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KHAZARS (known also as Chozars, as ' See also: ancient See also: people who occupied a prominent place amongst the secondary See also: powers of the See also: Byzantine See also: state-See also: system
.
In the epic of Firdousi Khazar is the representative name for all the See also: northern foes of See also: Persia, and legendary invasions long before the Christian era are vaguely attributed to them
.
But the Khazars are an historic figure upon the borderland of See also: Europe and See also: Asia for at least 900 years (A.D
.
190-1100)
.
The epoch of their greatness is from A.D
.
600 to 950
.
Their home was in the spurs of the See also: Caucasus and along the shores of the Caspian—called by See also: medieval Moslem geographers See also: Bahr-al-Khazar (" See also: sea of the Khazars ") ; their cities, all populous and civilized commercial centres, were Itil, the capital, upon the See also: delta of the Volga, the " See also: river of the Khazars," Semender(Tarkhu), the older capital, Khamlidje or Khalendsch, Belendscher, the outpost towards Armenia, and Sarkel on the See also: Don
.
They were the Venetians of the See also: Caspian and the Euxine, the organizers of the transit between the two basins, the universal See also: carriers between See also: East and West; and Itil was the meeting-place of the commerce of Persia, See also: Byzantium, Armenia, See also: Russia and the Bulgarians of the See also: middle Volga
.
The See also: tide of their dominion ebbed and flowed repeatedly, but the normal Khazari may be taken as the territory between the Caucasus, the Volga and the Don, with the outlying province of the See also: Crimea, or Little Khazaria
.
The See also: southern boundary never greatly altered; it did at times reach the Kur and the See also: Aras, but on that See also: side the Khazars were confronted by Byzantium and Persia, and were for the most See also: part restrained within the passes of the Caucasus by the fortifications of Dariel
.
Amongst the nomadic Ugrians and agricultural Slays of the See also: north their frontier fluctuated widely, and in its See also: zenith Khazaria extended from the See also: Dnieper to See also: Bolgari upon the middle Volga, and along the eastern See also: shore of the Caspian to See also: Astarabad
.
See also: Ethnology.—The origin of the Khazars has been much disputed, and they have been variously regarded as akin to the Georgians, Finno-Ugrians and See also: Turks
.
This last view is perhaps the roost probable . Their See also: king
See also: Joseph, in answer to the inquiry of Hasdai See also: Ibn Shaprut of Cordova (c
.
958), stated that his people sprang from Thogarmah, See also: grandson of Japhet, and the supposed ancestor of the other peoples of the Caucasus
.
The Arab geographers who knew the Khazars best connect them either with the Georgians (Ibn Athir) or with the Armenians (Dimishqi, ed
.
Mehren, p
.
263) ; whilst Abmad ibn Fadlan, who passed through Khazaria on a See also: mission from the See also: caliph Mogtadir (A.D
.
921), positively asserts that the Khazar See also: tongue differed not only from the See also: Turkish, but from that of the bordering nations, which were Ugrian
.
Nevertheless there are many points connected with the Khazars which indicate a close connexion with Ugrian or Turkish peoples
.
The official titles recorded by Ibn Fadlan are those in use amongst the Tatar nations of that age, whether See also: Huns, Bulgarians, Turks or See also: Mongols
.
The names of their cities can be explained only by reference to Turkish or Ugrian dialects (Klaproth, Mem. sur See also: les Khazars; Howorth, Khazars)
.
Some too amongst the medieval authorities (Ibn Haugal and Istakhri) note a resemblance between the speech in use amongst the Khazars and the Bulgarians; and the See also: modern Magyar—a Ugrian language—can be traced back to a tribe which in the 9th century formed part of the Khazar See also: kingdom
.
These characteristics, however, are accounted for by the fact that the Khazars were at one See also: time subject to the Huns (A.D
.
448 et seq.), at another to the Turks (c . 58o), which would sufficiently explain the signs of Tatar influence in their polity, and also by the testimony of all observers, Greeks,See also: Arabs and Russians, that there was a See also: double strain within the Khazar nation
.
There were Khazars and Kara (black) Khazars
.
The Khazars were See also: fair-skinned, black-haired and of a remarkable beauty and stature; their See also: women indeed were sought as wives equally at Byzantium and' See also: Bagdad; while the Kara Khazars were ugly, See also: short, and were reported by the Arabs almost as dark as See also: Indians
.
The latter were indubitably the Ugrian nomads of the steppe, akin to the Tatar invaders of Europe, who filled the armies and convoyed the caravans of the ruling caste
.
But the Khazars proper were a civic commercial people, the founders of cities, remarkable for somewhat elaborate See also: political institutions, for persistence and for See also: good faith—all qualities See also: foreign to the Hunnic character
.
