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::There is no source for that and if there is it does not serve big claims of some people, so you never find a proper source for that esp by claimants. Indeed whole of this article is manufactured here in this talk page and is not based on scientific evidence. [[User:KhalidMarwan|KhalidMarwan]] 17:09, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
::There is no source for that and if there is it does not serve big claims of some people, so you never find a proper source for that esp by claimants. Indeed whole of this article is manufactured here in this talk page and is not based on scientific evidence. [[User:KhalidMarwan|KhalidMarwan]] 17:09, 3 April 2006 (UTC)

::: Aucaman, I cannot teach you how to read books if you have never done it before. These books and articles very clearly support the contents. [[User:Shervink|Shervink]] 21:16, 3 April 2006 (UTC)shervink

Revision as of 21:16, 3 April 2006

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Iranian peoples are NOT merely a linguistic group

I have been pointing this out for quite a long time, many sources were mentioned for it, and nobody actually gave any real counter-evidence. Iranian peoples are not a linguistic group. They are an ethnic+linguistic+cultural group of people, with the degree of each of these three elements varying for each of them. The way the article starts now is simply wrong, and should not stay like this. Shervink 15:21, 5 March 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]

Iranian people are an ethno-lingustic group. The article even points to racial similarities. Why is this not stated clearly at the start? I sense the work of the same editors that spread anti-Iranian propaganda is at work here. 69.196.139.250 04:19, 14 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
If this article groups based on cultural aspects of Iranian people, then where is the mention of Turkish speaking Iranians? Didn't they contribute to culture of Iran? If it is pure languistic issue here, then why do we call this article "Iranian Peoples". We need to be more specific about the term and call it Indo-Iranian Speaking peoples. Otherwise it will be quite misleading..

Definition of Aryan According to Dictionaries and Encyclopedias

Here is one the definitons of the word Aryan by Oxford dictionary, “The restricted use rests on the ground that only the ancient Indian and Iranian members of the family are known on historical evidence to have called themselves Aria, Arya or Ariya; the wider application rests partly on the inference that the name probably belonged in pre-historic times to the whole family, while this still constituted an ethnic and linguistic unity; and partly on the ground that even if it did not, it is now the most convenient and least misleading name for the primitive type of speech from which all the languages above-mentioned have sprung, inasmuch as Indo-Germanic is too narrow, and Indo-European too wide, for the facts, while Japhetic introduces speculations of which science has no cognizance”.Zmmz 03:14, 7 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


The Merriam-Webster dictionary says, “1 : INDO-EUROPEAN 2 a : of or relating to a hypothetical ethnic type illustrated by or descended from early speakers of Indo-European languages b : NORDIC c -- used in Nazism to designate a supposed master race of non-Jewish Caucasians having especially Nordic features 3 : of or relating to Indo-Iranian or its speakers”[1].Zmmz 03:22, 7 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Columbia Encyclopedia says,“Early History to the Zand Dynasty Iran has a long and rich history. For a detailed description of the Persian Empire, see Persia. Some of the world’s most ancient settlements have been excavated in the Caspian region and on the Iranian plateau; village life began there c.4000 B.C. The Aryans came about 2000 B.C. and split into two main groups, the Medes and the Persians. The Persian Empire founded (c.550 B.C.) by Cyrus the Great was succeeded, after a period of Greek and Parthian rule, by the Sassanid in the early 3d cent. A.D”[2]. Zmmz 03:22, 7 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Macedonian genetic study

This is the study [3] that I had mentioned earlier, either here or over at Talk:Persian people. SouthernComfort 10:43, 7 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Leaving out many Iranian Peoples from "Iranian Peoples" Article

"Iranian Peoples" as described in the Wikipedia's article of Iran includes many ethnic groups like Azeris 24% etc. I think the title "Iranian Peoples" is quite misleading. It strikes me how on earth we can leave out so many Iranian Peoples in this article which is about "Iranian Peoples". I am not sure how to do it best. Maybe a sentence that we are talking linguistics here. Unless someone tells me that we are redefining the term "Iranian Peoples"! —This unsigned comment is by 203.48.45.194 (talkcontribs) .

Yeah this is about linguistic group, but some editors seem to be confused about this and somehow think Iranian is a "race". The article about people of Iran is Demographics of Iran. There Azeris are included. Does this help? AucamanTalk 03:58, 15 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Therefore, shouldn't we use a term that does not confuse people or a statement that says this article is completely a linguistic article. Then agian, what is the difference between this article and "Iranian Languages" then? —This unsigned comment is by 203.48.45.194 (talkcontribs) .

I've added a note saying this has very little to do with the country of Iran. See this for an alternative explanation of why this is happening. Is there anything specific that you don't like? AucamanTalk 04:16, 15 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

It is completely absurd to see Kharzai pictured as a member of Iranian peoples while the some of prominent past and contemporary Iranians can not be included in the term defined here. I think the title is quite misleading and confusing and should be changed. —This unsigned comment is by 203.48.45.194 (talkcontribs) .

Yes it is. But in Wikipedia it takes some time and effort for wrong things to be corrected. If you make a comment and leave no one's going to listen to you. AucamanTalk 04:23, 15 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Guess you proved yourself wrong here. You did something about it, didn't you? :) Thanks :)

Dispute

As I said before the infobox does not belong here. It is wrong and is special to ethnic groups such as Armenians. not linguistic groups. Diyako Talk + 15:40, 20 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Iranian people are not just a linguistic group, as mentioned by almost everybody before, so the info box is appropriate. Shervink 16:30, 20 March 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]
The article clearing starts with saying its about an "ethno-linguistic" group. --Kash 22:42, 20 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Update

The whole article makes lots of claims that are not well-sourced. Where's the claim that Iranian is an ethno-linguistic group coming from? Also (this is embarrassing to even bring up), Indo-European and Indo-Iranian are NOT ethnic groups for sure. Some people here don't seem to understand the difference between an ethnic group and a linguistic group. AucamanTalk 12:31, 22 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

