De
Itelmenen zijn een inheems volk van
Kamtsjatka in het uiterste oosten van Rusland. Ze maken als volk deel uit van de Kamtsjadalen.
Oorspronkelijk leefden ze als jagers-verzamelaar en vissers en bedroeg hun aantal 50000. Ze werden onderworpen door de Kozakken in de achttiende eeuw waardoor de bevolking gedecimeerd werd.
Er vonden zo veel huwelijken plaats tussen die twee groepen dat de term Kamtsjadalen nu verwijst naar het grote deel gemengde bevolking en de term Itelmenen voorbehouden werd voor de harde kern sprekers van het Itelmeens.
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The
Itelmen, sometimes known as Kamchadal, are an ethnic group who are the original inhabitants living on the Kamchatka peninsula in Russia. The Itelmen language (ethnonym: Itelmen) is distantly related to Chukchi and Koryak, forming the Chukotko-Kamchatkan language family, but it is now virtually extinct, the vast majority of ethnic Itelmens being native speakers of Russian. A. P. Volodin has published a grammar of the Itelmen language.
The Itelmen had a substantial hunter-gatherer and fishing society with up to fifty thousand natives inhabiting the peninsula before they were decimated by the Cossack conquest in the eighteenth century.
So much intermarriage took place between the natives and the Cossacks that Kamchadal now refers to the majority mixed population, and the term Itelmens at some point became reserved for persisting speakers of the Itelmen language. By 1993, there were less than 100 elderly speakers of the language left, but some 2,400 people considered themselves ethnic Itelmen in the 1989 census. By 2002, this number had risen to 3,180, and there are attempts at reviving the language.
Ethnographic maps shows the Itlemens as residing primarily in the valley of the Kamchatka River in the middle of the peninsula