Near East in 500 AD, showing the Sabirs and neighboring peoples.

The Sabirs (Savirs, Suars, Sawar, Sawirk among others; (Greek: Σάβιροι,[1]) were a nomadic Turkic equestrian people who lived in the north of the Caucasus beginning in the late-5th -7th century, on the eastern shores of the Black Sea, in the Kuban area,[2] and possibly came from Western Siberia.[3][4][5] They were skilled in warfare, used siege machinery,[6] had a large army (including women[7]) and were boat-builders.[8] They were also referred to as Huns, a title applied to various Eurasian nomadic tribes in the Pontic-Caspian Steppe during late antiquity. Sabirs led incursions into Transcaucasia in the late-400s/early-500s, but quickly began serving as soldiers and mercenaries during the Byzantine-Sasanian Wars on both sides. Their alliance with the Byzantines laid the basis for the later Khazar-Byzantine alliance.[9]

Etymology

Gyula Németh and Paul Pelliot considered Turkic etymology for Säbir / Sabïr / Sabar / Säβir / Sävir / Savar / Sävär / Sawār / Säwēr from the root *sap- 'to go astray', i.e. the 'wanderers, nomads', placed in a group of semantically similar names: Qazar, Qazaq, Yazar, and Qačar.[10][11][12] Al-Masudi recorded that the Khazars were named as such in Persian, while in Turkic it is Sabir, implying the same semantic meaning,[13] and related ethnogenesis.[14]

However, Golden notes that root *sap-'s aorist (ending in -ar) is sapar; according to Gerard Clauson, the meanings "to go astray, to deviate" of root sap- ~ sep- only appeared as new words in later medieval period.[lower-alpha 1] Golden suggests possible derivations (though still problematic) from other roots: sav- "to drive away, repulse, avoid, escape from", which fits better into the category of ethnonyms denoting nomads; or sipir- "to sweep, [...] to drive out, to send away", whose derivative would mean "those who sweep away [their foes]", even though the a/ä vocalization is unattested (unlike sipir- > süpür-).[16]

Walter Bruno Henning considered to have found them in the Sogdian Nafnamak (near Turpan) long after the 5th century.[10] Some scholars related their name to the name of Siberia (e.g. Harmatta), with a far-eastern Xianbei (e.g. Pritsak) and Finno-Ugric origin (e.g. Artamonov).[17][4][18][19] The ancient historians related and differed them from the Huns, implying their mixed descent.[20][21]

Byzantine documents normally refer to Sabirs as Sabiroi, although the Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos (908-959) writes in his De Administrando Imperio that he was told by a Hungarian delegation visiting his court that the Tourkoi (the Byzantine name for the Hungarians) used to be called "sabartoi asphaloi",[22] generally considered to mean "steadfast Sabirs", and still regularly sent delegations to those who stayed behind in the Caucasus region near Persia. Possibly some Hungarian group derived from the Sabirs as their name is reflected in Szavard, and personal clan name Zuard.[23][24]

History

In 463 AD, Priscus mentions that the Sabirs attacked the Saragurs, Oghurs and Onogurs, as a result of having themselves been attacked by the Avars.[25][26][27] It has been suggested that the nomadic motion began with the Chinese attack in 450-458 against the Rouran Khaganate.[28]

In 504 and 515, they held raids around the Caucasus, which was the Sasanian northern frontier during the rule of king Kavadh I, causing problems to the Persians in their war against the Byzantine Empire.[29] It has been proposed that the 20,000 Huns led by Zilgibis were Sabirs. They made treaties with both Justin I and Kavadh I, but decided for the former, which resulted with mutual agreement between Justin I and Kavadh I, and the former devastating attack on Zilgibis and his army.[30]

In 520s, the Queen Boareks, widow of the Sabir chieftain Balaq (Turkic balaq[23][31]) through Justinian I's diplomacy came closer to the Byzantines, and successfully attacked two Hunnic leaders Astera/Styrax (executed in Constantinople) and Aglanos/Glones (Sasanian ally).[32][33] She ruled over 100,000 people, and could field 20,000 strong-men army.[7] At the Battle of Satala (530), a mixed Persian army led by Mihr-Mihroe consisted of circa three thousand Sabirs.[34] In December 531, many Sabirs were summoned by the Persians to plunder around Euphratesia, Cyrrhus, Cilicia, but some of the booty had been returned by the Roman magister militum.[35]