First source

Thanks for adding in a source. The first source you've provided is this. Nice try. Your source says that Kurds are an ethno-linguistic group. Google searches are good, but if you actually read them after your search hits. It's also good for people to review the definition of what an ethno-liguistic group is: it's an ethnic group that shares one common language. All Iranian peoples share a common language? AucamanTalk 20:06, 22 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Hi, yes exactly dear Aucaman, in adition the source is NOT related to this article as it is on KURDS; it says Kurds are an ethno-linguistic group and does not say Iranians are an ethno-linguistic group. I wondered how dear SouthernComfort added this while his english is vey good. Diyako Talk + 20:19, 22 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Stop removing sources diyako, the source is clear????
Excuse me, What is clear? what that link claims? Diyako Talk + 20:26, 22 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The Kurds, an Iranian ethno-linguistic group--like Persians, Lurs, Baluch and Bakhtiari,--inhabit the mostly mountainous area where the borders of Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria converge. That's what the source says. Any other problems? SouthernComfort 20:31, 22 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
And BTW Aucaman, your sarcasm and condescending attitude are not appreciated. SouthernComfort 20:34, 22 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
It says Kurds are an Iranian ethno-linguistic group. Is that what you're saying in the article? You're claiming that Iranian peoples is an ethno-linguistic group. Where's the evidence for that? AucamanTalk 20:37, 22 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The source I've provided is pretty clear in defining "Iranian ethno-linguistic group" - "Iranian peoples," as this article defines it, matches the source. Furthermore, it states that the Kurds are an Iranian ethnolinguistic group "like the Persians, Lurs, Baluch, etc." - in other words, the other Iranian peoples. If you want more precise clarifications, you should visit the library. SouthernComfort 21:17, 22 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The source is an excellent read, thanks for finding it SouthernComfort. I was not sure that Kurds are ethno-linguistically Iranian people like Persians, but now I am sure that Kurds are pretty much as Iranian as Persians and other Iranian people are. --Kash 22:36, 22 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
First the source is nor for defination of Iranian peoples as it defines Kurds. Also for matter of Kurds there are enough Authorative sources to discuss it when required. But You link does not describe Iranian people. Diyako Talk + 22:51, 22 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


But it still says that there is an ethno linguistic group called Iranians and kurds and balouch and Persians are members of it. Do you have a source that says otherwise?

Gol 01:21, 23 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Some grammar help. The subject of the sentence is "Kurds". The sentence is talking about Kurds. I already know that Kurds are an ethno-linguistic group. AucamanTalk 04:26, 23 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Excuse me Aucaman, but you're being rude again and it's not appreciated. As I've stated before, the article identifies the Kurds and the other Iranian peoples (Persians, Lurs, Baluch, etc) as all being an "Iranian ethno-linguistic" group, and yet you continue to ignore this. You have no cause to dispute. SouthernComfort 05:15, 23 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Clarification

The source says Kurds are an Iranian ethno-linguistic group. The subject of the sentence is Kurds. Where does it say Iranian peoples is an ethno-linguistic group? AucamanTalk 05:30, 23 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The Kurds, an Iranian ethno-linguistic group--like Persians, Lurs, Baluch and Bakhtiari SouthernComfort 05:32, 23 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, it's saying Kurds, like Persians, Lurs, etc., are an Iranian ethno-linguistic group. How does this justify the statement "Iranian peoples are an ethno-linguistic group"? AucamanTalk 06:07, 23 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Well, the logical conlusion is that if "The Kurds, an Iranian ethno-linguistic group--like Persians, Lurs, Baluch and Bakhtiari" then Iranian peoples which consist of Kurds, Persians, Lurs, Baluch and Bakhtiari are an ethno-linguistic group. --ManiF 06:18, 23 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
logically it says they are several ethnolinguistic groups! or at least Kurds are an ethnolinguistic group!. It can be true when we say these peoples are ethnolinguistic groups but it does not answer this simple question that the 'Iranian peoples' by itself is an ethnolinguistic group or no. Sure it is simply a linguistic group and even if you still claim Iranian peoples is an ethnolinguist group so how much is the ethnical and cultural traits among these peoples. Are Persians and Afghans and Hazaras all ethnically one people. Clearly your answer is no and you may say: 'well, these people all are related', but then question is 'how much???' clearly their relationship in these cases is in varying degrees and is not enough to make a classification based on their culture and ethnic relations. It is only their language which is classified and has several branches western eastern... Diyako Talk + 16:30, 23 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry, which rule of logic are you using? The definition of an ethno-linguistic group is pretty straight-forward: it's an ethnic group sharing a common language. AucamanTalk 06:44, 23 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The last edit by dear Shervink seems to me to be more correct. We should be more carefull in taggings. but here since I've not taged the article, just I can only reduce the disputing degree till dear Aucaman says his last oponion. Diyako Talk + 17:46, 23 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I do not conclude that "Iranian peoples are members of several ethno-linguistic groups of people".!

That doesn't even make sense to me. I think the wording was better before. "The Iranian people are an ethno-linguistic group" then we can clarify it further later.

The article says The Kurds, an Iranian ethno-linguistic group--like Persians, Lurs, Baluch and Bakhtiari" then Iranian peoples which consist of Kurds, Persians, Lurs, Baluch and Bakhtiari

From this, I conclude that:

  • 1- There is an ethno-linguistic group called "Iranian(s)"
  • 2- This ethno-linguistic group contains people such as Persians, Lurs, Kurds, etc. --Kash 00:30, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Mashaallah! habibi once again: This is your personal assumption, the link clearly does not claim that. I wonder how you claim your knowledge of english is professional while cannot understand that simple English sentence correctly! If you know English grammar, It says Kurds are an ethnolinguistic group not Iranians.Diyako Talk + 00:46, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry I don't speak Arabic. Although English is my third language, I try very hard and don't appreciate your rudeness.

It is also not my personal assumption. Both ManiF and SouthernComfort have also agreed with me a few paragraphs above.

Please stop using Wikipedia to prove a point. See WP:POINT --Kash 01:01, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Since I did not say a bad word I see no reason to apology. I said it as a good word. but you made it an insult. If ManiF, and SouthernComfort think that link claims so it does not mean they are right. Ask any admin what your links claim. It describes Kurds as an Ethnolinguistic group not Iranians. Diyako Talk + 01:29, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Also user Shervink who is familiar with the debate of this article clearly did not think like you. He corrected the link so that I accepted it. you reveted it again to the wrong version. Diyako Talk + 01:31, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

