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Bulgars

The Bulgars (also Bulghars, Bulgari, Bolgars, Bolghars, Bolgari,[1] Proto-Bulgarians[2]) were Turkic semi-nomadic warrior tribes that flourished in the Pontic–Caspian steppe and the Volga region during the 7th century. They became known as nomadic equestrians in the Volga-Ural region, but some researchers say that their ethnic roots can be traced to Central Asia.[3] During their westward migration across the Eurasian steppe, the Bulgar tribes absorbed other tribal groups and cultural influences in a process of ethnogenesis, including Iranian, Finnic and Hunnic tribes.[4][5][6][7][8][9] Modern genetic research on Central Asian Turkic people and ethnic groups related to the Bulgars points to an affiliation with Western Eurasian populations.[9][10] The Bulgars spoke a Turkic language, i.e. Bulgar language of Oghuric branch.[11] They preserved the military titles, organization and customs of Eurasian steppes,[12] as well as pagan shamanism and belief in the sky deity Tangra.[13]

Bulgars led by Khan Krum pursue the Byzantines at the Battle of Versinikia (813)

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 c. 679, 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,[14][15] as well as with previously settled Slavic tribes, and were eventually Slavicized, thus forming the ancestors of modern Bulgarians.[16]

The remaining Pontic Bulgars migrated in the 7th century to the Volga River, where they founded the Volga Bulgaria; they preserved their identity well into the 13th century.[11] The modern Volga Tatars and Chuvash people claim to have originated from the Volga Bulgars.[11][17]

Etymology and origin

The etymology of the ethnonym Bulgar is not completely understood and difficult to trace back earlier than the 4th century AD.[18][19] Since the work of Wilhelm Tomaschek (1873),[20] it is generally said to be derived from Proto-Turkic root *bulga-[21] ("to stir", "to mix"; "to become mixed"), which with the consonant suffix -r implies a noun meaning "mixed".[22][23] Other scholars have added that bulğa might also imply "stir", "disturb", "confuse"[24][25][26] and Talat Tekin interpreted bulgar as the verb form "mixing" (i.e. rather than the adjective "mixed").[20] Both Gyula Németh and Peter Benjamin Golden initially advocated the "mixed race" theory, but later, like Paul Pelliot,[27] considered that "to incite", "rebel", or "to produce a state of disorder", i.e. the "disturbers",[28][29][30][25] was a more likely etymology for migrating nomads.[30][25]

According to Osman Karatay,[who?] 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.[31] 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".[32] Peter A. Boodberg noted that the Buluoji in the Chinese sources were recorded as remnants of the Xiongnu confederation,[33] and had strong Caucasian elements.[34]

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.[35][36] The Pugu were mentioned in Chinese sources from 103 BC up to the 8th century AD,[36] and later were situated among the eastern Tiele tribes, as one of the highest-ranking tribes after the Uyghurs.[35] 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).[37]

The names Onoğur and Bulgar were linked by later Byzantine sources for reasons that are unclear.[38][24][25]Tekin derived -gur from the Altaic suffix -gir.[39] 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".[40] The terms initially were not the same, as oq/ogsiz meant "arrow",[41] while oğul meant "offspring, child, son", oğuš/uğuš was "tribe, clan", and the verb oğša-/oqša meant "to be like, resemble".[40]

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[vague][further explanation needed].[20] 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.[42][43] He noted, however, an implication that the Kutrigurs and Utigurs were related to the Šarağur (šara oğur, shara oghur; "white oğhurs"),[44] and that according to Procopius these were Hunnish tribal unions, of partly Cimmerian descent.[42][36] 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.[45]

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;[27]
  • the Latin burgaroi – a Roman term mercenaries stationed in burgi ("forts") on the limes (G. A. Keramopulos);[27]
  • a reconstructed but unattested early Turkic term meaning "five oğhur", such as *bel-gur or *bil-gur (Zeki Velidi Togan).[46]

History

Turkic migration

The origin 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.[38]

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.[30] 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.[38] An obscure reference to Ziezi ex quo Vulgares, with Ziezi being an offspring of Biblical Shem, is in the Chronography of 354.[38][24]

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.[36]

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.[47] According to Priscus, in 463 the representatives of Šarağur, Oğur and Onoğur came to the Emperor in Constantinople,[48] and explained they had been driven out of their homeland by the Sabirs, who had been attacked by the Avars.[49] This tangle of events indicates that the Oğuric tribes are related to the Ting-ling and Tiele people.[50] It seems that Kutrigurs and Unigurs arrived with the initial waves of Oğuric peoples entering the Pontic steppes.[42] The Bulgars were not mentioned in 463.[24]

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.[36] Scholars attribute this account to the Huns,[51][52] Avars[52] or some Bulgar groups were probably carried away by the Huns to the Central Europe.[36][52] The Lombards, led by their new king Laimicho, rose up and defeated the Bulgars with great slaughter,[53] gaining great booty and confidence as they "became bolder in undertaking the toils of war."[54] The defeated Bulgars then became subjects of the Lombards and later migrated in Italy with their king Alboin.[55] 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.[56] The Bulgars were eventually defeated by Strabo in 480/481.[56] In 486 and 488 they fought against the Goths again, first as allies of the Byzantium, according to Magnus Felix Ennodius,[36] and later as allies of the Gepids, according to Paul the Deacon.[36] However, when Theoderic the Great with Ostrogoths parted for Italy in 489, the Illyricum and Thrace were open for Bulgar raids.[57]

In 493, according to Marcellinus Comes, they defeated and killed magister militum Julian.[57] In 499, crossed Danube and reached Thrace where on the banks of the river Tzurta (considered a tributary of Maritsa[58]) defeated 15,000 men strong Roman army led by magister militum Aristus.[59][60] In 502, Bulgars again devastated Thrace as reportedly there were no Roman soldiers to oppose them.[57][60] In 528–529 again invaded the region and defeated Roman generals Justin and Baduarius.[61] However, Gothic general, Mundus, offered allegiance to the Emperor Justinian I (527–565) in 530, and managed to kill 5,000 Bulgars plundering Thrace.[57] John Malalas recorded that in the battle was captured Bulgar warlord.[60] In 535, magister militum Sittas defeated the Bulgar army at the river Yantra.[60]

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".[62] In 505, the alleged 10,000 Hun horsemen in the Sabinian army, which was defeated by the Ostrogoths, are believed to be the Bulgars.[63] In 515, Bulgar mercenaries were listed along with others from the Goths, Scythians and Hunnic tribes as part of the Vitalian army.[64] In 539, two Hunnic "kinglets" defeated two Roman generals during the raid into Scythia Minor and Moesia.[65] A Roman army led by magister militum Ascum and Constantiolus intercepted and defeated them in Thrace, however, another raiding party ambushed and captured two Roman generals.[66] In 539 and 540, Procopius reported a powerful Hunnic army crossed the Danube, devastated Illyricum and reached up to the Anastasian Wall.[66] Such large distances covered in short time indicate they were horsemen.[66]

Jordanes described, in his work Getica (551), the Pontic steppe beyond the Acatziri, 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.[36][67][68] In the Middle Ages, marten skin was used as a substitute for minted money.[69]

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 (Saragur), 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)".[36][70]

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.[68]

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,[71] 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.[36]

By the middle of the 6th century, the Bulgars momentarily fade from the sources and the Kutrigurs and Utigurs come to the front.[30] 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.[72]

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.[73] 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-).[74]

Scholars consider it unclear how this union came about, viewing it as a long process in which a number of different groups were merged.[75][25] During that time, the Bulgars may have represented a large confederation including the remnants of Onoğurs, Utigurs and Kutrigurs among others.[76]

Old Great Bulgaria

 
The migration of the Bulgars after the fall of Old Great Bulgaria in the 7th century.

The Turk rule weakened sometime after 600, allowing the Avars to reestablish the control over the region.[24][71] 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.[24][75][77] 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.[78][24][71][79] He founded the Old Great Bulgaria (Magna Bulgaria[80]), also known as Onoğundur–Bulğars state, or Patria Onoguria in the Ravenna Cosmography.[81][71][36]

Little is known about Kubrat's activities. It is considered that Onogur Bulgars remained the only steppe tribes in good relations with the Byzantines.[80] His date of death is placed between 650 and 663 AD.[82] 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".[81][77]

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.[83][77] 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.[84][71] The Khazars were ultimately victorious and parts of the Bulgar union broke up.[24]

Subsequent migrations

 
Map of the Bulgar necropolises on the Lower Danube (8–9 century AD.)