During the Lazic War (541–562), in 548, along with the Alans they allied with Gubazes II of Lazica and conquered the Petra from the Persians.[36] In 551, some Sabirs were allied to Bessas in the successful attempt to wrest Petra from the Persians, meanwhile, other four thousand led by Mihr-Mihroe were part of the unsuccessful siege of Archaeopolis.[37] In 556, two thousand Sabirs served as heavy infantry mercenaries of the Byzantine Empire against the Sasanian Empire. They were led by Balmaq (Turkic barmaq, "finger" [38]), Kutilzis (Turkic *qut-il-či, with qut meaning "majesty") and Iliger (Turkic Ilig-ār, "prince-man").[39][40] They won against the three thousand Dilimnites near Archaeopolis. Eight hundred Dilimnites were killed in a failed rush.[41][42] In the same year, some five thousand Sabirs allied to the Persians were killed by three thousand Roman horsemen.[43][44]

As part of the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 572–591, in 572–573, Sabirs lost as part of the Sasanian mixed army against the Marcian near Nisibis.[45] In 578, some eight thousand Sabirs and Arab allies were on the side of the Persians, and raided territory around Resaena and Constantia.[46]

The Syriac translation of the Pseudo-Zacharias Rhetor's Ecclesiastical History (c. 555) in Western Eurasia recorded thirteen tribes, including the sbr (Sabir). 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)".[47]

The Armenian and Arabic sources placed them in the North Caucasus, near Laks, Alans, Filān, Masqat, Sāhib as-Sarīr and the Khazar town Samandar. By the late 6th century, the coming of the Pannonian Avars into Europe terminated the Sabir union in North Caucasus.[9][33] According to Theophylact Simocatta, when the Barsils, Onogurs and Sabirs saw the invading Uar and Chunni they panicked because thought the invaders were the Avars. Menander Protector placed the events between 558 and 560.[48] He mentioned them last time in connection with the Byzantine conquest in Caucasian Albania during the reign of Tiberius II Constantine (578–582),[33] but the large sums were not enough to stop them to rejoin the Persians.[30]

They were assimilated into the Khazars and Bulgars confederations.[49] The tribe Suwāz in Volga Bulgaria is related to the city Suwār in the same state, and North Caucasian kingdom Suwār. However, it is uncertain whether these Suwār i.e. Sawâr are the Sabirs who gone to the North Caucasus and after 558 retreated to the Volga, came there as the result of the Khazar state creation, or were tribes who never went to the North Caucasus, but stopped on the Volga.[50][51] Ahmad ibn Fadlan recorded that in the 10th century they still had own leader with the title Wirgh (*Vuyrigh, Turkic Buyruq), and there were some Suwār-Bulghar hostilities.[51]

There is no reliable information supporting the view of Mikhail Artamonov, who has claimed the intermixing of the Sabirs and Khazars was facilitated by their common Bulgar ethnicity, or that they were Turkicized Ugrians.[52] Károly Czeglédy considered that the Khazar state was composed of three basic groups, including the Sabirs.[53] Dieter Ludwig suggested that the Khazars were Sabirs who had formed an alliance with the Uar of Khwarezm.[54] The intimate ties between the Hungarians and the Sabirs led Lev Gumilev to speculate that rather than Oghuric they may have been Ugric speakers (both terms being of the same etymological origin).[55] Al-Biruni remarked that the language of the Volga Bulgars and Sawârs was "compounded of Turkic and Khazar", while modern scholars like Gyula Németh, Lajos Ligeti and Peter Benjamin Golden consider that the Sabirs spoke standard Turkic rather than Oghuric Turkic.[50][4]

Legacy

A number of Caucasian toponyms derive from their name; Šaberan, Samir, Samirkent, Sabir-xost, Sibir-don, Sivir-don, Savir, Bila-suvar, Sebir-oba, Sevare, Suvar,[23] and as well as the subdivisions Sabar and Sabur/Sabïr of the Kyrgyzes.[56] Etymology of Chuvash is unknown and popular theory accepted by Chuvash people suggests that Chuvash is a Shaz-Turkic adaptation of Lir-Turkic Suvar (Sabir people), an ethnonym of people that are widely considered to be the ancestors of modern Chuvash people.[57] Chuvash historians postulate that their nation is descended from Sabirs.[55] In the Mari language modern Volga Tatars are called Suas; Chuvash also are known as Suasenmari (which means Suar-icized Mari), or in Finnish Suaslanmari.[58]