As well as user Aucaman. Diyako Talk + 01:31, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I think I should explain my edit of a few days ago to avoid confusion. I'm not very much up to date on this discussion right now because I was on a short trip and couldn't follow the debate lately.
Basically, my edit followed the discussions regarding the issue whether Iranian people are an ethno-linguistic group or not. On one point, I must agree with Diyako and Aucaman, the source provided does not clearly say that Iranian people are one ethno-linguistic group. It says so about the Kurds, and basically the same thing can be said about Pashtuns, Bakhtiari, etc. I don't think that we can say - with the same definition - that Iranian people are one ethno-linguistic group. You might use another, broader, definition of the term ethno-linguistic (comprising several related groups) and then say Iranian people are one ethno-linguistic group. But then again, with that broad definition, you couldn't use the same term to refer to Kurds. What I'm saying basically is that you cannot use this same term in one sentence to refer to both Kurds and Iranians, because Iranian people is a much larger group, with relationships of a much more general character, and cannot be classified in exactly the same manner as Kurds or Pashtuns are. Therefore, I would suggest saying that Iranian people are comprised of a number of ethno-linguistic groups living in the specified areas, all of whom speak Iranian languages. Also, it would be good to mention that most of them, with varying degrees, are related culturally, religiously, and share a lot of their ancient traditions and mythology, albeit each having their distinct cultural aspects as well. Such a thing seems to be the most neutral and accurate to me, and would be fair towards everyone. I suggest, therefore, the first paragraph as I had already put it on my last edit here, plus one short sentence to mention other (non-linguistic) similarities which many of these people have. Shervink 21:59, 26 March 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]
One more thing: If your point is that the term ethno-linguistic can be used to refer to both, although I think it would be somewhat clumsy, I would in principle agree if you could provide a source clearly saying that. Fair is fair, and despite my many previous disagreements with them, Aucaman and Diyako are right on the point that this particular source does not say this. Shervink 22:04, 26 March 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]

Again Infobox

It seems that some users support existence of a infobox in the article. Ok I'm not against that. But actually parts of infobox at least its last section is wrong: See: Related ethnic groups: Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Nuristani, Dardic and Indo-Aryans. None of these groups are ethnic group. Ethnic group is: Persians, Armenians, Goergians not Indo-Iranian etc.. The suggestion is that whether correct that term or remove that. Diyako Talk + 17:58, 23 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Since when these groups have become an ethnic group?! It looks like a miracle! Diyako Talk + 00:51, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Diyako, the source clearly says "Iranian ethno-linguistic group". Just the fact that it acknowledges the Iranian peoples as an ethno-linguistic group is enough. What are you disputing? --Khoikhoi 02:13, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The source says Kurds are an Iranian ethno-linguistic group. The subject of the sentence is the word "Kurd". The statement does not say anything about Iranian peoples as a whole except that it says Kurds (and Persians, etc.) are an Iranian group. This article claims that the linguistic group "Iranian" is an ethno-linguistic group, which is totally false. AucamanTalk 02:18, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
That's your POV that it's false. You asked for a source that claims there is an Iranian ethno-linguistic group and SouthernComfort provided one. I'm not sure what else you want. --Khoikhoi 02:28, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I can't believe I'm having this conversation. The claim in the article is that Iranian is an ethno-linguitic group. The source says that Kurds are an ethno-linguistic group. Do you understand the difference? AucamanTalk 02:38, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The source says the Kurds are an Iranian ethno-linguistic group. As I said above, the fact that they said "Iranian ethno-linguistic group" is enough! The article says that the term exists, and shows that it is a valid one. --Khoikhoi 02:50, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
This is the last time I'm going to repeat this. The subject of the sentence is "Kurds" and the statement says nothing about Iranian peoples as a whole. AucamanTalk 02:53, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Khoikhoi! :::Are you a native speaker of English???.??! Diyako Talk + 11:18, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I second Khoikhoi. He seems to be correct as always. --Kash 20:01, 25 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The fact is that Iranian peoples has its own academic definition and it simply is 'peoples who speak Iranian languages'. If some people among them f. ex. Persians, Tajiks and Afgans or Hazaras and Xs have some ethnic ties then it should be discussed in a respective section in the article not generalize it to whole of group an put it just in the intro section! and all of this was already discussed and agreed on. Iranian peoples are linguistic group because all of them are classified as members of a language group. but they are not members of a ethnic group or ethnic family, There is nothing like that. Tajiks and Hazaras may have ethnolinguistc ties (and may not) but Kurds in Mahababd or Mariwan have no ethnic ties with Hazaras in Afghanistan or others in China rather than linguistic.Diyako Talk + 22:57, 25 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Disputed section

Souces have to be provided for this sentence:

"Having descended from the Aryans (Proto-Indo-Iranians), the ancient Iranian peoples were separated from the Indo-Aryans in the early 2nd millennium BC"

All Iranian peoples are descendants of one group? I've never heard such a thing. AucamanTalk 04:29, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Aucaman, it does not matter what you have personally heard of or not. You can't just dispute an article because of what you don't know about in the world, see Wikipedia:Verifiability This particular information has a link that is posted after that sentence, that is the reference. --Kash 19:59, 25 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
That source is only about the country of Iran and in particular Persians. It's not talking about this "Iranian peoples" of yours. AucamanTalk 20:03, 25 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Aucaman, I have warned you about rudeness before. Rudeness is indeed against a valuable Wikipedia policy WP:CIVIL.

'It's not talking about this "Iranian peoples" of yours.'

I thought you said you are Iranian? then why is "Iranian people" - of mine exactly?

Also I am not sure what exactly you are after here? The source is on the topic of Iran and not "only about the country of Iran", it clearly talks about the people of Iran as well as the Early History of the people and their origin also. --Kash 23:34, 25 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'm Iranian because I was born in the country of Iran, not because I'm a member of a nonexistant ethnic group. AucamanTalk 12:02, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
What do you mean by "non-existant" ethnic group? --Kash 17:33, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Indo-europeans are not an ethnic group. you claim it in the article. Xebat Talk + 17:49, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Deletion

Ok, You have not been able to provide a source for several months. Everytime you were asked for citiation rejected or provided a link wich is totally irrelevant to the topic. When I provide encyclopedic sources you delete it. and push your PERSONAL POV. I hope in deletion article we can reach a compromise. Xebat Talk + 17:49, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Ok, you are riight that nomination is wrong. but you clearly clearly are using a irrelevant source. Why when I insert the Encyclopedia of Ukraine you delete it???? ) Also Swedish Nationalencyklopedin stats the same. Xebat Talk + 18:06, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


The east Aryan group of peoples of the Indo-European family that today inhabit Iran, Soviet Central Asia and Transcaucasia, Afghanistan, and parts of Pakistan, Turkey, and Iraq http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/pages/I/R/Iranianpeoples.htm This link defines the Iranian peoples or your link that says Kurds are an ethniolinguistic group.?? Xebat Talk + 18:09, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

How can a source be irrelevant when it talks about the topic? I don't have a problem with your source, but you have repeatedly said that you have a problem with the term "Aryan", so you are contradicting yourself here. --Kash 18:16, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Your link says KURDS are an ethnolinguistic group. The person who inserted the term ethnolinguistic was User:Tombseye who later removed it by himself and said it is not an academic definition. You destroyed the definition by that link which referes to KURDS. Kurds are an ethnilinguis group because both their language and ethnicity is Kurdish. BUT while Iranian peoples speak languages of a linguistic group they all have different ethnicities. Are Afhgans and Persians one ethnic group? YES or NO? Xebat Talk + 18:21, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Link is not 'mine', I have not claimed ownership over it. It was not even introduced by me. So please keep it WP:CIVIL and don't be rude. I don't know who introduced the term originally, but since it is being used by academic sources, it seems correct.