It is unclear whether the parting ways by brothers was caused by the internal conflicts or strong Khazar pressure.[81][77] The latter is considered more likely.[77] 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.[85][24][86] 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.[24][86] 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".[37] In 922 they accepted Islam as the official religion.[87][24] 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.[88] They gradually lost their identity after 1431 when their towns and region were captured by the Russians.[89]

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"[90])... 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.[91]

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)".[91]

This migration and the foundation of the Danube Bulgaria (the First Bulgarian Empire) is usually dated c. 679.[91][77] 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.[92] 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.[80] They re-settled in North-Eastern Bulgaria, between Shumen and Varna, including Ludogorie plateau and southern Dobruja.[93] The distribution of pre-Christian burial assemblages in Bulgaria and Romania is considered as the indication of the confines of the Bulgar settlement.[94]

In the Balkans they merged with the Slavs and other autochthonous Romance and Greek speaking population, like the Thracians and Vlachs,[14] becoming a political and military elite.[15] 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.[95] The hinterlands of the Byzantine territory were for years occupied by many groups of Slavs.[93] According to Theophanes, the Bulgars subjugated the so-called Seven Slavic tribes, of which the Severeis 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.[93] 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.[96] It is considered that the Slavic tribal organization was left intact, and paid tribute to the ruling Bulgars.[97][93][13]

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.[81]

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.[81]

Bulgarian empires

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.[98] 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.[99] In the short period followed seven rulers from the Uokil and Ugain clan.[99] Telerig (768–777) managed to establish a pacific policy with Byzantium, and restore imperial power.[99]

During the reign of Khan Krum (803–814), the Empire doubled its size, including new lands in Macedonia and Serbia.[14] He also successfully repelled the invading force of the Byzantines, as well defeated the Pannonian Avars where additionally extended the Empire size.[14][99] In 865, during the reign of Khan Boris I (852–889), the Bulgars accepted Christianity as the official religion, and Eastern Orthodoxy in 879.[14] The greatest expansion of the Empire and prosperity during the time of Simeon I (893–927) is considered as the Bulgarian Golden Age.[100][14] 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,[14] and so weakened were eventually conquered in 1018 by the Byzantine Empire.[14]

In 1185, the Bulgarians and Vlachs held a revolt against the Byzantine Empire, and helped by the settled Cumans from Hungary, created the Second Bulgarian Empire (1186–1396) ruled by the Asen dynasty (1187–1280).[14][101] From 1280 till 1322 periodically ruled the Terter dynasty, and from 1323 till 1396 the Shishman dynasty, all the three of Cuman origin.[102] In 1396, the Bulgarians were conquered by the Ottoman Turks, and only in 1878 established an autonomous principality, while in 1908 declared independence.[14]

Society

 
The Madara Rider, 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.[103] Being in contact with sedentary cultures, they began mastering the crafts of blacksmithing, pottery, and carpentry.[79] The politically dominant tribe or clan usually gave its name to the tribal confederation.[104] Such confederations were often encouraged by the Imperial powers, for whom it was easier to deal with one ruler than several tribal chieftains.[105]

In nomadic society the tribes were political organizations based on kinship, with diffused power.[106] Tribes developed according to the relation with sedentary states, and only managed to conquer them when had social cohesion.[106] 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.[106] In a nomadic state the nomad and sedentary integration was limited, and usually had vassal tribute system.[106]

When the Bulgars arrived in the Balkan 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.[107] The Bulgar and Slavic settlements cannot be distinguished other than by the type of biritual cemeteries.[108]

Social structure

The Bulgars, at least the Danubian Bulgars, had a well-developed clan and military administrative system of "inner" and "outer" tribes,[109] governed by the ruling clan.[110] They had many titles, and according to Steven Runciman the distinction between titles which represented offices and mere ornamental dignities was somewhat vague.[111] Maenchen-Helfen theorized that the titles of the steppe peoples did not reflect the ethnicity of their bearers.[112] 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.[113][36] Tribute-paying sedentary vassals, such as the Slavs and Greek-speaking population, formed a substantial and important part of the khanate's maintenance.[114]

The ruler title in Bulgar inscriptions was khan/kana.[115] A counterpart of the Greek phrase ὁ ἐκ Θεοῦ ἄρχων (ho ek Theou archon) was also common in Bulgar inscriptions.[111] The kavhan was the second most important title in the realm,[116][117] seemingly chief official.[118] 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.[111]

There are several possible interpretations for the ruler title, kana sybigi, mentioned in six inscriptions by the Khan Omurtag and two by Malamir.[119][120] Among the proposed translations for sybigi or subigi are "lord of the army",[121] from the reconstructed Turkic phrase syu-beg (army master) paralleling the attested Orkhon Turkic syubashi.[122] Runciman and J. B. Bury considered ubige or uvege to be related to the Cuman-Turkic öweghü (high, glorious);[111][117] "bright, luminous, heavenly";[121][123] and more recently "(ruler) from God",[121] from the Indo-European *su- and baga-, i.e. *su-baga.[124] Florin Curta noted the resemblance in the use of the kana sybigi with the Byzantine name and title basileus.[125]

Members of the upper social class bore the title boila (later boyar).[126] The nobility was divided onto small and great boilas.[127][128] In the 10th century, there were three classes of boyars: the six great boilas, the outer boilas, and the inner boilas,[111][117][129][128] while in the mid-9th century there were twelve great boyars.[111][117] The great boilas occupied military and administrative offices in the state,[130] as well the council where they gathered for decisions on important matters of state.[127][131][117]

Bagaïns were the lesser class of the nobility,[130][126] probably a military class which also participated in the council.[132][128][117] The title bagatur, once as bogotor,[133] is found in several instances within the inscriptions.[134] It derives from Turkish bagadur (hero)[132][135] and was a high military rank.[132][135] The Bulgarian military commander who was defeated by the Croats in the Battle of the Bosnian Highlands (926) was called Alogobotur,[132] which is actually a title comprised by alo (considered Turkic alp, alyp; chief) and bagatur.[132]

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.[128]

Kolober (or qolovur), a rank title, is cited in two inscriptions,[136] and it derives from the Turkish term for a guide, golaghuz.[132][117] The title župan, also once as kopan[137] in the inscriptions, was often mentioned together with the bearer's name.[138][132] They were traditionally seen as Slavic chiefs.[137] 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.[139][132][117]

The title tarkhan probably represented a high military rank, similar to the Byzantine strategos, of the military governor of a province.[140][117] The variations kalutarkan and buliastarkan are considered to be officers at the head of the tarkans.[116] Curta interpreted the title zhupan tarqan as "tarqan of (all the) zhupans".[139]

Although it was not recorded on inscriptions, the title sampses is considered to be related to the royal court.[140] 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.[116]

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).[141]

Religion

Very little is known about the religion of the Bulgars,[142][143] but it is believed to have been monotheistic. In Greek language inscriptions from pagan Danube Bulgaria, Bulgar monarchs describe themselves as "ruler from God",[117][144][145] indicating authority from a divine origin,[146] and making an appeal to the deity's omniscience.[147] Presian's inscription from Philippi (837) states:[148]

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.[149][144] In the Chinese transcription as zhenli, and Turkic as Tangara and Tengeri, it represents the oldest known Turco-Mongolian word.[150] 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.[150] In modern Turkish, the word for god, Tanrı, derives from the same root.[151]

Tengrism apparently engaged various shamanic practices.[142] According to Mercia MacDermott, Tangra was the male deity connected with sky, light and the Sun.[151] The cult incorporated Tangra's female equivalent and principle goddess, Umay, the deity of fertility.[152] Their tamgha  , which can be frequently found in early medieval Bulgaria is associated with deity Tangra. However, its exact meaning and use remains unknown.[143] The most sacred creatures to Tangra were horses and eagles, particularly white horses.[151] Broze amulets with representations of the Sun, horses and other animals were found at Bulgar archeological sites.[151][153][154] This could explain the variety of Bulgars taboos, including those about animals.[142]

Ravil Bukharaev believed that such an autocratic and monotheistic religion—henotheism,[155] as seen in the report by Ahmad ibn Fadlan (10th century) about the Oghuz Turks, kindred to the Bulgars,[156] made the acceptance of Islam more natural and easier in Volga Bulgaria:[156][157]

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,[149] tentatively deciphered as "Khan sybigi Omurtag, ruler from god...was...and made sacrifice to god Tangra...itchurgu boila...gold".[158] An Ottoman manuscript recorded that the name of God, in Bulgarian, was "Tängri".[149]

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.[159] 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 forest dwellers of Finnic origin, who lived in their vicinity, with some elements borrowed from Islam.[156]

Paganism was closely connected with the old clan system,[160] and the remains of totemism and shamanism were preserved even after the crossing of Danube.[151][161] The Shumen plate in the archaeological literature is often associated with shamanism.[154] In the 9th century, it was recorded that before a battle the Bulgars "used to practice enchantments and jests and charms and certain auguries".[162][163] Liutprand of Cremona reported that Baian, son of Simeon I (893–927), could through magicam transform into a wolf.[153] Clement of Ohrid reported the worship of fire and water by the Bulgars,[164] 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.[165]

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.[151] Remains of dog and deer have been found in Bulgars graves, and it seems the wolf also had a special mythological significance.[151][3] The Bulgars were bi-ritual,[166] either cremating or burying their dead,[167][168] and often interred them with personal objects (pottery, rarely weapons or dress[168]), food, and sacred animals.[151][167][168]

 
Partial reconstruction of the Great Basilica in the first capital of the Bulgarian Empire, Pliska.