They have been identified with the 'A c&r"ipoi (perhaps Ak-Khazari, or See also: White Khazars) who appear upon the
See also: lower Volga in the Byzantine See also: annals, and thence they have been deduced, though with less convincing proof, either from the 'Ay i0vpeor (See also: Agathyrsi) or the Karlapor of See also: Herodotus, iv
.
104
.
There was throughout historic times a close connexion which eventually amounted to political identity between the Khazars and the Barsileens (the Passils of Moses of Chorene) who occupied the delta of the Volga; and the Barsileens can be traced through the pages of See also: Ptolemy (Geog. v
.
9), of See also: Pliny (iv
.
26), of See also: Strabo (vii
.
306), and of See also: Pomponius See also: Mela (ii. c
.
1, p . 119) to the so-called Royal Scyths, EsiOai tiae+a$es, who were known to the See also: Greek colonies upon the Euxine, and whose political superiority and commercial enterprise led to this rendering of their name
.
Such points, however, need not here be further pursued than to establish the presence of this white See also: race around the Caspian and the Euxine throughout historic times
.
They appear in See also: European See also: history as White Huns (See also: Ephthalites.), White
.
Ugrians (Sar-ogours), White Bulgarians
.
Owing to See also: climatic causes the See also: tract they occupied was slowly drying up
.
They were the outposts of See also: civilization towards the encroaching See also: desert, and the Tatar nomadism that advanced with it
.
They held in See also: precarious subjection the hordes whom the conditions of the See also: climate and the See also: soil made it impossible to supplant
.
They See also: bore the brunt of each of the See also: great waves of Tatar conquests, and were eventually overwhelmed
.
History.—Amidst this white race of the steppe the Khazars can important was this See also: traffic held at Constantinople that, when the be first historically distinguished at the end of the 2nd century A.D
.
They burst into Armenia with the Barsileens, A.D
.
198
.
They were repulsed and attacked in turn . The pressure of the nomads of the steppe, the quest of See also: plunder or revenge, these seem the only motives of these early expeditions; but in the long struggle between the See also: Roman and Persian empires, of which Armenia was often the battlefield, and eventually the, prize, the attitude of the Khazars assumed political importance
.
Armenia inclined to the civilization and ere long to the See also: Christianity of See also: Rome, whilst her Arsacid princes maintained an inveterate See also: feud with the Sassanids of Persia
.
It became therefore the policy of the Persian See also: kings to See also: call in the Khazars in every collision with the See also: empire (200-35o)
.
During the 4th century however, the growing power of Persia culminated in the annexation of eastern Armenia
.
The Khazars, endangered by so powerful a neighbour, passed from under Persian influence into that remote See also: alliance with Byzantium which thenceforth characterized their policy, and they aided Julian in his invasion of Persia (363)
.
Simultaneously with the approach of Persia to the Caucasus the terrible empire of the Huns sprang up among the Ugrians of the northern See also: steppes
.
The Khazars, straitened on every side, remained passive till the danger culminated in the accession of See also: Attila (434)
.
The emperor See also: Theodosius sent envoys to bribe the Khazars ('AKarrLpoc) to divert the Huns from the empire by an attack upon their flank
.
But there was a Hunnic party amongst the Khazar chiefs
.
The design was betrayed to Attila ; and he extinguished the independence of the nation in a moment
.
Khazaria became the apanage of his eldest son, and the centre of See also: government amongst the eastern subjects of the Hun (448)
.
Even the ironSee also: rule of Attila was prefer-able to the time of anarchy that succeeded it
.
Upon his See also: death (454) the See also: wild immigration which he had arrested revived
.
The Khazars and the Sarogours (i.e
.
White Ogors, possibly the Barsileens of the Volga delta) were swept along in a See also: flood of mixed Tatar peoples which the conquests of the See also: Avars had set in motion
.
The Khazars and their companions broke through the Persian defences of the Caucasus
.
They appropriated the territory up to the Kur and the Aras, and roamed at large through Iberia, See also: Georgia and Armenia
.
The Persian king implored the emperor See also: Leo I. to help him defend Asia Minor at the Caucasus (457), but Rome was herself too hard pressed, nor was it for fifty years that the Khazars were driven back and the pass of See also: Derbent fortified against them (c
.
507)
.
Throughout the 6th century Khazaria was the See also: mere See also: highway for the wild hordes to whom the Huns had opened the passage into Europe, and the Khazars took See also: refuge (like the Venetians from Attila) amongst the seventy mouths of the Volga
.
The pressure of the Turks in Asia precipitated the Avars upon the West
.
The conquering Turks followed in their footsteps (560-580)
.
They beat down all opposition, wrested even Bosporus in the Crimea from the empire, and by the annihilation of the Ephthalites completed the ruin of the White Race of the plains from the See also: Oxus to the Don
.
