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Tmutarakan

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Tmutarakan' is an ancient city that controlled the passage from the Black Sea to the Sea of Azov. It was situated on the Taman peninsula, in the present-day Krasnodar Krai of Russia.

Having originated as the Khazarian fortress Tamatarkha in the 8th century, the city was conquered by Svyatoslav of Rus in the mid-10th century. Fortified with a strong brick wall and boasting a fine harbour, Tmutarakan was a large city of merchants. It controlled much of the Northern European trade with the Byzantine Empire and Northern Caucasus. The inhabitants included the Greeks, Armenians, Russians, Jews, Ossetians, and Cirkassians.

A Khazar principality is known to have existed in the Taman region during the 980's, but whether this polity included the city of Tmutarakan is unknown.

One of the sons of Vladimir the Great, called Mstislav, was the prince of Tmutarakan from 988 to 1036. During his reign, a first stone church was dedicated to Madonna, the ruins of it being still visible. In the 12th century, the city was isolated from the Russian mainland by the Cumans and gradually declined.

The site of Tmutarakan was discovered in 1792, when the local peasants found a stone with an inscription stating that Prince Gleb had measured the sea from here to Kerch in 1068. The excavations of the site were conducted in the 19th century. In modern Russian language, Tmutarakan stands for "a distant and obscure province".

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