The Kutrigurs were a Turkic nomadic equestrian tribe who flourished on the Pontic–Caspian steppe in the 6th century AD. To their east were the similar Utigurs; both may have been closely related to the Bulgars.[1] The Kutrigeers warred with the Byzantine Empire and the Utigurs. Towards the end of the 6th century, they were absorbed by the Pannonian Avars under pressure from other Turkic groups.
Etymology
The name Kutrigur, also recorded as Kwrtrgr, Κουτρίγουροι, Κουτούργουροι, Κοτρίγουροι, Κοτρίγοροι, Κουτρίγοροι, Κοτράγηροι, Κουτράγουροι, Κοτριαγήροι,[2] has been suggested as a metathesized form of Turkic *Toqur-Oğur, with *quturoğur meaning "nine Oğur (tribes)".[3] David Marshall Lang derived it from Turkic kötrügür ("conspicuous, eminent, renowned").[4] Few scholars support theories deriving the Kutrigurs from the Guti/Quti and the Utigurs from the Udi/Uti, of ancient Southwest Asia and the Caucasus respectively, posited by Osman Karatay.[5] Similarly, few considr Duč'i, a term for the Bulgars (some read Kuchi), as a root of Kutrigur, as posited by Josef Markwart.[6]
History
René Grousset thought that the Kutrigurs were remnants of the Huns.[7] Procopius recounts:
in the old days many Huns,[nb 1] called then Cimmerians, inhabited the lands I mentioned already. They all had a single king. Once one of their kings had two sons: one called Utigur and another called Kutrigur. After their father's death they shared the power and gave their names to the subjected peoples, so that even nowadays some of them are called Utigurs and the others - Kutrigurs.[10][11]
They occupied the Tanaitic–Maeotic (Don–Azov) steppe zone, the Kutrigurs in the western part and the Utrigurs towards the east.[12] This story was also confirmed by the words of the Utigur ruler Sandilch:
It is neither fair nor decent to exterminate our tribesmen (the Kutrigurs), who not only speak a language, identical to ours, who are our neighbours and have the same dressing and manners of life, but who are also our relatives, even though subjected to other lords".[10]
Agathias Scholasticus, Greek poet and the principal historian of part of the reign of the Roman emperor Justinian I. recalls the origin of their name as follows:
In ancient times the Huns inhabited the region east of lake Maeotis to the north of the river Don, as did the rest of the barbarian peoples established in Asia on the near side of Mount Imaeus. All these peoples were referred to by the general name of Scythians or Huns, whereas individual tribes had their own particular names, rooted in ancestral tradition, such as Cotrigurs, Utigurs, Ultizurs, Bourougounds and so on and so forth.[13]
The Syriac translation of Pseudo-Zacharias Rhetor's Ecclesiastical History (c. 555) of Western Eurasia records 13 tribes: the wngwr (Onogur), wgr (Oğur), sbr (Sabir), bwrgr (Burğar, i.e. Bulgars), kwrtrgr (Kutriğurs), br (probably Abar, i.e. Avars), ksr (Kasr; Akatziri?), srwrgwr (Saragurs), dyrmr (*[I]di[r]mar? < Ιτιμαροι),[14] b'grsyq (Bagrasik, i.e. Barsils), kwls (Khalyzians?), bdl (Abdali?), and ftlyt (Hephthalite). They are described in typical phrases used for nomads in the ethnographic literature of the period, as people who "live in tents, earn their living on the meat of livestock and fish, of wild animals and by their weapons (plunder)".[10][15]
War with the Byzantines
In the late 6th century, Agathias wrote of the western steppe peoples:
... all of them are called in general Scythians and Huns and in particular according to their nation. Thus, some are Kotrigouroi or Outigouroi and yet others are Oultizouroi and Bourougoundoi [... who] were known up to the time of the Emperor Leo and the Romans of that time and appeared to have been strong. We, however, in this day, neither know them, nor, I think, will we. Perhaps, they have perished or perhaps they have moved off to very far places.[16]
In 551, a 12,000-strong Kutrigur army led by many commanders, including Chinialon, came from the "western side of the Maeotic Lake" to assist the Gepids, who were at the war with the Lombards.[17] Later, with the Gepids, they plundered Byzantine lands.[17] Emperor Justinian I (527–565), through diplomatic persuasion and bribery, tricked the Kutrigurs and Utigurs into mutual warfare.[18][11] Utigurs led by Sandilch attacked the Kutrigurs, who suffered great losses.[11]