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,[168] with their heads to the north so that the deceased "faced" south.[151] 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.[169] The only example of a mixed Bulgar-Slavic cemetery is in Istria near ancient Histria, on the coast of the Black Sea.[170]

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.[171] 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.[171] Kuznecov also found a connection in the plan of the Danube Bulgars sanctuaries at Pliska, Veliki Preslav, and Madara.[171] The architectural similarities include two squares of ashlars inserted one into another, oriented towards the summer sunrise.[171] One of these sites was transformed into a Christian church, which is taken as evidence that they served a religious function.[171]

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.[3] 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.[172] However, that the Bulgar residence in Pliska and Palace of Omurtag were inspired by the Byzantine architecture is considered indisputable.[173]

Christianity had already begun to penetrate, probably via their Slavic subjects,[142] when it was adopted in the First Bulgarian Empire by Knyaz Boris I in 865 as a state religion.[174] 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,[142] while it was officially adopted in Volga Bulgaria as a state religion in 922.[156][175]

Language

 
The reconstructed copy of Chatalar Inscription by Khan Omurtag (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 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.[166][176][177][178][179][180] Some scholars suggest Hunnic had strong ties with Bulgar and to modern Chuvash[181] and classify them as separate Hunno-Bulgar languages.[182][183]

According to P. Golden this association is apparent from the fragments of texts and isolated words and phrases preserved in inscriptions.[142][166] In addition to language, their culture and state structure retain many Central Asian features.[142] Military and hierarchical terms such as khan/qan, kanasubigi, qapağan, tarkan, bagatur and boila appear to be of Turkic origin.[142][96] The Bulgar calendar within the Nominalia of the Bulgarian khans had a twelve-year animal cycle, similar to the one adopted by Turkic and Mongolian peoples from the Chinese, with animal names and numbers deciphered as Turkic.[142] Tengri (in Bulgar Tangra/Tengre) was their supreme god.[142]

Bulgar inscriptions were written mostly in Greek or Cyrillic characters, most commonly in Greek or Graeco-Bulgar,[81] sometimes with Slavic terms,[184] thus allowing scholars to identify some of the Bulgar glosses.[81] Several Bulgar inscriptions were found in Northeastern Bulgaria and parts of Romania, written in runes similar to the Old Turkic alphabet;[185] they apparently have a sacral meaning.[185] 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.[3] The custom of stone engravings are considered to have Sasanian, Turkic and Roman parallels.[185][184] The Madara Rider resembles work of the Sasanian rock relief tradition, but its actual masonry tradition and cultural source is unknown.[186]

The Danubian Bulgars were unable to alter the predominantly Slavic character of Bulgaria,[187] seen in the toponymy and names of the capitals Pliska and Preslav.[177] They preserved their own native language and customs for about 200 years, but a bilingual period was recorded since the 9th century.[188][187][129] Golden argued that Bulgar Turkic almost disappeared with the transition to Christianity and Slavicisation in the middle of the 9th century.[189] 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.[187] The Bulgarian Christian Church used Slavic dialect from Macedonia.[14]

Among Bulgarian academics, notably Petar Dobrev,[166] a hypothesis linking the Bulgar language to the Iranian languages (Pamir[190]) has been popular since the 1990s.[191][192][193][194] Most proponents still assume an intermediate stance, proposing certain signs of Iranian influence on a Turkic substrate.[177][195][196] The names Asparukh and Bezmer from the Nominalia list, for example, were established as being of Iranian origin.[197] Other Bulgarian scholars actively oppose the "Iranian hypothesis".[198][199] According to Raymond Detrez, the Iranian theory is rooted in the periods of anti-Turkish sentiment in Bulgaria and is ideologically motivated.[200] 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.[201]

Ethnicity

 
The jug golden medallion, from the Treasure of Nagyszentmiklós, depicts a warrior with his captive. Experts cannot agree if this warrior represents a Khazar, Pannonian Avar, or Bulgar.

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.[202]

Recent studies consider ethnonyms closely related with warrior elites who ruled over a variety of heterogeneous groups.[203] The groups adopted new ideology and name as political designation, while the elites claimed right to rule and royal descent through origin myths.[203]

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,[204] their confederations incorporated an array of ethnic groups of newly joined Turkic, Caucasian, Iranian, and Finnic peoples.[205] During their Western Eurasian migrations to the Balkans, they also came into contact with Armenian, Semitic, Slavic, Thracian and Anatolian Greek among other populations.[206]

 
Map of the monuments of Sivashovka type

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,[207] 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.[177][208][79][86][209]

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 Iranian and Turkic languages, indicating dominance of the Slavic language among the common people.[177]

Anthropology and genetics

Genetic and anthropological researches have shown that the tribes of the Eurasian steppes were not always ethnically homogeneous, and were often unions of multiple ethnicities.[202] Skeletal remains from Kazakhstan (Central Asia), excavated from different sites dating between the 15th century BC to the 5th century AD, have been analyzed. The distribution of east and west Eurasian lineages through time in the region agrees with available archaeological information. Prior to the 13th–7th century BC, all samples belong to European lineages, while later, an arrival of East Asian sequences that coexisted with the previous genetic substratum was detected. Hundreds of excavated mummies in the Tarim Basin (West China) have Caucasoid features, revealing the presence of an ancient Caucasoid substratum in East Asia. These findings are associated with the ancient Tocharians and Tocharian languages.[210]

According to P. Golden, the Central Asian Turkic peoples have multiple points of origin and are a mixture of steppes ethnic groups.[211] Eric Hobsbawm considered the languages to be "almost always semi-artificial constructs".[212] Political processes, rather than linguistic, tribal or ethnic elements, created new communities.[211] Golden noted that the Turkic tribes in the Western Eurasia since the 1st millennium BC had contacts with Proto-Indo-Europeans. Those tribes were considered by Golden to be the ancestors of the Oğuric Turks.[213]

Recent blood and DNA studies of present-day populations in Central Asia confirm the extreme genetic heterogeneity.[210] The latest DNA studies on Turkic people in Central Asia and Eastern Europe also confirm genetic heterogeneity, indicating that the Turkic tribal confederations included various mtDNA and Y-DNA haplogroups.[214][215] A 2013 comparative genetic study shows that modern Bulgarians primarily are represented by the Western Eurasian Y haplogroups, with 40% belonging to haplogroups E-V13 and I-M423, and 20% to R-M17 (R-M198 and R-M458). Haplogroups common in the Middle East (J-M172, J-M267, and G-M201) and in South Western Asia (R-L23*) occur at frequencies of 19% and 5%, respectively. The central Asian and Altaic-Turkic haplogroups C, N and Q together occur at the negligible frequency of only 1.5% among Bulgarians.[190] It could indicate that "a shared paternal ancestry between proto-Bulgarians and Altaic and Central Asian Turkic-speaking groups either did not exist or was negligible".[190] However according to the Genetic Atlas of Human Admixture History by Hellenthal et al. 2014, using a chromosome painting, to follow the genetic admixture, only a small Northeast Asiatic DNA signal among Bulgarians (2,4%) might correspond to the whole genetic legacy left from the invasions of the Bulgars.[216] The DNA studies of the Chuvash people, who speak a Turkic language (Chuvash), show that they are genetically related to Caucasians, Mediterraneans, and Middle Easterners, partially Central or Northern Europeans (Finnic), but with little Central Asian-Altaic gene flow.[217] The DNA studies of the Tatars, Bashkirs and Russians in Chelyabinsk Oblast show European and Finnic impact on the Tatars; Caucasoid and East Asian impact were reported for the Bashkirs.[10] Some aspects of genetic relationships were found between Tatars and Chuvashes, as well Bulgarians, which could support the view that the Tatars may be descendants of ancient Bulgars.[10] It is currently unknown with which haplogroup the Bulgars should be associated; some scholars consider the possibility that only a cultural and low genetic influence was brought into the region.[217]

A 2015 Bulgarian mtDNA study on 13 samples from the 8th–10th century suggests a Western Eurasian matrilineal origin for Proto-Bulgarians. The study established that "Proto-Bulgarians are positioned among South-Eastern and Southern European populations including modern Bulgarians. Proto-Bulgarians are genetically distant from Northern and Western Europeans and populations from the Near East and Caucasus. On the greatest distance from Proto-Bulgarians are Volga-Ural and Arabic populations." The study further mentions that "...proto-Bulgarians are genetically similar to modern Bulgarians and to certain South-Eastern European as well as Italian populations."[218] Until now there's still not enough archaeogenetic data to confirm Turkic, Ugrian and/or Sarmatian origin and admixture of Proto-Bulgarian elite, however, Todor V. Chobanov and Svetoslav Samov in their research of available archaeological and genetical data presuppose "Proto-Bulgarians were a mixture of Late Sarmatians and older Caucasus populations, closely related to the Alans and preserving their genetic inheritance, even after arriving on the Balkans and mixing with Slav peoples and the remnants of the local Late Antiquity peoples".[219][220]

The paleoanthropological material from all sites in Volga region, Ukraine and Moldova attributed to the Bulgars testify complex ethno-cultural processes.[221] The material shows the assimilation between the local population and the migrating newcomers.[207] 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.[222][207][221] Despite the morphological proximity, there is a visible impact of the local population, in the Volga region of Finnic and ancient Turkic, in Ukraine of Sarmatian-Alans, and in Moldova of Slavic people.[221] The comparative analysis showed large morphological proximity between the medieval and modern population of the Volga region.[221] The examined graves in Northern Bulgaria and Southern Romania showed different somatic types, including Caucasoid-Mediterranean and less often East Asian.[166]

The pre-Christian burial customs in Bulgaria indicate diverse social, i.e. nomadic and sedentary, and cultural influences.[223] In some necropolises specific to the Danube Bulgars, artificial deformation was found in 80% of the skulls.[207] 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.[224] 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.[225][177]

Legacy

In modern ethnic nationalism there is some "rivalry for the Bulgar legacy" (see Bulgarism). The Volga Tatars and Chuvash people, are said to be descended from the Volga Bulgars,[17] and there may have been ethnogenic influences on the Bashkirs, Karachays and Balkars also.[226]

See also

Citations

  1. ^ Waldman, Mason 2006, p. 106.
  2. ^ Gi︠u︡zelev, Vasil (1979). The Proto-Bulgarians: Pre-history of Asparouhian Bulgaria text. pp. 15, 33, 38.
  3. ^ a b c d Hyun Jin Kim (2013). The Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe. Cambridge University Press. pp. 58–59, 150–155, 168, 204, 243. ISBN 9781107009066.
  4. ^ Golden 1992, p. 253, 256: "[Pontic Bulgars] 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 ..."
  5. ^ 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.
  6. ^ 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."
  7. ^ Brook 2006, p. 13: "Thus, the Bulgars were actually a tribal confederation of multiple Hunnic, Turkic, and Iranian groups mixed together."
  8. ^ "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.[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ a b "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.
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General and cited sources

  • Clauson, Gerard (1972). An Etymological dictionary of Pre-13th Century Turkish.[ISBN missing]
  • Runciman, Steven (1930). "§ Appendix V – Bulgar titles". A history of the First Bulgarian Empire. macedonia.kroraina.com. 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). . 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), (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. 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, THREE. 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). . Brill. ISBN 9789004180017. Archived from the original on 30 July 2017. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  • "Some remarks on the Chinese 'Bulgar'" (PDF). Sanping, Chen.

