Revision as of 19:12, 14 May 2015 view sourceMarcocapelle (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Page movers556,601 edits removed grandparent category of Bulgars category← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 16:37, 28 December 2024 view source Jingiby (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, New page reviewers62,352 edits Rv. not an improvement. Bulgarians arose as a separate ethnicity during the 10th century as result of the ethnogenetic process that occurred after the Christianization and Slavicization of the Bulgarian population, incl. invaders such as the Bulgars However, Proto-Bulgarians is one of the names of the Bulgars, although they had a minimal impact into the modern Bulgarians' ethnogenesis. .Tag: Undo | ||
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{{Short description|Turkic tribal confederation}} | |||
{{Other uses|Bulgar (disambiguation)}} | |||
{{Distinguish|Bulgarians|Bulgarian Turks}} | |||
{{POV-section|date=April 2015}} | |||
{{pp-semi-indef}} | {{pp-semi-indef}} | ||
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2022}} | |||
] | |||
] ] pursue the Byzantines at the ] (813)]] | |||
The '''Bulgars''' (also ''Bolgars'', ''Bulghars'', Proto-],<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.bg/books?id=JFohARk4i-AC&pg=PA57|last=Shea|first=John|page=57|title=The Bulgars, Christianity and Slavic text}}</ref> '']-Bulgars''<ref></ref>) were a semi-nomadic ] who flourished in the ] and the ] in the 7th century AD.<ref>Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House</ref><ref name="thefreedictionary">{{cite web|url=http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Bulgar|title=Bulgar - definition of Bulgar by The Free Dictionary|publisher=thefreedictionary.com|accessdate=2014-11-22}}</ref> Being under the influence of ], they are thought to have been ] ], with Iranian ]<ref>Rasho Rashev, ''Die Protobulgaren im 5.-7. Jahrhundert'', Orbel, Sofia, 2005. (in Bulgarian, German summary)</ref> and Sarmatian-]<ref name="Istituto italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente">Istituto italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente, , 1971, p.214</ref><ref>David Marshall Lang, , Westview Press, 1976, p.39</ref> elements.<ref name="britannica">{{cite web|url=http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/84067/Bulgar|title=Bulgar -- Encyclopedia Britannica|publisher=britannica.com|accessdate=2014-11-22}}</ref><ref name="google">{{cite book|title=Who Gets the Past?: Competition for Ancestors Among Non-Russian Intellectuals in Russia|author=Shnirelʹman, V.A.|date=1996|publisher=Woodrow Wilson Center Press|isbn=9780801852213|url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=4iwHp8amsdEC|page=44|accessdate=2014-11-22}}</ref><ref name="google2">{{cite book|title=The Silver Paradigm in the Emerald Heaven|author=Dobrovidel, C.|date=2009|publisher=Author Solutions|isbn=9781425162627|url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=gk7pg3dHZS8C|page=437|accessdate=2014-11-22}}</ref><ref name="google3">{{cite book|title=Lonely Planet Romania & Bulgaria|author1=Planet, L.|author2=Baker, M.|author3=Deliso, C.|author4=Waters, R.|author5=Watkins, R.|date=2013|publisher=Lonely Planet Publications|isbn=9781743216378|url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=zo2UNNuNwsgC|accessdate=2014-11-22}}</ref><ref name="google4">{{cite book|title=The Jews of Khazaria|author=Brook, K.A.|date=2006|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield Publishers|isbn=9781442203020|url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=hEuIveNl9kcC|page=13|accessdate=2014-11-22}}</ref><ref name="google5">{{cite book|title=Bulgarian History - A Concise Account|author=Miller-Yianni, M.|date=2010|publisher=Lulu Enterprises Incorporated|isbn=9781445716336|url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_iZ2AgAAQBAJ|page=10|accessdate=2014-11-22}}</ref><ref name="google6">{{cite book|title=Tatar and Chuvash Code-copies in Mari|author=Hesselbäck, A.|date=2005|publisher=AUU|isbn=9789155461256|url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=jswYAQAAIAAJ|accessdate=2014-11-22}}</ref><ref name="google7">{{cite book|title=Byzantium and Bulgaria: a comparative study across the early medieval frontier|author=Browning, R.|date=1975|publisher=Temple Smith|isbn=9780851170640|url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=UGcbAAAAYAAJ|accessdate=2014-11-22}}</ref> There is a discussion whether these Sarmatian elements in the cultural characteristics of the Proto-Bulgars are based on Sarmatized Turks or Turkicized Sarmatians.<ref>Otto Maenchen-Helfen, , University of California Press, 1973, p.443</ref> They had also enveloped other ethnic groups by their migration westwards across the ].<ref></ref><ref name="kroraina">{{cite web|url=http://www.kroraina.com/p_bulgar/p_bulg2a.htm|title=Proto-Bulgarians - 2a|author=Vassil Karloukovski|publisher=kroraina.com|accessdate=2014-11-22}}</ref> | |||
The '''Bulgars''' (also Bulghars, Bulgari, Bolgars, Bolghars, Bolgari,{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=106}} Proto-Bulgarians<ref>{{cite book |last=Gi︠u︡zelev |first=Vasil |title=The Proto-Bulgarians: Pre-history of Asparouhian Bulgaria text |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7lhpAAAAMAAJ&q=Proto-Bulgarians |pages=15, 33, 38|year=1979 }}</ref>) were ] ] warrior tribes that flourished in the ] and the ] between the 5th{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=104}} and 7th centuries. They became known as ] in the ], but some researchers trace Bulgar ethnic roots to ].<ref name="Kim">{{cite book |author=Hyun Jin Kim |date=18 April 2013 |title=The Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jCpncXFzoFgC |publisher=Cambridge University Press |pages=58–59, 150–155, 168, 204, 243 |isbn=9781107009066}}</ref> | |||
Emerging as ] in the ], their roots can be traced, according to some researchers to Central Asia.<ref>The Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe, Hyun Jin Kim, Cambridge University Press, 2013, ISBN 1107009065, pp. 137-155.</ref> They became sedentary during the 7th century into the ], establishing the polity (khanate) of ] c. 630 AD. However it was absorbed by the ] in 668 AD. In 680 AD Khan ] conquered ], opening access to ], and established the ], which was however ] by the 10th century. Another state called ] was established on the middle Volga circa 670 AD. Volga Bulgars preserved their national identity well into the 13th century by repelling the first ] in 1223. They were eventually subdued, and their capital ] city became one of major cities of the Mongol ]. Later, the Volga Bulgars adopted the ] (with some or no Kipchak admixture) and became the ] of the ] and later modern ]. | |||
During their westward migration across the ], the Bulgar tribes absorbed other tribal groups and cultural influences in a process of ethnogenesis, including ], ], and ] tribes.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=253, 256|ps=: " With their Avar and Türk political heritage, they assumed political leadership over an array of Turkic groups, Iranians and Finno-Ugric peoples, under the overlordship of the Khazars, whose vassals they remained." ... "The Bulgars, whose Oguric ancestors ..."}}<ref>{{cite book |first=Rosamond |last=McKitterick |author-link=Rosamond McKitterick |date=1995 |title=The New Cambridge Medieval History |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZEaSdNBL0sgC |publisher=Cambridge University Press |pages=229 |isbn=9780521362924 |quote=The exact ethnic origins of the Danubian Bulgars is controversial. It is in any case most probable that they had enveloped groupings of diverse origins during their migration westwards across the Eurasian steppes, and they undoubtedly spoke a form of Turkic as their main language. The Bulgars long retained many of the customs, military tactics, titles and emblems of a nomadic people of the steppes.}}</ref>{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|pp=65–66, 68–69|ps=: "The warriors who founded the Bulgar state in the Lower Danube region were culturally related to the nomads of Eurasia. Indeed, their language was Turkic, and more specifically Oğuric, as is apparent from the isolated words and phrases preserved in a number of inventory inscriptions." ... "It is generally believed that during their migration to the Balkans, the Bulgars brought with them or swept along several other groups of Eurasian nomads whose exact ethnic and linguistic affinities are impossible to determine... Sarmato-Alanian origin... Slav or Slavicized sedentary populations."}}{{sfn|Brook|2006|p=13|ps=: "Thus, the Bulgars were actually a tribal confederation of multiple Hunnic, Turkic, and Iranian groups mixed together."}}<ref name="EB_Arrival">{{cite web |url=http://global.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/84090/Bulgaria/42718/Sport-and-recreation#toc42721 |title=Bulgaria: Arrival of the Bulgars |website=] |publisher=] |access-date=3 June 2015 |quote=The name Bulgaria comes from the Bulgars, a people who are still a matter of academic dispute with respect to their origin (Turkic or Indo-European) as well as to their influence on the ethnic mixture and the language of present-day Bulgaria. }}{{Dead link|date=June 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref name="EB_Bulgars">{{cite web |url=http://global.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/84067/Bulgar |title=Bulgar |website=] |publisher=] |access-date=3 June 2015 |quote=Although many scholars, including linguists, had posited that the Bulgars were derived from a Turkic tribe of Central Asia (perhaps with Iranian elements), modern genetic research points to an affiliation with western Eurasian populations.}}</ref> The Bulgars spoke a ], the ] of the ] branch.{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=106–107}} They preserved the military titles, organization, and customs of Eurasian steppes{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=108–109}} as well as pagan shamanism and belief in the sky deity ].{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=109}} | |||
== Etymology == | |||
{{Expand section|date=April 2015}} | |||
The Bulgars became semi-sedentary during the 7th century in the Pontic-Caspian steppe, establishing the polity of ] c. 630–635, which was defeated by the ] in 668 AD. In 681, Khan ] conquered ], opening access to ], and established the Danubian Bulgaria – the ], where the Bulgars became a political and military elite. They merged subsequently with established ],{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=108}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=145, 158, 196}} as well as with previously settled ], and were eventually ], thus becoming one of the ancestors of modern ].{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=151|ps=: "...ethnic symbiosis between Slavic commoners and Bulgar elites of Turkic origin, who ultimately gave their name to the Slavic-speaking Bulgarians."}} | |||
The etymology of the name '']'' is not fully understood; there are claims that it derived from the ] verb ''bulğa'' ("to mix", "shake, "stir") and its derivative ''bulgak'' ("revolt", "disorder") by some authorities.<ref>Bowersock, Glen W. & al. '''', p. 354. Harvard University Press, 1999. ISBN 0-674-51173-5.</ref><ref>Karaty, O. ''In search of the lost tribe: the origins and making of the Croatian nation'', pp 24-26 </ref> A minority hypothesis derives it from ''bel gur'' ("five ]").<ref>Karataty, Osman. '''', p. 28.</ref> | |||
The remaining Pontic Bulgars migrated in the 7th century to the ], where they founded ]; they preserved their identity well into the 13th century.{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=106–107}} The modern ], ] and ] claim to have originated from the Volga Bulgars.{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=106–107}}{{sfn|Shnirelʹman|1996|p=22–35}}<ref name="History of the Jewish khazars">{{cite book |author=D. M. Dunlop |title=The History of the Jewish khazars |year=1967 |location=New Jersey |page=34}}</ref> | |||
== Etymology and origin == | |||
The etymology of the ethnonym '']'' is not completely understood and difficult to trace back earlier than the 4th century AD.<ref name="Gurov">{{cite web |last=Gurov |first=Dilian |date=March 2007 |title=The Origins of the Bulgars |url=https://www.nada.kth.se/~dilian/bulgars.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171014084810/https://www.nada.kth.se/~dilian/bulgars.pdf |archive-date=2017-10-14 |access-date=2015-05-14 |pages=3}}</ref>{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=103–104}} Since the work of ] (1873),{{sfn|Karatay|2003|p=24}} it is generally said to be derived from ] root *'']''<ref> in Starostin et al. "Turkic Etymology" ''Etymological Dictionary of the Altaic Languages'' (2003). Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers.</ref> ("to stir", "to mix"; "to become mixed"), which with the consonant suffix ''-r'' implies a noun meaning "mixed".{{sfn|Karatay|2003|p=24, 27}}{{sfn|Chen|2012|p=96}} | |||
Other scholars have added that ''bulğa'' might also imply "stir", "disturb", "confuse"{{sfn|Bowersock, Brown, Grabar|1999|p=354}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=143}}{{sfn|Clauson|1972|p=337}} and ] interpreted ''Bulgar'' as the verb form "mixing" (i.e. rather than the adjective "mixed").{{sfn|Karatay|2003|p=24}} Both ] and ] initially advocated the "mixed race" theory, but later, like ],{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|p=384}} considered that "to incite", "rebel", or "to produce a state of disorder", i.e. the "disturbers",{{sfn|Chen|2012|p=97}}<ref>{{cite book |author=Leif Inge Ree Petersen |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BRGaAAAAQBAJ |title=Siege Warfare and Military Organization in the Successor States (400–800 AD): Byzantium, the West and Islam |date=2013 |publisher=Brill |isbn=9789004254466 |pages=369}}</ref>{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=104}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=143}} was a more likely etymology for migrating nomads.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=104}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=143}} | |||
According to ], if the "mixed" etymology relied on the westward migration of the ], meeting and merging with the Huns, north of the Black Sea, it was a faulty theory, since the Oghurs were documented in Europe as early as 463, while the Bulgars were not mentioned until 482 – an overly short time period for any such ] to occur.{{sfn|Karatay|2003|p=25}} | |||
However, the "mixing" in question may have occurred before the Bulgars migrated from further east, and scholars such as ] have noted analogous groups in ], with phonologically similar names, who were frequently described in similar terms: during the 4th century, the '']'' (] ''b'uo-lak-kiei''), a component of the "]" groups in Ancient China, were portrayed as both a "mixed race" and "troublemakers".{{sfn|Chen|2012|p=92–95, 97}} ] noted that the ''Buluoji'' in the Chinese sources were recorded as remnants of the ] confederation,{{sfn|Chen|2012|pp=83–90}} and had strong Caucasian elements.{{sfn|Chen|2012|pp=92–97}} | |||
Another theory linking the Bulgars to a Turkic people of Inner Asia has been put forward by ], who identified them with the ''Pugu'' (僕骨; ''buk/buok kwət''; ''Buqut''), a ] and/or ] tribe.{{sfn|Golden|2012|loc=footnote 37}}<ref name="Origin" /> The Pugu were mentioned in Chinese sources from 103 BC up to the 8th century AD,<ref name="Origin" /> and later were situated among the eastern Tiele tribes, as one of the highest-ranking tribes after the ].{{sfn|Golden|2012|loc=footnote 37}} | |||
According to the ''Chronicle'' by ], which comprises several historical events of different age into one story, three mythical ] brothers set out on a journey from the mountain Imaon (]) in Asia and reached the river Tanais (]), the country of the ] called ], which would be later inhabited by the Bulgars and the Pugurs (''Puguraje'').<ref name="Barsils" /> | |||
The names ] and Bulgar were linked by later Byzantine sources for reasons that are unclear.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=103}}{{sfn|Bowersock, Brown, Grabar|1999|p=354}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=143}}Tekin derived ''-gur'' from the Altaic suffix ''-gir''.<ref>Tekin, Talat, ''Tuna Bulgarları ve Dilleri'' (1987). Türk Dil Kurumu. p. 66</ref> Generally, modern scholars consider the terms ''oğuz'' or ''oğur'', as generic terms for ], to be derived from Turkic ''*og/uq'', meaning "kinship or being akin to".{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=96}} The terms initially were not the same, as ''oq/ogsiz'' meant "arrow",{{sfn|Golden|2012|p=96}} while ''oğul'' meant "offspring, child, son", ''oğuš/uğuš'' was "tribe, clan", and the verb ''oğša-/oqša'' meant "to be like, resemble".{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=96}} | |||
There also appears to be an etymological association between the Bulgars and the preceding ] (''Kuturgur'' > ''Quturğur'' > ''*Toqur(o)ğur'' < ''toqur''; "nine" in Proto-Bulgar; ''toquz'' in Common Turkic) and ] (''Uturgur'' > ''Uturğur'' < ''utur/otur''; "thirty" in Proto-Bulgar; ''otuz'' in Common Turkic) – as '']'' (Oghur) tribes, with the ethnonym Bulgar as a "spreading" adjective{{vague|date=September 2016}}{{explain|date=September 2016}}.{{sfn|Karatay|2003|p=24}} Golden considered the origin of the Kutrigurs and Utigurs to be obscure and their relationship to the Onogurs and Bulgars – who lived in similar areas at the same time – as unclear.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=99}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=140}} | |||
He noted, however, an implication that the Kutrigurs and Utigurs were related to the ] (''šara oğur'', ''shara oghur''; "white oğhurs"),{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=97, 99}} and that according to ] these were Hunnish tribal unions, of partly ] descent.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=99}}<ref name="Origin" /> Karatay considered the Kutrigurs and Utigurs to be two related, ancestral people, and prominent tribes in the later Bulgar union, but different from the Bulgars.{{sfn|Karatay|2003|p=24–29}} | |||
Among many other theories regarding the etymology of Bulgar, the following have also had limited support. | |||
* an ] root meaning "combative" (i.e. cognate with the Latin ''pugnax''), according to D. Detschev;{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|p=384}} | |||
* the Latin ''burgaroi'' – a Roman term mercenaries stationed in ''burgi'' ("forts") on the '']'' (G. A. Keramopulos);{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|p=384}} | |||
* a reconstructed but unattested early Turkic term meaning "five oğhur", such as ''*bel-gur'' or ''*bil-gur'' (]).{{sfn|Karatay|2003|p=28}} | |||
== History == | == History == | ||
=== Turkic migration === | |||
{{History of Bulgaria}} | |||
{{Further|Turkic migration|Huns}}].]] The original homeland of the early Bulgars is still unclear. Their homeland is believed to be situated in ] and the ] steppes. Interaction with the Hunnic tribes, causing the migration, may have occurred there, but the ] seems a more likely location.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=103}} Some scholars propose that the Bulgars may have been a branch or offshoot of the Huns or at least Huns seem to have been absorbed by the Onogur-Bulgars after ]'s death.{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|p=168}} ] however, argues that the ] continued under Ernak, becoming the ] and ] ]-Bulgars.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Kim |first=Hyun Jin |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jCpncXFzoFgC |title=The Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe |date=2013-04-18 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-107-00906-6 |location=2013 |pages=123 |language=en}}</ref> These conclusions remain a topic of ongoing debate and controversy among scholars. | |||
The first clear mention and evidence of the Bulgars was in 480, when they served as the allies of the Byzantine Emperor ] (474–491) against the ].{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=104}} Anachronistic references about them can also be found in the 7th-century geography work '']'' by ], where the ''Kup'i Bulgar'', ''Duč'i Bulkar'', ''Olxontor Błkar'' and immigrant ''Č'dar Bulkar'' tribes are mentioned as being in the North Caucasian-Kuban steppes.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=103}} An obscure reference to ''Ziezi ex quo Vulgares'', with ] being an offspring of Biblical ], is in the '']''.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=103}}{{sfn|Bowersock, Brown, Grabar|1999|p=354}} | |||
=== Hunnic Empire === | |||
{{further|Turkic migration|Huns}} | |||
According to D. Dimitrov, the 5th-century '']'' by ] speaks about two migrations of the Bulgars, from ] to ]. The first migration is mentioned in the association with the campaign of Armenian ruler ] (probably ]) to the lands "named Basen by the ancients... and which were afterwards populated by immigrants of the vh' ndur Bulgar Vund, after whose name they (the lands) were named ]".{{cn|date=April 2024}} | |||
The early Bulgars (or "Proto-Bulgars") may have been present in the Pontic Steppe from the 2nd century, | |||
identified with the ''Bulensii'' in certain ] versions of ]'s ''Geography'', shown as occupying the territory along the northwest coast of ] east of ].<ref>Dobrev, Petar 2001</ref><ref>Fries, Lorenz and Claudius Ptolemy. . In: Servetus, Michael. ''Opus Geographiae''. Lyon, 1535.</ref><ref>Germanus, Nikolaus and Claudius Ptolemy. . Ulm: Lienhart Holle, 1482. (fragment)</ref> | |||
The second migration took place during the time of the ruler ], when "great disturbances occurred in the range of the great Caucasus mountain, in the land of the Bulgars, many of whom migrated and came to our lands and settled south of Kokh". Both migrations are dated to the second half of the 4th century AD. The "disturbances" which caused them are believed to be the expansion of the Huns in the East-European steppes. Dimitrov recorded that the toponyms of the Bolha and ] rivers, tributaries of the ] river, are known as ''Bolgaru-chaj'' and ''Vanand-chaj'', and could confirm the Bulgar settlement of Armenia.<ref name="Origin">{{cite book |author=D. Dimitrov |title=Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie |date=1987 |place=Varna |chapter=Bulgars, Unogundurs, Onogurs, Utigurs, Kutrigurs |chapter-url=http://www.kroraina.com/p_bulgar/p_bulg1a.htm}}</ref> | |||
In the early 4th century, the Bulgars would have been caught up in the ] migrations, moving to the fertile lands along the lower valleys of the rivers ] and ] and the ] seashore, and assimilating some remainders of the ]<!-- note that the Alans, often considered as belonging to the Sarmatians, did not lose their ethnic identity and language, at least not at the time, and never completely, as the ] are their descendants, so the Sarmatians have never really fully disappeared -->. Some of these remained for centuries in their new settlements, whereas others moved on with the Huns towards ], settling in ]. | |||
Those Bulgars took part in the Hunnic raids on Central and Western Europe between 377 and 453. After the death of ] in 453, and the subsequent disintegration of the ], the Bulgar tribes dispersed mostly to the eastern and southeastern parts of Europe. | |||
Around 463 AD, the ] and other tribes that had been part of the Hunnic union were attacked by the Šarağurs, one of the first Oğuric Turkic tribes that entered the ] as the result of migrations set off in Inner Asia.{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=92–93, 103}} According to ], in 463 the representatives of Šarağur, Oğur and Onoğur came to the Emperor in ],{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=92–93}} and explained they had been driven out of their homeland by the ], who had been attacked by the ].{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=92–93, 97}} This tangle of events indicates that the Oğuric tribes are related to the ] and ].{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=93–95}} It seems that Kutrigurs and Unigurs arrived with the initial waves of Oğuric peoples entering the Pontic steppes.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=99}} The Bulgars were not mentioned in 463.{{sfn|Bowersock, Brown, Grabar|1999|p=354}} | |||