The Kutrigurs made a peace treaty with the Byzantine Empire, and 2,000 Kutrigurs on horseback, accompanied by their wives and children and led by Sinnion, entered imperial service and were settled in Thrace.[11][17] Sandilch viewed this friendly treatment of those Kutrigurs negatively.[11]
In the winter of 558, the remaining Kutrigur army led by Zabergan crossed the frozen Danube and divided into three sections: one raided south as far as Thermopylae, one in the Thracian Chersonesus, and one in the periphery of Constantinople.[19] In March 559, Zabergan attacked Constantinople with forces that included 7,000 horsemen.[20] The transit of such distances in a short period of time shows that they were mounted warriors.[19] In contrast to Chinialon's army, Zabergan's raiders had already been encamped near the banks of the Danube.[19]
Although Procopius, Agathias, and Menander Protector deemed the Kutrigurs and Utigurs a threat to the stability of the Byzantine Empire, ultimately the two peoples decimated one another.[11] Some Kutrigur remnants were swept away by the Avars to Pannonia. By 569 the Κοτζαγηροί (Kotzagiroi, possibly Kutrigurs), Ταρνιάχ (Tarniach), and Ζαβενδὲρ (Zabender) had fled to the Avars from the Türks.[11] Avar Khagan Bayan I in 568 ordered 10,000 so-called Kutrigur Huns to cross the Sava river.[21] The Utigurs remained in the Pontic steppe and fell under the rule of the Türks.[22][7]
Between 630 and 635, Khan Kubrat managed to unite the Onogur Bulgars with the tribes of the Kutrigurs and Utigurs under a single rule, creating a powerful confederation that medieval authors in Western Europe referred to as Old Great Bulgaria,[23] or Patria Onoguria. According to some scholars, it is more correctly called the Onogundur-Bulgar Empire.[24]
Notes
References
- ↑ Golden, Peter Benjamin (1990). "The peoples of the south Russian steppes". The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia. Cambridge University Press. pp. 256–284. doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521243049.011. ISBN 9781139054898.
Sometime about A.D. 463 a series of nomadic migrations was set off in Inner Asia... Archeological and literary evidence permits us to place the homeland of these newcomers, the Oghur tribes, in Western Siberia and the Kazakh steppes... The Oghurs were part of a large Turkic tribal grouping known in Chinese sources as the Tieh-lê, who were to be found in Inner Asia as well The fluidity of the situation in the steppes is mirrored in our sources, a kaleidoscope of dissolving and reforming tribal unions... Although some of the antecedents of this important migration are still unclear, there can be no doubt that the 0ghur tribes now became the dominant element in the Ponto-Caspian steppes. The term Oghur denoted "grouping of kindred tribes, tribal union" and figures in their ethnonyms: Onoghur, Saraghur, etc. The language of these Oghur tribes, which survives today only in Chuvash, was distinct from that of Common Turkic. In 480 we find our earliest firm notice on the Bulghars ("Mixed Ones"), a large conglomeration of Oghur, Hunnic and other elements. In addition, we have reports about the activities of the Kutrighurs and Utrighurs who appear in our sources under their own names, as "Huns" and perhaps even as "Bulghars." Their precise relationship to the latter cannot be determined with any certainty, but all three clearly originated in the same Hunno-Oghur milieu.
- ↑ Golden 2011, p. 139.
- ↑ Golden 2011, p. 71, 139.
- ↑ Lang 1976, p. 34.
- ↑ Karatay 2003, p. 26.
- ↑ Zlatarski 1918.
- 1 2 Grousset 1970, p. 79.
- ↑ Beckwith 2009, p. 99.
- ↑ Dickens 2004, p. 19.
- 1 2 3 Dimitrov 1987.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Golden 2011, p. 140.
- ↑ Golden 1992, p. 99.
- ↑ Agathias. Agathias: The Histories. Translated by Frendo, Joseph D.
- ↑ Peter B. Golden (1992). An Introduction to the History of the Turkic People. O. Harrassowitz. p. 505
- ↑ Golden 1992, p. 97.
- ↑ Golden 1992, p. 98.
- 1 2 3 Curta 2015, p. 76.
- ↑ Golden 1992, p. 99–100.
- 1 2 3 Curta 2015, p. 77.
- ↑ Golden 2011, p. 107.
- ↑ Dickens 2010, p. 5.
- ↑ Golden 2011, p. 140–141.
- ↑ Patriarch Nikephoros I of Constantinople, Historia syntomos, breviarium
- ↑ Zimonyi Istvan: "History of the Turkic speaking peoples in Europe before the Ottomans". (Uppsala University: Institute of Linguistics and Philology) (archived from the original Archived on 2013-10-21)