External links

bulgars, confused, with, bulgarians, bulgarian, turks, also, bulghars, bulgari, bolgars, bolghars, bolgari, proto, bulgarians, were, turkic, semi, nomadic, warrior, tribes, that, flourished, pontic, caspian, steppe, volga, region, during, century, they, became. Not to be confused with Bulgarians or Bulgarian Turks The Bulgars also Bulghars Bulgari Bolgars Bolghars Bolgari 1 Proto Bulgarians 2 were Turkic semi nomadic warrior tribes that flourished in the Pontic Caspian steppe and the Volga region during the 7th century They became known as nomadic equestrians in the Volga Ural region but some researchers say that their ethnic roots can be traced to Central Asia 3 During their westward migration across the Eurasian steppe the Bulgar tribes absorbed other tribal groups and cultural influences in a process of ethnogenesis including Iranian Finnic and Hunnic tribes 4 5 6 7 8 9 Modern genetic research on Central Asian Turkic people and ethnic groups related to the Bulgars points to an affiliation with Western Eurasian populations 9 10 The Bulgars spoke a Turkic language i e Bulgar language of Oghuric branch 11 They preserved the military titles organization and customs of Eurasian steppes 12 as well as pagan shamanism and belief in the sky deity Tangra 13 Bulgars led by Khan Krum pursue the Byzantines at the Battle of Versinikia 813 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 c 679 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 14 15 as well as with previously settled Slavic tribes and were eventually Slavicized thus forming the ancestors of modern Bulgarians 16 The remaining Pontic Bulgars migrated in the 7th century to the Volga River where they founded the Volga Bulgaria they preserved their identity well into the 13th century 11 The modern Volga Tatars and Chuvash people claim to have originated from the Volga Bulgars 11 17 Contents 1 Etymology and origin 2 History 2 1 Turkic migration 2 2 Old Great Bulgaria 2 3 Subsequent migrations 2 4 Bulgarian empires 3 Society 3 1 Social structure 3 2 Religion 4 Language 5 Ethnicity 6 Anthropology and genetics 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 Citations 10 General and cited sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology and originThe etymology of the ethnonym Bulgar is not completely understood and difficult to trace back earlier than the 4th century AD 18 19 Since the work of Wilhelm Tomaschek 1873 20 it is generally said to be derived from Proto Turkic root bulga 21 to stir to mix to become mixed which with the consonant suffix r implies a noun meaning mixed 22 23 Other scholars have added that bulga might also imply stir disturb confuse 24 25 26 and Talat Tekin interpreted bulgar as the verb form mixing i e rather than the adjective mixed 20 Both Gyula Nemeth and Peter Benjamin Golden initially advocated the mixed race theory but later like Paul Pelliot 27 considered that to incite rebel or to produce a state of disorder i e the disturbers 28 29 30 25 was a more likely etymology for migrating nomads 30 25 According to Osman Karatay who if the mixed etymology relied on the westward migration of the Ogurs 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 31 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 32 Peter A Boodberg noted that the Buluoji in the Chinese sources were recorded as remnants of the Xiongnu confederation 33 and had strong Caucasian elements 34 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 kwet Buqut a Tiele and or Toquz Oguz tribe 35 36 The Pugu were mentioned in Chinese sources from 103 BC up to the 8th century AD 36 and later were situated among the eastern Tiele tribes as one of the highest ranking tribes after the Uyghurs 35 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 37 The names Onogur and Bulgar were linked by later Byzantine sources for reasons that are unclear 38 24 25 Tekin derived gur from the Altaic suffix gir 39 Generally modern scholars consider the terms oguz or ogur as generic terms for Turkic tribal confederations to be derived from Turkic og uq meaning kinship or being akin to 40 The terms initially were not the same as oq ogsiz meant arrow 41 while ogul meant offspring child son ogus ugus was tribe clan and the verb ogsa oqsa meant to be like resemble 40 There also appears to be an etymological association between the Bulgars and the preceding Kutrigur Kuturgur gt Quturgur gt Toqur o gur lt toqur nine in Proto Bulgar toquz in Common Turkic and Utigur Uturgur gt Uturgur lt utur otur thirty in Proto Bulgar otuz in Common Turkic as Ogur Oghur tribes with the ethnonym Bulgar as a spreading adjective vague further explanation needed 20 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 42 43 He noted however an implication that the Kutrigurs and Utigurs were related to the Saragur sara ogur shara oghur white oghurs 44 and that according to Procopius these were Hunnish tribal unions of partly Cimmerian descent 42 36 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 45 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 27 the Latin burgaroi a Roman term mercenaries stationed in burgi forts on the limes G A Keramopulos 27 a reconstructed but unattested early Turkic term meaning five oghur such as bel gur or bil gur Zeki Velidi Togan 46 HistoryTurkic migration Further information Turkic migration and Huns The origin 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 38 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 30 Anachronistic references about them can also be found in the 7th century geography work Ashkharatsuyts by Anania Shirakatsi where the Kup i Bulgar Duc i Bulkar Olxontor Blkar and immigrant C dar Bulkar tribes are mentioned as being in the North Caucasian Kuban steppes 38 An obscure reference to Ziezi ex quo Vulgares with Ziezi being an offspring of Biblical Shem is in the Chronography of 354 38 24 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 36 Around 463 AD the Akatziroi and other tribes that had been part of the Hunnic union were attacked by the Saragurs one of the first Oguric Turkic tribes that entered the Ponto Caspian steppes as the result of migrations set off in Inner Asia 47 According to Priscus in 463 the representatives of Saragur Ogur and Onogur came to the Emperor in Constantinople 48 and explained they had been driven out of their homeland by the Sabirs who had been attacked by the Avars 49 This tangle of events indicates that the Oguric tribes are related to the Ting ling and Tiele people 50 It seems that Kutrigurs and Unigurs arrived with the initial waves of Oguric peoples entering the Pontic steppes 42 The Bulgars were not mentioned in 463 24 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 36 Scholars attribute this account to the Huns 51 52 Avars 52 or some Bulgar groups were probably carried away by the Huns to the Central Europe 36 52 The Lombards led by their new king Laimicho rose up and defeated the Bulgars with great slaughter 53 gaining great booty and confidence as they became bolder in undertaking the toils of war 54 The defeated Bulgars then became subjects of the Lombards and later migrated in Italy with their king Alboin 55 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 56 The Bulgars were eventually defeated by Strabo in 480 481 56 In 486 and 488 they fought against the Goths again first as allies of the Byzantium according to Magnus Felix Ennodius 36 and later as allies of the Gepids according to Paul the Deacon 36 However when Theoderic the Great with Ostrogoths parted for Italy in 489 the Illyricum and Thrace were open for Bulgar raids 57 In 493 according to Marcellinus Comes they defeated and killed magister militum Julian 57 In 499 crossed Danube and reached Thrace where on the banks of the river Tzurta considered a tributary of Maritsa 58 defeated 15 000 men strong Roman army led by magister militum Aristus 59 60 In 502 Bulgars again devastated Thrace as reportedly there were no Roman soldiers to oppose them 57 60 In 528 529 again invaded the region and defeated Roman generals Justin and Baduarius 61 However Gothic general Mundus offered allegiance to the Emperor Justinian I 527 565 in 530 and managed to kill 5 000 Bulgars plundering Thrace 57 John Malalas recorded that in the battle was captured Bulgar warlord 60 In 535 magister militum Sittas defeated the Bulgar army at the river Yantra 60 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 62 In 505 the alleged 10 000 Hun horsemen in the Sabinian army which was defeated by the Ostrogoths are believed to be the Bulgars 63 In 515 Bulgar mercenaries were listed along with others from the Goths Scythians and Hunnic tribes as part of the Vitalian army 64 In 539 two Hunnic kinglets defeated two Roman generals during the raid into Scythia Minor and Moesia 65 A Roman army led by magister militum Ascum and Constantiolus intercepted and defeated them in Thrace however another raiding party ambushed and captured two Roman generals 66 In 539 and 540 Procopius reported a powerful Hunnic army crossed the Danube devastated Illyricum and reached up to the Anastasian Wall 66 Such large distances covered in short time indicate they were horsemen 66 Jordanes described in his work Getica 551 the Pontic steppe beyond the Acatziri 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 Onogurs were notable for the marten skin trade 36 67 68 In the Middle Ages marten skin was used as a substitute for minted money 69 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 Onogurs are people who live in tents Then he records 13 tribes the wngwr Onogur wgr Ogur sbr Sabir bwrgr Burga i e Bulgar kwrtrgr Kutrigurs br probably Vars also known as the Avars ksr Kasr possibly Akatziri srwrgwr Saragur 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 36 70 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 68 According to D Dimitrov scholars partially managed to identify and locate the Bulgar groups mentioned in the Armenian Ashkharatsuyts The Olxontor Blkar is one of the variations used for the Onogurs Bulgars while others could be related to the ancient river names 71 such as the Kup i Bulgar and the Kuban Kuphis The Duc i could