At the end of the 5th century (probably in the years 480, 486, and 488) they fought against the ] as allies of the ] ]. From 493 they carried out frequent attacks on the western territories of the ]. Later raids were carried out at the end of the 5th century and the beginning of the 6th century. | |||
The account by ] in his '']'' (8th century) says that at the beginning of the 5th century in the North-Western slopes of the ] the ''Vulgares'' killed the ] king Agelmund.<ref name="Origin"/> Scholars attribute this account to the Huns,<ref>{{cite book |last=Menghin |first=Wilfred |date=1985 |title=Die Langobarden. Archäologie und Geschichte |language=de |publisher=Theiss |place=Stuttgart |page=14 |isbn=9783806203646}}</ref>{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|pp=127–129}} Avars{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|pp=127–129}} or some Bulgar groups who were probably carried away by the Huns to the Central Europe.<ref name="Origin"/>{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|pp=127–129}} The Lombards, led by their new king Laimicho, rose up and defeated the Bulgars with great slaughter,<ref>Hist. gentis Lang., Ch. XVII.</ref> gaining great booty and confidence as they "became bolder in undertaking the toils of war."<ref>PD, XVII.</ref> | |||
=== Bulgar Khanate === | |||
] | |||
{{main|Old Great Bulgaria}} | |||
The defeated Bulgars then became subjects of the Lombards and later migrated in Italy with their king ].<ref>{{cite book|title=History of the Lombards: Translated by William Dudley Foulke |first=Edward |last=Peters |year=2003 |place=University of Pennsylvania Press}}</ref> When the army of Ostrogoth chieftain ] grew to 30,000-men strong, it was felt as a menace to Byzantine ], who somehow managed to convince the Bulgars to attack the Thracian Goths.<ref name="Wolfram">{{cite book |first1=Herwig |last1=Wolfram |author-link=Herwig Wolfram |first2=Thomas J. |last2=Dunlap |date=1990 |title=History of the Goths |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xsQxcJvaLjAC |publisher=University of California Press |page=276 |isbn=9780520069831}}</ref> The Bulgars were eventually defeated by Strabo in 480/481.<ref name="Wolfram" /> In 486 and 488 they fought against the Goths again, first as allies of Byzantium, according to ],<ref name="Origin" /> and later as allies of the ], according to Paul the Deacon.<ref name="Origin" /> However, when ] with his Ostrogoths departed for Italy in 489, the ] and ] were open for Bulgar raids.{{sfn|Croke|2001|p=69}} | |||
In the middle of the 6th century, war broke out between the two main Bulgar tribes, the ] and ]. To the west, the Kutrigurs fell under ] dominion and became influential within the Khaganate. The eastern Utigurs fell under the western ] empire in 568. | |||
The Bulgars took the city of ] in the middle of the 7th century.<ref name="jstor">{{cite web|url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/2849381|title=JSTOR: An Error Occurred Setting Your User Cookie|publisher=jstor.org|accessdate=2014-11-22}}</ref> | |||
In 493, according to ], they defeated and killed ] Julian.{{sfn|Croke|2001|p=69}} In 499, they crossed the Danube and reached Thrace where on the banks of the river Tzurta (considered a tributary of ]{{sfn|Croke|2001|p=53}}) defeated a 15,000-strong Roman army led by magister militum Aristus.{{sfn|Croke|2001|pp=23, 68}}{{sfn|Curta|2015|p=75}} In 502, Bulgars again devastated Thrace as reportedly there were no Roman soldiers to oppose them.{{sfn|Croke|2001|p=69}}{{sfn|Curta|2015|p=75}} In 528–529 they again invaded the region and defeated Roman generals ] and ].{{sfn|Croke|2001|p=70}} However, the Gothic general ] offered allegiance to Emperor ] (527–565) in 530, and managed to kill 5,000 Bulgars plundering Thrace.{{sfn|Croke|2001|p=69}} ] recorded that in the battle a Bulgar warlord was captured.{{sfn|Curta|2015|p=75}} In 535, magister militum ] defeated the Bulgar army at the river ].{{sfn|Curta|2015|p=75}} | |||
United under ] of the ] (identical to the ruler mentioned by ] chronicler ] under the name of Shahriar), the joined forces of the Utigur and Kutrigur Bulgars, and probably the Bulgar ], broke loose from the Turkic khanate in the 630s. They formed an independent state, the Onogundur-Bulgar (''Oghondor-blkar'' or ''Olhontor-blkar'') Empire, often called by ] sources "the ]". The empire was situated between the lower course of the ] to the west, the ] and the ] to the south, the ] River to the east, and the ] River to the north. It is assumed that the state capital was ], an ancient city on the ] peninsula (''see'' ]). However, the archaeological evidence shows that the city became predominantly Bulgar only after Kubrat's death and the consequent disintegration of his state. | |||
Ennodius, ] and ] identified the Bulgars with the Huns in a 6th-century ], in which Ennodius referred to a captured Bulgar horse as "''equum Huniscum''".{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|pp=164, 220}} In 505, the alleged 10,000 Hun horsemen in the ] army, which was defeated by the Ostrogoths, are believed to be the Bulgars.{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|p=164}} In 515, Bulgar mercenaries were listed along with others from the Goths, Scythians and Hunnic tribes as part of the ] army.{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|p=421}} In 539, two Hunnic "kinglets" defeated two Roman generals during the raid into ] and ].{{sfn|Curta|2015|pp=75–76}} | |||
A Roman army led by magister militum ] and ] intercepted and defeated them in Thrace; however, another raiding party ambushed and captured the two Roman generals.{{sfn|Curta|2015|p=76}} In 539 and 540, Procopius reported a powerful Hunnic army crossed the Danube, devastated Illyricum and reached up to the ].{{sfn|Curta|2015|p=76}} Such large distances covered in a short time indicate they were horsemen.{{sfn|Curta|2015|p=76}} | |||
] described, in his work '']'' (551), the Pontic steppe beyond the Akatziri, above the Pontic Sea, as the habitat of the ''Bulgari'', "whom the evils of our sins have made famous". In this region, the ''Hunni'' divided into two tribes: the ''Altziagiri'' (who trade and live next to ]) and ''Saviri'', while the ''Hunuguri'' (believed to be the Onoğurs) were notable for the ] skin trade.<ref name="Origin"/>{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|p=431}}{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=98}} In the Middle Ages, marten skin was used as a substitute for minted money.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=254}} | |||
The Syriac translation of ]'s ''Ecclesiastical History'' (c. 555) in Western Eurasia records: | |||
<blockquote>The land Bazgun... extends up to the ] and to the sea, which are in the Hunnish lands. Beyond the gates live the Burgars (Bulgars), who have their language, and are people pagan and barbarian. They have towns. And the Alans – they have five towns... Avnagur (Aunagur, considered Onoğurs) are people, who live in tents</blockquote> | |||
Then he records 13 tribes, the ''wngwr'' (]), ''wgr'' (Oğur), ''sbr'' (]), ''bwrgr'' (Burğa, i.e. Bulgar), ''kwrtrgr'' (Kutriğurs), ''br'' (probably ], also known as the Avars), ''ksr'' (''Kasr''; possibly ]), ''srwrgwr'' (]), ''dyrmr'' (unknown<!-- If it's unknown this is meaningless: Dirmar=Ιτίγαροι -->), ''b'grsyq'' (''Bagrasir'', i.e. ]), ''kwls'' (unknown<!-- If it's unknown this is meaningless: Xwâlis -->), ''bdl'' (probably ]), and ''ftlyt'' (Hephthalite) ... They are described in typical phrases reserved 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)".<ref name="Origin"/>{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=97}} | |||
] (c. 579–582) wrote: | |||
<blockquote>...all of them are called in general Scythians and Huns in particular according to their nation. Thus, some are Koutrigours or Outigours and yet others are Oultizurs and Bourougounds... the Oultizurs and Bourougounds were known up to the time of the Emperor ] (457–474) 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 place.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=98}}</blockquote> | |||
According to D. Dimitrov, scholars partially managed to identify and locate the Bulgar groups mentioned in the Armenian ''Ashkharatsuyts''. The ''Olxontor Błkar'' is one of the variations used for the Onoğurs Bulgars, while others could be related to the ancient river names,{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=144}} such as the ''Kup'i Bulgar'' and the ] (Kuphis). The ''Duč'i'' could read ''Kuchi Bulkar'' and as such could be related to the ] (Kocho). However, the ''Č'dar Bulkar'' location is unclear. Dimitrov theorized that the differences in the ''Bulgar'' ethnonym could be due to the dialect differentiations in their language.<ref name="Origin"/> | |||
By the middle of the 6th century, the Bulgars momentarily fade from the sources and the Kutrigurs and Utigurs come to the front.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=104}} Between 548 and 576, mostly due to Justinian I (527–565), through diplomatic persuasion and bribery the Kutrigurs and Utigurs were drawn into mutual warfare, decimating one another. In the end, the Kutrigurs were overwhelmed by the Avars, while the Utigurs came under the rule of the Western Turks.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=100}} | |||
The Oğurs and Onoğurs, in the 6th- and 7th-century sources, were mentioned mostly in connection with the Avar and Turk conquest of Western Eurasia.{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=100–102}} From the 8th century, the Byzantine sources often mention the Onoğurs in close connection with the Bulgars. Agathon (early 8th century) wrote about the nation of Onoğurs Bulğars. ] (early 9th century) noted that ] was the lord of the ''Onoğundurs''; his contemporary ] referred to them as ''Onoğundur–Bulğars''. | |||
] (mid-10th century) remarked that the Bulğars formerly called themselves '']''. This association was previously mirrored in Armenian sources, such as the ''Ashkharatsuyts'', which refers to the ''Olxontor Błkar'', and the 5th century ''History'' by Movses Khorenatsi, which includes an additional comment from a 9th-century writer about the colony of the Vłĕndur Bułkar. Marquart and Golden connected these forms with the ''Iġndr'' (*Uluġundur) of ] (c. 820), the ''Vnndur'' (*Wunundur) of ] (982), the ''Wlndr'' (*Wulundur) of ] (10th century) and Hungarian name for Belgrad ''Nándor Fejérvár'', the ''nndr'' (*Nandur) of ] (11th century) and ''*Wununtur'' in the ] by the Khazar King ]. All the forms show the phonetic changes typical of later Oğuric (prothetic v-).{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=102}} | |||
Scholars consider it unclear how this union came about, viewing it as a long process in which a number of different groups were merged.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=244}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=143}} During that time, the Bulgars may have represented a large confederation including the remnants of Onoğurs, Utigurs and Kutrigurs among others.{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=100, 103}} | |||
=== Old Great Bulgaria === | |||
{{Main|Old Great Bulgaria}} | |||
] | |||
The Turk rule weakened sometime after 600, allowing the Avars to reestablish the control over the region.{{sfn|Bowersock, Brown, Grabar|1999|p=354}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=144}} As the ] declined, finally collapsing in the middle of the 7th century, it was against Avar rule that the Bulgars, recorded as ''Onoğundur–Bulğars'', reappeared.{{sfn|Bowersock, Brown, Grabar|1999|p=354}}{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=244}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=145}} They revolted under their leader ] (c. 635), who seems to have been prepared by ] (610–641) against the Sasanian–Avar alliance. With his uncle ] in 619, Kubrat had been baptized in Constantinople.{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=244–245}}{{sfn|Bowersock, Brown, Grabar|1999|p=354}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=144}}<ref name="Great">{{cite book |author=D. Dimitrov |date=1987 |chapter="Old Great Bulgaria" |title=Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie |chapter-url=http://www.kroraina.com/p_bulgar/p_bulg5.htm |place=Varna}}</ref> He founded the ] (''Magna Bulgaria''{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=152}}), also known as ''Onoğundur–Bulğars'' state, or ''Patria Onoguria'' in the '']''.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=245}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=144}}<ref name="Origin"/> | |||
Little is known about Kubrat's activities. It is considered that Onogur Bulgars remained the only steppe tribes in good relations with the Byzantines.{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=152}} His date of death is placed between 650 and 663 AD.<ref>{{cite book |last=Somogyi |first= Péter |chapter=New remarks on the flow of Byzantine coins in Avaria and Walachia during the second half of the seventh century |title=The Other Europe in the Middle Ages: Avars, Bulgars, Khazars and Cumans |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_-G1L-9Zec0C |editor-last1=Curta |editor-first1=Florin |editor-link1=Florin Curta |editor-last2=Kovalev |editor-first2=Roman |date=2008 |publisher=Brill |page=104 |isbn=9789004163898}}</ref> According to Nikephoros I, Kubrat instructed his five sons to "never separate their place of dwelling from one another, so that by being in concordance with one another, their power might thrive".{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=245}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=145}} | |||
Subsequent events proved Old Great Bulgaria to be only a loose tribal union, as there emerged a rivalry between the ] and the Bulgars over Turk patrimony and dominance in the Pontic–Caspian steppe.{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=236, 245}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=145}} Some historians consider the war an extension of the Western Turks struggle, between the ''Nushibi'' tribes and ], who led the Khazars, and the ''Duolu/Tu-lu'' tribes, which some scholars associated with the ], from which Kubrat and many Bulgar rulers originated.{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=103, 236–237}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=144}} The Khazars were ultimately victorious and parts of the Bulgar union broke up.{{sfn|Bowersock, Brown, Grabar|1999|p=354}} | |||
=== Subsequent migrations === | === Subsequent migrations === | ||
{{Further|Volga Bulgaria|First Bulgarian Empire}} | |||
], 10th century.]] | |||
] | |||
It is unclear whether the brothers' parting ways was caused by the internal conflicts or strong Khazar pressure.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=245}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=145}} The latter is considered more likely.{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=145}} The Bulgars led by the first two brothers ] and ] remained in the Pontic steppe zone, where they were known as ''Black Bulgars'' by Byzantine and Rus sources, and became Khazar vassals.{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=245–246}}{{sfn|Bowersock, Brown, Grabar|1999|p=354}}<ref name="Saltovo">{{cite book |author=D. Dimitrov |date=1987 |chapter=The Proto-Bulgarians and the Saltovo-Majack culture |title=Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie |chapter-url=http://www.kroraina.com/p_bulgar/p_bulg5.htm |place=Varna}}</ref> The Bulgars led by Kotrag migrated to the middle ] region during the 7th and 9th centuries, where they founded ], with ] as its capital.{{sfn|Bowersock, Brown, Grabar|1999|p=354}}<ref name="Saltovo"/> | |||
{{further|Volga Bulgaria|First Bulgarian Empire}} | |||
According to legend, on his deathbed Khan Kubrat commanded his sons to gather sticks and bring them to him, which he then bundled together. He commanded his eldest son ] (also Bayan or Boyan) to break the bundle. Bayan failed against the strength of the combined sticks, and so did the other sons in turn. Kubrat undid the bundle and broke each stick separately. He then proclaimed to his sons, "unity makes strength", which has become a commonplace Bulgarian folk slogan and now appears on the modern ]. (] occur also in Greek, Roman, Persian, Chinese and Japanese historic legends, as well as in the legend of ] and his six sons.) | |||
According to ] (10th century), the Volga Bulgars were divided into three branches: "the first branch was called Bersula (Barsils), the second ], and the third Bulgar".<ref name="Barsils">{{cite book |author=D. Dimitrov |title=Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie |date=1987 |place=Varna |chapter=Sabirs, Barsils, Belendzheris, Khazars |chapter-url=http://www.kroraina.com/p_bulgar/p_bulg1b.htm}}</ref> In 922 they accepted ] as the official religion.{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=245, 253–258}}{{sfn|Bowersock, Brown, Grabar|1999|p=354}} They preserved their national identity well into the 13th century by repelling the first ] in 1223. They were eventually subdued by the Mongols in 1237.{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=107}} They gradually lost their identity after 1431 when their towns and region were captured by the Russians.{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|pp=107–108}} | |||
The Byzantine ] ] relates that Kubrat's sons, however, did not live up to this advice,{{Citation needed|date=November 2009}} and thus soon after the death of Kubrat around 665, the ] expansion eventually led to the dissolution of ]. Batbayan at first remained the ruler of the lands north of the ] and the ]s, but the Khazars soon subdued him. Those Bulgars, along with their Khazar masters, converted to ] in the 9th century. Furthermore, the ] in ] may be also the descendants of this Bulgar branch.{{Citation needed|date=November 2009}} | |||
The third and most famous son, ], according to Nikephoros I: | |||
The ], led by Kubrat’s second son ], migrated to the confluence of the ] and ]s in what is now ] (see ]). The present-day republics of ] and ] are traditionally considered to be the descendants of ] in terms of territory and people, but linguistic research casts doubt on this tradition in regard to the ]. Linguistically, only the ] is similar to the old ];<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref> the ] belongs to a different branch of the ], which has led some to speculate that the Volga Tatars either mixed with ] or simply adopted the ] (a position known as ]). It is worth noting that the Chuvash were never Muslims, while the bulk of Volga Bulgars were. Another factor is that most of the Muslims of the ], even the Muslim Mongol aristocracy, adopted the Kipchak language. | |||
{{Blockquote|crossed the river Danapros and Danastros, lived in the locale around the Ister, having occupied a place suitable for settlement, called in their language ογγλον (ogglon; Slav. ''o(n)gl'', "angle", "corner"; Turk. ''agyl'', "yard"<ref>{{cite book |author=D. Dimitrov |date=1987 |chapter=The migration of the Unogundur-Bulgars of Asparukh from the lands of Azov to the Lower Danube |title=Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie |chapter-url=http://www.kroraina.com/p_bulgar/P_bulg10.html |place=Varna}}</ref>)... The people having been divided and scattered, the tribe of the Khazars, from within Berulia (]), which neighbors with Sarmatia, attacked them with impunity. They overran all the lands lying behind the Pontos Euxeinos and penetrated to the sea. After this, having made Bayan a subject, they forced him to pay tribute.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=246}}}} | |||
The Bulgars led by Khubrat's youngest son, ], moved westward and occupied what is today the southern part of ]. He was followed by a small Bulgar horde.<ref></ref><ref>Ал. Бурмов, Създаване на Българската дъжава с. 132.</ref><ref></ref> A twelfth-century source gives its number as 10,000.<ref></ref> After a successful war with ] in 680, ]'s khanate settled in ]. Asparukh and Byzantine Constantine IV Pogonatus signed a treaty in 681. Asparukh's khanate went on to conquer ]. The year 681 is usually regarded as the year of the establishment of modern ]. | |||
Asparukh, according to the ''Pseudo''–Zacharias Rhetor, "fled from the Khazars out of the Bulgarian mountains". In the Khazar ruler Joseph's letter is recorded "in the country in which I live, there formerly lived the Vununtur (< Vunundur < Onoğundur). Our ancestors, the Khazars warred with them. The Vununtur were more numerous, as numerous as the sand by the sea, but they could not withstand the Khazars. They left their country and fled... until they reached the river called Duna (])".{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=246}} | |||
The smallest successor group to Great Bulgaria, the ] (also transliterated as 'Altsek' and 'Altcek' or 'Ducca Alzeco'), after many wanderings settled mainly near ] in the ] and ] provinces, under the leadership of Emnetzur. | |||
This migration and the foundation of the Danube Bulgaria (the ]) is usually dated c. 681.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=246}}{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=145}} The composition of the horde is unknown, and sources only mention tribal names Čakarar, Kubiar, Küriger, and clan names ], ], Ermiyar, Ugain and Duar.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=247}} The ''Onglos'' where Bulgars settled is considered northern ], secured to the West and North by Danube and its ], and bounded to the East by the ].{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=152}} They re-settled in North-Eastern Bulgaria, between ] and ], including ] plateau and southern Dobruja.{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=154}} The distribution of pre-Christian burial assemblages in Bulgaria and Romania is considered as the indication of the confines of the Bulgar settlement.{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|pp=154–156}}]In the Balkans they merged with the Slavs and other autochthonous Romance and Greek speaking population, like the ] and ],{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=108}} becoming a political and military elite.{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=145, 158, 196}} However, the influence of the pre-Slavic population had relatively little influence on the Slavs and Bulgars, indicating their population was reduced in previous centuries.{{sfn|Fine|1991|p=68}} The hinterlands of the Byzantine territory were for years occupied by many groups of Slavs.{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=154}} According to Theophanes, the Bulgars subjugated the so-called ], of which the ] were re-settled from the pass of Beregaba or Veregava, most likely the ] of the ], to the East, while the other six tribes to the Southern and Western regions as far the boundary with the Pannonian Avars.{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=154}} Scholars consider that the absence of any source recording the Slavic resistance to the invasion was because it was in their interest to be liberated from the Byzantine taxation.{{sfn|Sedlar|2011|p=16}}{{multiple image | |||
A group of Bulgars ruled by ] inhabited ]. After breaking free of Avar overlordship, they migrated to ].<ref>Zlatarski 1970 <nowiki></nowiki>: </ref> This group, numbering around 70,000,<ref>Mikulchik 1996: 71 ()</ref> included descendants of Roman captives of various ethnicities that had been resettled in Pannonia by the Avars.<ref>Hupchick 2001</ref><ref>Curta 2006</ref> The majority of historians do not see any evidence for the existence of a Bulgar khanate in Macedonia before 850 AD{{Citation needed|date=November 2009}}; but ] posits that Kuber was also a son of Kubrat, that Kuber's Bulgars formed a khanate in Macedonia, and that Kuber's khanate joined ] to attack the Byzantine Empire. | |||
| direction = vertical | |||
| width = 220 | |||
| footer = | |||
| image1 = 52-manasses-chronicle.jpg | |||
| alt1 = A page of a medieval manuscript | |||
| caption1 = Khan ] defeats the Byzantine Emperor ] in the ], '']'' | |||
| image2 = 51-manasses-chronicle krum crop.png | |||
| alt2 = A page of a medieval manuscript | |||
| caption2 = Khan Krum feasts with the skull cup of Nicephorus after the victory at the Varbitsa Pass, ''Manasses Chronicle'' | |||