The article by the way, mentions that Kurds are an Iranian ethnolinguistic group. Keep that in mind. Also, there is no dispute over that different ethnicities have different ethnicities! but the article correctly states that they are all branches of one ethno-linguistic family of Iranians. --Kash 18:28, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Ok, no problem. It seems that the dispute tag should stay forever until you will accpet that your link does not claim that. Xebat Talk + 18:31, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Linguists used to think that changes in language meant ethnic changes. If Indo-European languages spread, that meant the people speaking Indo-European languages had proliferated, conquered other peoples, and erased their language. There are still many sources that take this view of history. This view should be be given, however ... the current view is that languages can spread with innovations in material culture, and that actual people movements need not be involved. Consider, for a minute, the spread of English. Many upper-class South Asians speak English as a first language. Does that mean that they're of British descent? No. Evidence from genetic studies also shows that the language = genetics equation does not hold. Hence the whole basis for this article is an outmoded theory that has been proven wrong. Not to mention the fact that it's sheer, unabashed irredentism. Zora 18:32, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I agree with your point Zora, however you should keep in mind that your hypothesis is just a theory in this case and not really relevant to this case as far as I can see, as well as not being a generally accepted theory on this case and you can't generalise from one certain class of people to whole of Iranian peoples anyway. --Kash 18:38, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Kash, that's shuffling and jiving. Of course it's relevant to this case. And something doesn't have to be "generally accepted" to rate mention in WP. NPOV is about giving alternate theories, not picking one and shutting out the others. A theory just has to be "notable" and the current theories of IE language spread are widespread in academia and indeed notable. Zora 18:48, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
In that case I would like to see sources about your ideas then, --Kash 18:54, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Update

This is not an ethnic group - it includes at least 15 other ethnic groups within it!!! Where are all the definitions in this article coming from? Where are your sources for the article as a whole? You seem to be trying to justify the article one sentence at a time (by finding ad hoc sources for each sentence). But when you put things together it doesn't really add up.

You also might want to read this article a little more closely. Pay specila attention to this map (the codes are provided here). As you can see from the map, Persians are genetically (hence "racially") closer to Turkish Turks and Caucasians than they are to Pathans or Baluchis (who are almost half South Asian). (This is why some Iranians like Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi look more like Caucasian or Turkish people (compare Vigen, the Armenian singer) than Afghans, Pakistanis, or Tajiks.) So, again, linguistic similarity does not automatically lead to genetic/racial similarity.

I'm going to be looking at some of the sources provided in the reference section to see if I can find a consistent definition of "Iranian peoples", but this is going to take some time. Until then people should explain their reasoning as to why this article was formed in the first place.

I will also ask User:Xebat to exercise some patience until we get to the bottom of this. AucamanTalk 18:44, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Again, no one claims Iranian peoples to be of one ethnicity. I am not sure where you are getting this idea from. --Kash 18:57, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
They why are you saying it's an ethnolinguistic group? AucamanTalk 19:26, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Clarification

OK I think you guys have mistaken the term used here, to clarify what "ethno-linguistic" means:

A "people group" is an ethnolinguistic group with a common self-identity that is shared by the various members. There are two parts to that word: ethno and linguistic. Language is a primary and dominant identifying factor of a people group. But there are other factors that determine or are associated with ethnicity.

Usually there is a common self-name and a sense of common identity of individuals identified with the group. A common history, customs, family and clan identities, as well as marriage rules and practices, age-grades and other obligation covenants, and inheritance patterns and rules are some of the common ethnic factors defining or distinguishing a people. What they call themselves may vary at different levels of identity, or among various sub-groups. [4]

Iranian peoples share the same language. Thats one thing. About the ethno part, "common identity", which is shared by Iranian peoples by their history clearly, as well as customs e.g. Norouz which has been celebrated by most if not all Iranian peoples worldwide, and "What they call themselves may vary at different levels of identity, or among various sub-groups." So I think that should explain to you about this term, before you mistake what the article is talking about --Kash 19:15, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Iranian peoples share the same language? What language is that? Maybe I should learn it. All these people speak the same language? AucamanTalk 19:24, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

They speak Iranian languages, and I bet you already know one or two! :) --Kash 19:26, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Iranian languages are not a same language! but several independant languages! Are Pashtun and Persian and Kurdish the same spoken language?!!
-): According to your link even only part of Iranian peoples are a multi-ethnic language group but still those part not an ethnolinguistic one! Hazaras, Persians, and Tajiks who speak one language can be called a multi-ethnic language group but others are even more remote because they have several language: At the same time there may be different peoples who speak the same language but distinguish themselves because of different histories, other factors causing enmity, an endogamous marriage pattern, differing political alliances, or separate self-name or loyalty to a different common ancestor or leader of a common source people group in history. !!! All Iranic peoples be an ethnolinguistc group is a big claim.Xebat Talk + 19:27, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Hey Diyako! nope they are not but that page has put things in a simple language I thought you might understand. Iranian languages are not very different eachother, infact Persians, Lurs, Baluches, Afghans, Tajiks, etc can usually understand eachother's languages. I even have an Uzbek friend who reads Persian poetry!

Anyway thats beside the point. They all speak Iranian languages, and they share similar culture, history and identity, etc. --Kash 19:39, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Sources?