read Kuchi Bulkar and as such could be related to the Dnieper Kocho However the C dar Bulkar location is unclear Dimitrov theorized that the differences in the Bulgar ethnonym could be due to the dialect differentiations in their language 36 By the middle of the 6th century the Bulgars momentarily fade from the sources and the Kutrigurs and Utigurs come to the front 30 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 72 The Ogurs and Onogurs in the 6th and 7th century sources were mentioned mostly in connection with the Avar and Turk conquest of Western Eurasia 73 From the 8th century the Byzantine sources often mention the Onogurs in close connection with the Bulgars Agathon early 8th century wrote about the nation of Onogurs Bulgars Nikephoros I early 9th century noted that Kubrat was the lord of the Onogundurs his contemporary Theophanes referred to them as Onogundur Bulgars Constantine VII mid 10th century remarked that the Bulgars formerly called themselves Onogundurs This association was previously mirrored in Armenian sources such as the Ashkharatsuyts which refers to the Olxontor Blkar and the 5th century History by Movses Khorenatsi which includes an additional comment from a 9th century writer about the colony of the Vlĕndur Bulkar 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 Nandor Fejervar the nndr Nandur of Gardizi 11th century and Wununtur in the letter by the Khazar King Joseph All the forms show the phonetic changes typical of later Oguric prothetic v 74 Scholars consider it unclear how this union came about viewing it as a long process in which a number of different groups were merged 75 25 During that time the Bulgars may have represented a large confederation including the remnants of Onogurs Utigurs and Kutrigurs among others 76 Old Great Bulgaria Main article Old Great Bulgaria The migration of the Bulgars after the fall of Old Great Bulgaria in the 7th century The Turk rule weakened sometime after 600 allowing the Avars to reestablish the control over the region 24 71 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 Onogundur Bulgars reappeared 24 75 77 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 78 24 71 79 He founded the Old Great Bulgaria Magna Bulgaria 80 also known as Onogundur Bulgars state or Patria Onoguria in the Ravenna Cosmography 81 71 36 Little is known about Kubrat s activities It is considered that Onogur Bulgars remained the only steppe tribes in good relations with the Byzantines 80 His date of death is placed between 650 and 663 AD 82 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 81 77 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 83 77 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 84 71 The Khazars were ultimately victorious and parts of the Bulgar union broke up 24 Subsequent migrations Further information Volga Bulgaria Map of the Bulgar necropolises on the Lower Danube 8 9 century AD It is unclear whether the parting ways by brothers was caused by the internal conflicts or strong Khazar pressure 81 77 The latter is considered more likely 77 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 85 24 86 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 24 86 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 37 In 922 they accepted Islam as the official religion 87 24 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 88 They gradually lost their identity after 1431 when their towns and region were captured by the Russians 89 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 ogglon ogglon Slav o n gl angle corner Turk agyl yard 90 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 91 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 lt Vunundur lt Onogundur 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 91 This migration and the foundation of the Danube Bulgaria the First Bulgarian Empire is usually dated c 679 91 77 The composition of the horde is unknown and sources only mention tribal names Cakarar Kubiar Kuriger and clan names Dulo Ukil Vokil Ermiyar Ugain and Duar 92 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 80 They re settled in North Eastern Bulgaria between Shumen and Varna including Ludogorie plateau and southern Dobruja 93 The distribution of pre Christian burial assemblages in Bulgaria and Romania is considered as the indication of the confines of the Bulgar settlement 94 In the Balkans they merged with the Slavs and other autochthonous Romance and Greek speaking population like the Thracians and Vlachs 14 becoming a political and military elite 15 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 95 The hinterlands of the Byzantine territory were for years occupied by many groups of Slavs 93 According to Theophanes the Bulgars subjugated the so called Seven Slavic tribes of which the Severeis 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 93 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 96 It is considered that the Slavic tribal organization was left intact and paid tribute to the ruling Bulgars 97 93 13 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 81 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 81 Bulgarian empires Main articles First Bulgarian Empire and Second Bulgarian Empire 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 98 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 99 In the short period followed seven rulers from the Uokil and Ugain clan 99 Telerig 768 777 managed to establish a pacific policy with Byzantium and restore imperial power 99 During the reign of Khan Krum 803 814 the Empire doubled its size including new lands in Macedonia and Serbia 14 He also successfully repelled the invading force of the Byzantines as well defeated the Pannonian Avars where additionally extended the Empire size 14 99 In 865 during the reign of Khan Boris I 852 889 the Bulgars accepted Christianity as the official religion and Eastern Orthodoxy in 879 14 The greatest expansion of the Empire and prosperity during the time of Simeon I 893 927 is considered as the Bulgarian Golden Age 100 14 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 14 and so weakened were eventually conquered in 1018 by the Byzantine Empire 14 In 1185 the Bulgarians and Vlachs held a revolt against the Byzantine Empire and helped by the settled Cumans from Hungary created the Second Bulgarian Empire 1186 1396 ruled by the Asen dynasty 1187 1280 14 101 From 1280 till 1322 periodically ruled the Terter dynasty and from 1323 till 1396 the Shishman dynasty all the three of Cuman origin 102 In 1396 the Bulgarians were conquered by the Ottoman Turks and only in 1878 established an autonomous principality while in 1908 declared independence 14 Society The Madara Rider 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 103 Being in contact with sedentary cultures they began mastering the crafts of blacksmithing pottery and carpentry 79 The politically dominant tribe or clan usually gave its name to the tribal confederation 104 Such confederations were often encouraged by the Imperial powers for whom it was easier to deal with one ruler than several tribal chieftains 105 In nomadic society the tribes were political organizations based on kinship with diffused power 106 Tribes developed according to the relation with sedentary states and only managed to conquer them when had social cohesion 106 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 106 In a nomadic state the nomad and sedentary integration was limited and usually had vassal tribute system 106 When the Bulgars arrived in the Balkan 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 107 The Bulgar and Slavic settlements cannot be distinguished other than by the type of biritual cemeteries 108 Social structure The Bulgars at least the Danubian Bulgars had a well developed clan and military administrative system of inner and outer tribes 109 governed by the ruling clan 110 They had many titles and according to Steven Runciman the distinction between titles which represented offices and mere ornamental dignities was somewhat vague 111 Maenchen Helfen theorized that the titles of the steppe peoples did not reflect the ethnicity of their bearers 112 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 113 36 Tribute paying sedentary vassals such as the Slavs and Greek speaking population formed a substantial and important part of the khanate s maintenance 114 The ruler title in Bulgar inscriptions was khan kana 115 A counterpart of the Greek phrase ὁ ἐk 8eoῦ ἄrxwn ho ek Theou archon was also common in Bulgar inscriptions 111 The kavhan was the second most important title in the realm 116 117 seemingly chief official 118 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 111 There are several possible interpretations for the ruler title kana sybigi mentioned in six inscriptions by the Khan Omurtag and two by Malamir 119 120 Among the proposed translations for sybigi or subigi are lord of the army 121 from the reconstructed Turkic phrase syu beg army master paralleling the attested Orkhon Turkic syubashi 122 Runciman and J B Bury considered ubige or uvege to be related to the Cuman Turkic oweghu high glorious 111 117 bright luminous heavenly 121 123 and more recently ruler from God 121 from the Indo European su and baga i e su baga 124 Florin Curta noted the resemblance in the use of the kana sybigi with the Byzantine name and title basileus 125 Members of the upper social class bore the title boila later boyar 126 The nobility was divided onto small and great boilas 127 128 In the 10th century there were three classes of boyars the six great boilas the outer boilas and the inner boilas 111 117 129 128 while in the mid 9th century there were twelve great boyars 111 117 The great boilas occupied military and administrative offices in the state 130 as well the council where they gathered for decisions on important matters of state 127 131 117 Bagains were the lesser class of the nobility 130 126 probably a military class which also participated in the council 132 128 117 The title bagatur once as bogotor 133 is found in several instances within the inscriptions 134 It derives from