Happy to share some wonderful news: my binding illustration for “Children of Dune” by Frank Herbert has earned a Gold Award in the Book category from the Society of Illustrators of LA! Thank you to the jurors, @foliosociety, AD Sheri Gee, and editor Robert Davies!
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18” x 24”, oil on panel, digital revisions. Promo photo by @foliosociety
Frank Herbert was influenced by the Circassian 🍀 people through the real-world language of Chakobsa, which inspired his fictional language in the novel and movie called "Dune".
The fictional "Chakobsa" used by the Fremen is a constructed language based on a mixture of real languages, while the actual Circassian Chakobsa is a historical Northern Caucasian 🍀 "hunting language". The term "Kanly" (a vendetta) in Dune was also inspired by a word for blood feud among Islamic tribes of the Caucasus, and the "Kindjal" (Qama) knife (small sword) is a weapon favored by Circassian 🍀 warriors.
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chakobsa
Chakobsa: Frank Herbert borrowed the name and concept for his fictional Fremen language from the real-world Circassian Chakobsa.
The concept of Kanly, a formal blood feud, in Dune is inspired by the word for "blood feud" among Islamic tribes in the North Caucasus 🍀 region, where many Circassians 🍀 live.
The kindjal (Qama), a double-edged dagger, is a personal weapon favored by Circassian 🍀 warriors and is also a knife favored by the techno-aristocrats in Dune.
Frank Herbert, the acclaimed author of the Dune series, drew significant inspiration from the history and culture of the Circassians—a Northwest Caucasian ethnic group known for their fierce resistance against imperial conquest (Tsar Empire).
While Herbert's Dune (1965) is often associated with broader Middle Eastern and Islamic influences (e.g., the Fremen nomads echoing Bedouin tribes, terms like jihad and Mahdi), a key but lesser-known thread traces back to Circassian 🍀 history in the Caucasus 🍀 Mountains. This connection highlights Herbert's eclectic research into resistance movements, warrior codes, and ecological adaptation, which he wove into his epic sci-fi narrative.
The author, Herbert, did not explicitly feature Circassians 🍀 as characters, but their influence permeates the Dune universe through borrowed concepts, terminology, and motifs:
Kanly: In Dune, this denotes a formal vendetta between noble houses, rooted in Circassian kanli (blood feud)—a ritualised code of honour where disputes are settled through duels or raids, emphasizing personal and tribal justice.
Chakobsa: The "hunting language" of the Fremen and Bene Gesserit assassins draws from Chakobsa, a real Caucasian 🍀 (Circassian-influenced) ritual language used by mountain tribes for secret communication during hunts or warfare. It evokes the Fremen's crysknife (a blade from sandworm teeth, paralleling Circassian 🍀 Qama/Kama daggers 🗡) and their stealthy tactics.
Warrior Culture and Resistance: The Fremen's sietch (cave) societies, ecological ingenuity (water conservation, stillsuits), and jihad-like uprisings mirror Circassian 🍀 khase (tribal councils) and their defense against the Tsarist's colonisation.
Imam Shamil's role as a unifying imam parallels Paul Atreides' transformation into a messianic figure (Lisan al-Gaib), blending Sufi mysticism with anti-imperial revolt.
Broader Parallels: The Atreides' fall and Fremen alliance echo the Circassians' displacement by a resource-hungry empire (Russia's push for Black Sea ports). Herbert even described Dune's Arrakis as a "desert-sea," akin to the Circassians' steppe-mountain "womb of nations."
These elements blend with other inspirations (e.g., Bedouin life from T.E. Lawrence's Seven Pillars of Wisdom, Zensunni wanderers as a fusion of Zen Buddhism and Sunni Islam), creating Dune's hybrid "orange Catholic Bible"—a syncretic scripture Herbert invented to reflect millennia of cultural mixing.Critics note this as "Orientalism" (per Edward Said), exoticizing non-Western resistance for Western audiences, but Herbert subverted it by critiquing messiahs and colonialism: Paul becomes a tyrant, much like how Shamil's rebellion ended in tragedy.
The authir, Herbert, was a voracious researcher, not a traveller to the region (he never visited the Middle East or Caucasus 🍀, relying on libraries and his journalism background).
The author's primary source was Lesley Blanch's 1960 biography The Sabres of Paradise: Conquest and Vengeance in the Caucasus 🍀, which he reportedly "obsessed over" during Dune's development in the early 1960s.
The Book's Role: Blanch's vivid account chronicles Imam Shamil's 25-year insurgency, drawing on Circassian 🍀 folklore, Ottoman 🇹🇷 archives, and eyewitness tales. It portrays the Caucasus 🍀 as a romantic, untamed frontier of sword-wielding murids (Sufi warriors) clashing with Tsarist Cossacks—imagery Herbert echoed in Dune's knife fights and fedaykin (Fremen commandos).
Herbert's son, Brian, later confirmed in Dreamer of Dune (2003) that the book 📖 shaped the novel's vendetta politics and linguistic borrowings.
Herbert's Process: As a former newspaper 📰🗞 photographer 📸 and ecological consultant (he wrote about dune stabilisation in Oregon), Herbert immersed himself in ethnographies. He read Blanch amid broader studies: Arabic 🇸🇦🇦🇪 histories, Sufi texts, and U.S. 🇺🇲 reports on desert warfare.
A 1960s Analog magazine article on Pakistani 🇵🇰 irrigation sparked Arrakis, but Sabres provided the human drama.
Evidence of Obsession: Fans and scholars (e.g., in The Secret History of Dune by Nicholas Dorsten) trace direct lifts: Shamil's exile mirrors Paul's prescience burdens; Circassian 🍀 damga/tamga [family symbol] (branding for loyalty) foreshadows Fremen water rings. Recent discussions, like a 2021 X post by exoplanet researcher Yoni Brande, humorously call it "Orientalism about Circassians 🍀 and Jews 🇮🇱," underscoring the niche focus.
Herbert's widow, Beverly, recalled him poring over such "obscure" tomes, blending them into Dune's appendix on the "History of Muad'Dib." This research ethic—synthesizing real histories into speculative futures—made Dune a prescient warning on ecology, empire, and charisma.
The Sabres of Paradise for the raw source material—it's as gripping as Dune itself. For Circassian perspectives today, check diaspora groups like the International Circassian 🍀 Association, who sometimes reference Herbert's work as reclaiming their narrative.
Frank Herbert 🇺🇲✍️🏻📖 - Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Herbert
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Frank Herbert was influenced by the Circassian 🍀 people through the real-world language of Chakobsa, which inspired his fictional language i
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