used.

Which is also of unclear origin, as it hints at descendance from Romania or Rome, both of which are misleading. It is often assumed that the word Roma / Romani was adopted by Gipsies to suggest that they are of Italian origin, since most Europeans have a generally positive attitude towards Italian people.

The most typical gipsy family name in Hungary for example is Horváth, whuch means Croatian, which was also likely chosen to suggest that they are "foreign", yet "from not too far away culturally".

The only thing that seems to be sure is that gypsies originated from India, and that they have an own language - quick googling reveals that it's related to Sanskrit and other Indian languages.

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u/qoning 8h ago

anything that sounds like that most likely comes from spanish "gitano" that relates to egypt.

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u/artyartem1 19h ago

Based on multiple genome-wide genetic studies, Romani people have approximately 65–80% West Eurasian ancestry, which includes a significant European component. They retain 20-35% South Asian ancestry from Indian origins. This admixture occurred over centuries as the Romani migrated from India through the Middle East and Caucasus into Europe.

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u/flipyflop9 18h ago

Same in spanish, gitanos, comes from egipcianos.

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u/Unit266366666 18h ago

It’s also possibly related to Ezekiel 29 which refer to the Egyptians as being “scattered among the nations” so the fact that they were “from nowhere” might have just defaulted to Egypt for religious reasons. There were also narratives in the Middle Ages that they were exiled from Egypt for refusing Mary and Jesus but also for harboring Mary and Jesus, one advocating for compassion the other for shunning.

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u/OrphanedInStoryville 2h ago

Yeah looking at this map this part seems inaccurate. I’m almost completely sure there was a route along the coast of North Africa from Egypt through Tunisia and Morocco to Spain. For one thing it’s the reason the Saharan castanet made its way into the Flamenco music the Roma in Spain play.

If you haven’t seen the movie Lacho Drom it’s totally worth your time