Turkish bagadur hero 132 135 and was a high military rank 132 135 The Bulgarian military commander who was defeated by the Croats in the Battle of the Bosnian Highlands 926 was called Alogobotur 132 which is actually a title comprised by alo considered Turkic alp alyp chief and bagatur 132 There are several title associations with uncertain meaning such as boila kavkhan icirgu boila kana boila qolovur bagatur bagain biri bagain setit bagain and ik bagain 128 Kolober or qolovur a rank title is cited in two inscriptions 136 and it derives from the Turkish term for a guide golaghuz 132 117 The title zupan also once as kopan 137 in the inscriptions was often mentioned together with the bearer s name 138 132 They were traditionally seen as Slavic chiefs 137 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 139 132 117 The title tarkhan probably represented a high military rank similar to the Byzantine strategos of the military governor of a province 140 117 The variations kalutarkan and buliastarkan are considered to be officers at the head of the tarkans 116 Curta interpreted the title zhupan tarqan as tarqan of all the zhupans 139 Although it was not recorded on inscriptions the title sampses is considered to be related to the royal court 140 The title tabare or iltabare which derives from the old Turkish altabar like sampses is not mentioned on inscriptions but is related to the legates and ambassadors 116 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 141 Religion Very little is known about the religion of the Bulgars 142 143 but it is believed to have been monotheistic In Greek language inscriptions from pagan Danube Bulgaria Bulgar monarchs describe themselves as ruler from God 117 144 145 indicating authority from a divine origin 146 and making an appeal to the deity s omniscience 147 Presian s inscription from Philippi 837 states 148 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 149 144 In the Chinese transcription as zhenli and Turkic as Tangara and Tengeri it represents the oldest known Turco Mongolian word 150 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 150 In modern Turkish the word for god Tanri derives from the same root 151 Tengrism apparently engaged various shamanic practices 142 According to Mercia MacDermott Tangra was the male deity connected with sky light and the Sun 151 The cult incorporated Tangra s female equivalent and principle goddess Umay the deity of fertility 152 Their tamgha which can be frequently found in early medieval Bulgaria is associated with deity Tangra However its exact meaning and use remains unknown 143 The most sacred creatures to Tangra were horses and eagles particularly white horses 151 Broze amulets with representations of the Sun horses and other animals were found at Bulgar archeological sites 151 153 154 This could explain the variety of Bulgars taboos including those about animals 142 Ravil Bukharaev believed that such an autocratic and monotheistic religion henotheism 155 as seen in the report by Ahmad ibn Fadlan 10th century about the Oghuz Turks kindred to the Bulgars 156 made the acceptance of Islam more natural and easier in Volga Bulgaria 156 157 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 149 tentatively deciphered as Khan sybigi Omurtag ruler from god was and made sacrifice to god Tangra itchurgu boila gold 158 An Ottoman manuscript recorded that the name of God in Bulgarian was Tangri 149 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 159 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 forest dwellers of Finnic origin who lived in their vicinity with some elements borrowed from Islam 156 Paganism was closely connected with the old clan system 160 and the remains of totemism and shamanism were preserved even after the crossing of Danube 151 161 The Shumen plate in the archaeological literature is often associated with shamanism 154 In the 9th century it was recorded that before a battle the Bulgars used to practice enchantments and jests and charms and certain auguries 162 163 Liutprand of Cremona reported that Baian son of Simeon I 893 927 could through magicam transform into a wolf 153 Clement of Ohrid reported the worship of fire and water by the Bulgars 164 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 165 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 151 Remains of dog and deer have been found in Bulgars graves and it seems the wolf also had a special mythological significance 151 3 The Bulgars were bi ritual 166 either cremating or burying their dead 167 168 and often interred them with personal objects pottery rarely weapons or dress 168 food and sacred animals 151 167 168 Partial reconstruction of the Great Basilica in the first capital of the Bulgarian Empire Pliska 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 168 with their heads to the north so that the deceased faced south 151 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 169 The only example of a mixed Bulgar Slavic cemetery is in Istria near ancient Histria on the coast of the Black Sea 170 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 171 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 171 Kuznecov also found a connection in the plan of the Danube Bulgars sanctuaries at Pliska Veliki Preslav and Madara 171 The architectural similarities include two squares of ashlars inserted one into another oriented towards the summer sunrise 171 One of these sites was transformed into a Christian church which is taken as evidence that they served a religious function 171 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 3 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 172 However that the Bulgar residence in Pliska and Palace of Omurtag were inspired by the Byzantine architecture is considered indisputable 173 Christianity had already begun to penetrate probably via their Slavic subjects 142 when it was adopted in the First Bulgarian Empire by Knyaz Boris I in 865 as a state religion 174 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 142 while it was officially adopted in Volga Bulgaria as a state religion in 922 156 175 LanguageMain article Bulgar language The reconstructed copy of Chatalar Inscription by Khan Omurtag 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 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 166 176 177 178 179 180 Some scholars suggest Hunnic had strong ties with Bulgar and to modern Chuvash 181 and classify them as separate Hunno Bulgar languages 182 183 According to P Golden this association is apparent from the fragments of texts and isolated words and phrases preserved in inscriptions 142 166 In addition to language their culture and state structure retain many Central Asian features 142 Military and hierarchical terms such as khan qan kanasubigi qapagan tarkan bagatur and boila appear to be of Turkic origin 142 96 The Bulgar calendar within the Nominalia of the Bulgarian khans had a twelve year animal cycle similar to the one adopted by Turkic and Mongolian peoples from the Chinese with animal names and numbers deciphered as Turkic 142 Tengri in Bulgar Tangra Tengre was their supreme god 142 Bulgar inscriptions were written mostly in Greek or Cyrillic characters most commonly in Greek or Graeco Bulgar 81 sometimes with Slavic terms 184 thus allowing scholars to identify some of the Bulgar glosses 81 Several Bulgar inscriptions were found in Northeastern Bulgaria and parts of Romania written in runes similar to the Old Turkic alphabet 185 they apparently have a sacral meaning 185 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 3 The custom of stone engravings are considered to have Sasanian Turkic and Roman parallels 185 184 The Madara Rider resembles work of the Sasanian rock relief tradition but its actual masonry tradition and cultural source is unknown 186 The Danubian Bulgars were unable to alter the predominantly Slavic character of Bulgaria 187 seen in the toponymy and names of the capitals Pliska and Preslav 177 They preserved their own native language and customs for about 200 years but a bilingual period was recorded since the 9th century 188 187 129 Golden argued that Bulgar Turkic almost disappeared with the transition to Christianity and Slavicisation in the middle of the 9th century 189 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 187 The Bulgarian Christian Church used Slavic dialect from Macedonia 14 Among Bulgarian academics notably Petar Dobrev 166 a hypothesis linking the Bulgar language to the Iranian languages Pamir 190 has been popular since the 1990s 191 192 193 194 Most proponents still assume an intermediate stance proposing certain signs of Iranian influence on a Turkic substrate 177 195 196 The names Asparukh and Bezmer from the Nominalia list for example were established as being of Iranian origin 197 Other Bulgarian scholars actively oppose the Iranian hypothesis 198 199 According to Raymond Detrez the Iranian theory is rooted in the periods of anti Turkish sentiment in Bulgaria and is ideologically motivated 200 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 201 Ethnicity The jug golden medallion from the Treasure of Nagyszentmiklos depicts a warrior with his captive Experts cannot agree if this warrior represents a Khazar Pannonian Avar or Bulgar 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 202 Recent studies consider ethnonyms closely related with warrior elites who ruled over a variety of heterogeneous groups 203 The groups adopted new ideology and name as political designation while the elites claimed right to rule and royal descent through origin myths 203 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 204 their confederations incorporated an array of ethnic groups of newly joined Turkic Caucasian Iranian and Finnic peoples 205 During their Western Eurasian migrations to the Balkans they also came into contact with Armenian Semitic Slavic Thracian and Anatolian Greek among other populations 206 Map of the monuments of Sivashovka type 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 207 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 177 208 79 86 209 