Chieftains

  • Balaq (Turkic balaq, 'child, boy',[23] 'young of an animal')[31]
  • Boa/Boarez/Boareks[59] - Sabir queen, widow of Balaq[38][33]
  • Balmaq/Barmaq (Turkic barmaq, 'finger')[38]
  • Iliger (Turkic 'prince-man')[38]
  • Kutilzis (Turkic qut-ilči/elči, 'heavenly good fortune' – 'majesty')[60][31]

See also

Notes

  1. As for the earliest attested meanings, sep- meant "to repair (something broken)" in Old Turkic and "to equip, fit out" in Old Uyghur and sap- meant "to instil, graft" in Old Uyghur[15]

References

  1. Golden 1980, p. 256.
  2. Maenchen-Helfen 1973, p. 432.
  3. Sinor 1990, p. 200–201.
  4. 1 2 3 Golden 1992, p. 104.
  5. Golden 2011, p. 146.
  6. Golden 2011, p. 112.
  7. 1 2 Golden 2011, p. 91.
  8. Golden 2011, p. 113:In the 559 siege of Thracian Chersonese they fashioned small boats
  9. 1 2 Golden 1980, p. 35.
  10. 1 2 Maenchen-Helfen 1973, p. 440.
  11. Golden 1980, p. 127.
  12. Golden 2011, p. 147.
  13. Golden 1980, p. 36, 133.
  14. Golden 2011, p. 146, 149–151, 225.
  15. Clauson 1972, p. 784.
  16. Golden 2013, p. 54-55.
  17. Golden 1980, p. 35, 257.
  18. Zimonyi 2015, p. 246.
  19. Christian, David. A History of Russia, Central Asia and Mongolia. Blackwell Publishing, 1998. Page 279.
  20. Sinor 1990, p. 200.
  21. Bell-Fialkoff, Andrew (2016), The Role of Migration in the History of the Eurasian Steppe: Sedentary Civilization vs. 'Barbarian' and Nomad, Palgrave Macmillan US, pp. 231–232, ISBN 978-1-349-61837-8
  22. Sinor 1990, p. 243.
  23. 1 2 3 4 Golden 1980, p. 257.
  24. Sinor 1990, p. 243, 246.
  25. Maenchen-Helfen 1973, p. 436.
  26. Golden 1992, p. 92–93, 97.
  27. Golden 2011, p. 70, 138.
  28. Zimonyi 2015, p. 246–247.
  29. Greatrex & Lieu 2007, p. 78.
  30. 1 2 Golden 2011, p. 87.
  31. 1 2 3 Golden 1992, p. 105.
  32. Maenchen-Helfen 1973, p. 391.
  33. 1 2 3 4 Golden 1992, p. 106.
  34. Greatrex & Lieu 2007, p. 91.
  35. Greatrex & Lieu 2007, p. 95–96.
  36. Greatrex & Lieu 2007, p. 117–118.
  37. Greatrex & Lieu 2007, p. 118–119.
  38. 1 2 3 4 Golden 1980, p. 258.
  39. Agathias 1975, p. 87.
  40. Maenchen-Helfen 1973, p. 409, 414.
  41. Agathias 1975, p. 87–88.
  42. Greatrex & Lieu 2007, p. 121.
  43. Agathias 1975, p. 115.
  44. Greatrex & Lieu 2007, p. 122.
  45. Greatrex & Lieu 2007, p. 150.
  46. Greatrex & Lieu 2007, p. 160.
  47. Golden 1992, p. 97.
  48. Zimonyi 2015, p. 250.
  49. Zhivkov 2015, p. 38, 138.
  50. 1 2 Golden 1980, p. 36, 87.
  51. 1 2 Sinor 1990, p. 236.
  52. Zhivkov 2015, p. 26, 36–38.
  53. Golden 1980, p. 53.
  54. Struktur und Gesellschaft, D. Ludwig, 1982)
  55. 1 2 "Suarlar/Суарлар". Tatar Encyclopaedia (in Tatar). Kazan: The Republic of Tatarstan Academy of Sciences. Institution of the Tatar Encyclopaedia. 2002.
  56. Golden 2013, p. 51, note 18.
  57. Salmin, Anton K. "The History of the Chuvash People in Ethnographic Facts" (PDF). Journal Tourism Studies & Practices (RTEP) (2: Geplat: Caderno Suplementar): 1–2. ISSN 2316-1493.
  58. Eero Kuussaari: Suomen Suvun Tiet (Helsinki 1935)
  59. Evan Michael Schultheis (30 January 2019). The Battle of the Catalaunian Fields AD 451: Flavius Aetius, Attila the Hun and the Transformation of Gaul. Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1526745668.
  60. Golden 1980, p. 258–259.

Sources

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