None of these stuff really matter. The definition of the term "Iranian peoples" should come from a source that clearly says what the term means and which groups are included. Instead of arguing about the specific wordings lets first find sources that say what the term means and which groups are included. AucamanTalk 19:39, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The article is well sourced Aucaman, which part exactly are you disputing? --Kash 19:44, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The article is not well-sourced. The first source talks about Kurds, not Iranian peoples. The second one talks about the citizens of Iran - again not the same as the people we're talking about here. You have to provide sources that talk about Iranian peoples, not other people. Otherwise I'm starting to think that the term is not even in use. I'll try to look for some sources myself. AucamanTalk 19:54, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Sources do not have to necessary talk only and only about a certain topic to be used as a reference on wikipedia, if a source talks about the matter, it can be used. You have compared this to Germanic people and you wonder why there are not as many sources on the matter, but you have to remember that the idea of Germanic people has been talked about much more in west, as it was one of the most important ideologies of the 20th century, used in one of the biggest wars in history of man kind. In contrast the idea of Iranian peoples has been an eastern topic and has not had the same effect on the west. As far as I know much of the research has been carried out in Persian language and Russian. There is no question I don't think that Iranian people speak Iranian languages and their culture is Iranian culture, and I know it might sound POV to someone who doesn't know much about the topic, but its true. --Kash 22:04, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
We all know that this source is more authorative, reliable and neutral than POV of some users. The east Aryan group of peoples of the Indo-European family and we know that nowadays Aryan is used only in linguistics. [5]. In addition most of these peoples have uncertain or even different ethnic origins [6] [7]. So while even Aryan is a linguistic term not ethnical and speakers of this linguistic group have different ethnic backgrounds why we should ignore all of these facts and push our pov or our friends? Xebat Talk + 03:31, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Lol we all know this? are you sure? that source does not look very reliable to me, the article we have here is two pages full with references. This "authorative" source of yours is good but does not really define what it is talking about, unless you use other sources to back it up, etc. Even then you don't get a full picture. --Kash 04:28, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, Diyako. This is what your source says: Iranian peoples. The east Aryan group of peoples of the Indo-European family that today inhabit Iran, Soviet Central Asia and Transcaucasia, Afghanistan, and parts of Pakistan, Turkey, and Iraq. In ancient times they also inhabited southeastern Europe. During the 1st millennia BC and AD Ukraine was inhabited consecutively by the Iranian-speaking Cimmerians, Scythians, Sarmatians, Alans, and Irano-Turkic Khazars. These peoples interacted with the indigenous proto-Slavs and influenced their cultural development. [8] It does not say anything about linguistics. SouthernComfort 04:51, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, The east Aryan group of peoples of the Indo-European family and we know that Aryan is used only in linguistics. [9]. In addition most of these peoples have uncertain or even different ethnic origins [10] [11]. So while even Aryan is a linguistic term not ethnical and speakers of this linguistic group have different ethnic backgrounds why we should ignore all of these facts? Xebat Talk + 05:02, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The source added doesn't say anything about linguistics, Diyako. SouthernComfort 05:09, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Your link does not say anything about Iranians BEING AN RELATED ETHNIC GROUP!!!!!! it defines Kurds. My source does define it as East Aryan group. Xebat Talk + 05:11, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The source(s) disagree with you, my friend. The second one even explicitly refers to Iranian peoples. And please do not shout. SouthernComfort 05:15, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

It refers to Kurds. Kurds are an ethnolinguistc group. Not Persians and Hazaras and Pashtuns altogether!!Xebat Talk + 05:16, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Iranian peoples. The east Aryan group of peoples of the Indo-European family that today inhabit Iran, Soviet Central Asia and Transcaucasia, Afghanistan, and parts of Pakistan, Turkey, and Iraq. In ancient times they also inhabited southeastern Europe. During the 1st millennia BC and AD Ukraine was inhabited consecutively by the Iranian-speaking Cimmerians, Scythians, Sarmatians, Alans, and Irano-Turkic Khazars. These peoples interacted with the indigenous proto-Slavs and influenced their cultural development. That is as clear as any source is going to get. It is just that obvious, my friend. SouthernComfort 05:17, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I second SouthernComfort. Very clear, indeed. --Kash 05:18, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Ok my dear friend where you did get the term Iranian peoples being an ethnolinguist group? Xebat Talk + 05:38, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Excuse me? SouthernComfort 05:41, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Kurds are an Iranian Ethnolinguitic group.
Which is ethnolinguistic group? Kurds or Iranian?? Xebat Talk + 05:43, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Don't you already know from the sources provided? The article is pretty clear in its wording. SouthernComfort 05:48, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

No, unfortunately, I'm so sorry, can you please help us and clarify which one is an ethnolinguistic group? Maybe I'm wrong! As far as i understand the same as in the logic Toyota is a japanese car this is Toyota which is a car, here in this sentence I understand that this is Kurds who are an ethnolinguistic group not Iranians. Xebat Talk + 05:51, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

PLEASE CALL IT "Toyota Motor Corporation" NOT JUST TOYOTA! IM QUITE SENSETIVE ABOUT THIS. THANKS.

Protected

I have temporarily protected the article, so you could discuss your edit conflict on the talk page, before the edit warring. abakharev 07:25, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Thank you for protecting. I really didn't want to get involved in this dispute, but I kept seeing numerous reverts come up while I was on recent changes patrol and initiated a discussion with Xebat. Frankly, I'd say I tend to agree with the anti-Xebat crowd, yet I nonetheless find it inappropriate to repeatedly delete his dispute tags. I really wish everyone would just follow WP:1RR in these cases: Xebat tags the article, the tag is deleted, the tag is restored--leave the tag in place. He honestly has not been given adequate time to explain his complaint, and none of the editors here have shown him any respect or civility. He, on the other hand, was equally uncivil by adding a ridiculous number of inappropriate tags to the article with the intent of undermining its ethical appeal and making a point. As there clearly is a dispute about the factuality and neutrality of the article, I urge the editors here, after the article is unprotected, to leave Xebot's tag in place until a resolution is reached--either through an overwhelming consensus, his concession, or mediation. It is most definitely inappropriate to repeatedly remove these tags only a couple of hours after they were originally posted. Leave them in place for at least a few days, and if everyone agrees that Xebot has made no valid statement of a dispute, then you can delete them without being rash and cruel. AmiDaniel (Talk) 07:59, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I think User:Xebat deserves more credit than he's been given. Some users here try to push for certain terms and ideas to appear in the article not by concensus or cooperation but by carrying out constant revert wars and repeatedly taking off the dispute tags. This has got to stop. The article is on Iranian peoples but the source justifying its definition here comes from an article on Kurds. No sources have been provided that give a consistent definition of who Iranian peoples are and this is of great concern. Instead of looking for comprehensive sources and presenting them here, they have decided to just define things the way they see it and then look for (incomplete) sources justifying one sentence but at the same time contradicting another. AucamanTalk 08:40, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Incorrect. There is a consensus and the sources clearly define what is meant by "Iranian peoples". Please see WP:V, and as for your other comments directed towards specific editors, please see WP:CIVIL. SouthernComfort 08:54, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I agree, users such as Xebat have asked for sources that say that an Iranian ethno-linguistic group exists - we provided it to him and Aucaman but both rejected it saying "it's about the Kurds". Yes the subject of the article is about the Kurds, but it still acknowleges the existance of an Iranian ethno-linguistic group. --Khoikhoi 09:13, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Again, just because Kurds are an ethno-linguistic group it doesn't mean you can call Iranians an ethno-linguistic group. An ethno-linguistic group is an ethnic group that shares a common language. Kurds have that. "Iranians" don't. Iranian is a general linguistic group. I can't believe you're bring this same issue back up. Makes me wonder if you're reading the source correctly. AucamanTalk 09:42, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
This is what the source says: "The Kurds, an Iranian ethno-linguistic group--like Persians, Lurs, Baluch and Bakhtiari". The source clearly indicates that Iranian peoples (Kurds, Persians, Lurs, Baluch and Bakhtiari) are a related ethnolinguistic group. --ManiF 10:04, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Is Xebat a sock puppet for User:Diyako? Just wondering.--Zereshk 09:37, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Just who uses the term Iranian peoples, and how?