}} | |||
It is considered that the Slavic tribal organization was left intact, and paid tribute to the ruling Bulgars.{{sfn|Fine|1991|pp=67–69}}{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=154}}{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=109}} According to Nikephoros I and Theophanes, an unnamed fourth brother, believed to be ], "having crossed the river Ister, resides in Pannonia, which is now under the sway of the Avars, having made an alliance with the local peoples". Kuber later led a revolt against the Avars and with his people moved as far as the region of ] in Greek ].{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=245}} The fifth brother, reported by Nikephoros I and Theophanes, "settling in the five ]te cities became a subject of the Romans". This brother is believed to be ], who after a stay in Avar territory left and settled in Italy, in ], ] and ]. These Bulgars preserved their speech and identity until the late 8th century.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=245}} | |||
The legacy of Volga Bulgaria endured as part of the Muslim history of the Asian part of the ]; Russian historian S. M. Solov'ev reflected: "For a long time Asia, Muslim Asia built here a home; a home not for nomadic hordes but for its civilization; for a long time, a commercial and industrial people, the Bulgars had been established here. When the Bulgar was already listening to the Qur'an on the shores of the Volga and the Kama, the Russian Slav had not yet started to build Christian churches on the Oka and had not yet conquered these places in the name of European civilization".<ref> | |||
S. M. Solov'ev, Istoriia Rossii s drevneishikh vremen, vol. 5 – 6 (Moscow, 1959–1965), p. 476.</ref> | |||
] | |||
==Society== | |||
], a famous example of Bulgar art in Bulgaria, dated to c. 710 and attributed to the reign of ].]] | |||
The First Bulgarian Empire (681–1018) had a significant political influence in the Balkans. In the time of ] (700–721) the Bulgars helped Byzantines two times, in 705 the Emperor ] to regain his throne, and 717–718 defeating the Arabs during the siege of Constantinople.{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=247–248}} ] (738–753) was the last ruler from the Dulo clan, and the period until c. 768–772 was characterized by the Byzantino-Bulgar conflict and internal crisis.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=248}} In the short period followed seven rulers from the Uokil and Ugain clan.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=248}} ] (768–777) managed to establish a pacific policy with Byzantium, and restore imperial power.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=248}} | |||
Archaeological finds from the Ukrainian steppe suggest that the early Bulgars had the typical culture of the ] of Central Asia, who migrated seasonally in pursuit of pastures. From the 7th century, however they became a settled culture, planting crops, and mastering the crafts of blacksmithing, masonry, and carpentry. | |||
] | |||
During the reign of ] (803–814), the Empire doubled its size, including new lands in Macedonia and ].{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=108}} He also successfully repelled the invading force of the Byzantines, as well defeated the Pannonian Avars where additionally extended the Empire size.{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=108}}{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=248}} In 865, during the reign of Khan ] (852–889), the Bulgars accepted Christianity as the official religion, and Eastern Orthodoxy in 879.{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=108}} The greatest expansion of the Empire and prosperity during the time of ] (893–927) is considered as the Bulgarian ].<ref>{{cite book |url=http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/creees/content/outreach/fulbright/final_projects/hart.pdf |last=Hart |first=Nancy |title=Bulgarian Art and Culture: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives |page=21 |publisher=] |access-date=2007-03-03 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070810191242/http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/creees/content/outreach/fulbright/final_projects/hart.pdf |archive-date=August 10, 2007|url-status=dead}}</ref>{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=108}} However, from the time of ] (927–969) their power declined. The Hungarians, ] Slavs, as well ] and ] held many raids into their territory,{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=108}} and so weakened were eventually conquered in 1018 by the Byzantine Empire.{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=108}} | |||
== Society == | |||
], an example of Bulgar art in Bulgaria, dated to the beginning of the 8th century]] | |||
Bulgars had the typical culture of the nomadic equestrians of Central Asia, who migrated seasonally in pursuit of good pastures, as well attraction to economic and cultural interaction with sedentary societies.{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=5–10}} Being in contact with sedentary cultures, they began mastering the crafts of ]ing, ], and ].<ref name="Great"/> The politically dominant tribe or clan usually gave its name to the tribal confederation.{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=5–6}} Such confederations were often encouraged by the Imperial powers, for whom it was easier to deal with one ruler than several tribal chieftains.{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=54}} | |||
In nomadic society the tribes were political organizations based on kinship, with diffused power.{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=118}} Tribes developed according to the relation with sedentary states, and only managed to conquer them when had social cohesion.{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=118}} If the raiding by the nomads had negative effect on the economic development of the region it could significantly slow down their own social and cultural development.{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=118}} In a nomadic state the nomad and sedentary integration was limited, and usually had vassal tribute system.{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=118}} | |||
When the Bulgars arrived in the Balkans their first generations probably still lived a nomadic life in ]s, but they quickly adopted the ] of rectangular plan and sedentary or seasonal lifestyle of the Slavs and autochthonous population.{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=201}} The Bulgar and Slavic settlements cannot be distinguished other than by the type of biritual cemeteries.{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=200}} | |||
=== Social structure === | === Social structure === | ||
] and the ] ] groups as well as an ] tribe ]]] | |||
The Bulgars had a well-developed clan system and were governed by hereditary rulers. The members of the military aristocracy bore the title ''boyil'' (]). There also were ''bagains'' - lesser military commanders. The nobility were further divided onto Small and Great Boyars. The latter formed the Council of the Great Boyars and gathered to take decisions on important state matters presided by the ] (king). Their numbers varied between six and twelve. These probably included the ichirgu boyil and the ] (vice khan), the two most powerful people after the khan. These positions were administrative and noninheritable, though by the end of the First Bulgarian Empire the kavkhan's title had become inheritable as well (see ], who was "from a kavkhan's family"). The boyars could also be internal and external, probably distinguished by their place of residence — inside or outside the capital.<ref name="Beshev1981" /> The heir of the throne was called ''kanartikin''. Other subroyal titles used by the Bulgarian noble class include ''boyila tarkan'' (possibly the second son of the khan), ''kana boyila kolobur'' (possibly the chief priest), ''boritarkan'' (city mayor). | |||
The Bulgars, at least the Danubian Bulgars, had a well-developed clan and military administrative system of "inner" and "outer" tribes,{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|pp=69–70}} governed by the ruling clan.{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=69}} They had many titles, and according to ] the distinction between titles which represented offices and mere ornamental dignities was somewhat vague.{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=284}} ] theorized that the titles of the steppe peoples did not reflect the ethnicity of their bearers.{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|p=383}} According to Magnus Felix Ennodius, the Bulgars did not have nobility, yet their leaders and common men became noblemen on the battle field, indicating social mobility.{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|p=199}}<ref name="Origin" /> | |||
Tribute-paying sedentary vassals, such as the Slavs and Greek-speaking population, formed a substantial and important part of the ''khanate'''s maintenance.{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=70}} | |||
Although it was not recorded on inscriptions, the title ''sampses'' is considered to be related to the royal court.{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=286}} The title ''tabare'' or ''iltabare'', which derives from the old Turkish ''ältäbär'', like ''sampses'' is not mentioned on inscriptions, but is related to the legates and ambassadors.{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=287}} | |||
The ] listed Bulgarian legates at the ] at Constantinople in 869–870. They were mentioned as Stasis, Cerbula, Sundica (''vagantur''=''bagatur''), Vestranna (''iltabare''), Praestizisunas (''campsis''), and Alexius Hunno (''sampsi'').{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=288}} The ruler title in Bulgar inscriptions was '']''{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=71}} or '']''.<ref>Florin Curta, Roman Kovalev, “The” Other Europe in the Middle Ages: Avars, Bulgars, Khazars and Cumans ; , BRILL, 2008, p. 363, {{ISBN|9789004163898}}</ref> A counterpart of the Greek phrase {{lang|grc|ὁ ἐκ Θεοῦ ἄρχων}} (''ho ek Theou archon'') was also common in Bulgar inscriptions.{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=284}} The '']'' was the second most important title in the realm,{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=287}}<ref name="Bury" /> seemingly chief official.{{sfn|Petkov|2008|pp=7, 12–13}} Some Bulgar inscriptions, written in Greek and later in ], refer to the Bulgarian rulers respectively with the Greek title '']'', or the Slavic titles '']'' and '']''.{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=284}}] | |||
There are several possible interpretations for the ruler title, '']'', mentioned in six inscriptions by the Khan ] and two by ].{{sfn|Petkov|2008|pp=8–12}}{{sfn|Curta|2006|pp=162–163}} Among the proposed translations for ''sybigi'' or ''subigi'' are "lord of the army",{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=162}} from the reconstructed Turkic phrase ''syu-beg'' (army master) paralleling the attested ] '']''.<ref>{{citation |last=Beshevliev |first=Veselin |author-link=Veselin Beshevliev |date=1981 |title=Прабългарската обществена и държавна структура |trans-title=Proto-Bulgarian public and state structure |url=http://www.promacedonia.org/vb/vb_5.html |language=bg |publisher=Izd. na Otech. front |place=Sofia |pages=33–34}}</ref> Runciman and ] considered ''ubige'' or ''uvege'' to be related to the ]-Turkic ''öweghü'' (high, glorious);{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=284}}<ref name="Bury">{{cite book |last=Bury |first=John B. |author-link=J. B. Bury |date=2015 |title=A History of the Eastern Roman Empire |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vL-wBgAAQBAJ |publisher=Cambridge University Press |pages=334–335 |isbn=9781108083218}}</ref> "bright, luminous, heavenly";{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=162}}{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=72}} and more recently "(ruler) from God",{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=162}} from the Indo-European ''*su-'' and '']-'', i.e. ''*su-baga''.<ref>{{citation |last=Stepanov |first=Tsvetelin |date=March 2001 |title=The Bulgar title ΚΑΝΑΣΥΒΙΓΙ: reconstructing the notions of divine kingship in Bulgaria, AD 822–836 |journal=Early Medieval Europe |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=1–19 |doi=10.1111/1468-0254.00077|s2cid=154863640 }}</ref> ] noted the resemblance in the use of the ''kana sybigi'' with the Byzantine name and title '']''.{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=163}}], the first capital of Bulgaria]]Members of the upper social class bore the title '']'' (later '']'').{{sfn|Petkov|2008|p=8}} The nobility was divided onto ''small'' and ''great'' boilas.{{sfn|Sedlar|2011|p=59}}{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=74}} In the 10th century, there were three classes of boyars: the six ''great'' boilas, the ''outer'' boilas, and the ''inner'' boilas,{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=284}}<ref name="Bury" /><ref name="Henning">{{cite book |last=Henning |first=Joachim |date=2007 |title=Post-Roman Towns, Trade and Settlement in Europe and Byzantium: Byzantium, Pliska, and the Balkans |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3oCI8BVxcB8C |publisher=Walter de Gruyter |pages=618–619 |isbn=9783110183580}}</ref>{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=74}} while in the mid-9th century there were twelve ''great'' boyars.{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=284}}<ref name="Bury" /> The ''great'' boilas occupied military and administrative offices in the state,{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=73}} as well the council where they gathered for decisions on important matters of state.{{sfn|Sedlar|2011|p=59}}{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=75}}<ref name="Bury" /> | |||
''Bagaïns'' were the lesser class of the nobility,{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=73}}{{sfn|Petkov|2008|p=8}} probably a military class which also participated in the council.{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=285}}{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=74}}<ref name="Bury" /> The title '']'', once as ''bogotor'',{{sfn|Petkov|2008|p=10}} is found in several instances within the inscriptions.{{sfn|Petkov|2008|pp=8, 10, 34–35}} It derives from Turkish ''bagadur'' (hero){{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=285}}{{sfn|Petkov|2008|pp=34–35}} and was a high military rank.{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=285}}{{sfn|Petkov|2008|pp=34–35}} The Bulgarian military commander who was defeated by the Croats in the ] (926) was called ],{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=285}} which is actually a title comprised by ''alo'' (considered Turkic '']''; chief) and ''bagatur''.{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=285}} | |||
There are several title associations with uncertain meaning, such as ''boila kavkhan'', ''ičirgu boila'', ''kana boila qolovur'', ''bagatur bagain'', ''biri bagain'', ''setit bagain'' and ''ik bagain''.{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=74}} ''Kolober'' (or ''qolovur''), a rank title, is cited in two inscriptions,{{sfn|Petkov|2008|pp=10, 13}} and it derives from the Turkish term for a guide, ''golaghuz''.{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=285}}<ref name="Bury" /> The title '']'', also once as ''kopan''{{sfn|Petkov|2008|p=9}} in the inscriptions, was often mentioned together with the bearer's name.{{sfn|Petkov|2008|pp=9–10, 37–38, 448, 508}}{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=285}} They were traditionally seen as Slavic chiefs.{{sfn|Petkov|2008|p=9}} It seems to have meant "head of a clan-district", as among the South Slavs (Croats, Serbs) where it was more widely used, it meant "head of a tribe" with a high district and court function.{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=164}}{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=285}}<ref name="Bury" /> | |||
The title '']'' probably represented a high military rank, similar to the Byzantine '']'', of the military governor of a province.{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=286}}<ref name="Bury"/> The variations ''kalutarkan'' and ''buliastarkan'' are considered to be officers at the head of the ''tarkans''.{{sfn|Runciman|1930|p=287}} Curta interpreted the title ''zhupan tarqan'' as "''tarqan of (all the) zhupans''".{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=164}} | |||
That the early Bulgar rulers used the title ''khan'' is only an assumption, since the evidence for it is scanty and only suggestive. There is the event of the Bulgarian ruler, ] being called "{{lang|grc|Καμπαγάνος}}" (Kampaganos) by ] (Nikephoros) in the Patriarch's ], at the end of section 16. The editors of a Bulgarian edition of this source have claimed (via an annotation) that "Kampaganos" is a corruption of "Kan Pagan".<ref>''Breviarium'' of Patriarch Nicephorus, Included in {{bg icon}}''Fontes graeci historiae bulgaricae'', VI: 305</ref><ref>Mango 1990: English translation of the ''Breviarium'' of Patriarch Nicephorus</ref> There is a word ''kanasubigi'' in stone inscriptions, which some historians presume is a compound of ''kana'', the archaic form of 'khan'. Among the proposed translations for the phrase ''kanasubigi'' are 'lord of the army', from the reconstructed Turkic phrase *''sü begi'', paralleling the attested ] ''sü baši'',<ref name="Beshev1981" /> and, more recently, '(ruler) from God', from the Indo-European *''su''- and ''baga''-, i.e. *''su-baga'' (a counterpart of the Greek phrase {{lang|grc|ὁ ἐκ Θεοῦ ἄρχων}}, ''ho ek Theou archon'', which is common in Bulgar inscriptions).<ref>Stepanov 2003</ref> This titulature presumably persisted until the Bulgars adopted ].<ref>Sedlar 1994: 46</ref> Some Bulgar inscriptions written in ] and later in ] refer to the Bulgarian ruler respectively with the ] title ''archon'' or the ] title '']''.<ref>] Chronicle, Vatican copy of the Bulgarian translation, p. 145</ref> | |||
=== Religion === | === Religion === | ||
Very little is known about the religion of the Bulgars |
Very little is known about the religion of the Bulgars,{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=250}}{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=207}} but it is believed to have been ]. | ||
{{ |
In Danube Bulgaria, Bulgar monarchs described themselves as a "ruler from God",<ref name="Bury" />{{sfn|Curta|2006|pp=161–162}}{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|pp=84–86}} indicating authority from a singular divine origin,{{sfn|Sedlar|2011|p=141}} and making appeals to the deity's ].{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|p=273}} ]'s inscription from ] (837) states:{{sfn|Petkov|2008|pp=12–13}}{{Blockquote|When someone seeks the truth, God sees. And when someone lies, God sees that too. The Bulgars did many favors to the Christians (Byzantines), but the Christians forgot them. But God sees.}} | ||
It is traditionally assumed that the God in question was the Turkic supreme sky deity, ].{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=84}}{{sfn|Curta|2006|pp=161–162}} In the Chinese transcription as ''zhenli'', and Turkic as ''Tangara'' and ''Tengeri'', it represents the oldest known Turco-Mongolian word.<ref name="Tengri" /> Tengri may have originated in the Xiongnu confederacy, which settled on the frontiers of China in the 2nd century BC. The confederacy probably had both pre-Turkic and pre-Mongolian ethnic elements.<ref name="Tengri">{{cite book |first1=Yves |last1=Bonnefoy |author-link1=Yves Bonnefoy |first2=Wendy |last2=Doniger |author-link2=Wendy Doniger |date=1993 |title=Asian Mythologies |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=r4I-FsZCzJEC |publisher=University of Chicago Press |pages=315, 331 |isbn=9780226064567}}</ref> In modern Turkish, the word for god, ''Tanrı'', derives from the same root.<ref name="Mercia">{{Cite book |last=MacDermott |first=Mercia |author-link=Mercia MacDermott |date=1998 |title=Bulgarian Folk Customs |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gh4IE6toGJMC |publisher=] |pages=21–22 |isbn=9781853024856}}</ref> | |||
It is traditionally assumed that the God in question was the Turkic ] ], with few occurrences of that name in documents related to Bulgaria. One such occurrence is in a late Ottoman Turkish manuscript listing the names of the supreme god in different languages, which has "Tangra" for Bulgarian.<ref>Beshevliev 1981: </ref> Another, from a severely damaged Greek language inscription found on a presumed ] stone near Madara, tentatively deciphered by Beshevliev as "] ], ruler (from God), was ... and sacri(ficed to go)d Tangra ...(some Bulgar titles follow)."<ref>Beshevliev 1979 {{bg icon}}</ref> Beshevliev has also conjectured that the frequent Danube Bulgar runic sign ıYı (i.e. ]]]]) stands for "Tangra", as it seems to disappear after the conversion to Christianity. | |||
] apparently engaged various shamanic practices.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=250}} According to ], Tangra was the male deity connected with sky, light and the Sun.<ref name="Mercia" /> The cult incorporated Tangra's female equivalent and principle goddess, ], the deity of fertility.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Zhivkov |first=Boris |date=2015 |title=Khazaria in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7Du2CAAAQBAJ |publisher=Brill |pages=78, 80, 112 |isbn=9789004294486}}</ref> Their ] | |||
A piece of ethnographic evidence which has been invoked to support the belief that the Bulgars worshipped Tengri/Tangra is the relatively similarity of the name "Tengri" to "Tură", the name of the supreme deity of the traditional religion of the ], who are traditionally regarded as descendants of the ].<ref>Tokarev, A. ''et al.'' 1987–1988</ref> Nevertheless, the Chuvash religion today is markedly different from Tengriism and can be described as a local form of ] with some elements borrowed from ]. In addition, there was the cult of the worship of ] (called ] by the ]) by the population of the ] capital Varachan (i.e. ]/Belendjer, "army head" ) <ref>Gmyrya, L. 1995. ''Hun country at the Caspian Gate: Caspian Dagestan during the epoch of the Great Movement of Peoples''. Makhachkala: Dagestan Publishing, pp. 23, 24</ref> in Northern ], which is mostly known as "]" <ref>Gmyrya, L. 1995. ''Hun country at the Caspian Gate: Caspian Dagestan during the epoch of the Great Movement of Peoples''. Makhachkala: Dagestan Publishing</ref> but which Russian historian M. I. Artamonov considered to be ethnically Bulgar. The cult involved sacrifice of horses and use of sacred trees in worship.<ref>Dimitrov 1987</ref> | |||
], which can be frequently found in early medieval Bulgaria is associated with deity Tangra. However, its exact meaning and use remains unknown.{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=207}} The most sacred creatures to Tangra were horses and eagles, particularly white horses.<ref name="Mercia" /> Bronze amulets with representations of the Sun, horses and other animals were found at Bulgar archeological sites.<ref name="Mercia" />{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=88}}{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=208}} This could explain the variety of Bulgars taboos, including those about animals.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=250}} | |||
Ravil Bukharaev believed that such an autocratic and monotheistic religion{{mdash}}],{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|pp=83–84, 86}} as seen in the report by ] (10th century) about the ], kindred to the Bulgars,<ref name="Islam">{{Cite book |last=Bukharaev |first=Ravil |date=2014 |title=Islam in Russia: The Four Seasons |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vIy3AwAAQBAJ |publisher=Routledge |pages=80–82, 83 |isbn=9781136807930}}</ref> made the acceptance of Islam more natural and easier in Volga Bulgaria:<ref name="Islam" />{{sfn|Shnirelʹman|1996|pp=30–31}} | |||