The empires of Turks and Avars, however, ran swiftly their barbaric course, and the Khazars arose out of the See also: chaos to more than their ancient renown
.
They issued from the See also: land of Barsilia, and extended their rule over the Bulgarian hordes See also: left masterless by the Turks, compelling the more stubborn to migrate to the Danube (641)
.
The agricultural Slays of the Dnieper and the Oka were reduced to tribute, and before the end of the 7th century the Khazars had annexed the Crimea, had won See also: complete command of the Sea of See also: Azov, and, seizing upon the narrow neck which separates the Volga from the Don, had organized the See also: portage which has continued since an important See also: link in the traffic between Asia and Europe
.
The alliance with Byzantium was revived
.
Simultaneously, and no doubt in concert, with the Byzantine See also: campaign against Persia (589), the Khazars had reappeared in Armenia, though it was not till 625 that they appear as Khazars in the Byzantine annals
.
They are then described as " Turks from the East," a powerful nation which held the coasts of the Caspian and the Euxine, and took tribute of the Viatitsh, the Severians and the Polyane
.
The khakan, enticed by the promise of an imperial princess, furnished See also: Heraclius with 40,000 men for his Persian war, who shared in the victory over See also: Chosroes at See also: Nineveh
.
Meanwhile the Moslem empire had arisen
.
The Persian empire was struck down (637). and the Moslems poured into Armenia
.
The khakan, who had defied the summons sent him by the invaders, now aided the Byzantine patrician in the defence of Armenia
.
The See also: allies were defeated, and the Moslems undertook the subjugation of Khazaria (651)
.
Eighty years of warfare followed, but in the end the Moslems prevailed
.
The khakan and his chieftains were captured and compelled to embrace See also: Islam (737), and till the decay of the See also: Mahommedan empire Khazaria with all the other countries of the Caucasus paid an See also: annual tribute of See also: children and of corn (737-861)
.
Nevertheless, though overpowered in the end, the Khazars had protected the plains of Europe from the Mahommedans, and made the Caucasus the limit of their conquests
.
In the See also: interval between the decline of the Mahommedan empire and the rise of Russia the Khazars reached the zenith of their power
.
The merchants of Byzantium, Armenia and Bagdad met in the markets of hi] (whither since the raids of the Mahommedans the capital had been transferred from Semender), and traded for the See also: wax, furs, See also: leather and honey that came down the Volga
.
So
portage to the Don was endangered by the irruption of a fresh See also: horde of Turks (the See also: Petchenegs), the emperor See also: Theophilus himself despatched the materials and the workmen to build for the Khazars a fortress impregnable to their forays (834)
.
Famous as the one See also: stone structure is in that stoneless region, the
See also: post became known far and wide amongst the hordes of the steppe as Sar-kel or the White Abode
.
Merchants from every nation found See also: protection and good faith in the Khazar cities
.
The Jews, expelled from Constantinople, sought a home amongst them, See also: developed the Khazar See also: trade, and contended with Mahommedans and Christians for the theological allegiance of the See also: Pagan people
.
The dynasty accepted Judaism (c
.
740), but there was equal tolerance for all, and each See also: man was held amenable to the authorized See also: code and to the official See also: judges of his own faith
.
At the Byzantine See also: court the khakan was held in high honour
.
The emperor Justinian Rhinotmetus took refuge with him during his exile and married his daughter (702)
.
Justinian's See also: rival See also: Vardanes in turn sought an See also: asylum in Khazaria, and in Leo IV
.
(775) the grandson of a Khazar See also: sovereign ascended the Byzantine See also: throne
.
Khazar troops were amongst the bodyguard of the imperial court; they fought for Leo VI. against Simeon of See also: Bulgaria; and the khakan was honoured in See also: diplomatic intercourse with the See also: seal of three solidi, which marked him as a potentate of the first See also: rank, above even the See also: pope and the Carolingian monarchs
.
Indeed his dominion became an See also: object of uneasiness to the jealous statecraft of Byzantium, and See also: Constantine Porphyrogenitus, writing for his son's instruction in the government, carefully enumerates the Alans, the Petchenegs, the See also: Uzes and the Bulgarians as the forces he must rely on to restrain it
.
It was, however, from a power that Constantine did not consider that the overthrow of the Khazars came
.
The arrival of the Varangians amidst the scattered Slays (862) had See also: united them into a nation
.
The advance of the Petchenegs from the East gave the Russians their opportunity
.
Before the onset of those fierce invaders the precarious See also: suzerainty of the khakan broke up
.
By calling in the Uzes, the Khazars did indeed dislodge the Petchenegs from the position they had seized in the See also: heart of the kingdom between the Volga and the Don, but only to drive them inwards to the Dnieper
.