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 Iranian and Turkic languages indicating dominance of the Slavic language among the common people 177 Anthropology and geneticsGenetic and anthropological researches have shown that the tribes of the Eurasian steppes were not always ethnically homogeneous and were often unions of multiple ethnicities 202 Skeletal remains from Kazakhstan Central Asia excavated from different sites dating between the 15th century BC to the 5th century AD have been analyzed The distribution of east and west Eurasian lineages through time in the region agrees with available archaeological information Prior to the 13th 7th century BC all samples belong to European lineages while later an arrival of East Asian sequences that coexisted with the previous genetic substratum was detected Hundreds of excavated mummies in the Tarim Basin West China have Caucasoid features revealing the presence of an ancient Caucasoid substratum in East Asia These findings are associated with the ancient Tocharians and Tocharian languages 210 According to P Golden the Central Asian Turkic peoples have multiple points of origin and are a mixture of steppes ethnic groups 211 Eric Hobsbawm considered the languages to be almost always semi artificial constructs 212 Political processes rather than linguistic tribal or ethnic elements created new communities 211 Golden noted that the Turkic tribes in the Western Eurasia since the 1st millennium BC had contacts with Proto Indo Europeans Those tribes were considered by Golden to be the ancestors of the Oguric Turks 213 Recent blood and DNA studies of present day populations in Central Asia confirm the extreme genetic heterogeneity 210 The latest DNA studies on Turkic people in Central Asia and Eastern Europe also confirm genetic heterogeneity indicating that the Turkic tribal confederations included various mtDNA and Y DNA haplogroups 214 215 A 2013 comparative genetic study shows that modern Bulgarians primarily are represented by the Western Eurasian Y haplogroups with 40 belonging to haplogroups E V13 and I M423 and 20 to R M17 R M198 and R M458 Haplogroups common in the Middle East J M172 J M267 and G M201 and in South Western Asia R L23 occur at frequencies of 19 and 5 respectively The central Asian and Altaic Turkic haplogroups C N and Q together occur at the negligible frequency of only 1 5 among Bulgarians 190 It could indicate that a shared paternal ancestry between proto Bulgarians and Altaic and Central Asian Turkic speaking groups either did not exist or was negligible 190 However according to the Genetic Atlas of Human Admixture History by Hellenthal et al 2014 using a chromosome painting to follow the genetic admixture only a small Northeast Asiatic DNA signal among Bulgarians 2 4 might correspond to the whole genetic legacy left from the invasions of the Bulgars 216 The DNA studies of the Chuvash people who speak a Turkic language Chuvash show that they are genetically related to Caucasians Mediterraneans and Middle Easterners partially Central or Northern Europeans Finnic but with little Central Asian Altaic gene flow 217 The DNA studies of the Tatars Bashkirs and Russians in Chelyabinsk Oblast show European and Finnic impact on the Tatars Caucasoid and East Asian impact were reported for the Bashkirs 10 Some aspects of genetic relationships were found between Tatars and Chuvashes as well Bulgarians which could support the view that the Tatars may be descendants of ancient Bulgars 10 It is currently unknown with which haplogroup the Bulgars should be associated some scholars consider the possibility that only a cultural and low genetic influence was brought into the region 217 A 2015 Bulgarian mtDNA study on 13 samples from the 8th 10th century suggests a Western Eurasian matrilineal origin for Proto Bulgarians The study established that Proto Bulgarians are positioned among South Eastern and Southern European populations including modern Bulgarians Proto Bulgarians are genetically distant from Northern and Western Europeans and populations from the Near East and Caucasus On the greatest distance from Proto Bulgarians are Volga Ural and Arabic populations The study further mentions that proto Bulgarians are genetically similar to modern Bulgarians and to certain South Eastern European as well as Italian populations 218 Until now there s still not enough archaeogenetic data to confirm Turkic Ugrian and or Sarmatian origin and admixture of Proto Bulgarian elite however Todor V Chobanov and Svetoslav Samov in their research of available archaeological and genetical data presuppose Proto Bulgarians were a mixture of Late Sarmatians and older Caucasus populations closely related to the Alans and preserving their genetic inheritance even after arriving on the Balkans and mixing with Slav peoples and the remnants of the local Late Antiquity peoples 219 220 The paleoanthropological material from all sites in Volga region Ukraine and Moldova attributed to the Bulgars testify complex ethno cultural processes 221 The material shows the assimilation between the local population and the migrating newcomers 207 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 222 207 221 Despite the morphological proximity there is a visible impact of the local population in the Volga region of Finnic and ancient Turkic in Ukraine of Sarmatian Alans and in Moldova of Slavic people 221 The comparative analysis showed large morphological proximity between the medieval and modern population of the Volga region 221 The examined graves in Northern Bulgaria and Southern Romania showed different somatic types including Caucasoid Mediterranean and less often East Asian 166 The pre Christian burial customs in Bulgaria indicate diverse social i e nomadic and sedentary and cultural influences 223 In some necropolises specific to the Danube Bulgars artificial deformation was found in 80 of the skulls 207 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 224 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 225 177 LegacyIn modern ethnic nationalism there is some rivalry for the Bulgar legacy see Bulgarism The Volga Tatars and Chuvash people are said to be descended from the Volga Bulgars 17 and there may have been ethnogenic influences on the Bashkirs Karachays and Balkars also 226 See alsoBulgar calendar Bulgar language Eurasian nomads History of Bulgaria Oghur languages Turkic migration Turkic tribal confederations Volga BulgariaCitations Waldman Mason 2006 p 106 Gi u zelev Vasil 1979 The Proto Bulgarians Pre history of Asparouhian Bulgaria text pp 15 33 38 a b c d Hyun Jin Kim 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 Pontic Bulgars With their Avar and Turk 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 Oguric 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 Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Encyclopaedia 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 permanent dead link a b Bulgar Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Encyclopaedia 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 a b c 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 Blackwell Publishing Ltd 39 5 375 392 doi 10 1111 j 1744 313X 2012 01117 x PMID 22520580 S2CID 20804610 a b c Waldman Mason 2006 p 106 107 Waldman Mason 2006 p 108 109 a b Waldman Mason 2006 p 109 a b c d e f g h i j k Waldman Mason 2006 p 108 a b Golden 2011 p 145 158 196 Fiedler 2008 p 151 ethnic symbiosis between Slavic commoners and Bulgar elites of Turkic origin who ultimately gave their name to the Slavic speaking Bulgarians a b Shnirelʹman 1996 p 22 35 Gurov Dilian March 2007 The Origins of the Bulgars PDF p 3 Archived from the original PDF on 14 October 2017 Retrieved 14 May 2015 Golden 1992 p 103 104 a b c Karatay 2003 p 24 bulga in Starostin et al Turkic Etymology Etymological Dictionary of the Altaic Languages 2003 Leiden Brill Academic Publishers Karatay 2003 p 24 27 Chen 2012 p 96 a b c d e f g h i j k Bowersock Brown Grabar 1999 p 354 a b c d e Golden 2011 p 143 Clauson 1972 p 337 a b c Maenchen Helfen 1973 p 384 Chen 2012 p 97 Leif Inge Ree Petersen 2013 Siege Warfare and Military Organization in the Successor States 400 800 AD Byzantium the West and Islam Brill p 369 ISBN 9789004254466 a b c d Golden 1992 p 104 Karatay 2003 p 25 Chen 2012 p 92 95 97 Chen 2012 pp 83 90 Chen 2012 pp 92 97 a b Golden 2012 footnote 37 a b c d e f g h i j k l m D Dimitrov 1987 Bulgars Unogundurs Onogurs Utigurs Kutrigurs Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie kroraina com Varna a b D Dimitrov 1987 Sabirs Barsils Belendzheris Khazars Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie kroraina com Varna a b c d Golden 1992 p 103 Tekin Talat Tuna Bulgarlari ve Dilleri 1987 Turk Dil Kurumu p 66 a b Golden 1992 p 96 Golden 2012 p 96 a b c Golden 1992 p 99 Golden 2011 p 140 Golden 1992 p 97 99 Karatay 2003 p 24 29 Karatay 2003 p 28 Golden 1992 pp 92 93 103 Golden 1992 pp 92 93 Golden 1992 pp 92 93 97 Golden 1992 pp 93 95 Menghin Wilfred 1985 Die Langobarden Archaologie und Geschichte in German Stuttgart Theiss p 14 ISBN 9783806203646 a b c Maenchen Helfen 1973 pp 127 129 Hist gentis Lang Ch XVII PD XVII Peters Edward 2003 History of the Lombards Translated by William Dudley Foulke University of Pennsylvania Press a b Wolfram Herwig Dunlap Thomas J 1990 History of the Goths University of California Press p 276 ISBN 9780520069831 a b c d Croke 2001 p 69 Croke 2001 p 53 Croke 2001 pp 23 68 a b c d Curta 2015 p 75 Croke 2001 p 70 Maenchen Helfen 1973 pp 164 220 Maenchen Helfen 1973 p 164 Maenchen Helfen 1973 p 421 Curta 2015 pp 75 76 a b c Curta 2015 p 76 Maenchen Helfen 1973 p 431 a b Golden 1992 p 98 Golden 1992 p 254 Golden 1992 p 97 a b c d e Golden 2011 p 144 Golden 1992 p 100 Golden 1992 pp 100 102 Golden 1992 p 102 a b Golden 1992 p 244 Golden 1992 pp 100 103 a b c d e f Golden 2011 p 145 Golden 1992 pp 244 245 a b c D Dimitrov 1987 Old Great Bulgaria Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie kroraina com Varna a b c Fiedler 2008 p 152 a b c d e f g Golden 1992 p 245 Somogyi Peter 2008 New remarks on the flow of Byzantine coins in Avaria and Walachia during