D. Dimitrov has argued that the Bulgars also adopted elements of Iranian religious beliefs. He sees Iranian influences on the cult at Varachan and notes resemblances between the layout of the ] temples of fire and what seem to be pagan Bulgar sanctuaries at ], ], and ]. The architectural similarities include two squares of ashlars inserted one into another, oriented towards the summer sunrise. One of these sites was transformed into a Christian church, which is taken as evidence that they served a religious function.<ref></ref> | |||
{{Blockquote|If someone trouble befalls any of them or there happens any unlucky incident, they look out into the sky and summon: "Ber Tengre!". In the Turkish language, that means, "by the One and Only God!".}} Another mention of Tengri is on the severely damaged Greek inscription found on a presumed ] stone near Madara,{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=84}} tentatively deciphered as "Khan ''sybigi'' Omurtag, ruler from god...was...and made sacrifice to god Tangra...''itchurgu boila''...gold".{{sfn|Petkov|2008|p=11}} An Ottoman manuscript recorded that the name of God, in Bulgarian, was "Tängri".{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=84}} | |||
Officially ] was adopted in ] by ] ] in 865 (as a state religion). ] was officially adopted in ] as a state religion in 922, but old religion revolts continued into the Mongol conquest in 1230's. | |||
] dated from the ] period has seven fingers representing the ]s]] | |||
A piece of ethnographic evidence which has been invoked to support the belief that the Bulgars worshipped Tengri/Tangra is the relative similarity of the name "Tengri" to "Tură", the name of the supreme deity of the traditional religion of the ], who are traditionally regarded as descendants of the Volga Bulgars.{{sfn|Tokarev|1980}} Nevertheless, the Chuvash religion today is markedly different from Tengrism and can be described as a local form of ], due to pagan beliefs of the ], forest dwellers of ] origin who lived in their vicinity, with some elements borrowed from Islam.<ref name="Islam" /> | |||
] was closely connected with the old clan system,{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=141}} and the remains of ] and ] were preserved even after the crossing of Danube.<ref name="Mercia"/>{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|pp=86–89}} The ] plate in the archaeological literature is often associated with shamanism.{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=208}} In the 9th century, it was recorded that before a battle the Bulgars "''used to practice enchantments and jests and charms and certain auguries''".{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|p=268}}{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=82}} ] reported that Baian, son of ] (893–927), could through ''magicam'' transform into a wolf.{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=88}} ] reported the worship of fire and water by the Bulgars,{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=83}} while in the 11th century ] remembered that before the Christianization the Bulgars respected the Sun, Moon and the stars, and sacrificed dogs to them.{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=80}} | |||
Allegedly, the Dulo clan had the dog as its sacred animal. To this today Bulgarians still use the expression "he kills the dog" to mean "he gives the orders", a relic of the time when the Dulo Khan sacrificed a dog to the deity Tangra.<ref name="Mercia"/> Remains of dog and deer have been found in Bulgars graves, and it seems the ] also had a special mythological significance.<ref name="Mercia"/><ref name="Kim"/> The Bulgars were bi-ritual,{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=66}} either cremating or burying their dead,{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=67}}{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=157}} and often interred them with personal objects (pottery, rarely weapons or dress{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=157}}), food, and sacred animals.<ref name="Mercia"/>{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=67}}{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=157}} | |||
Because of the cult of the Sun, the Bulgars had a preference for the south. Their main buildings and shrines faced south, as well their ]s, which were usually entered from the south, although less often from the east. Excavations showed that Bulgars buried their dead on a north–south axis,{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=157}} with their heads to the north so that the deceased "faced" south.<ref name="Mercia" /> The Slavs practiced only cremation, the remains were placed in urns, and like the Bulgars, with the conversion to Christianity ] the dead on west–east axis.{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=158}} The only example of a mixed Bulgar-Slavic cemetery is in ] near ancient ], on the coast of the Black Sea.{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=159}} | |||
D. Dimitrov has argued that the Kuban Bulgars also adopted elements of Iranian religious beliefs. He noticed Iranian influences on the cult of the former Caucasian Huns capital Varachan (]), making a religious syncretism between the principal Turkic deity Tengri and the Iranian sun god ].<ref name="Dimitrov">{{cite book |author=D. Dimitrov |date=1987 |chapter=The Proto-Bulgarians east of the Sea of Azov in the VIII–IX cc. |title=Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie |chapter-url=http://www.kroraina.com/p_bulgar/p_bulg7.htm |place=Varna}}</ref> Dimitrov cited the work by V.A. Kuznetsov, who considered the resemblance between the layout of the ] temples of fire and the Kuban Bulgar centre, Humarin citadel, situated 11 km to the north of the town ], where the pottery belonged to the ] culture.<ref name="Dimitrov"/> | |||
Kuznecov also found a connection in the plan of the Danube Bulgars sanctuaries at ], ], and ].<ref name="Dimitrov" /> The architectural similarities include two squares of ]s inserted one into another, oriented towards the summer sunrise.<ref name="Dimitrov" /> One of these sites was transformed into a Christian church, which is taken as evidence that they served a religious function.<ref name="Dimitrov" /> | |||
The view of the ] and ] influence, which ] also argued, is considered debatable, showing the cultural impact of the Iranian world on communities in the Pontic–Caspian steppe.<ref name="Kim"/> Many scholars believe that the square shape, with the north–south and east–west axis of the Bulgar sacral monuments is very similar to those of Turkic khagans in Mongolia.{{sfn|Curta|2006|p=160}} However, that the Bulgar residence in Pliska and ] were inspired by the Byzantine architecture is considered indisputable.{{sfn|Fiedler|2008|p=196}} | |||
] had already begun to penetrate, probably via their Slavic subjects,{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=250}} when it was adopted in the First Bulgarian Empire by ] ] in 865 as a state religion.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=252}} There was interest in ] as well, seen in the book ''Answers to the Questions of the King of the Burgar addressed to him about Islam and Unity'' by the ] caliph ] (813–833) for the Pontic/Bosporan Bulgars,{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=250}} while it was officially adopted in Volga Bulgaria as a state religion in 922.<ref name="Islam"/><ref>{{cite journal |first=Gerald |last=Mako |date=2011 |title=The Islamization of the Volga Bulghars: A Question Reconsidered |journal=Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi |issue=18 |pages=199–223}}</ref> | |||
== Language == | == Language == | ||
{{ |
{{Main|Bulgar language}} | ||
] by Khan ] (815–831). It is written in Greek, and top two lines read: "Kanasubigi Omortag, in the land where he was born is archon by God. In the field of Pliska...".]] | |||
The origin and ] has been the subject of debate since around the start of the 20th century. It is generally accepted that at least the Bulgar elite spoke a language that was a member of the ] branch of the ], alongside the now extinct ] and the solitary survivor of these languages, ].{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=66}}<ref>{{cite book |last=Detrez |first=Raymond |author-link=Raymond Detrez |year=2005 |title=Developing Cultural Identity in the Balkans: Convergence Vs. Divergence |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TRttHdXjP14C |publisher=Peter Lang |pages=29|isbn=9789052012971 }}</ref><ref name="Rashev">{{citation |last=Rashev |first=Rasho |date=1992 |title=On the origin of the Proto-Bulgarians |url=http://www.kroraina.com/bulgar/rashev.html |journal=Studia Protobulgarica et Mediaevalia Europensia |place=Veliko Tarnovo |pages=23–33 |access-date=2006-08-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120718213232/http://www.kroraina.com/bulgar/rashev.html |archive-date=2012-07-18 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>Petrov 1981: </ref><ref>Angelov 1971: </ref><ref>Runciman 1930: </ref> | |||
The origin and the ] has been the subject of debate since around the start of the 20th century. The current leading theory<ref>http://www.csc.kth.se/~dilian/Papers/bulgars.pdf{{full|date=November 2012}}{{self-published inline|date=November 2011}}</ref> is that at least the Bulgar elite spoke a language that, alongside ] and ], was a member of the ] branch of the ] language family.<ref>Petrov 1981: </ref><ref>Angelov 1971: </ref><ref>Runciman 1930: </ref><ref>Siegert 1985: 46</ref> This theory is supported, among other things, by the fact that some Bulgar words contained in the few surviving stone inscriptions<ref name="Beshev1981">Beshevliev 1981 (online)</ref> and in other documents (mainly military and hierarchical terms such as ], ], and probably ]) appear to be of Turkic origin and written in Kuban alphabet of the ]. Also, the ] had a twelve-year cycle, similar to the one adopted by Turkic and Mongolian peoples from the ], with names and numbers that are deciphered as Turkic. The Bulgars' supreme god was apparently called ], a deity widely known among the Turkic peoples under names such as ], Tura etc.<ref>Sedlar 1994: (Google Books preview)</ref> | |||
Although there is no direct evidence, a group of linguists believe that Chuvash may be descendant from a dialect of Volga Bulgar<ref name=":02">{{Cite journal |last=Agyagási |first=K. |date=2020 |title=A Volga Bulgarian Classifier: A Historical and Areal Linguistic Study |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/338899820 |journal=University of Debrecen |language=en |volume=3 |pages=9 |quote="Modern Chuvash is the only descendant language of the Ogur branch.The ancestors of its speakers left the Khazar Empire in the 8th century and migrated to the region at the confluence of the Volga and Kama rivers, where they founded the Volga Bulgarian Empire in the 10th century. In the central Volga region three Volga Bulgarian dialects developed, and Chuvash is the descendant of the 3rd dialect of Volga Bulgarian (Agyagási 2019: 160–183). Sources refer to it as a separate language beginning with 1508"}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{cite book |last=Marcantonio |first=Angela |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Cp-tB08yd2EC&pg=PA167 |title=The Uralic language family: facts, myths and statistics |publisher=Wiley-Blackwell |year=2002 |isbn=0-631-23170-6 |page=167}}</ref><ref name=":33">{{cite book |last=Price |first=Glanville |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=29BAeKHwvuoC&pg=PA88 |title=Encyclopedia of the languages of Europe |publisher=Wiley-Blackwell |year=2000 |isbn=0-631-22039-9 |page=88}}</ref><ref name=":4">{{cite book |last=Clauson |first=Gerard |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uJ-7yFXRpiYC&pg=PA38 |title=Studies in Turkic and Mongolic linguistics |publisher=Taylor & Francis |year=2002 |isbn=0-415-29772-9 |page=38}}</ref> while others support the idea that Chuvash is another distinct ] language.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/edit/10.4324/9781003243809/turkic-languages-lars-johanson-%C3%A9va-csat%C3%B3 |title=The Turkic Languages |year=2021 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9781003243809 |editor-last=Johanson |editor-first=Lars |doi=10.4324/9781003243809 |quote="Another Turkic people in the Volga area are the Chuvash, who, like the Tatars, regard themselves as descendants of the Volga Bulghars in the historical and cultural sense. It is clear that Chuvash belongs to the Oghur branch of Turkic, as the language of the Volga Bulghars did, but no direct evidence for diachronic development between the two has been established. As there were several distinct Oghur languages in the Middle Ages, Volga Bulghar could represent one of these and Chuvash another." |editor-last2=Csató |editor-first2=Éva Á}}</ref> Some scholars suggest ] had strong ties with Bulgar and to modern Chuvash<ref>{{cite journal |last=Pritsak |first=Omeljan |author-link=Omeljan Pritsak |date=1982 |title=The Hunnic Language of the Attila Clan |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41036005 |journal=Harvard Ukrainian Studies |publisher=] |volume=IV |issue=4 |pages=470 |issn=0363-5570 |jstor=41036005 |quote="The language had strong ties to Bulgar language and to modern Chuvash, but also had some important connections, especially lexical and morphological, to Ottoman Turkish and Yakut" |place=Cambridge, Massachusetts}}</ref> and refer to this extended grouping as separate Hunno-Bulgar languages.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Archived|first=Article|title="The Hunnic Language of the Attila Clan" (pages 428, ..., 476), author: Omeljan Pritsak|url=https://www.academia.edu/88411462|journal=Ukrainian Studies|volume=VI|number=4|year=1982|publisher=Ukrainian Research Institute, Harvard University|place=Cambridge, Massachusetts|pages=430|quote="I was able to establish a Danube- Bulgarian nominative- suffix /A/ from the consonant stems. Recalling that Danube- Bulgarian was a Hunnic language."|access-date=23 April 2023|archive-date=23 April 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230423151254/https://www.academia.edu/88411462|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Ramer |first=Alexis Manaster |title=Proto-Bulgarian/Danube Bulgar/Hunno-Bulgar Bekven |url=https://www.academia.edu/41975042 |page=1 p |quote="Granberg’s suggestion that we should revive the term Hunno-Bulgar may well became that replacement — once it is clear that Hunnic and Bulgar were closely related and perhaps even the same language."}}</ref> However, such speculations are not based on proper linguistic evidence, since the language of the Huns is almost unknown except for a few attested words and personal names. Scholars generally consider Hunnish as unclassifiable.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Savelyev |first=Alexander |title=Chuvash and the Bulgharic Languages |url=https://academic.oup.com/book/41762/chapter-abstract/354239965?redirectedFrom=fulltext&login=false |access-date=2024-03-30 |website=academic.oup.com |date=27 May 2020 |pages=448 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-880462-8}}</ref>{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=88, 89}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=RÓNA-TAS |first=ANDRÁS |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.7829/j.ctv280b77f |title=Hungarians and Europe in the Early Middle Ages |date=1999-03-01 |publisher=Central European University Press |isbn=978-963-386-572-9 |pages=208|doi=10.7829/j.ctv280b77f }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Sinor |first=Denis |title=Studies in medieval inner Asia |date=1997 |publisher=Ashgate |isbn=978-0-86078-632-0 |series=Collected studies series |location=Aldershot, Hampshire |pages=336}}</ref> | |||
Some also point out the presence of Turkic loanwords in the Slavic ] language and Church Slavonic language,<ref>Tzvetkov P.S., ''The Turks, Slavs and the Origin of the Bulgarians''//The Turks, Vol 1, pp. 562–567, Ankara, 2002, ISBN 975-6782-55-2, ISBN 975-6782-56-0</ref> and the fact that the Bulgars used an ] similar to the Turkic ]; this alphabet was deciphered and analyzed by S. Baichorov:<ref>Baichorov S.Ya., ''Ancient Turkic runic monuments of the Europe'', Stavropol, 1989 (''In Russian'')</ref> the Bulgar inscriptions were sometimes written in ] or ] characters, most commonly in Greek, thus allowing the scholars to identify some of the Bulgar glosses. Contemporaneous sources like ], ] and ] called the Bulgars "]",<ref>Maenchen-Helfen 1973: </ref> while others, like the Byzantine ], called them "]" or "]", but this latter identification was probably due to the Byzantine tradition of naming peoples geographically. Due to the lack of definitive evidence, modern scholarship instead uses an ] approach in explaining the Bulgars' origin. There are also a number of Iranian words in modern Bulgarian, inherited from the Bulgars. | |||
According to P. Golden this association is apparent from the fragments of texts and isolated words and phrases preserved in inscriptions.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=250}}{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=66}} In addition to language, their culture and state structure retain many Central Asian features.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=250}} Military and hierarchical terms such as ''khan/qan'', ''kanasubigi'', ''qapağan'', ''tarkan'', ''bagatur'' and ''boila'' appear to be of Turkic origin.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=250}}{{sfn|Sedlar|2011|p=16}} The ] within the '']'' had a twelve-year animal cycle, similar to the one adopted by Turkic and Mongolic peoples from the ], with animal names and numbers deciphered as Turkic.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=250}} ] (in Bulgar ''Tangra/Tengre'') was their supreme god.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=250}} | |||
Further evidence culturally linking the ] Bulgar state to ] steppe traditions was the layout of the Bulgars' new capital of ], founded just north of the ] shortly after 681. The large area enclosed by ramparts, with the rulers' habitations and assorted utility structures concentrated in the center, resembled more a steppe winter encampment turned into a permanent settlement than it did a typical ] ] city."<ref>Hupchick 2001: 10</ref> | |||
Danubian Bulgar inscriptions were written mostly in ] or ] characters, most commonly in Greek or Graeco-Bulgar,{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=245}} others in the ] which is a variant of ].{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=45}} they apparently have a sacral meaning.{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=45}} Inscriptions sometimes included Slavic terms,{{sfn|Sedlar|2011|p=425}} thus allowing scholars to identify some of the Bulgar ].{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=245}} Altheim argued that the runes were brought into Europe from Central Asia by the Huns, and were an adapted version of the old ] in the ]/] language.<ref name="Kim" /> The custom of stone engravings are considered to have Iranic, Turkic and Roman parallels.{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=45}}{{sfn|Sedlar|2011|p=425}} The ] resembles work of the ] rock ] tradition, but its actual masonry tradition and cultural source is unknown.{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|pp=45, 83}} | |||
In ]n academy, a hypothesis linking the Bulgar language to the ] has become popular in the 1990s.<ref>Добрев, Петър, 1995. "Езикът на Аспаруховите и Куберовите българи" 1995</ref><ref>Бакалов, Георги. Малко известни факти от историята на древните българи <!--The author, a very prominent Bulgarian historian, mentions three linguists as opponents of the Turkic theory. The first one is Omeljan Pritsak, who in fact was one of the principal proponents of the Turkic theory (see Mosko Moskov, Imennik na balgarskite hanove). The second one is a French linguist, Denis (?), who apparently said in 1921 that "at times one may wonder whether the language really was Turkic or simply had a lot of Turkic loanwords".{http://www.protobulgarians.com/Kniga%20AtStamatov/Izvori%20-%202%20chast.htm) - neither up-to-date, nor categorical. The third one is Cvetana Tafradzhiyska, who was a Bulgarian specialist in Mongolian studies. She based her support of the Iranian theory on historical rather than linguistic considerations (http://www.bgbook.dir.bg/book.php?ID=7237). She may be the only modern linguist who supported it, I'm not sure that's enough of a reason to mention her here.--> </ref><ref>Димитров, Божидар, 2005. 12 мита в българската история</ref><ref>Милчева, Христина. Българите са с древно-ирански произход. Научна конференция "Средновековна Рус, Волжка България и северното Черноморие в контекста на руските източни връзки", Казан, Русия, 15.10.2007</ref> | |||
Most proponents still assume an intermediate stance, proposing certain signs of Iranian influence on a Turkic substrate.<ref>Бешевлиев, Веселин. Ирански елементи у първобългарите. Античное Общество, Труды Конференции по изучению проблем античности, стр. 237-247, Издательство "Наука", Москва 1967, АН СССР, Отделение Истории.</ref><ref>Rüdiger Schmitt (Saarbrücken). IRANICA PROTOBULGARICA: Asparuch und Konsorten im Lichte der Iranischen Onomastik. Academie Bulgare des Sciences, Linguistique Balkanique, XXVIII (1985), l, 13-38</ref><ref>Rasho Rashev. On the origin of the Proto-Bulgarians, p. 23-33 in: Studia protobulgarica et mediaevalia europensia. In honour of Prof. V. Beshevliev, Veliko Tarnovo, 1992.</ref> while other Bulgarian scholars actively oppose the "Iranian hypothesis".<ref>Йорданов, Стефан. Славяни, тюрки и индо-иранци в ранното средновековие: езикови проблеми на българския етногенезис. В: Българистични проучвания. 8. Актуални проблеми на българистиката и славистиката. Седма международна научна сесия. Велико Търново, 22-23 август 2001 г. Велико Търново, 2002, 275-295.</ref><ref>Надпис № 21 от българското златно съкровище “Наги Сент-Миклош”, студия от проф. д-р Иван Калчев Добрев от Сборник с материали от Научна конференция на ВА “Г. С. Раковски”. София, 2005 г.</ref> | |||
According to linguist and academician ] Bulgar language was the first fully proved Turkic language that came into direct contact with South Slavs.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Khayrullina-Valieva |first=Albina G. |date=2020-03-31 |title=Turkic lexical elements in the Bulgarian language |url=https://apcz.umk.pl/LC/article/view/LC.2020.015 |journal=Litteraria Copernicana |volume=33 |language=en |issue=1(33)/ |pages=205–211 |doi=10.12775/LC.2020.015 |s2cid=241146294 |issn=2392-1617|doi-access=free }}</ref> The Danubian Bulgars were unable to alter the predominantly Slavic character of Bulgaria,{{sfn|Sedlar|2011|p=424}} seen in the toponymy and names of the capitals Pliska and Preslav.<ref name="Rashev" /> They preserved their own native language and customs for about 200 years, but a bilingual period was recorded since the 9th century.{{sfn|Fine|1991|p=69}}{{sfn|Sedlar|2011|p=424}}<ref name="Henning" /> Golden argued that Bulgar Turkic almost disappeared with the transition to Christianity and ] in the middle of the 9th century.{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=268}} When the ruling class abandoned its native language and adopted Slavic, according to Jean W. Sedlar, it was so complete that no trace of Turkic speech patterns remained in Old Slavic texts.{{sfn|Sedlar|2011|p=424}} The Bulgarian Christian Church used the Slavic dialect from Macedonia.{{sfn|Waldman, Mason|2006|p=108}} | |||