I did some googling on the web, and then with Google Scholar, and then I sifted through the material on Questia and what I found was:

Usage of the term "Iranian peoples" to refer to the various "ethnic" groups that are found in the modern state of Iran. I suspect that the cite from the article re the Kurds is using "Iranian peoples" in that sense.

Usage of the term "Iranian peoples" for tribes/states/peoples in the PAST who spoke various Iranian languages. The term is generally used for groups that were already separate in pre-Achaemenid times -- groups such as the Medes, Persians, Chorasmians, Sogdians, etc. In the Behistun inscription, Darius names them all separately, as groups just like the Assyrians or the Elamites, and identifies himself as a Persian.

The article, however, is using the term "Iranian peoples" for ill-defined contemporary groups who speak a language related to modern Persian. However, no evidence is given that any of them define themselves as "Iranian peoples". So who is applying the label? We don't have any references showing that it is widely used by academics or journalists. All we have is a number of Iranian editors who are applying the label to people who aren't here on WP and can't object.

Furthermore, the article is asserting that people who speak "Iranian" languages (not in the national, but in the linguistic classification sense) are genetically linked. There's some fussing about later mixing, but the article is firmly based on the OLD model of "invading Aryan tribes", which many leading academics have rejected.

If the dang thing is going to be kept, it's going to have to be extensively rewritten, in a much more detached way. Right now it reads like "We are the biggest and the best, huzzah for us!" If vanity articles aren't acceptable for people, I don't think they're acceptable for nations either. Zora 10:29, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Article might have some problem but it is not what you are making it look like. We are the best we are the greatest!!! Who said that? where is it mentioned or implied?

Gol 19:37, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Owwh are u sure... Noo, I'm not sure... u know what is ethnolinguistic? see Nenets people they r. Ossetians and persians together not oh no no. why it is so. Ossettians are different. that are not ethnolinguistic. no, no, ............


Cogent argument, that :) Ah, a little more googling suggests that the source for all of this is CAIS, Circle of Ancient Iranian Studies, which is apparently a group of Iranian diaspora academics, no longer connected to the University of London, with explicitly nationalist aims. Their home page reads, ""The future belongs to the nation who appreciates her past" and prominently advertises a petition by against Azeri separatism. They are apparently in the process of setting up a section on "Iranian peoples", of which this WP article is a reflection. Tainted source. Zora 19:20, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

From what I've seen in these books
  • The Cambridge History of Iran: Volume 1,2,3
  • The Seven Great Monarchies of the Ancient Eastern World: The Fifth and Seventh Monarchy: Persia and Sassanids
  • Ruzgaran : tarikh-i Iran az aghz ta saqut saltnat Pahlvi
  • Dr. David Nicolle "Sassanian Armies : the Iranian empire early 3rd to mid-7th centuries AD"
  • Dr. Ali Akbar Sarfaraz, Dr. Bahman Firuzmandi "Mad, Hakhamanishi, Ashkani, Sasani"

One can explicitly deduce that the term "Iranian people" refers to different groups of people who speak an Iranian language and generally share some definite genetical similarity (Genetical markers) due to their common background from a single Indo-Iranian origin. The term is pretty much in use nowadays albeit many of the original Iranian peoples have been disappeared. Amir85 20:13, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


To zora:

The article, however, is using the term "Iranian peoples" for ill-defined contemporary groups who speak a language related to modern Persian. However, no evidence is given that any of them define themselves as "Iranian peoples". So who is applying the label?

Do you think all Germanic people, an average person from England for example, constantly think of themselves as Germanic? Believe me most of them, especially those without a college education, do not even know such thing exists. They think Germanic people are only people of Germany! but their ignorance does not change the facts. I am sure there are a lot of speakers of Iranian languages that do not know there is a language group called Iranian and that their language is a member but that does not change the fact that they are Iranian people. What other name would you have for speakers of Iranian languages? (I asked this question of all the editors who oppose this term and they could not give me an answer!)

Also what part implies that they are genetically connected, anymore that they obviously are? Can you be specific? The genetic section sounds accurate and factual to me. is it some other part?

Gol 20:16, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I would use the term "speakers of languages related to modern Persian". There's no particular need to have a short and snappy term for a classification surely of use only to linguists.
As for the "they obviously are", that is one POV, but there are other POVs. Gimbutas, Mallory, Ehret, and Witzel accept a theory in which a language spreads with a complex of technological innovations. People who adopted horse-raising and battle chariots adopted the associated languages. As a contemporary example, take the spread of the Internet and the associated spread of English. Does everyone who learns English to participate in international forums (such as this) automagically become English by descent? Zora 22:25, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Are Germanic people called speakers of Germanic languages? No they are called Germanic people.

Iranian people do share some genetic connection. But it is a fact that they share similarities with other people and might no longer be strongly connected to each other ( I think this issue is mentioned in the genetic section.) however You can not possibly argue that these groups have NO similarities to each other whatsoever! Or that it is only a POV! You can not possibly argue that their genetic connection to each other is ZERO!! Please try to be a little balance while presenting your own point of view. Thank you.

Gol 02:45, 28 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

It's not an all-or-nothing matter. It's greater or lesser genetic distance, measured by variance from an arbitrary standard. See Mitochondrial DNA and Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza. Usually human populations share genetic peculiarities with people on all sides of them. Frex, Baluchis are related to Persians, but also to peoples of the Punjab. There is no one gene marker that is found in all populations speaking an Iranian (in a linguistic sense) language and in no other populations. People don't inherit language, they LEARN it. They usually learn it from their relatives, but not always.
As for the genetic background of English-speaking peoples from the UK -- it's a goulash! All-mix-up! And it varies from area to area. London you'd have a lot of mixture, rural areas not so much. There was a recent article about genetic testing done on a body preserved in a bog, from thousands of years ago (before the Anglo-Saxon and Viking invasions), and then on members of the local, rural, population. One schoolteacher, from a family that had lived there for a long time, was genetically quite close to the bog man. So he was not a Germanic person :)
This stuff is still cutting edge and it's still in a state of flux. But it is extremely exciting (at least to me) because it means that in addition to linguistic and archaelogical evidence for the human past before writing, we now have genetic evidence. It's going to solve a lot of questions and possibly upend a lot of what we think we know. Zora 04:16, 28 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]