The Hungarians, severed from their kindred and their rulers, migrated to the Carpathians, whilst See also: Oleg, the Russ See also: prince of See also: Kiev, passed through the Slav tribes of the Dnieper See also: basin with the cry " Pay nothing to the Khazars " (884)
.
The kingdom dwindled rapidly to its ancient limits between the Caucasus, the Volga and the Don, whilst the See also: Russian traders of Novgorod and Kiev supplanted the Khazars as the carriers between Constantinople and the North
.
When Ibn Fadlan visited Khazaria See also: forty years later, Itil was even yet a great city, with See also: baths and market-places and See also: thirty mosques
.
But there was no domestic product nor manufacture; the kingdom depended solely upon the now precarious transit dues, and administration was in the hands pf a major domus also called khakan . At the assault of Swiatoslav of Kiev the rotten fabric crumbled into dust . His troops were equally at home on land andSee also: water
.
Sarkel, Itil and Semender surrendered to him (965-969)
.
He pushed his conquests to the Caucasus, and established Russian colonies upon the Sea of Azov
.
The principality of Tmutarakan, founded by his grandson Mstislav (988), replaced the kingdom of Khazaria, the last trace of which was extinguished by a joint expedition of Russians and Byzantines (1016)
.
The last of the khakans, See also: George, Tzula, was taken prisoner
.
A remnant of the nation took refuge in an See also: island of the Caspian (Siahcouye) ; others retired to the Caucasus; part emigrated to the See also: district of Kasakhi in Georgia, and appear for the last time joining with Georgia in her successful effort to throw off the yoke of the Seljuk Turks (1089)
.
But the name is thought to survive in Kadzaria, the Georgian title for See also: Mingrelia, and in Kadzaro, the Turkish word for the Lazis
.
Till the 13th century the Crimea was known to European travellers as Gazaria ; the " ram-parts of the Khazars " are still distinguished in the See also: Ukraine; and the record of their dominion survives in the names of Kazarek, Kazaritshi, Kazarinovod, Kozar-owka, Kozari, and perhaps in Kazan
.
AuTnoRITIEs.—Khazar: The letter of King Joseph to R
.
Hasdai Ibn Shaprut, first published by J
.
Akrish, Kol Mebasser (Constantinople, 1577), and often reprinted in See also: editions of Jehuda See also: hal-See also: Levy's Kuzari
.
See also: German See also: translations by Zedner (Berlin, 1840) and See also: Cassel, Magyar
.
Alterth
.
(Berlin, 1848) ; French by Carmoly, Rev
.
Or
.
(1841)
.
Cf
.
Harkavy, Russische Revue, iv
.
69; See also: Graetz, Geschichte, v
.
364, and Carmoly, Itineraires de la Terre Sainte (Brussels, 1847)
.
Armenian: Moses of Chorene; cf
.
See also: Saint-See also: Martin, Memoires historiques et geographiques sur l'Armenie (
See also: Paris, 1818)
.
Arabic: The account of Ibn Fadlan (921) is preserved by Yakut, ii . 436 seq . See also Isiiakhry (ed. de Geoje, pp . 220 seq.), Mas`udy, ch. xvii. pp . 406 seq. ofSee also: Sprenger's See also: translation; Ibn Haukal (ed. de See also: Goeje, pp
.
279 seq.) and the histories of Ibn el Athir and Tabary
.
Much of the Arabic material has been collected and translated by Fraehn, " Veteres Memoria, Chasarorum " in Mein. de St Pet
.
(1822) ; Dorn (from the Persian Tabary), Mena de St Pet
.
(1844); Dufremery, Journ
.
As
.
(1849)
.
See also D'Ohsson's imaginary Voyage d'Abul Cassim, based on these See also: sources
.
Byzantine Historians: The relative passages are collected in Stritter's Memoriae populorum (St See also: Petersburg, 1778)
.
Russian : The See also: Chronicle ascribed to See also: Nestor
.
Modern: Klaproth, " Mem. sur les Khazars," in Journ
.
As. i st series, vol. iii
.
; id., Tableaux hist. de l'Asie (Paris, 1823) ; id., Tab?. hist. de Caucases (1827); See also: memoirs on the Khazars by Harkavy and by Howorth (Congres intern. See also: des Orientalistes, vol. ii.) ; Latham, Russian and Turk, pp
.
209—217; Vivien St Martin, Etudes de geog. ancienne (Paris, 1850) ; id., Recherches sur les populations du Caucase (1847); id., " Sur les Khazars," in Nouvelles See also: ann. des voyages (1857) ; D'Ohsson, Peuples du Caucase (Paris, 1828) ; S
.
Krauss, " Zur Geschichte der Chazaren," in Revue orientale pour les etudes Ourals-altaiques (1900)
.
(P
.
L
.
G.; C
.
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