Among Bulgarian academics, notably Petar Dobrev,{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=66}} a hypothesis linking the Bulgar language to the ] (especially ]{{sfn|Karachanak, ''et al.''|2013}}) has been popular since the 1990s.<ref>Добрев, Петър, 1995. "Езикът на Аспаруховите и Куберовите българи" 1995</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Stamatov |first=Atanas |date=1997 |title=TEMPORA INCOGNITA НА РАННАТА БЪЛГАРСКА ИСТОРИЯ |chapter=ИЗВОРИ И ИНТЕРПРЕТАЦИИ – І–ІІ ЧАСТ |chapter-url=http://www.protobulgarians.com/kniga_Atstamatov.htm |publisher=MGU Sv. Ivan Rilski}}</ref><ref>Димитров, Божидар, 2005. 12 мита в българската история</ref><ref>Милчева, Христина. Българите са с древно-ирански произход. Научна конференция "Средновековна Рус, Волжка България и северното Черноморие в контекста на руските източни връзки", Казан, Русия, 15.10.2007</ref> Most proponents still assume an intermediate stance, proposing certain signs of Iranic influence on a Turkic substrate.<ref name="Rashev" /><ref>Бешевлиев, Веселин. Ирански елементи у първобългарите. Античное Общество, Труды Конференции по изучению проблем античности, стр. 237–247, Издательство "Наука", Москва 1967, АН СССР, Отделение Истории.</ref><ref>{{cite journal |first=Rüdiger |last=Schmitt |date=1985 |title=Iranica Protobulgarica: Asparuch und Konsorten im Lichte der Iranischen Onomastik |publisher=Academie Bulgare des Sciences |place=] |journal=Linguistique Balkanique |volume=XXVIII |issue=l |pages=13–38}}</ref> The names ] and Bezmer from the '']'' list, for example, were established as being of Iranic origin.{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|pp=384, 443}} Other Bulgarian scholars actively oppose the "Iranic hypothesis".<ref>Йорданов, Стефан. Славяни, тюрки и индо-иранци в ранното средновековие: езикови проблеми на българския етногенезис. В: Българистични проучвания. 8. Актуални проблеми на българистиката и славистиката. Седма международна научна сесия. Велико Търново, 22–23 август 2001 г. Велико Търново, 2002, 275–295.</ref><ref>Надпис No. 21 от българското златно съкровище "Наги Сент-Миклош", студия от проф. д-р Иван Калчев Добрев от Сборник с материали от Научна конференция на ВА "Г. С. Раковски". София, 2005 г.</ref> According to ], the Iranian theory is rooted in the periods of ] in Bulgaria and is ideologically motivated.<ref name="Detrez">{{cite book| first=Raymond| last=Detrez |author-link=Raymond Detrez |title=Developing Cultural Identity in the Balkans: Convergence Vs. Divergence |publisher=Peter Lang |year=2005 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TRttHdXjP14C |page=29| isbn=9789052012971 }}</ref> Since 1989, anti-Turkish rhetoric is now reflected in the theories that challenge the thesis of the proto-Bulgars' Turkic origin. Alongside the Iranian or Aryan theory, there appeared arguments favoring an autochthonous origin.<ref name=":0">{{cite book|title=Quest for a Suitable Past: Myths and Memory in Central and Eastern Europe|author=Cristian Emilian Ghita, Claudia Florentina Dobre|year=2016|page=142}}</ref> | |||
== Ethnicity == | == Ethnicity == | ||
] |
], depicts a warrior with his captive. Experts cannot agree if this warrior represents a ], ], or Bulgar.]] | ||
Due to the lack of definitive evidence, modern scholarship uses an ] approach in explaining the Bulgars origin. More recent theories view the nomadic confederacies, such as the Bulgars, as the formation of several different cultural, political and linguistic entities that could dissolve as quickly as they formed, entailing a process of ethnogenesis. | |||
Traditionally, historians have associated the Bulgars with the ], who migrated out of Central Asia. ] data collected from medieval Bulgar ]es from ], ] and the ] ] have shown that Bulgars were a ] people with a small ] component and practiced circular type ].<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref>М. Балан, П. Боев. Антропологични материали от некропола при Нови пазар. — ИАИ, XX, 1955, 347— 371</ref><ref>Й. Ал. Йорданов. Антропологично изследване на костния материал от раннобългарски масов гроб при гр. Девня. - ИНМВ, XII (XVII), 1976, 171-194</ref><ref>Н. Кондова, П. Боев, Сл. Чолаков. ''Изкуствено деформирани черепи от некропола при с. Кюлевча, Шуменски окръг. — Интердисциплинарни изследвания, 1979, 3—4, 129— 138;</ref><ref>Н. Кондова, С л. Чолаков. Антропологични данни за етногенеза на ранносредновековната популация от Североизточна България. — Българска етнография, 1992, 2, 61-68</ref> ], who visited Volga Bulgaria in the 10th century, describes the appearance of the Bulgars as "ailing" (pale) and "not ruddy" like the ].<ref>R.Frye, Ibn Fadlan's journey to Russia, 2005</ref> | |||
According to Walter Pohl, the existential fate of the tribes and their confederations depended on their ability to adapt to an environment going through rapid changes, and to give this adaptation a credible meaning rooted in tradition and ritual. Slavs and Bulgars succeeded because their form of organization proved as stable and as flexible as necessary, while the ] failed in the end because their model could not respond to new conditions. Pohl wrote that members of society's lower strata did not feel themselves to be part of any large-scale ethnic group; the only distinct classes were within the armies and the ruling elite.<ref name="Pohl">{{citation |last=Pohl |first=Walter |author-link=Walter Pohl |date=1998 |chapter=Conceptions of Ethnicity in Early Medieval Studies |title=Debating the Middle Ages: Issues and Readings |chapter-url=http://www.kroraina.com/bulgar/pohl_etnicity.html |editor1=Lester K. Little |editor2=Barbara H. Rosenwein |publisher=Blackwell Publishers |pages=13–24}}</ref> | |||
Due to the lack of definitive evidence, a modern scholarship instead uses an ] approach in explaining the Bulgars' origin. Contemporaneous sources like ], ] and ] called the Bulgars "]"<ref></ref> while others, like the Byzantine ], called them "]" or "]", but this latter identification was probably due to the Byzantine tradition of naming peoples geographically. The ] spoken by the Bulgar elites was a member of the ] branch of the ] language family, alongside with Hunnic, Khazar and Turkic Avar.<ref name="Bulgars">Encyclopaedia Britannica Online - </ref> | |||
Recent studies consider ethnonyms closely related with warrior elites who ruled over a variety of heterogeneous groups.{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=55}} The groups adopted new ideology and name as political designation, while the elites claimed right to rule and royal descent through origin myths.{{sfn|Golden|2011|p=55}} | |||
More recent theories view the nomadic confederacies, such as the ], as the formation of several different cultural, political and linguistic entities that could dissolve as quickly as they formed, entailing a process of ].<ref>N.M. Khazhanov. ''Nomads and the Outside World''. Chapter 5</ref><ref>Christian, David. 1998. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-20814-3</ref> | |||
When the Turkic tribes began to enter into the Pontic–Caspian steppe in the Post-Hunnic era, or as early as the 2nd century AD,{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=392}} their confederations incorporated an array of ethnic groups of newly joined Turkic, Caucasian, Iranian, and Finno-Ugric peoples.{{sfn|Golden|1992|pp=392–398}} During their Western Eurasian migrations to the Balkans, they also came into contact with Armenian, Semitic, Slavic, Thracian and Anatolian Greek among other populations.{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=383}} | |||
===Genetics=== | |||
Genetic and anthropological researches have shown that the ]'s ] of history were not ] ], but rather ] such as ], ], and ] among others. Skeletal remains from ], excavated from different sites dating between the 15th century BC to the 5th century AD, have been analyzed. The distribution of east and west ]n lineages through time in the region agrees with available archaeological information. Prior to the 13th - 7th century BC, all samples belong to ]; later, an arrival of ] sequences that coexisted with the previous genetic substratum was detected.<ref>Lalueza-Fox, ''et al.'' 2004</ref> | |||
From the 6th to 8th centuries, distinctive Bulgar monuments of the Sivashovka type were built upon ruins of the late ] culture of the 2nd to 4th centuries AD,<ref name="Graves">{{cite book |author=D. Dimitrov |date=1987 |chapter=Pit graves, artificial skull deformation, Sarmatians, Northern Bactria |title=Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie |chapter-url=http://www.kroraina.com/p_bulgar/p_bulg2a.htm |place=Varna}}</ref> and the 6th century ] of the ] and Slavs. Early medieval ] (an ]-based culture) settlements in the ] since the 8th century were destroyed by the Pechengs during the 10th century.<ref name="Rashev"/>{{sfn|Golden|1992|p=261}}<ref name="Great"/><ref name="Saltovo"/><ref>{{cite book |author=D. Dimitrov |date=1987 |chapter=The Proto-Bulgarians in the Crimea in the VIII–IX cc. |title=Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie |chapter-url=http://www.kroraina.com/p_bulgar/p_bulg9.html |place=Varna}}</ref> | |||
According to a comparative genetic study, low Bulgar genetic influence was brought into the region of today Bulgaria and Chuvashia, since the genetic background of local populations was not detectably modified.<ref>Arnaiz-Villena ''et al.'' Human Biology, Volume 75, Number 3, June 2003, E-ISSN: 1534-6617, HLA Genes in the Chuvashian Population from European Russia: Admixture of Central European and Mediterranean Populations, pp. 375–392.</ref> | |||
Although the older Iranian tribes were enveloped by the widespread Turkic migration into the Pontic–Caspian steppe, the following centuries saw a complete disappearance of both the Iranic and Turkic languages, indicating dominance of the Slavic language among the common people.<ref name="Rashev"/> | |||
== Anthropology and genetics == | |||
] was the first Bulgar ruler known to have claimed divine origin, '']'']] | |||
According to a paleo-DNA study from 2019 which examined Medieval burials in the Carpathian Basin a closest connection was found between the Y-DNA of these nomadic people and the modern ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Neparáczki |first1=Endre |last2=Maróti |first2=Zoltán |last3=Kalmár |first3=Tibor |last4=Maár |first4=Kitti |last5=Nagy |first5=István |last6=Latinovics |first6=Dóra |last7=Kustár |first7=Ágnes |last8=Pálfi |first8=György |last9=Molnár |first9=Erika |last10=Marcsik |first10=Antónia |last11=Balogh |first11=Csilla |last12=Lőrinczy |first12=Gábor |last13=Gál |first13=Szilárd Sándor |last14=Tomka |first14=Péter |last15=Kovacsóczy |first15=Bernadett |date=2019-11-12 |title=Y-chromosome haplogroups from Hun, Avar and conquering Hungarian period nomadic people of the Carpathian Basin |journal=Scientific Reports |language=en |volume=9 |issue=1 |pages=16569 |doi=10.1038/s41598-019-53105-5 |pmid=31719606 |pmc=6851379 |bibcode=2019NatSR...916569N |issn=2045-2322}}</ref> According to Hungarian archeogenetist Neparáczki Endre: "From all recent and archaic populations tested the ] show the smallest genetic distance to the entire Conqueror population" and "a direct genetic relation of the Conquerors to Onogur-Bulgar ancestors of these groups is very feasible."<ref>{{cite journal |biorxiv=10.1101/250688 |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0205920 |doi-access=free |title=Mitogenomic data indicate admixture components of Central-Inner Asian and Srubnaya origin in the conquering Hungarians |date=2018 |last1=Neparáczki |first1=Endre |last2=Maróti |first2=Zoltán |last3=Kalmár |first3=Tibor |last4=Kocsy |first4=Klaudia |last5=Maár |first5=Kitti |last6=Bihari |first6=Péter |last7=Nagy |first7=István |last8=Fóthi |first8=Erzsébet |last9=Pap |first9=Ildikó |last10=Kustár |first10=Ágnes |last11=Pálfi |first11=György |last12=Raskó |first12=István |last13=Zink |first13=Albert |last14=Török |first14=Tibor |journal=PLOS ONE |volume=13 |issue=10 |pages=e0205920 |pmid=30335830 |pmc=6193700 |bibcode=2018PLoSO..1305920N }}</ref> | |||
The paleoanthropological material from all sites in Volga region, Ukraine and Moldova attributed to the Bulgars testify complex ethno-cultural processes.<ref name="Gerasimova">{{cite book |author1=Gerasimova M.M. |author2=Rud' N.M. |author3=Yablonsky L.T. |date=1987 |title=Antropologiya antichnovo i srednevekovo naseleniya Vostochno i Yevropy |trans-title=Anthropology of the Ancient and Middle Age Populations of Eastern Europe |url=https://xn--80ad7bbk5c.xn--p1ai/ru/content/antropologiya-antichnogo-i-srednevekovogo-naseleniya-vostochnoy-evropy |publisher=Наука |place=Moscow}}</ref> The material shows the assimilation between the local population and the migrating newcomers.<ref name="Graves"/> In all sites can be traced the anthropological type found in the Zlivka necropolis near the village of Ilichevki, the district of ], of brachiocranic ] with small ] admixtures but with Bulgar males being more Mongoloid than females.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.iriston.com/nogbon/print.php?newsid=368|title=ЯВЛЕНИЕ ИССКУСТВЕННОЙ ДЕФОРМАЦИИ ЧЕРЕПА У ПРОТОБОЛГАР. ПРОИСХОЖДЕНИЕ И ЗНАЧЕНИЕ. (окончание)|website=www.iriston.com|access-date=27 March 2018}}</ref><ref name="Graves"/><ref name="Gerasimova"/> | |||
Modern genetic research on Central Asian Turkic peoples and ethnic groups related to the Bulgars points to an affiliation with Western Eurasian populations.<ref name="EB_Bulgars" /><ref name="Suslova">{{cite journal |author=Suslova |display-authors=etal |date=October 2012 |title=HLA gene and haplotype frequencies in Russians, Bashkirs and Tatars, living in the Chelyabinsk Region (Russian South Urals). |journal=International Journal of Immunogenetics |publisher=Blackwell Publishing Ltd |volume=39 |issue=5 |pages=375–392 |doi=10.1111/j.1744-313X.2012.01117.x |pmid=22520580 |s2cid=20804610}}</ref> Despite the morphological proximity, there is a visible impact of the local population, in the Volga region of ] and ]-], in Ukraine of ]-] and ]-], and in ] and ] of ].<ref name="Gerasimova" /><ref>{{Cite bioRxiv |last=Mikheyev |first=Alexander |title=Diverse genetic origins of medieval steppe nomad conquerors |year=2019 |biorxiv =10.1101/2019.12.15.876912 |quote=Given the common Turkic genetic background of the Bulgars and Khazars, these ethnicities may be difficult to tell apart either archaeologically or genetically.}}</ref> The comparative analysis showed large morphological proximity between the medieval and modern population of the Volga region.<ref name="Gerasimova" /> The examined graves in Northern Bulgaria and Southern Romania showed different somatic types, including Caucasoid-] and less often East Asian.{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|p=66}} | |||
The pre-Christian burial customs in Bulgaria indicate diverse social, i.e. nomadic and sedentary, and cultural influences.{{sfn|Sophoulis|2011|pp=68–69}} In some necropolises specific to the Danube Bulgars, artificial deformation was found in 80% of the skulls.<ref name="Graves" /> The Bulgars had a special type of shamanic "medicine-men" who performed ] of the skull, usually near the ]. This practice had a medical application, as well as a symbolic purpose; in two cases the patient had brain problems.<ref>{{cite book |author=D. Dimitrov |date=1987 |chapter=The Proto-Bulgarians north of the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov in the VIII–IX cc. |title=Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie |chapter-url=http://www.kroraina.com/p_bulgar/p_bulg8.html |place=Varna}}</ref> According to ] and Rashev, the artificial deformation of skulls, and other types of burial artifacts in Bulgars graves, are similar to those of the ], and Sarmatized Turks or Turkicized Sarmatians of the post-Hunnic graves in the Ukrainian steppe.{{sfn|Maenchen-Helfen|1973|p=443}}<ref name="Rashev" /> | |||
== Legacy == | == Legacy == | ||
In modern ] there is some "rivalry for the Bulgar legacy" (see ]). The ], ] and ], are said to be descended from the Volga Bulgars,{{sfn|Shnirelʹman|1996|p=22–35}}<ref name="History of the Jewish khazars" /> and there may have been ethnogenetic influences on the ] (Magyars) and ]] also.{{sfn|Olson, Pappas, Pappas|1994|pp=79–81, 84–87, 114–115}} | |||
In modern ], there is some "rivalry for the Bulgar legacy" (see ]).<ref name="The Rivalry for the Bulgar Legacy">Viktor Aleksandrovich Shnirelʹman, ''Who gets the past?: competition for ancestors among non-Russian intellectuals in Russia'', Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 1996, ISBN 0-8018-5221-8, ISBN 978-0-8018-5221-3. Cf. chapters: '''', ''The Neo-Bulgarists'', etc.</ref><ref name="The Rivalry for the Bulgar Legacy"/><ref>James Stuart Olson, Lee Brigance Pappas, Nicholas Charles, ''An Ethnohistorical dictionary of the Russian and Soviet empires'', Greenwood Publishing Group, 1994, ISBN 0-313-27497-5, ISBN 978-0-313-27497-8, </ref> The ], ], and ] are said to be descended from the Bulgars, as well as (possibly) the ]. | |||
The President of the Bulgar National Congress, Gusman Khalilov appealed to the ] on the issue of renaming the Tatars into Bulgars, but in 2010 he lost in court.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Татары — это не болгары |date=November 2000 |url=https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/162137}}</ref> | |||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
== |
== Citations == | ||
{{ |
{{Reflist|30em}} | ||
== General and cited sources == | |||
== References == | |||
<!-- ''Spelling note: the Bulgarian letter'' '''ъ''' ''is usually transliterated 'ǎ'. However, variation in the transliteration is found in academic literature and library catalogs in the West, as well as in official Bulgarian transliterations: the alternatives are'' 'ŭ' ''and'' 'y'. ''The diacritic is often missing. The alternatives'' 'ŭ' ''and'' 'y' ''can be observed below in the spellings of the common first name, Dimitǎr which have become bibliographically established for particular authors.'' --> | |||
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*{{cite book |last= Clauson| first= Gerard|title= An Etymological dictionary of Pre-13th Century Turkish|year= 1972|isbn=}}{{ISBN?}} | |||
''Spelling note: the Bulgarian letter'' '''ъ''' ''is usually transliterated 'ǎ'. However, variation in the transliteration is found in academic literature and library catalogs in the West, as well as in official Bulgarian transliterations: the alternatives are'' 'ŭ' ''and'' 'y'. ''The diacritic is often missing. The alternatives'' 'ŭ' ''and'' 'y' ''can be observed below in the spellings of the common first name, Dimitǎr which have become bibliographically established for particular authors.'' | |||
*{{cite book |last=Runciman |first=Steven |author-link=Steven Runciman |date=1930 |chapter=§ Appendix V – Bulgar titles |title=A history of the First Bulgarian Empire |chapter-url=http://macedonia.kroraina.com/en/sr/sr_app5.htm |publisher=] |place=London }} | |||
*{{citation |last=Maenchen-Helfen |first=Otto John |author-link=Otto J. Maenchen-Helfen |date=1973 |title=The World of the Huns: Studies in Their History and Culture |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CrUdgzSICxcC |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=9780520015968 }} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Tokarev |first=Sergei A. |author-link=Sergei Aleksandrovich Tokarev |date=1980 |title=Mify narodov mira |trans-title=Myths of the world's peoples |language=ru |publisher=Sovetskaya Entsiklopediya |place=Moscow |volume=2}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Shnirelʹman |first=Viktor A. |date=1987 |chapter=The Rivalry for the Bulgar legacy |title=Who Gets the Past?: Competition for Ancestors Among Non-Russian Intellectuals in Russia |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4iwHp8amsdEC |publisher=Woodrow Wilson Center Press |isbn=9780801852213 |ref={{harvid|Shnirelʹman1996}}}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Fine |first=John V. Antwerp |author-link=John Van Antwerp Fine Jr. |title=The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y0NBxG9Id58C |publisher=University of Michigan Press |year=1991 |isbn=9780472081493 }} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Golden |first=Peter Benjamin |author-link=Peter Benjamin Golden |date=1992 |title=An introduction to the History of the Turkic peoples: ethnogenesis and state formation in medieval and early modern Eurasia and the Middle East |url=https://www.academia.edu/12545004 |publisher=] |place=] |isbn=9783447032742 }} | |||
*{{cite book |last1=Olson |first1=James S. |author-link=James S. Olson |last2=Pappas |first2=Lee Brigance |last3=Pappas |first3=Nicholas Charles |date=1994 |title=An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CquTz6ps5YgC |publisher=] |isbn=9780313274978 |ref={{harvid|Olson, Pappas, Pappas1994}}}} | |||
*{{cite book |last1=Bowersock |first1=Glen |author-link1=Glen Bowersock |last2=Brown |first2=Peter |author-link2=Peter Brown (historian) |last3=Grabar |first3=Oleg |author-link3=Oleg Grabar |date=1999 |title=Late Antiquity: A Guide to the Postclassical World |url=https://archive.org/details/lateantiquitygui00bowe |url-access=registration |publisher=Harvard University Press |isbn=9780674511736 |ref={{harvid|Bowersock, Brown, Grabar1999}}}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Croke |first=Brian |date=2001 |title=Count Marcellinus and His Chronicle |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ep6U-meRt00C |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780198150015 }} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Karatay |first=Osman |date=2003 |title=In Search of the Lost Tribe: The Origins and Making of the Croatian Nation |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h_Qu1ywX0-wC |publisher=Ayse Demiral |isbn=9789756467077 }} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Vásáry |first=István |date=2005 |title=Cumans and Tatars: Oriental Military in the Pre-Ottoman Balkans, 1185–1365 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7DJWyg97IggC |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=9781139444088 }} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Curta |first=Florin |author-link=Florin Curta |date=2006 |title=Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250 |url=https://archive.org/details/southeasterneuro0000curt |url-access=registration |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=9780521815390 }} | |||
*{{cite book |last1=Waldman |first1=Carl |last2=Mason |first2=Catherine |date=2006 |title=Encyclopedia of European Peoples |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kfv6HKXErqAC |publisher=Infobase Publishing |isbn=9781438129181 |ref={{harvid|Waldman, Mason2006}}}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Brook |first=Kevin Alan |date=2006 |title=The Jews of Khazaria |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hEuIveNl9kcC |publisher=] |isbn=1442203021 }} | |||
*{{cite book |first=Kiril |last=Petkov |date=2008 |title=The Voices of Medieval Bulgaria, Seventh-Fifteenth Century: The Records of a Bygone Culture |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tjPEtxSOuYgC |publisher=Brill |isbn=9789004168312 }} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Fiedler |first=Uwe |chapter=Bulgars in the Lower Danube region: A survey of the archaeological evidence and of the state of current research |title=The Other Europe in the Middle Ages: Avars, Bulgars, Khazars and Cumans |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_-G1L-9Zec0C |editor-last1=Curta |editor-first1=Florin |editor-link1=Florin Curta |editor-last2=Kovalev |editor-first2=Roman |date=2008 |publisher=Brill |pages=151–236 |isbn=9789004163898 }} | |||
*{{Cite book |last=Sophoulis |first=Panos |date=2011 |title=Byzantium and Bulgaria, 775–831 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EbIyAQAAQBAJ |publisher=Brill |isbn=9789004206960 |access-date=2015-05-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150518083412/https://books.google.hr/books?id=EbIyAQAAQBAJ |archive-date=2015-05-18 |url-status=dead }} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Sedlar |first=Jean W. |date=2011 |title=East Central Europe in the Middle Ages, 1000–1500 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ANdbpi1WAIQC |publisher=University of Washington Press |isbn=9780295800646 }} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Golden |first=Peter B. |author-link=Peter Benjamin Golden |date=2011 |title=Studies on the Peoples and Cultures of the Eurasian Steppes |url=https://www.academia.edu/9609971 |publisher=Editura Academiei Române; Editura Istros a Muzeului Brăilei |isbn=9789732721520 }} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Chen |first=Sanping |date=2012 |title=Multicultural China in the Early Middle Ages |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ugbWH-5OjegC |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |isbn=978-0812206289 }} | |||
*{{citation |last=Golden |first=Peter B. |author-link=Peter Benjamin Golden |title=Oq and Oğur~Oğuz* |publisher=Turkish and Middle Eastern Studies, Rutgers University |year=2012 |url=http://www.enu.kz/repository/repository2014/oq-and-ogur.pdf |access-date=2015-04-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150419023615/http://www.enu.kz/repository/repository2014/oq-and-ogur.pdf |archive-date=2015-04-19 |url-status=dead }} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Curta |first=Florin |author-link=Florin Curta |chapter=Avar Blitzkrieg, Slavic and Bulgar raiders, and Roman special ops: mobile warriors in the 6th-century Balkans |title=Eurasia in the Middle Ages. Studies in Honour of Peter B. Golden |chapter-url=https://www.academia.edu/12138833 |editor1=Zimonyi István |editor2=Osman Karatay |date=2015 |publisher=Otto Harrassowitz |place=Wiesbaden |pages=69–89 }} | |||