Thats wrong, it is not an ethnic group. VattuVattu

Several ethnic groups speaking several languages.... they are not an ethnolinguistic group, not an ehnic group, not a multi-ethnic language group, not a multi-lingual ethnic group


they are one a people who live

See: http://strategyleader.org/peopledefinitions/peoplegroup.html


Wrong info on wikipedia forums

VattuVattu


Archived

It looks like this page was already archived but the person archiving forgot to remove the archived material (or put in the link). I finished the job. AucamanTalk 14:48, 28 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The problem here

Here's a message I left someone discussing some of the problems here:

The article does not provide any sources discussing the subject of the article. All the sources provided are about other ethnic groups, but they make side comments that have been taken out context and are contradictory to some of the other statements appearing on the page. The article is on Iranian peoples, so it should contain at least one source discussing who these people are. Such a source has yet to be provided.
I think the article was initially meant to be written on the linguistic group of all speakers of Iranian languages, but the definition has changed considerably due to some misunderstandings (Iran is also the name of a country and some Iranian citizens see themselves as part of a greater ethnic group, that of "Iranian peoples" - see the article on Greater Iran for signs of this). I'm not sure what's the best way to move on from here. The article definitely has to be rewritten with a clear definition in mind, but a lot of users are not being cooperative. I'd strongly consider any advice or mediation.

I think this well-describes the problem here. I think the Germanic peoples article makes a good model for this. Pay particular attention to this section as well as my comments here. AucamanTalk 14:31, 28 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I don't see any contradictions in this page and it is well sourced. --Kash 20:17, 28 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This page should merge with "Iranian Languages" page.

This page describes people who speak various Iranian languages. So what is it that we can have here that we are not able to add in Iranian languages.

Unlike the term "Germanic", the term Iranian has a strong link to citizens of Iran today as they have been Iranians for as long as history can recall the term Iran or Iranian. It is absurd leaving out many such citizens of Iran from an article named "Iranian peoples". I am not sure if term "Germanic" leaves out many German citizens out apart from those who migrated quite recently. It might even include some non-Germans in. However, the term Iranian people, the way described here, leaves almost 20 million Turkish speaking Iranians who have had the greatest strong links to Iran and contributed to Iranian history and culture. Iranians united under the rule and banner of those Turkish speaking people on more than one or two occasions. I am not sure how one can define "Iranian peoples" without them. I am not sure if there was a period of time when their ancesstors were called nothing but Iranian. Unless someone wants to redefine the word Iranian as a pure linguistic term.

If we want to be precise we might even think of Turkish as one of Iranian langauges since it has been spoken by Iranians for more than half a mellenium. (That is when Iranian Safavid rulers spoke the language or at least their army spoke the language.)

One can think of even changing the title of Iranian languages to Indo-Iranian langauges, as one portion of Iranian languages, for that matter.


Please go an invent a new word for this grouping. Say, Indo-Aryan speaker. Or whatever. But using an existing adjective for other than what it means is not acceptable.—This unsigned comment was added by 203.48.45.194 (talkcontribs) 04:25, 29 March 2006.


Sorry but I don't think many people speak Turkish in Iran. They speak "Azeri" which is a Turkic language. Iranian languages are part of Indo-Aryan and Indo-European languages. I am not sure about your other suggestions, please clarify. --Kash 12:50, 29 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This issue had been addressed before, and Azeris have been left out here because of the concerns of those who mistakenly think Iranian peoples is a merely linguistic concept. Azeris are indeed Iranian people [12], not because they are citizens of Iran, but because Iranian peoples has a broader meaning than only language. Therefore, I also think they should be included, and the article modified accordingly to accomodate the more accurate, not only linguistic, meaning of the word Iranian. Shervink 15:47, 29 March 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]
Well Dear Kash, as you said it more precisely, Azeri which is a Turkic language. For the very reason you mentioned Turkic and not Turkish, I think this article is wrong to be called "Iranian peoples". You used Turkic on a pure linguistic terms. Since you thought someone might make a misjudgement and might think some 20 million Azeri speaking Iranians as Turks for their mother tongue is a Turkic language. Then how can we exclude them from an article called "Iranian peoples"? I really do not know what is the reason for this article to exist with this title! What is the point of including Afghans and Parsis in India in a group, if not merely linguistic, and leave out Azeri speaking Iranian peoles? What are we going to achieve with this grouping if not other than linguistic? As I siad, this article should be renamed or merged with Iranian languages. Or to be more precise, we need to even rename Iranian languages to Indo-Iranian languages so that we can exclude Azeri from that article too. I think Azeris are as Iranian people if not more than their Indo-Iranian speaking Iranians.
It is astonishing that still some editors refuse to recognize that this article is not about a linguistic group. This is why Azeris and Parsis (which by the way also do not speak an Iranian language) should be included here. Iranian peoples are the people of Greater Iran. What is so difficult to understand about this? And why should we disregard the fact that academia always uses this same term (Iranian) when talking about these people? Shervink 08:00, 30 March 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]
Not sure where Academia talks about Afghans, Iraqi etc. as Iranian peoples. Iranian peoples (Mardomaane-Iran) are Iranian citizens now, same as Turkish for citizen of Turkey, Germans for citizens of Germany etc. We might need to come with a term similar to Germanic for all who somehow are related to Iran at the present or past, either culturally, from an ethnic point of view, and/or a pure linguistic point of view. I strongly think the term Greater Iran can be interpreted as an aggressive term or represent a view of those who still think of glorious past and not present reality. Furthermore, Iranian languages can include all material in Greater Iran and no need for a different article.
However, this article with its contents discusses Lors, Pashtuns, Parsis, etc. who all share a linguistic and to some extent ethnic and cultural background while Azeri speaking Iranians are excluded. The only thing Iranian Azeris do not share with the groups discussed in this article is pure linguistic. Therefore, the grouping of people in this article is based on language. Then again, all those groups are discussed in Iranian languages! So I am not seeing any point on having this separate article!
As I said before, Azeris must also be included in the article, and the only reason they are not is because of the POV-pushing of some Kurdish editors who denied the relations of Azeris with other Iranians, forcing the article to be written in this incomplete manner. Thus, I totally agree that they should be included, because this article is not only about language. As for the terms Greater Iran and Iranian peoples (meaning the people of Greater Iran), both are very, very common terms in academia. The only reason one would interpret Greater Iran as an agressive term is lack of knowledge about the numerous works of scholars using the term. That the term Iranian peoples(note the s) can be easily confused with Iranian people(citizens of Iran), is a problem. But this is nevertheless common academic usage, and which meaning is intended is always made clear within the context. As Wikipedia prohibits original reasearch, we must adhere to the term used in academia rather than invent something in place of it. Shervink 11:41, 31 March 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]
It's not used in academia in the sense that it's being used here in Wikipedia. As I said, I googled on the term and found that it's either used for ALL the ethnic groups in the current Iran (including Kurds, Azeris, Arabs, etc.) or for a hypothesized wave of migrating peoples speaking Iranian (in the linguistic sense) languages, back in pre-Achaemenid times. Persians, Medes, Sogdians, Chorasmians were considered Iranian peoples. Using the term for contemporary groups speaking languages related to Persian is not academic and it seems to be an innovation of the CAIS website.
Read the WP article on Ethnicity. It points out that people think of ethnicity as a fact, when it's a choice. People choose to identify themselves as something or other. People here in Hawai'i who have eight great-grandparents, one of whom was Native Hawaiian, will self-identify as Native Hawaiian. That's a choice. They could have identified with any one of their great-grandparents, who may have been American, German, Portuguese, Chinese, whatever, but they picked one, for personal reasons. Well, so far as I can tell, none of the groups identified as "Iranian peoples" describe themselves in that way. If they don't think that they're Iranian peoples, then how can they be "Iranian"? Zora 12:12, 31 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Rather than googling the term, it might be good if you take a look at textbooks written by scholars of Iranian studies. There are plenty of choices, if you do not trust the CAIS website. But one way or another, that website has been created by a number of well-respected academics, so it deserves proper attention as well. Shervink 13:16, 31 March 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]