*{{cite journal |pages=941–647 |doi=10.1098/rspb.2004.2698 |title=Unravelling migrations in the steppe: Mitochondrial DNA sequences from ancient Central Asians |pmc=1691686 |year=2004 |last1=Lalueza-Fox |first1=C. |last2=Sampietro |first2=M. L. |last3=Gilbert |first3=M. T. P. |last4=Castri |first4=L. |last5=Facchini |first5=F. |last6=Pettener |first6=D. |last7=Bertranpetit |first7=J. |journal=Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences |volume=271 |issue=1542 |pmid=15255049 |ref={{harvid|Lalueza-Fox, et al.2004}}}} | |||
*{{cite journal |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0056779 |pmc=3590186 |title=Y-Chromosome Diversity in Modern Bulgarians: New Clues about Their Ancestry |year=2015 |last1=Karachanak |first1=S. |last2=Grugni |first2=V. |last3=Fornarino |first3=S. |last4=Nesheva |first4=D. |last5=Al-Zahery |first5=N. |last6=Battaglia |first6=V. |last7=Carrosa |first7=C. |last8=Yordanov |first8=Y. |last9=Torroni |first9=A. |last10=Galabov |first10=A. |last11=Toncheva |first11=D. |last12=Semino |first12=O. |journal=PLOS ONE |volume=8 |issue=3 |ref={{harvid|Karachanak, et al.2013}} |pmid=23483890 |pages=e56779|bibcode=2013PLoSO...856779K |doi-access=free }} | |||
*{{cite book|last= Zimonyi|first= István|title= The Origins of the Volga Bulghars|series= Studia Uralo-Altaica, 32|editor= Klára Szõnyi-Sándor|year= 1990}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
''The journal'' FGHB ''is an occasional journal. BAS publishes other occasional journals each devoted to a different language (e.g., Latin) among the languages in which sources of Bulgarian history were composed.'' | |||
*{{cite book |last=Angelov |first=Dimitŭr |date=1971 |title=Образуване на българската народност |language=bg |url=http://www.kroraina.com/knigi/da/index.html |place=Sofia |publisher=Nauka i Izkustvo, Vekove}} | |||
--> | |||
*{{cite web |last=Beshevliev |first=Veselin |author-link=Veselin Beshevliev |date=1981 |title=Прабългарски епиграфски паметници |url=http://www.promacedonia.org/vb/index.html |language=bg |website=promacedonia.org |publisher=Издателство на Отечествения фронт |place=Sofia}} | |||
*{{cite web |last=Beshevliev |first=Veselin |author-link=Veselin Beshevliev |date=1981 |title=Proto-Bulgarian Epigraphic Monuments (images) |url=http://protobulgarians.com/Statii%20ot%20drugi%20avtori/Veselin%20Beshevliev/Veselin%20Beshevliev%20-%20Proto-Bulgarian%20epigraphic%20monuments.htm |language=bg |website=protobulgarians.com |publisher=Izd. na Otech. front |place=Sofia}} | |||
*{{bg icon}} Angelov, Dimitŭr . 1971. . Sofia: Nauka i Izkustvo, “Vekove”. | |||
*{{cite book |last=Dobrev |first=Petăr |date=2001 |title=Nepoznatata drevna Bălgarija |trans-title=The Unknown Ancient Bulgaria |language=bg |place=Sofia |publisher=Ivan Vazov Publishers |isbn=954-604-121-1}} | |||
*Arnaiz-Villena, A., ''et al.'' 2003. . ''Human Biology'', June 2003. | |||
*{{EI3|last=Golden|first=Peter B.|title=Bulghārs|url=https://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopaedia-of-islam-3/bulghars-COM_23726?s.num=98&s.f.s2_parent=s.f.book.encyclopaedia-of-islam-3&s.start=80&s.q=caucasus|year=2011|ref=none}} | |||
*{{bg icon}} Beshevliev, Vesselin . 1979. ''Първобългарски надписи''. Sofia: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (BAS). | |||
*Karatay, Osman. "The Bulgars in Transoxiana: Some Inferences from Early Islamic Sources." Migracijske i etničke teme 1–2 (2009): 69–88. | |||
*Beshevliev, Vesselin . 1981. . The original is also available online {{bg icon}}: . Sofia: Издателство на Отечествения фронт. | |||
*{{cite book |first=Tsvetelin |last=Stepanov |date=2010 |title=The Bulgars and the Steppe Empire in the Early Middle Ages: The Problem of the Others |url=http://www.brill.com/bulgars-and-steppe-empire-early-middle-ages |publisher=Brill |isbn=9789004180017 |access-date=2015-05-14 |archive-date=2017-07-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170730014536/http://www.brill.com/bulgars-and-steppe-empire-early-middle-ages |url-status=dead }} | |||
*Curta, Florin. 2006. ''Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500-1250''. Cambridge Univ. Press. Series: Cambridge Medieval Textbooks. | |||
*{{cite web|url=http://podhorski.com/main/assets/documents/Chinese_Bulgars.pdf|title=Some remarks on the Chinese 'Bulgar'|last=Sanping|first=Chen}} | |||
*Dimitrov, Dimityr. 1987. Translated from the Bulgarian, ''Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie''; Varna. The original is also available online {{bg icon}} here . | |||
*{{bg icon}} Dobrev, Ivan . (c. 2005) . Sofia: Rakovski Military Academy . Compare same title and author except without the анотация (''anotacija'' — annotations): Sofia, Riva, 2005. | |||
*{{bg icon}} Dobrev, Petăr. 2001. ''Nepoznatata drevna Bălgarija'' (The Unknown Ancient Bulgaria). Sofia: Ivan Vazov Publishers. ISBN 954-604-121-1. | |||
*''Encyclopædia Britannica Online''. . | |||
*{{bg icon}} and {{el icon}} (Greek sources of Bulgarian history). Edited by Ivan Dujchev, Genoveva Tsankova-Petkova, ''et al.''. Sofia: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (BAS), . (In ] and Bulgarian). This content is in the ] format and requires corresponding special reader software. | |||
*Hupchick, Dennis P. 2001. ''The Balkans: From Constantinople to Communism''. Palgrave. ISBN 0-312-21736-6. | |||
*{{cite journal |pages=941–7 |doi=10.1098/rspb.2004.2698 |pmc=1691686 |title=Unravelling migrations in the steppe: Mitochondrial DNA sequences from ancient Central Asians |year=2004 |last1=Lalueza-Fox |first1=C. |last2=Sampietro |first2=M. L. |last3=Gilbert |first3=M. T. P. |last4=Castri |first4=L. |last5=Facchini |first5=F. |last6=Pettener |first6=D. |last7=Bertranpetit |first7=J. |journal=Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences |volume=271 |issue=1542 |pmid=15255049}} | |||
*Maenchen-Helfen. Otto. 1973. . Univ. of California Press. | |||
*{{bg icon}} ]. 1992 . ''Khronikata na Konstantin Manasi: Zorata na bulgarskata epika''. (Bulgarian translation of the Byzantine Greek.) Universitetsko izd-vo "Sv. Kliment Okhridski" | |||
*{{en icon}} and {{el icon}} Mango, Cyril A. 1990. ''Nikephoros, Patriarch of Constantinople: Short History''. Washington, D. C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection. ("Short History" = "Breviarium") | |||
*{{mk icon}} Mikulčić, Ivan . 1996. . Skopje: Makedonska Civilizacija. (In Macedonian.) | |||
*{{bg icon}} Petrov, Petǎr . 1981. . Sofia: Nauka i Izkustvo. | |||
*]. 1930. . London: G. Bell & Sons. | |||
*Sedlar, Jean W. 1994. ''East Central Europe in the Middle Ages, 1000–1500''. University of Washington Press. | |||
*{{bg icon}} Shishmanov, Ivan . 1900. ''Критичен преглед на въпроса за произхода на прабългарите от езиково гледище и етимологиите на името българин''. | |||
*{{de icon}} Siegert, Heinz. 1985. Osteuropa—Vom Ursprung bis Moskaus Aufstieg. ''Panorama der Weltgeschichte'', vol. II. Heinrich Pleticha (ed.). Bertelsmann-Lexikon-Verlag. | |||
*Stepanov, Tsvetelin. 2001. . ''Early Medieval Europe'', March 2001, 10(1): 1-19. . | |||
*{{ru icon}} ] ''et al.'' 1980. ''Mify narodov mira'' (Myths of the world's peoples). | |||
*Zakiev, Mirfatyh . 2003. . Part II: Origin of Tatars. English translation of Russian language work, ''Происхождение тюрков и татар''. | |||
*{{bg icon}} Zlatarski, V. N. . 1970 . . Sofia: 2nd edition (II изд.) 1970 by Nauka i Izkustvo; 1st edition (I изд.) 1918. | |||
*Curta, Florin, ed., with the assistance of Roman Kovalev. 2008. ''The other Europe in the Middle Ages: Avars, Bulgars, Khazars, and Cumans''. BRILL. | |||
*Viktor Aleksandrovich Shnirelʹman, Who gets the past?: competition for ancestors among non-Russian intellectuals in Russia, Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 1996, ISBN 0-8018-5221-8, ISBN 978-0-8018-5221-3. (Chapter '''' at Google Books). | |||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
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Latest revision as of 16:37, 28 December 2024
Turkic tribal confederation Not to be confused with Bulgarians or Bulgarian Turks.
The Bulgars (also Bulghars, Bulgari, Bolgars, Bolghars, Bolgari, Proto-Bulgarians) were Turkic semi-nomadic warrior tribes that flourished in the Pontic–Caspian steppe and the Volga region between the 5th and 7th centuries. They became known as nomadic equestrians in the Volga-Ural region, but some researchers trace Bulgar ethnic roots to Central Asia.
During their westward migration across the Eurasian Steppe, the Bulgar tribes absorbed other tribal groups and cultural influences in a process of ethnogenesis, including Iranic, Finno-Ugric, and Hunnic tribes. The Bulgars spoke a Turkic language, the Bulgar language of the Oghuric branch. They preserved the military titles, organization, and customs of Eurasian steppes as well as pagan shamanism and belief in the sky deity Tangra.
The Bulgars became semi-sedentary during the 7th century in the Pontic-Caspian steppe, establishing the polity of Old Great Bulgaria c. 630–635, which was defeated by the Khazar Empire in 668 AD. In 681, Khan Asparukh conquered Scythia Minor, opening access to Moesia, and established the Danubian Bulgaria – the First Bulgarian Empire, where the Bulgars became a political and military elite. They merged subsequently with established Byzantine populations, as well as with previously settled Slavic tribes, and were eventually Slavicized, thus becoming one of the ancestors of modern Bulgarians.
The remaining Pontic Bulgars migrated in the 7th century to the Volga River, where they founded Volga Bulgaria; they preserved their identity well into the 13th century. The modern Volga Tatars, Bashkirs and Chuvash people claim to have originated from the Volga Bulgars.
Etymology and origin
The etymology of the ethnonym Bulgar is not completely understood and difficult to trace back earlier than the 4th century AD. Since the work of Tomaschek (1873), it is generally said to be derived from Proto-Turkic root *bulga- ("to stir", "to mix"; "to become mixed"), which with the consonant suffix -r implies a noun meaning "mixed". Other scholars have added that bulğa might also imply "stir", "disturb", "confuse" and Talat Tekin interpreted Bulgar as the verb form "mixing" (i.e. rather than the adjective "mixed"). Both Gyula Németh and Peter Benjamin Golden initially advocated the "mixed race" theory, but later, like Paul Pelliot, considered that "to incite", "rebel", or "to produce a state of disorder", i.e. the "disturbers", was a more likely etymology for migrating nomads.
According to Osman Karatay, if the "mixed" etymology relied on the westward migration of the Oğurs, meeting and merging with the Huns, north of the Black Sea, it was a faulty theory, since the Oghurs were documented in Europe as early as 463, while the Bulgars were not mentioned until 482 – an overly short time period for any such ethnogenesis to occur.
However, the "mixing" in question may have occurred before the Bulgars migrated from further east, and scholars such as Sanping Chen have noted analogous groups in Inner Asia, with phonologically similar names, who were frequently described in similar terms: during the 4th century, the Buluoji (Middle Chinese b'uo-lak-kiei), a component of the "Five Barbarian" groups in Ancient China, were portrayed as both a "mixed race" and "troublemakers". Peter A. Boodberg noted that the Buluoji in the Chinese sources were recorded as remnants of the Xiongnu confederation, and had strong Caucasian elements.
Another theory linking the Bulgars to a Turkic people of Inner Asia has been put forward by Boris Simeonov, who identified them with the Pugu (僕骨; buk/buok kwət; Buqut), a Tiele and/or Toquz Oguz tribe. The Pugu were mentioned in Chinese sources from 103 BC up to the 8th century AD, and later were situated among the eastern Tiele tribes, as one of the highest-ranking tribes after the Uyghurs.
According to the Chronicle by Michael the Syrian, which comprises several historical events of different age into one story, three mythical Scythian brothers set out on a journey from the mountain Imaon (Tian Shan) in Asia and reached the river Tanais (Don), the country of the Alans called Barsalia, which would be later inhabited by the Bulgars and the Pugurs (Puguraje).
The names Onoğur and Bulgar were linked by later Byzantine sources for reasons that are unclear.Tekin derived -gur from the Altaic suffix -gir. Generally, modern scholars consider the terms oğuz or oğur, as generic terms for Turkic tribal confederations, to be derived from Turkic *og/uq, meaning "kinship or being akin to". The terms initially were not the same, as oq/ogsiz meant "arrow", while oğul meant "offspring, child, son", oğuš/uğuš was "tribe, clan", and the verb oğša-/oqša meant "to be like, resemble".
There also appears to be an etymological association between the Bulgars and the preceding Kutrigur (Kuturgur > Quturğur > *Toqur(o)ğur < toqur; "nine" in Proto-Bulgar; toquz in Common Turkic) and Utigur (Uturgur > Uturğur < utur/otur; "thirty" in Proto-Bulgar; otuz in Common Turkic) – as 'Oğur (Oghur) tribes, with the ethnonym Bulgar as a "spreading" adjective. Golden considered the origin of the Kutrigurs and Utigurs to be obscure and their relationship to the Onogurs and Bulgars – who lived in similar areas at the same time – as unclear.
He noted, however, an implication that the Kutrigurs and Utigurs were related to the Šarağurs (šara oğur, shara oghur; "white oğhurs"), and that according to Procopius these were Hunnish tribal unions, of partly Cimmerian descent. Karatay considered the Kutrigurs and Utigurs to be two related, ancestral people, and prominent tribes in the later Bulgar union, but different from the Bulgars.
Among many other theories regarding the etymology of Bulgar, the following have also had limited support.
- an Eastern Germanic root meaning "combative" (i.e. cognate with the Latin pugnax), according to D. Detschev;
- the Latin burgaroi – a Roman term mercenaries stationed in burgi ("forts") on the limes (G. A. Keramopulos);
- a reconstructed but unattested early Turkic term meaning "five oğhur", such as *bel-gur or *bil-gur (Zeki Velidi Togan).
History
Turkic migration
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The original homeland of the early Bulgars is still unclear. Their homeland is believed to be situated in Kazakhstan and the North Caucasian steppes. Interaction with the Hunnic tribes, causing the migration, may have occurred there, but the Pontic–Caspian steppe seems a more likely location. Some scholars propose that the Bulgars may have been a branch or offshoot of the Huns or at least Huns seem to have been absorbed by the Onogur-Bulgars after Dengizich's death. Hyun Jin Kim however, argues that the Huns continued under Ernak, becoming the Kutrigur and Utigur Hunno-Bulgars. These conclusions remain a topic of ongoing debate and controversy among scholars.
The first clear mention and evidence of the Bulgars was in 480, when they served as the allies of the Byzantine Emperor Zeno (474–491) against the Ostrogoths. Anachronistic references about them can also be found in the 7th-century geography work Ashkharatsuyts by Anania Shirakatsi, where the Kup'i Bulgar, Duč'i Bulkar, Olxontor Błkar and immigrant Č'dar Bulkar tribes are mentioned as being in the North Caucasian-Kuban steppes. An obscure reference to Ziezi ex quo Vulgares, with Ziezi being an offspring of Biblical Shem, is in the Chronography of 354.
According to D. Dimitrov, the 5th-century History of Armenia by Movses Khorenatsi speaks about two migrations of the Bulgars, from Caucasus to Armenia. The first migration is mentioned in the association with the campaign of Armenian ruler Valarshak (probably Varazdat) to the lands "named Basen by the ancients... and which were afterwards populated by immigrants of the vh' ndur Bulgar Vund, after whose name they (the lands) were named Vanand".
The second migration took place during the time of the ruler Arshak III, when "great disturbances occurred in the range of the great Caucasus mountain, in the land of the Bulgars, many of whom migrated and came to our lands and settled south of Kokh". Both migrations are dated to the second half of the 4th century AD. The "disturbances" which caused them are believed to be the expansion of the Huns in the East-European steppes. Dimitrov recorded that the toponyms of the Bolha and Vorotan rivers, tributaries of the Aras river, are known as Bolgaru-chaj and Vanand-chaj, and could confirm the Bulgar settlement of Armenia.
Around 463 AD, the Akatziroi and other tribes that had been part of the Hunnic union were attacked by the Šarağurs, one of the first Oğuric Turkic tribes that entered the Ponto-Caspian steppes as the result of migrations set off in Inner Asia. According to Priscus, in 463 the representatives of Šarağur, Oğur and Onoğur came to the Emperor in Constantinople, and explained they had been driven out of their homeland by the Sabirs, who had been attacked by the Avars. This tangle of events indicates that the Oğuric tribes are related to the Ting-ling and Tiele people. It seems that Kutrigurs and Unigurs arrived with the initial waves of Oğuric peoples entering the Pontic steppes. The Bulgars were not mentioned in 463.
The account by Paul the Deacon in his History of the Lombards (8th century) says that at the beginning of the 5th century in the North-Western slopes of the Carpathians the Vulgares killed the Lombard king Agelmund. Scholars attribute this account to the Huns, Avars or some Bulgar groups who were probably carried away by the Huns to the Central Europe. The Lombards, led by their new king Laimicho, rose up and defeated the Bulgars with great slaughter, gaining great booty and confidence as they "became bolder in undertaking the toils of war."
The defeated Bulgars then became subjects of the Lombards and later migrated in Italy with their king Alboin. When the army of Ostrogoth chieftain Theodoric Strabo grew to 30,000-men strong, it was felt as a menace to Byzantine Emperor Zeno, who somehow managed to convince the Bulgars to attack the Thracian Goths. The Bulgars were eventually defeated by Strabo in 480/481. In 486 and 488 they fought against the Goths again, first as allies of Byzantium, according to Magnus Felix Ennodius, and later as allies of the Gepids, according to Paul the Deacon. However, when Theoderic the Great with his Ostrogoths departed for Italy in 489, the Illyricum and Thrace were open for Bulgar raids.
In 493, according to Marcellinus Comes, they defeated and killed magister militum Julian. In 499, they crossed the Danube and reached Thrace where on the banks of the river Tzurta (considered a tributary of Maritsa) defeated a 15,000-strong Roman army led by magister militum Aristus. In 502, Bulgars again devastated Thrace as reportedly there were no Roman soldiers to oppose them. In 528–529 they again invaded the region and defeated Roman generals Justin and Baduarius. However, the Gothic general Mundus offered allegiance to Emperor Justinian I (527–565) in 530, and managed to kill 5,000 Bulgars plundering Thrace. John Malalas recorded that in the battle a Bulgar warlord was captured. In 535, magister militum Sittas defeated the Bulgar army at the river Yantra.
Ennodius, Jordanes and Procopius identified the Bulgars with the Huns in a 6th-century literary topos, in which Ennodius referred to a captured Bulgar horse as "equum Huniscum". In 505, the alleged 10,000 Hun horsemen in the Sabinian army, which was defeated by the Ostrogoths, are believed to be the Bulgars. In 515, Bulgar mercenaries were listed along with others from the Goths, Scythians and Hunnic tribes as part of the Vitalian army. In 539, two Hunnic "kinglets" defeated two Roman generals during the raid into Scythia Minor and Moesia.
A Roman army led by magister militum Ascum and Constantiolus intercepted and defeated them in Thrace; however, another raiding party ambushed and captured the two Roman generals. In 539 and 540, Procopius reported a powerful Hunnic army crossed the Danube, devastated Illyricum and reached up to the Anastasian Wall. Such large distances covered in a short time indicate they were horsemen.
Jordanes described, in his work Getica (551), the Pontic steppe beyond the Akatziri, above the Pontic Sea, as the habitat of the Bulgari, "whom the evils of our sins have made famous". In this region, the Hunni divided into two tribes: the Altziagiri (who trade and live next to Cherson) and Saviri, while the Hunuguri (believed to be the Onoğurs) were notable for the marten skin trade. In the Middle Ages, marten skin was used as a substitute for minted money.
The Syriac translation of Pseudo-Zacharias Rhetor's Ecclesiastical History (c. 555) in Western Eurasia records:
The land Bazgun... extends up to the Caspian Gates and to the sea, which are in the Hunnish lands. Beyond the gates live the Burgars (Bulgars), who have their language, and are people pagan and barbarian. They have towns. And the Alans – they have five towns... Avnagur (Aunagur, considered Onoğurs) are people, who live in tents
Then he records 13 tribes, the wngwr (Onogur), wgr (Oğur), sbr (Sabir), bwrgr (Burğa, i.e. Bulgar), kwrtrgr (Kutriğurs), br (probably Vars, also known as the Avars), ksr (Kasr; possibly Akatziri), srwrgwr (Saragurs), dyrmr (unknown), b'grsyq (Bagrasir, i.e. Barsil), kwls (unknown), bdl (probably Abdali), and ftlyt (Hephthalite) ... They are described in typical phrases reserved 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)".
Agathias (c. 579–582) wrote:
...all of them are called in general Scythians and Huns in particular according to their nation. Thus, some are Koutrigours or Outigours and yet others are Oultizurs and Bourougounds... the Oultizurs and Bourougounds were known up to the time of the Emperor Leo (457–474) 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 place.
According to D. Dimitrov, scholars partially managed to identify and locate the Bulgar groups mentioned in the Armenian Ashkharatsuyts. The Olxontor Błkar is one of the variations used for the Onoğurs Bulgars, while others could be related to the ancient river names, such as the Kup'i Bulgar and the Kuban (Kuphis). The Duč'i could read Kuchi Bulkar and as such could be related to the Dnieper (Kocho). However, the Č'dar Bulkar location is unclear. Dimitrov theorized that the differences in the Bulgar ethnonym could be due to the dialect differentiations in their language.
By the middle of the 6th century, the Bulgars momentarily fade from the sources and the Kutrigurs and Utigurs come to the front. Between 548 and 576, mostly due to Justinian I (527–565), through diplomatic persuasion and bribery the Kutrigurs and Utigurs were drawn into mutual warfare, decimating one another. In the end, the Kutrigurs were overwhelmed by the Avars, while the Utigurs came under the rule of the Western Turks.
The Oğurs and Onoğurs, in the 6th- and 7th-century sources, were mentioned mostly in connection with the Avar and Turk conquest of Western Eurasia. From the 8th century, the Byzantine sources often mention the Onoğurs in close connection with the Bulgars. Agathon (early 8th century) wrote about the nation of Onoğurs Bulğars. Nikephoros I (early 9th century) noted that Kubrat was the lord of the Onoğundurs; his contemporary Theophanes referred to them as Onoğundur–Bulğars.
Constantine VII (mid-10th century) remarked that the Bulğars formerly called themselves Onoğundurs. This association was previously mirrored in Armenian sources, such as the Ashkharatsuyts, which refers to the Olxontor Błkar, and the 5th century History by Movses Khorenatsi, which includes an additional comment from a 9th-century writer about the colony of the Vłĕndur Bułkar. Marquart and Golden connected these forms with the Iġndr (*Uluġundur) of Ibn al-Kalbi (c. 820), the Vnndur (*Wunundur) of Hudud al-'Alam (982), the Wlndr (*Wulundur) of Al-Masudi (10th century) and Hungarian name for Belgrad Nándor Fejérvár, the nndr (*Nandur) of Gardīzī (11th century) and *Wununtur in the letter by the Khazar King Joseph. All the forms show the phonetic changes typical of later Oğuric (prothetic v-).
Scholars consider it unclear how this union came about, viewing it as a long process in which a number of different groups were merged. During that time, the Bulgars may have represented a large confederation including the remnants of Onoğurs, Utigurs and Kutrigurs among others.
Old Great Bulgaria
Main article: Old Great BulgariaThe Turk rule weakened sometime after 600, allowing the Avars to reestablish the control over the region. As the Western Turkic Khaganate declined, finally collapsing in the middle of the 7th century, it was against Avar rule that the Bulgars, recorded as Onoğundur–Bulğars, reappeared. They revolted under their leader Kubrat (c. 635), who seems to have been prepared by Heraclius (610–641) against the Sasanian–Avar alliance. With his uncle Organa in 619, Kubrat had been baptized in Constantinople. He founded the Old Great Bulgaria (Magna Bulgaria), also known as Onoğundur–Bulğars state, or Patria Onoguria in the Ravenna Cosmography.
Little is known about Kubrat's activities. It is considered that Onogur Bulgars remained the only steppe tribes in good relations with the Byzantines. His date of death is placed between 650 and 663 AD. According to Nikephoros I, Kubrat instructed his five sons to "never separate their place of dwelling from one another, so that by being in concordance with one another, their power might thrive".
Subsequent events proved Old Great Bulgaria to be only a loose tribal union, as there emerged a rivalry between the Khazars and the Bulgars over Turk patrimony and dominance in the Pontic–Caspian steppe. Some historians consider the war an extension of the Western Turks struggle, between the Nushibi tribes and Ashina clan, who led the Khazars, and the Duolu/Tu-lu tribes, which some scholars associated with the Dulo clan, from which Kubrat and many Bulgar rulers originated. The Khazars were ultimately victorious and parts of the Bulgar union broke up.
Subsequent migrations
Further information: Volga Bulgaria and First Bulgarian EmpireIt is unclear whether the brothers' parting ways was caused by the internal conflicts or strong Khazar pressure. The latter is considered more likely. The Bulgars led by the first two brothers Batbayan and Kotrag remained in the Pontic steppe zone, where they were known as Black Bulgars by Byzantine and Rus sources, and became Khazar vassals. The Bulgars led by Kotrag migrated to the middle Volga region during the 7th and 9th centuries, where they founded Volga Bulgaria, with Bolghar as its capital.
According to Ahmad ibn Rustah (10th century), the Volga Bulgars were divided into three branches: "the first branch was called Bersula (Barsils), the second Esegel, and the third Bulgar". In 922 they accepted Islam as the official religion. They preserved their national identity well into the 13th century by repelling the first Mongol attacks in 1223. They were eventually subdued by the Mongols in 1237. They gradually lost their identity after 1431 when their towns and region were captured by the Russians.
The third and most famous son, Asparukh, according to Nikephoros I:
crossed the river Danapros and Danastros, lived in the locale around the Ister, having occupied a place suitable for settlement, called in their language ογγλον (ogglon; Slav. o(n)gl, "angle", "corner"; Turk. agyl, "yard")... The people having been divided and scattered, the tribe of the Khazars, from within Berulia (Bessarabia), which neighbors with Sarmatia, attacked them with impunity. They overran all the lands lying behind the Pontos Euxeinos and penetrated to the sea. After this, having made Bayan a subject, they forced him to pay tribute.
Asparukh, according to the Pseudo–Zacharias Rhetor, "fled from the Khazars out of the Bulgarian mountains". In the Khazar ruler Joseph's letter is recorded "in the country in which I live, there formerly lived the Vununtur (< Vunundur < Onoğundur). Our ancestors, the Khazars warred with them. The Vununtur were more numerous, as numerous as the sand by the sea, but they could not withstand the Khazars. They left their country and fled... until they reached the river called Duna (Danube)".
This migration and the foundation of the Danube Bulgaria (the First Bulgarian Empire) is usually dated c. 681. The composition of the horde is unknown, and sources only mention tribal names Čakarar, Kubiar, Küriger, and clan names Dulo, Ukil/Vokil, Ermiyar, Ugain and Duar. The Onglos where Bulgars settled is considered northern Dobruja, secured to the West and North by Danube and its Delta, and bounded to the East by the Black Sea. They re-settled in North-Eastern Bulgaria, between Shumen and Varna, including Ludogorie plateau and southern Dobruja. The distribution of pre-Christian burial assemblages in Bulgaria and Romania is considered as the indication of the confines of the Bulgar settlement.
In the Balkans they merged with the Slavs and other autochthonous Romance and Greek speaking population, like the Thracians and Vlachs, becoming a political and military elite. However, the influence of the pre-Slavic population had relatively little influence on the Slavs and Bulgars, indicating their population was reduced in previous centuries. The hinterlands of the Byzantine territory were for years occupied by many groups of Slavs. According to Theophanes, the Bulgars subjugated the so-called Seven Slavic tribes, of which the Severians were re-settled from the pass of Beregaba or Veregava, most likely the Rish Pass of the Balkan Mountains, to the East, while the other six tribes to the Southern and Western regions as far the boundary with the Pannonian Avars. Scholars consider that the absence of any source recording the Slavic resistance to the invasion was because it was in their interest to be liberated from the Byzantine taxation.
Khan Krum defeats the Byzantine Emperor Nicephorus I in the battle of the Varbitsa Pass, Manasses ChronicleKhan Krum feasts with the skull cup of Nicephorus after the victory at the Varbitsa Pass, Manasses ChronicleIt is considered that the Slavic tribal organization was left intact, and paid tribute to the ruling Bulgars. According to Nikephoros I and Theophanes, an unnamed fourth brother, believed to be Kuber, "having crossed the river Ister, resides in Pannonia, which is now under the sway of the Avars, having made an alliance with the local peoples". Kuber later led a revolt against the Avars and with his people moved as far as the region of Thessaloniki in Greek Macedonia. The fifth brother, reported by Nikephoros I and Theophanes, "settling in the five Ravennate cities became a subject of the Romans". This brother is believed to be Alcek, who after a stay in Avar territory left and settled in Italy, in Sepino, Bojano and Isernia. These Bulgars preserved their speech and identity until the late 8th century.
The First Bulgarian Empire (681–1018) had a significant political influence in the Balkans. In the time of Tervel (700–721) the Bulgars helped Byzantines two times, in 705 the Emperor Justinian II to regain his throne, and 717–718 defeating the Arabs during the siege of Constantinople. Sevar (738–753) was the last ruler from the Dulo clan, and the period until c. 768–772 was characterized by the Byzantino-Bulgar conflict and internal crisis. In the short period followed seven rulers from the Uokil and Ugain clan. Telerig (768–777) managed to establish a pacific policy with Byzantium, and restore imperial power.
During the reign of Krum (803–814), the Empire doubled its size, including new lands in Macedonia and Serbia. He also successfully repelled the invading force of the Byzantines, as well defeated the Pannonian Avars where additionally extended the Empire size. In 865, during the reign of Khan Boris I (852–889), the Bulgars accepted Christianity as the official religion, and Eastern Orthodoxy in 879. The greatest expansion of the Empire and prosperity during the time of Simeon I (893–927) is considered as the Bulgarian Golden Age. However, from the time of Peter I (927–969) their power declined. The Hungarians, Kievan Rus' Slavs, as well Pechenegs and Cumans held many raids into their territory, and so weakened were eventually conquered in 1018 by the Byzantine Empire.
Society
Bulgars had the typical culture of the nomadic equestrians of Central Asia, who migrated seasonally in pursuit of good pastures, as well attraction to economic and cultural interaction with sedentary societies. Being in contact with sedentary cultures, they began mastering the crafts of blacksmithing, pottery, and carpentry. The politically dominant tribe or clan usually gave its name to the tribal confederation. Such confederations were often encouraged by the Imperial powers, for whom it was easier to deal with one ruler than several tribal chieftains.
In nomadic society the tribes were political organizations based on kinship, with diffused power. Tribes developed according to the relation with sedentary states, and only managed to conquer them when had social cohesion. If the raiding by the nomads had negative effect on the economic development of the region it could significantly slow down their own social and cultural development. In a nomadic state the nomad and sedentary integration was limited, and usually had vassal tribute system.
When the Bulgars arrived in the Balkans their first generations probably still lived a nomadic life in yurts, but they quickly adopted the sunken-featured building of rectangular plan and sedentary or seasonal lifestyle of the Slavs and autochthonous population. The Bulgar and Slavic settlements cannot be distinguished other than by the type of biritual cemeteries.
Social structure
The Bulgars, at least the Danubian Bulgars, had a well-developed clan and military administrative system of "inner" and "outer" tribes, governed by the ruling clan. They had many titles, and according to Steven Runciman the distinction between titles which represented offices and mere ornamental dignities was somewhat vague. Maenchen-Helfen theorized that the titles of the steppe peoples did not reflect the ethnicity of their bearers. According to Magnus Felix Ennodius, the Bulgars did not have nobility, yet their leaders and common men became noblemen on the battle field, indicating social mobility.
Tribute-paying sedentary vassals, such as the Slavs and Greek-speaking population, formed a substantial and important part of the khanate's maintenance.
Although it was not recorded on inscriptions, the title sampses is considered to be related to the royal court. The title tabare or iltabare, which derives from the old Turkish ältäbär, like sampses is not mentioned on inscriptions, but is related to the legates and ambassadors.
The Anastasius Bibliothecarius listed Bulgarian legates at the Council at Constantinople in 869–870. They were mentioned as Stasis, Cerbula, Sundica (vagantur=bagatur), Vestranna (iltabare), Praestizisunas (campsis), and Alexius Hunno (sampsi). The ruler title in Bulgar inscriptions was khan or kanasubigi. A counterpart of the Greek phrase ὁ ἐκ Θεοῦ ἄρχων (ho ek Theou archon) was also common in Bulgar inscriptions. The kavhan was the second most important title in the realm, seemingly chief official. Some Bulgar inscriptions, written in Greek and later in Slavonic, refer to the Bulgarian rulers respectively with the Greek title archon, or the Slavic titles knyaz and tsar.
There are several possible interpretations for the ruler title, kana sybigi, mentioned in six inscriptions by the Khan Omurtag and two by Malamir. Among the proposed translations for sybigi or subigi are "lord of the army", from the reconstructed Turkic phrase syu-beg (army master) paralleling the attested Orkhon Turkic syubashi. Runciman and J. B. Bury considered ubige or uvege to be related to the Cuman-Turkic öweghü (high, glorious); "bright, luminous, heavenly"; and more recently "(ruler) from God", from the Indo-European *su- and baga-, i.e. *su-baga. Florin Curta noted the resemblance in the use of the kana sybigi with the Byzantine name and title basileus.
Members of the upper social class bore the title boila (later boyar). The nobility was divided onto small and great boilas. In the 10th century, there were three classes of boyars: the six great boilas, the outer boilas, and the inner boilas, while in the mid-9th century there were twelve great boyars. The great boilas occupied military and administrative offices in the state, as well the council where they gathered for decisions on important matters of state.
Bagaïns were the lesser class of the nobility, probably a military class which also participated in the council. The title bagatur, once as bogotor, is found in several instances within the inscriptions. It derives from Turkish bagadur (hero) and was a high military rank. The Bulgarian military commander who was defeated by the Croats in the Battle of the Bosnian Highlands (926) was called Alogobotur, which is actually a title comprised by alo (considered Turkic alp, alyp; chief) and bagatur.
There are several title associations with uncertain meaning, such as boila kavkhan, ičirgu boila, kana boila qolovur, bagatur bagain, biri bagain, setit bagain and ik bagain. Kolober (or qolovur), a rank title, is cited in two inscriptions, and it derives from the Turkish term for a guide, golaghuz. The title župan, also once as kopan in the inscriptions, was often mentioned together with the bearer's name. They were traditionally seen as Slavic chiefs. It seems to have meant "head of a clan-district", as among the South Slavs (Croats, Serbs) where it was more widely used, it meant "head of a tribe" with a high district and court function.
The title tarkhan probably represented a high military rank, similar to the Byzantine strategos, of the military governor of a province. The variations kalutarkan and buliastarkan are considered to be officers at the head of the tarkans. Curta interpreted the title zhupan tarqan as "tarqan of (all the) zhupans".
Religion
Very little is known about the religion of the Bulgars, but it is believed to have been monotheistic.
In Danube Bulgaria, Bulgar monarchs described themselves as a "ruler from God", indicating authority from a singular divine origin, and making appeals to the deity's omniscience. Presian's inscription from Philippi (837) states:
When someone seeks the truth, God sees. And when someone lies, God sees that too. The Bulgars did many favors to the Christians (Byzantines), but the Christians forgot them. But God sees.
It is traditionally assumed that the God in question was the Turkic supreme sky deity, Tengri. In the Chinese transcription as zhenli, and Turkic as Tangara and Tengeri, it represents the oldest known Turco-Mongolian word. Tengri may have originated in the Xiongnu confederacy, which settled on the frontiers of China in the 2nd century BC. The confederacy probably had both pre-Turkic and pre-Mongolian ethnic elements. In modern Turkish, the word for god, Tanrı, derives from the same root.
Tengrism apparently engaged various shamanic practices. According to Mercia MacDermott, Tangra was the male deity connected with sky, light and the Sun. The cult incorporated Tangra's female equivalent and principle goddess, Umay, the deity of fertility. Their tamgha , which can be frequently found in early medieval Bulgaria is associated with deity Tangra. However, its exact meaning and use remains unknown. The most sacred creatures to Tangra were horses and eagles, particularly white horses. Bronze amulets with representations of the Sun, horses and other animals were found at Bulgar archeological sites. This could explain the variety of Bulgars taboos, including those about animals.
Ravil Bukharaev believed that such an autocratic and monotheistic religion—henotheism, as seen in the report by Ahmad ibn Fadlan (10th century) about the Oghuz Turks, kindred to the Bulgars, made the acceptance of Islam more natural and easier in Volga Bulgaria:
If someone trouble befalls any of them or there happens any unlucky incident, they look out into the sky and summon: "Ber Tengre!". In the Turkish language, that means, "by the One and Only God!".
Another mention of Tengri is on the severely damaged Greek inscription found on a presumed altar stone near Madara, tentatively deciphered as "Khan sybigi Omurtag, ruler from god...was...and made sacrifice to god Tangra...itchurgu boila...gold". An Ottoman manuscript recorded that the name of God, in Bulgarian, was "Tängri".
A piece of ethnographic evidence which has been invoked to support the belief that the Bulgars worshipped Tengri/Tangra is the relative similarity of the name "Tengri" to "Tură", the name of the supreme deity of the traditional religion of the Chuvash people, who are traditionally regarded as descendants of the Volga Bulgars. Nevertheless, the Chuvash religion today is markedly different from Tengrism and can be described as a local form of polytheism, due to pagan beliefs of the Volga Finns, forest dwellers of Finno-Ugric origin who lived in their vicinity, with some elements borrowed from Islam.
Paganism was closely connected with the old clan system, and the remains of totemism and shamanism were preserved even after the crossing of Danube. The Shumen plate in the archaeological literature is often associated with shamanism. In the 9th century, it was recorded that before a battle the Bulgars "used to practice enchantments and jests and charms and certain auguries". Liutprand of Cremona reported that Baian, son of Simeon I (893–927), could through magicam transform into a wolf. Clement of Ohrid reported the worship of fire and water by the Bulgars, while in the 11th century Theophylact of Ohrid remembered that before the Christianization the Bulgars respected the Sun, Moon and the stars, and sacrificed dogs to them.
Allegedly, the Dulo clan had the dog as its sacred animal. To this today Bulgarians still use the expression "he kills the dog" to mean "he gives the orders", a relic of the time when the Dulo Khan sacrificed a dog to the deity Tangra. Remains of dog and deer have been found in Bulgars graves, and it seems the wolf also had a special mythological significance. The Bulgars were bi-ritual, either cremating or burying their dead, and often interred them with personal objects (pottery, rarely weapons or dress), food, and sacred animals.
Because of the cult of the Sun, the Bulgars had a preference for the south. Their main buildings and shrines faced south, as well their yurts, which were usually entered from the south, although less often from the east. Excavations showed that Bulgars buried their dead on a north–south axis, with their heads to the north so that the deceased "faced" south. The Slavs practiced only cremation, the remains were placed in urns, and like the Bulgars, with the conversion to Christianity inhumed the dead on west–east axis. The only example of a mixed Bulgar-Slavic cemetery is in Istria near ancient Histria, on the coast of the Black Sea.
D. Dimitrov has argued that the Kuban Bulgars also adopted elements of Iranian religious beliefs. He noticed Iranian influences on the cult of the former Caucasian Huns capital Varachan (Balanjar), making a religious syncretism between the principal Turkic deity Tengri and the Iranian sun god Hvare. Dimitrov cited the work by V.A. Kuznetsov, who considered the resemblance between the layout of the Zoroastrian temples of fire and the Kuban Bulgar centre, Humarin citadel, situated 11 km to the north of the town Karachayevsk, where the pottery belonged to the Saltovo-Mayaki culture.
Kuznecov also found a connection in the plan of the Danube Bulgars sanctuaries at Pliska, Veliki Preslav, and Madara. The architectural similarities include two squares of ashlars inserted one into another, oriented towards the summer sunrise. One of these sites was transformed into a Christian church, which is taken as evidence that they served a religious function.
The view of the Parthian and Sasanian influence, which Franz Altheim also argued, is considered debatable, showing the cultural impact of the Iranian world on communities in the Pontic–Caspian steppe. Many scholars believe that the square shape, with the north–south and east–west axis of the Bulgar sacral monuments is very similar to those of Turkic khagans in Mongolia. However, that the Bulgar residence in Pliska and Palace of Omurtag were inspired by the Byzantine architecture is considered indisputable.
Christianity had already begun to penetrate, probably via their Slavic subjects, when it was adopted in the First Bulgarian Empire by Knyaz Boris I in 865 as a state religion. There was interest in Islam as well, seen in the book Answers to the Questions of the King of the Burgar addressed to him about Islam and Unity by the Abbasid caliph Al-Ma'mun (813–833) for the Pontic/Bosporan Bulgars, while it was officially adopted in Volga Bulgaria as a state religion in 922.
Language
Main article: Bulgar languageThe origin and language of the Bulgars has been the subject of debate since around the start of the 20th century. It is generally accepted that at least the Bulgar elite spoke a language that was a member of the Oghur branch of the Turkic language family, alongside the now extinct Khazar and the solitary survivor of these languages, Chuvash.
Although there is no direct evidence, a group of linguists believe that Chuvash may be descendant from a dialect of Volga Bulgar while others support the idea that Chuvash is another distinct Oghur Turkic language. Some scholars suggest Hunnish had strong ties with Bulgar and to modern Chuvash and refer to this extended grouping as separate Hunno-Bulgar languages. However, such speculations are not based on proper linguistic evidence, since the language of the Huns is almost unknown except for a few attested words and personal names. Scholars generally consider Hunnish as unclassifiable.
According to P. Golden this association is apparent from the fragments of texts and isolated words and phrases preserved in inscriptions. In addition to language, their culture and state structure retain many Central Asian features. Military and hierarchical terms such as khan/qan, kanasubigi, qapağan, tarkan, bagatur and boila appear to be of Turkic origin. The Bulgar calendar within the Nominalia of the Bulgarian khans had a twelve-year animal cycle, similar to the one adopted by Turkic and Mongolic peoples from the Chinese, with animal names and numbers deciphered as Turkic. Tengri (in Bulgar Tangra/Tengre) was their supreme god.
Danubian Bulgar inscriptions were written mostly in Greek or Cyrillic characters, most commonly in Greek or Graeco-Bulgar, others in the Kuban alphabet which is a variant of Orkhon script. they apparently have a sacral meaning. Inscriptions sometimes included Slavic terms, thus allowing scholars to identify some of the Bulgar glosses. Altheim argued that the runes were brought into Europe from Central Asia by the Huns, and were an adapted version of the old Sogdian alphabet in the Hunnic/Oghur Turkic language. The custom of stone engravings are considered to have Iranic, Turkic and Roman parallels. The Madara Rider resembles work of the Sasanian rock relief tradition, but its actual masonry tradition and cultural source is unknown.
According to linguist and academician Albina G. Khayrullina-Valieva Bulgar language was the first fully proved Turkic language that came into direct contact with South Slavs. The Danubian Bulgars were unable to alter the predominantly Slavic character of Bulgaria, seen in the toponymy and names of the capitals Pliska and Preslav. They preserved their own native language and customs for about 200 years, but a bilingual period was recorded since the 9th century. Golden argued that Bulgar Turkic almost disappeared with the transition to Christianity and Slavicisation in the middle of the 9th century. When the ruling class abandoned its native language and adopted Slavic, according to Jean W. Sedlar, it was so complete that no trace of Turkic speech patterns remained in Old Slavic texts. The Bulgarian Christian Church used the Slavic dialect from Macedonia.
Among Bulgarian academics, notably Petar Dobrev, a hypothesis linking the Bulgar language to the Iranic languages (especially Pamir) has been popular since the 1990s. Most proponents still assume an intermediate stance, proposing certain signs of Iranic influence on a Turkic substrate. The names Asparukh and Bezmer from the Nominalia list, for example, were established as being of Iranic origin. Other Bulgarian scholars actively oppose the "Iranic hypothesis". According to Raymond Detrez, the Iranian theory is rooted in the periods of anti-Turkish sentiment in Bulgaria and is ideologically motivated. Since 1989, anti-Turkish rhetoric is now reflected in the theories that challenge the thesis of the proto-Bulgars' Turkic origin. Alongside the Iranian or Aryan theory, there appeared arguments favoring an autochthonous origin.
Ethnicity
Due to the lack of definitive evidence, modern scholarship uses an ethnogenesis approach in explaining the Bulgars origin. More recent theories view the nomadic confederacies, such as the Bulgars, as the formation of several different cultural, political and linguistic entities that could dissolve as quickly as they formed, entailing a process of ethnogenesis.
According to Walter Pohl, the existential fate of the tribes and their confederations depended on their ability to adapt to an environment going through rapid changes, and to give this adaptation a credible meaning rooted in tradition and ritual. Slavs and Bulgars succeeded because their form of organization proved as stable and as flexible as necessary, while the Pannonian Avars failed in the end because their model could not respond to new conditions. Pohl wrote that members of society's lower strata did not feel themselves to be part of any large-scale ethnic group; the only distinct classes were within the armies and the ruling elite.