Unprotection?

Do you think the conflict is settled and it is time to unprotect? abakharev 01:34, 30 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Not yet, please refer to the above discussion on merging this document with Iranian languages.
No, precisely because of issues such as the one mentioned above and any possible moves that might be made against consensus. Until such users learn to accept policy such as WP:V we will continue to have problems with them here. Interestingly enough, they have not attempted to impose their ideas over at Indo-Aryans. SouthernComfort 08:47, 30 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
No sure how learning WP:V will teach someone to accept opinions as facts??? No one is against facts and no one can have anything against facts so long as the facts are stated from truely non biased sources. So No there is no consensus and there will be none, unless "all" learn WP:V.
That is what makes writing objectively so difficult. But it is worth the effort.


I agree. Not yet. AucamanTalk 12:06, 30 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

More proof

People have been saying that Iranian peoples are "only a linguistic group", but this article provides sources to show that they aren't. See Iranian peoples#Genetics for example - it cites a scientific source (I believe Xebat was asking for one awhile back) and says the following:

People are not saying "Iranina poeples" are only a linguistic group. What they are saying is that this article, called "Iranian peoples" groups all who have a common language origin while excluding Iranian Azeris who, according to your source below, share common mtDNA lineage composition with the rest of Iranians. So that is why, we either have to merge "this" article with Iranian languages or mend this article to reflect what true definition of "Iranian peoples" is. Please note that we are not here to invent meanings for terms but to define them the way they are used in true academia.
As I mentioned before, I'm totally in favor of including Azaris in the article. In fact, we must include them for the article to be complete. Shervink 19:44, 2 April 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]

Populations located west of the Indus basin, including those from Iran, Anatolia and the Caucasus, exhibit a common mtDNA lineage composition, consisting mainly of western Eurasian lineages, with a very limited contribution from South Asia and eastern Eurasia (fig. 1). Indeed, the different Iranian populations show a striking degree of homogeneity. This is revealed not only by the nonsignificant FST values and the PC plot (fig. 6) but also by the SAMOVA results, in which a significant genetic barrier separates populations west of Pakistan from those east and north of the Indus Valley (results not shown). These observations suggest either a common origin of modern Iranian populations and/or extensive levels of gene flow amongst them.

The study is showing that there are many common genetic markers among the Iranian peoples "from the Tigris to the areas west of the Indus". Even further down this article it goes on to say that Kurds may not be as close to other Iranian peoples as previously believed. --Khoikhoi 18:26, 31 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I've read that entire article. The definition of "Iranian" they have there is different from the one here. In that study Tajiks and Pashtuns are not considered Iranian. The study also shows that Pashtuns are genetically close to South Asians and Tajiks are close to Eastern Eurasian people. Iranians (i.e. those from the country of Iran) are generically closer to Caucasians and Turks than Tajiks, Pashtuns, and various Pakistani groups that happen to speak Iranian languages. I've already discussed all of this here and your post here shows that you haven't been following the previous discussions. As I've said before, we need to find sources that specifically discuss Iranina peoples as a linguistic group. I've checked a copy of this book and will let you know if I find anything (I haven't had the time because you keep removing my other edits without much reason). Until then the article would be protected until someone presents some sort of an academic paper that discusses who these people are (no, an article on Kurds doesn't count). AucamanTalk 19:09, 31 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Aucaman, you say: we need to find sources that specifically discuss Iraninan peoples as a linguistic group, whereas the whole point of our discussion is that they are much more than that. Your statement basically suggests that you are only willing to accept sources which validate something which you mistakenly already have decided to be true. This is not the way to work here. Shervink 19:14, 31 March 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]
Well you have not provided any evidence that say they're more than just a linguistic group. In fact, as I have pointed out, the evidence show that Eastern Iranian peoples (who are closer to South Asians and/or East Eurasians) are genetically different from Western Iranian peoples (who are closer to Caucasians and Turkish people). In any case we need to come up with sources that clearly define who these people are. Right now we don't have any. The only source presented so far is the one mentioned above which shows that Iranian peoples are genetically heterogeneous. AucamanTalk 20:38, 2 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
That's not true. You have been presented with overwhelming evidence. In fact, it is nearly impossible to find a source defining Iranian peoples in merely linguistic terms, so in any case the burden of proof lies with you (who is the one challenging common academic views). I'm not going to waste my time reciting the sources. You can find them yourself by looking at the discussion, or looking up many books you would find in a library. The definition is also clear. Iranian peoples are usually defined as the people of Greater Iran, according to many of the same sources. The fact that you select not to look at or accept the definition does not refute its existence. Shervink 21:16, 2 April 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]
"People of Greater Iran"??? Like I said you have not provided any sources. AucamanTalk 22:11, 2 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Of course. The people of Greater Iran. [13][14][15]Shervink 15:35, 3 April 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]
I'm asking for sources for this article, not Nowrooz or "Persian myths". AucamanTalk 16:35, 3 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
There is no source for that and if there is it does not serve big claims of some people, so you never find a proper source for that esp by claimants. Indeed whole of this article is manufactured here in this talk page and is not based on scientific evidence. KhalidMarwan 17:09, 3 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Aucaman, I cannot teach you how to read books if you have never done it before. These books and articles very clearly support the contents. Shervink 21:16, 3 April 2006 (UTC)shervink[reply]