Recent studies consider ethnonyms closely related with warrior elites who ruled over a variety of heterogeneous groups. The groups adopted new ideology and name as political designation, while the elites claimed right to rule and royal descent through origin myths.
When the Turkic tribes began to enter into the Pontic–Caspian steppe in the Post-Hunnic era, or as early as the 2nd century AD, their confederations incorporated an array of ethnic groups of newly joined Turkic, Caucasian, Iranian, and Finno-Ugric peoples. During their Western Eurasian migrations to the Balkans, they also came into contact with Armenian, Semitic, Slavic, Thracian and Anatolian Greek among other populations.
From the 6th to 8th centuries, distinctive Bulgar monuments of the Sivashovka type were built upon ruins of the late Sarmatian culture of the 2nd to 4th centuries AD, and the 6th century Penkovka culture of the Antes and Slavs. Early medieval Saltovo-Mayaki (an Alanic-based culture) settlements in the Crimea since the 8th century were destroyed by the Pechengs during the 10th century.
Although the older Iranian tribes were enveloped by the widespread Turkic migration into the Pontic–Caspian steppe, the following centuries saw a complete disappearance of both the Iranic and Turkic languages, indicating dominance of the Slavic language among the common people.
Anthropology and genetics
According to a paleo-DNA study from 2019 which examined Medieval burials in the Carpathian Basin a closest connection was found between the Y-DNA of these nomadic people and the modern Volga Tatars. According to Hungarian archeogenetist Neparáczki Endre: "From all recent and archaic populations tested the Volga Tatars show the smallest genetic distance to the entire Conqueror population" and "a direct genetic relation of the Conquerors to Onogur-Bulgar ancestors of these groups is very feasible."
The paleoanthropological material from all sites in Volga region, Ukraine and Moldova attributed to the Bulgars testify complex ethno-cultural processes. The material shows the assimilation between the local population and the migrating newcomers. In all sites can be traced the anthropological type found in the Zlivka necropolis near the village of Ilichevki, the district of Donetsk, of brachiocranic Caucasoid with small East Asian admixtures but with Bulgar males being more Mongoloid than females.
Modern genetic research on Central Asian Turkic peoples and ethnic groups related to the Bulgars points to an affiliation with Western Eurasian populations. Despite the morphological proximity, there is a visible impact of the local population, in the Volga region of Volga Finns and Cuman-Kipchaks, in Ukraine of Onogur-Khazars and Sarmatian-Alans, and in Moldova and Thrace of Seven Slavic tribes. The comparative analysis showed large morphological proximity between the medieval and modern population of the Volga region. The examined graves in Northern Bulgaria and Southern Romania showed different somatic types, including Caucasoid-Mediterranean and less often East Asian.
The pre-Christian burial customs in Bulgaria indicate diverse social, i.e. nomadic and sedentary, and cultural influences. In some necropolises specific to the Danube Bulgars, artificial deformation was found in 80% of the skulls. The Bulgars had a special type of shamanic "medicine-men" who performed trepanations of the skull, usually near the sagittal suture. This practice had a medical application, as well as a symbolic purpose; in two cases the patient had brain problems. According to Maenchen-Helfen and Rashev, the artificial deformation of skulls, and other types of burial artifacts in Bulgars graves, are similar to those of the Sarmatians, and Sarmatized Turks or Turkicized Sarmatians of the post-Hunnic graves in the Ukrainian steppe.
Legacy
In modern ethnic nationalism there is some "rivalry for the Bulgar legacy" (see Bulgarism). The Volga Tatars, Bashkirs and Chuvash people, are said to be descended from the Volga Bulgars, and there may have been ethnogenetic influences on the Hungarians (Magyars) and Karachay-Balkars also.
The President of the Bulgar National Congress, Gusman Khalilov appealed to the European Court of Human Rights on the issue of renaming the Tatars into Bulgars, but in 2010 he lost in court.
See also
- Bulgar calendar
- Bulgar language
- Eurasian nomads
- History of Bulgaria
- Oghur languages
- Turkic migration
- Turkic tribal confederations
Citations
- Waldman, Mason 2006, p. 106.
- Gi︠u︡zelev, Vasil (1979). The Proto-Bulgarians: Pre-history of Asparouhian Bulgaria text. pp. 15, 33, 38.
- ^ Golden 1992, p. 104.
- ^ Hyun Jin Kim (18 April 2013). The Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe. Cambridge University Press. pp. 58–59, 150–155, 168, 204, 243. ISBN 9781107009066.
- Golden 1992, p. 253, 256: " With their Avar and Türk political heritage, they assumed political leadership over an array of Turkic groups, Iranians and Finno-Ugric peoples, under the overlordship of the Khazars, whose vassals they remained." ... "The Bulgars, whose Oguric ancestors ..."
- McKitterick, Rosamond (1995). The New Cambridge Medieval History. Cambridge University Press. p. 229. ISBN 9780521362924.
The exact ethnic origins of the Danubian Bulgars is controversial. It is in any case most probable that they had enveloped groupings of diverse origins during their migration westwards across the Eurasian steppes, and they undoubtedly spoke a form of Turkic as their main language. The Bulgars long retained many of the customs, military tactics, titles and emblems of a nomadic people of the steppes.
- Sophoulis 2011, pp. 65–66, 68–69: "The warriors who founded the Bulgar state in the Lower Danube region were culturally related to the nomads of Eurasia. Indeed, their language was Turkic, and more specifically Oğuric, as is apparent from the isolated words and phrases preserved in a number of inventory inscriptions." ... "It is generally believed that during their migration to the Balkans, the Bulgars brought with them or swept along several other groups of Eurasian nomads whose exact ethnic and linguistic affinities are impossible to determine... Sarmato-Alanian origin... Slav or Slavicized sedentary populations."
- Brook 2006, p. 13: "Thus, the Bulgars were actually a tribal confederation of multiple Hunnic, Turkic, and Iranian groups mixed together."
- "Bulgaria: Arrival of the Bulgars". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
The name Bulgaria comes from the Bulgars, a people who are still a matter of academic dispute with respect to their origin (Turkic or Indo-European) as well as to their influence on the ethnic mixture and the language of present-day Bulgaria.
- ^ "Bulgar". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
Although many scholars, including linguists, had posited that the Bulgars were derived from a Turkic tribe of Central Asia (perhaps with Iranian elements), modern genetic research points to an affiliation with western Eurasian populations.
- ^ Waldman, Mason 2006, p. 106–107.
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- Detrez, Raymond (2005). Developing Cultural Identity in the Balkans: Convergence Vs. Divergence. Peter Lang. p. 29. ISBN 9789052012971.
- ^ Rashev, Rasho (1992), "On the origin of the Proto-Bulgarians", Studia Protobulgarica et Mediaevalia Europensia, Veliko Tarnovo: 23–33, archived from the original on 18 July 2012, retrieved 28 August 2006
- Petrov 1981: §A.II.1
- Angelov 1971: §II.2
- Runciman 1930: §I.1
- Agyagási, K. (2020). "A Volga Bulgarian Classifier: A Historical and Areal Linguistic Study". University of Debrecen. 3: 9.
Modern Chuvash is the only descendant language of the Ogur branch.The ancestors of its speakers left the Khazar Empire in the 8th century and migrated to the region at the confluence of the Volga and Kama rivers, where they founded the Volga Bulgarian Empire in the 10th century. In the central Volga region three Volga Bulgarian dialects developed, and Chuvash is the descendant of the 3rd dialect of Volga Bulgarian (Agyagási 2019: 160–183). Sources refer to it as a separate language beginning with 1508
- Marcantonio, Angela (2002). The Uralic language family: facts, myths and statistics. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 167. ISBN 0-631-23170-6.
- Price, Glanville (2000). Encyclopedia of the languages of Europe. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 88. ISBN 0-631-22039-9.
- Clauson, Gerard (2002). Studies in Turkic and Mongolic linguistics. Taylor & Francis. p. 38. ISBN 0-415-29772-9.
- Johanson, Lars; Csató, Éva Á, eds. (2021). The Turkic Languages. Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781003243809. ISBN 9781003243809.
Another Turkic people in the Volga area are the Chuvash, who, like the Tatars, regard themselves as descendants of the Volga Bulghars in the historical and cultural sense. It is clear that Chuvash belongs to the Oghur branch of Turkic, as the language of the Volga Bulghars did, but no direct evidence for diachronic development between the two has been established. As there were several distinct Oghur languages in the Middle Ages, Volga Bulghar could represent one of these and Chuvash another.
- Pritsak, Omeljan (1982). "The Hunnic Language of the Attila Clan". Harvard Ukrainian Studies. IV (4). Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute: 470. ISSN 0363-5570. JSTOR 41036005.
The language had strong ties to Bulgar language and to modern Chuvash, but also had some important connections, especially lexical and morphological, to Ottoman Turkish and Yakut
- Archived, Article (1982). ""The Hunnic Language of the Attila Clan" (pages 428, ..., 476), author: Omeljan Pritsak". Ukrainian Studies. VI (4). Cambridge, Massachusetts: Ukrainian Research Institute, Harvard University: 430. Archived from the original on 23 April 2023. Retrieved 23 April 2023.
I was able to establish a Danube- Bulgarian nominative- suffix /A/ from the consonant stems. Recalling that Danube- Bulgarian was a Hunnic language.
- Ramer, Alexis Manaster. "Proto-Bulgarian/Danube Bulgar/Hunno-Bulgar Bekven": 1 p.
Granberg's suggestion that we should revive the term Hunno-Bulgar may well became that replacement — once it is clear that Hunnic and Bulgar were closely related and perhaps even the same language.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - Savelyev, Alexander (27 May 2020). Chuvash and the Bulgharic Languages. Oxford University Press. p. 448. ISBN 978-0-19-880462-8. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
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:|website=
ignored (help) - Golden 1992, pp. 88, 89.
- RÓNA-TAS, ANDRÁS (1 March 1999). Hungarians and Europe in the Early Middle Ages. Central European University Press. p. 208. doi:10.7829/j.ctv280b77f. ISBN 978-963-386-572-9.
- Sinor, Denis (1997). Studies in medieval inner Asia. Collected studies series. Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate. p. 336. ISBN 978-0-86078-632-0.
- ^ Sophoulis 2011, p. 45.
- ^ Sedlar 2011, p. 425.
- Sophoulis 2011, pp. 45, 83.
- Khayrullina-Valieva, Albina G. (31 March 2020). "Turkic lexical elements in the Bulgarian language". Litteraria Copernicana. 33 (1(33)/): 205–211. doi:10.12775/LC.2020.015. ISSN 2392-1617. S2CID 241146294.
- ^ Sedlar 2011, p. 424.
- Fine 1991, p. 69.
- Golden 2011, p. 268.
- Karachanak, et al. 2013.
- Добрев, Петър, 1995. "Езикът на Аспаруховите и Куберовите българи" 1995
- Stamatov, Atanas (1997). "ИЗВОРИ И ИНТЕРПРЕТАЦИИ – І–ІІ ЧАСТ". TEMPORA INCOGNITA НА РАННАТА БЪЛГАРСКА ИСТОРИЯ. MGU Sv. Ivan Rilski.
- Димитров, Божидар, 2005. 12 мита в българската история
- Милчева, Христина. Българите са с древно-ирански произход. Научна конференция "Средновековна Рус, Волжка България и северното Черноморие в контекста на руските източни връзки", Казан, Русия, 15.10.2007
- Бешевлиев, Веселин. Ирански елементи у първобългарите. Античное Общество, Труды Конференции по изучению проблем античности, стр. 237–247, Издательство "Наука", Москва 1967, АН СССР, Отделение Истории.
- Schmitt, Rüdiger (1985). "Iranica Protobulgarica: Asparuch und Konsorten im Lichte der Iranischen Onomastik". Linguistique Balkanique. XXVIII (l). Saarbrücken: Academie Bulgare des Sciences: 13–38.
- Maenchen-Helfen 1973, pp. 384, 443.
- Йорданов, Стефан. Славяни, тюрки и индо-иранци в ранното средновековие: езикови проблеми на българския етногенезис. В: Българистични проучвания. 8. Актуални проблеми на българистиката и славистиката. Седма международна научна сесия. Велико Търново, 22–23 август 2001 г. Велико Търново, 2002, 275–295.
- Надпис No. 21 от българското златно съкровище "Наги Сент-Миклош", студия от проф. д-р Иван Калчев Добрев от Сборник с материали от Научна конференция на ВА "Г. С. Раковски". София, 2005 г.
- Detrez, Raymond (2005). Developing Cultural Identity in the Balkans: Convergence Vs. Divergence. Peter Lang. p. 29. ISBN 9789052012971.
- Cristian Emilian Ghita, Claudia Florentina Dobre (2016). Quest for a Suitable Past: Myths and Memory in Central and Eastern Europe. p. 142.
- Pohl, Walter (1998), "Conceptions of Ethnicity in Early Medieval Studies", in Lester K. Little; Barbara H. Rosenwein (eds.), Debating the Middle Ages: Issues and Readings, Blackwell Publishers, pp. 13–24
- ^ Golden 2011, p. 55.
- Golden 1992, p. 392.
- Golden 1992, pp. 392–398.
- Golden 1992, p. 383.
- ^ D. Dimitrov (1987). "Pit graves, artificial skull deformation, Sarmatians, Northern Bactria". Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie. Varna.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Golden 1992, p. 261.
- D. Dimitrov (1987). "The Proto-Bulgarians in the Crimea in the VIII–IX cc.". Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie. Varna.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Neparáczki, Endre; Maróti, Zoltán; Kalmár, Tibor; Maár, Kitti; Nagy, István; Latinovics, Dóra; Kustár, Ágnes; Pálfi, György; Molnár, Erika; Marcsik, Antónia; Balogh, Csilla; Lőrinczy, Gábor; Gál, Szilárd Sándor; Tomka, Péter; Kovacsóczy, Bernadett (12 November 2019). "Y-chromosome haplogroups from Hun, Avar and conquering Hungarian period nomadic people of the Carpathian Basin". Scientific Reports. 9 (1): 16569. Bibcode:2019NatSR...916569N. doi:10.1038/s41598-019-53105-5. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 6851379. PMID 31719606.
- Neparáczki, Endre; Maróti, Zoltán; Kalmár, Tibor; Kocsy, Klaudia; Maár, Kitti; Bihari, Péter; Nagy, István; Fóthi, Erzsébet; Pap, Ildikó; Kustár, Ágnes; Pálfi, György; Raskó, István; Zink, Albert; Török, Tibor (2018). "Mitogenomic data indicate admixture components of Central-Inner Asian and Srubnaya origin in the conquering Hungarians". PLOS ONE. 13 (10): e0205920. Bibcode:2018PLoSO..1305920N. bioRxiv 10.1101/250688. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0205920. PMC 6193700. PMID 30335830.
- ^ Gerasimova M.M.; Rud' N.M.; Yablonsky L.T. (1987). Antropologiya antichnovo i srednevekovo naseleniya Vostochno i Yevropy [Anthropology of the Ancient and Middle Age Populations of Eastern Europe]. Moscow: Наука.
- "ЯВЛЕНИЕ ИССКУСТВЕННОЙ ДЕФОРМАЦИИ ЧЕРЕПА У ПРОТОБОЛГАР. ПРОИСХОЖДЕНИЕ И ЗНАЧЕНИЕ. (окончание)". www.iriston.com. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
- Suslova; et al. (October 2012). "HLA gene and haplotype frequencies in Russians, Bashkirs and Tatars, living in the Chelyabinsk Region (Russian South Urals)". International Journal of Immunogenetics. 39 (5). Blackwell Publishing Ltd: 375–392. doi:10.1111/j.1744-313X.2012.01117.x. PMID 22520580. S2CID 20804610.
- Mikheyev, Alexander (2019). "Diverse genetic origins of medieval steppe nomad conquerors". bioRxiv 10.1101/2019.12.15.876912.
Given the common Turkic genetic background of the Bulgars and Khazars, these ethnicities may be difficult to tell apart either archaeologically or genetically.
- Sophoulis 2011, pp. 68–69.
- D. Dimitrov (1987). "The Proto-Bulgarians north of the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov in the VIII–IX cc.". Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie. Varna.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Maenchen-Helfen 1973, p. 443.
- Olson, Pappas, Pappas 1994, pp. 79–81, 84–87, 114–115.
- "Татары — это не болгары". November 2000.
General and cited sources
- Clauson, Gerard (1972). An Etymological dictionary of Pre-13th Century Turkish.
- Runciman, Steven (1930). "§ Appendix V – Bulgar titles". A history of the First Bulgarian Empire. London: George Bell & Sons.
- Maenchen-Helfen, Otto John (1973), The World of the Huns: Studies in Their History and Culture, University of California Press, ISBN 9780520015968
- Tokarev, Sergei A. (1980). Mify narodov mira [Myths of the world's peoples] (in Russian). Vol. 2. Moscow: Sovetskaya Entsiklopediya.
- Shnirelʹman, Viktor A. (1987). "The Rivalry for the Bulgar legacy". Who Gets the Past?: Competition for Ancestors Among Non-Russian Intellectuals in Russia. Woodrow Wilson Center Press. ISBN 9780801852213.
- Fine, John V. Antwerp (1991). The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 9780472081493.
- Golden, Peter Benjamin (1992). An introduction to the History of the Turkic peoples: ethnogenesis and state formation in medieval and early modern Eurasia and the Middle East. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz. ISBN 9783447032742.
- Olson, James S.; Pappas, Lee Brigance; Pappas, Nicholas Charles (1994). An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313274978.
- Bowersock, Glen; Brown, Peter; Grabar, Oleg (1999). Late Antiquity: A Guide to the Postclassical World. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674511736.
- Croke, Brian (2001). Count Marcellinus and His Chronicle. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198150015.
- Karatay, Osman (2003). In Search of the Lost Tribe: The Origins and Making of the Croatian Nation. Ayse Demiral. ISBN 9789756467077.
- Vásáry, István (2005). Cumans and Tatars: Oriental Military in the Pre-Ottoman Balkans, 1185–1365. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139444088.
- Curta, Florin (2006). Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521815390.
- Waldman, Carl; Mason, Catherine (2006). Encyclopedia of European Peoples. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 9781438129181.
- Brook, Kevin Alan (2006). The Jews of Khazaria. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 1442203021.
- Petkov, Kiril (2008). The Voices of Medieval Bulgaria, Seventh-Fifteenth Century: The Records of a Bygone Culture. Brill. ISBN 9789004168312.
- Fiedler, Uwe (2008). "Bulgars in the Lower Danube region: A survey of the archaeological evidence and of the state of current research". In Curta, Florin; Kovalev, Roman (eds.). The Other Europe in the Middle Ages: Avars, Bulgars, Khazars and Cumans. Brill. pp. 151–236. ISBN 9789004163898.
- Sophoulis, Panos (2011). Byzantium and Bulgaria, 775–831. Brill. ISBN 9789004206960. Archived from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
- Sedlar, Jean W. (2011). East Central Europe in the Middle Ages, 1000–1500. University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295800646.
- Golden, Peter B. (2011). Studies on the Peoples and Cultures of the Eurasian Steppes. Editura Academiei Române; Editura Istros a Muzeului Brăilei. ISBN 9789732721520.
- Chen, Sanping (2012). Multicultural China in the Early Middle Ages. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0812206289.
- Golden, Peter B. (2012), Oq and Oğur~Oğuz* (PDF), Turkish and Middle Eastern Studies, Rutgers University, archived from the original (PDF) on 19 April 2015, retrieved 13 April 2015
- Curta, Florin (2015). "Avar Blitzkrieg, Slavic and Bulgar raiders, and Roman special ops: mobile warriors in the 6th-century Balkans". In Zimonyi István; Osman Karatay (eds.). Eurasia in the Middle Ages. Studies in Honour of Peter B. Golden. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz. pp. 69–89.
- Lalueza-Fox, C.; Sampietro, M. L.; Gilbert, M. T. P.; Castri, L.; Facchini, F.; Pettener, D.; Bertranpetit, J. (2004). "Unravelling migrations in the steppe: Mitochondrial DNA sequences from ancient Central Asians". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 271 (1542): 941–647. doi:10.1098/rspb.2004.2698. PMC 1691686. PMID 15255049.
- Karachanak, S.; Grugni, V.; Fornarino, S.; Nesheva, D.; Al-Zahery, N.; Battaglia, V.; Carrosa, C.; Yordanov, Y.; Torroni, A.; Galabov, A.; Toncheva, D.; Semino, O. (2015). "Y-Chromosome Diversity in Modern Bulgarians: New Clues about Their Ancestry". PLOS ONE. 8 (3): e56779. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...856779K. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0056779. PMC 3590186. PMID 23483890.
- Zimonyi, István (1990). Klára Szõnyi-Sándor (ed.). The Origins of the Volga Bulghars. Studia Uralo-Altaica, 32.
Further reading
- Angelov, Dimitŭr (1971). Образуване на българската народност (in Bulgarian). Sofia: Nauka i Izkustvo, Vekove.
- Beshevliev, Veselin (1981). "Прабългарски епиграфски паметници". promacedonia.org (in Bulgarian). Sofia: Издателство на Отечествения фронт.
- Beshevliev, Veselin (1981). "Proto-Bulgarian Epigraphic Monuments (images)". protobulgarians.com (in Bulgarian). Sofia: Izd. na Otech. front.
- Dobrev, Petăr (2001). Nepoznatata drevna Bălgarija [The Unknown Ancient Bulgaria] (in Bulgarian). Sofia: Ivan Vazov Publishers. ISBN 954-604-121-1.
- Golden, Peter B. (2011). "Bulghārs". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online. ISSN 1873-9830.
- Karatay, Osman. "The Bulgars in Transoxiana: Some Inferences from Early Islamic Sources." Migracijske i etničke teme 1–2 (2009): 69–88.
- Stepanov, Tsvetelin (2010). The Bulgars and the Steppe Empire in the Early Middle Ages: The Problem of the Others. Brill. ISBN 9789004180017. Archived from the original on 30 July 2017. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
- Sanping, Chen. "Some remarks on the Chinese 'Bulgar'" (PDF).
External links
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Central Asian (i.e. Turkmeni, Afghani and Iranian) Turkmens, distinct from Levantine (i.e. Iraqi and Syrian) Turkmen/Turkoman minorities, who mostly adhere to an Ottoman-Turkish heritage and identity. In traditional areas of Turkish settlement (i.e. former Ottoman territories). |