the second half of the seventh century In Curta Florin Kovalev Roman eds The Other Europe in the Middle Ages Avars Bulgars Khazars and Cumans Brill p 104 ISBN 9789004163898 Golden 1992 pp 236 245 Golden 1992 pp 103 236 237 Golden 1992 pp 245 246 a b c D Dimitrov 1987 The Proto Bulgarians and the Saltovo Majack culture Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie kroraina com Varna Golden 1992 pp 245 253 258 Waldman Mason 2006 p 107 Waldman Mason 2006 pp 107 108 D Dimitrov 1987 The migration of the Unogundur Bulgars of Asparukh from the lands of Azov to the Lower Danube Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie kroraina com Varna a b c Golden 1992 p 246 Golden 1992 p 247 a b c d Fiedler 2008 p 154 Fiedler 2008 pp 154 156 Fine 1991 p 68 a b Sedlar 2011 p 16 Fine 1991 pp 67 69 Golden 1992 pp 247 248 a b c d Golden 1992 p 248 Hart Nancy Bulgarian Art and Culture Historical and Contemporary Perspectives PDF University of Texas at Austin p 21 Archived from the original PDF on 10 August 2007 Retrieved 3 March 2007 Vasary 2005 pp 13 26 Vasary 2005 p 1 Golden 1992 pp 5 10 Golden 1992 pp 5 6 Golden 2011 p 54 a b c d Golden 2011 p 118 Fiedler 2008 p 201 Fiedler 2008 p 200 Sophoulis 2011 pp 69 70 Sophoulis 2011 p 69 a b c d e f Runciman 1930 p 284 Maenchen Helfen 1973 p 383 Maenchen Helfen 1973 p 199 Sophoulis 2011 p 70 Sophoulis 2011 p 71 a b c Runciman 1930 p 287 a b c d e f g h i j Bury John B 2015 A History of the Eastern Roman Empire Cambridge University Press pp 334 335 ISBN 9781108083218 Petkov 2008 pp 7 12 13 Petkov 2008 pp 8 12 Curta 2006 pp 162 163 a b c Curta 2006 p 162 Beshevliev Veselin 1981 Prablgarskata obshestvena i drzhavna struktura Proto Bulgarian public and state structure protobulgarians com in Bulgarian Sofia Izd na Otech front pp 33 34 Sophoulis 2011 p 72 Stepanov Tsvetelin March 2001 The Bulgar title KANASYBIGI reconstructing the notions of divine kingship in Bulgaria AD 822 836 Early Medieval Europe 10 1 1 19 doi 10 1111 1468 0254 00077 S2CID 154863640 Curta 2006 p 163 a b Petkov 2008 p 8 a b Sedlar 2011 p 59 a b c d Sophoulis 2011 p 74 a b Henning Joachim 2007 Post Roman Towns Trade and Settlement in Europe and Byzantium Byzantium Pliska and the Balkans Walter de Gruyter pp 618 619 ISBN 9783110183580 a b Sophoulis 2011 p 73 Sophoulis 2011 p 75 a b c d e f g h Runciman 1930 p 285 Petkov 2008 p 10 Petkov 2008 pp 8 10 34 35 a b Petkov 2008 pp 34 35 Petkov 2008 pp 10 13 a b Petkov 2008 p 9 Petkov 2008 pp 9 10 37 38 448 508 a b Curta 2006 p 164 a b Runciman 1930 p 286 Runciman 1930 p 288 a b c d e f g h i j Golden 1992 p 250 a b Fiedler 2008 p 207 a b Curta 2006 pp 161 162 Sophoulis 2011 pp 84 86 Sedlar 2011 p 141 Maenchen Helfen 1973 p 273 Petkov 2008 pp 12 13 a b c Sophoulis 2011 p 84 a b Bonnefoy Yves Doniger Wendy 1993 Asian Mythologies University of Chicago Press pp 315 331 ISBN 9780226064567 a b c d e f g h i MacDermott Mercia 1998 Bulgarian Folk Customs Jessica Kingsley Publishers pp 21 22 ISBN 9781853024856 Zhivkov Boris 2015 Khazaria in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries Brill pp 78 80 112 ISBN 9789004294486 a b Sophoulis 2011 p 88 a b Fiedler 2008 p 208 Sophoulis 2011 pp 83 84 86 a b c d Bukharaev Ravil 2014 Islam in Russia The Four Seasons Routledge pp 80 82 83 ISBN 9781136807930 Shnirelʹman 1996 pp 30 31 Petkov 2008 p 11 Tokarev 1980 Golden 1992 p 141 Sophoulis 2011 pp 86 89 Maenchen Helfen 1973 p 268 Sophoulis 2011 p 82 Sophoulis 2011 p 83 Sophoulis 2011 p 80 a b c d e Sophoulis 2011 p 66 a b Sophoulis 2011 p 67 a b c d Fiedler 2008 p 157 Fiedler 2008 p 158 Fiedler 2008 p 159 a b c d e D Dimitrov 1987 The Proto Bulgarians east of the Sea of Azov in the VIII IX cc Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie kroraina com Varna Curta 2006 p 160 Fiedler 2008 p 196 Golden 1992 p 252 Mako Gerald 2011 The Islamization of the Volga Bulghars A Question Reconsidered Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi 18 199 223 Detrez Raymond 2005 Developing Cultural Identity in the Balkans Convergence Vs Divergence Peter Lang p 29 ISBN 9789052012971 a b c d e f 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 Pritsak Omeljan 1982 The Hunnic Language of the Attila Clan Harvard Ukrainian Studies Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute IV 4 470 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 Pritsak Omeljan 1981 The Proto Bulgarian Military Inventory Inscriptions Turkic Bulgarian Hungarian relations Budapest 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 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Sedlar 2011 p 425 a b c Sophoulis 2011 p 45 Sophoulis 2011 pp 45 83 a b c Sedlar 2011 p 424 Fine 1991 p 69 Golden 2011 p 268 a b c Karachanak et al 2013 Dobrev Petr 1995 Ezikt na Asparuhovite i Kuberovite blgari 1995 Stamatov Atanas 1997 IZVORI I INTERPRETACII I II ChAST TEMPORA INCOGNITA NA RANNATA BLGARSKA ISTORIYa MGU Sv Ivan Rilski Dimitrov Bozhidar 2005 12 mita v blgarskata istoriya Milcheva Hristina Blgarite sa s drevno iranski proizhod Nauchna konferenciya Srednovekovna Rus Volzhka Blgariya i severnoto Chernomorie v konteksta na ruskite iztochni vrzki Kazan Rusiya 15 10 2007 Beshevliev Veselin Iranski elementi u prvoblgarite Antichnoe Obshestvo Trudy Konferencii po izucheniyu problem antichnosti str 237 247 Izdatelstvo Nauka Moskva 1967 AN SSSR Otdelenie Istorii Schmitt Rudiger 1985 Iranica Protobulgarica Asparuch und Konsorten im Lichte der Iranischen Onomastik Linguistique Balkanique Saarbrucken Academie Bulgare des Sciences XXVIII l 13 38 Maenchen Helfen 1973 pp 384 443 Jordanov Stefan Slavyani tyurki i indo iranci v rannoto srednovekovie ezikovi problemi na blgarskiya etnogenezis V Blgaristichni prouchvaniya 8 Aktualni problemi na blgaristikata i slavistikata Sedma mezhdunarodna nauchna sesiya Veliko Trnovo 22 23 avgust 2001 g Veliko Trnovo 2002 275 295 Nadpis 21 ot blgarskoto zlatno skrovishe Nagi Sent Miklosh studiya ot prof d r Ivan Kalchev Dobrev ot Sbornik s materiali ot Nauchna konferenciya na VA G S Rakovski Sofiya 2005 g 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 a b 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 a b Golden 2011 p 55 Golden 1992 p 392 Golden 1992 pp 392 398 Golden 1992 p 383 a b c d D Dimitrov 1987 Pit graves artificial skull deformation Sarmatians Northern Bactria Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie kroraina com Varna Golden 1992 p 261 D Dimitrov 1987 The Proto Bulgarians in the Crimea in the VIII IX cc Prabylgarite po severnoto i zapadnoto Chernomorie kroraina com Varna a b Lalueza Fox et al 2004 a b Golden 1992 pp 379 382 Golden 1992 p 381 Golden 1992 pp 124 127 Heyer Evelyne Balaresque Patricia 2009 Genetic diversity and the emergence of ethnic groups in Central Asia BMC Genet 10 49 49 doi 10 1186 1471 2156 10 49 PMC 2745423 PMID 19723301 Yunusbayev Bayazit Metspalu Mait 2015 The Genetic Legacy of the Expansion of Turkic Speaking Nomads across Eurasia PLOS Genetics 11 4 e1005068 doi 10 1371 journal pgen 1005068 PMC 4405460 PMID 25898006 Science 14 February 2014 Vol 343 no 6172 p 751 A Genetic Atlas of Human Admixture History Garrett Hellenthal at al CIs for the admixture time s overlap but predate the Mongol empire with estimates from 440 to 1080 CE Fig 3 In each population one source group has at least some ancestry related to Northeast Asians with 2 to 4 of these groups total ancestry linking directly to East Asia This signal might correspond to a small genetic legacy from invasions of peoples from the Asian steppes e g the Huns Magyars and Bulgars during the first millennium CE a b Arnaiz Villena et al June 2003 HLA Genes in the Chuvashian Population from European Russia Admixture of Central European and Mediterranean Populations PDF Human Biology 75 3 375 392 doi 10 1353 hub 2003 0040 hdl 1808 13584 ISSN 1534 6617 PMID 14527201 S2CID 9416136 Nesheva Karachanak Yankova Lari Yordanov Galabov Caramelli Toncheva 2015 Mitochondrial DNA Suggests a Western Eurasian Origin for Ancient Proto Bulgarians Human Biology 87 1 19 28 doi 10 13110 humanbiology 87 1 0019 JSTOR 10 13110 humanbiology 87 1 0019 PMID 26416319 S2CID 25940845 Chobanov Todor Stamov Svetoslav 2019 Archaeological and genetic data suggestCiscaucasian origin for the Proto Bulgarians Papers of BAS Humanities and Social Sciences 6 1 13 31 Retrieved 4 May 2022 Chobanov Todor 2021 VII Conclusion The Debate about the origin of Protobulgarians after the introduction of Genetic evidence The debate about the origin of Protobulgarians in the beginning of the 21st century Ciela pp 161 178 ISBN 978 954 28 3629 2 a b c d 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 Nauka YaVLENIE ISSKUSTVENNOJ DEFORMACII ChEREPA U PROTOBOLGAR PROISHOZhDENIE I ZNAChENIE okonchanie www iriston com Retrieved 27 March 2018 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 kroraina com Varna Maenchen Helfen 1973 p 443 Olson Pappas Pappas 1994 pp 79 81 84 87 114 115 General and cited sourcesClauson Gerard 1972 An Etymological dictionary of Pre 13th Century Turkish ISBN missing Runciman Steven 1930 Appendix V Bulgar titles A history of the First Bulgarian Empire macedonia kroraina com London George Bell amp 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 Vasary Istvan 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 amp 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 Romane 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 Ogur Oguz 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 Istvan 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 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0056779 PMC 3590186 PMID 23483890 Zimonyi Istvan 1990 Klara Szonyi Sandor ed The Origins of the Volga Bulghars Studia Uralo Altaica 32 Further readingAngelov Dimitŭr 1971 Obrazuvane na blgarskata narodnost in Bulgarian Sofia Nauka i Izkustvo Vekove Beshevliev Veselin 1981 Prablgarski epigrafski pametnici promacedonia org in Bulgarian Sofia Izdatelstvo na Otechestveniya front 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 Bulghars In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 Karatay Osman The Bulgars in Transoxiana Some Inferences from Early Islamic Sources Migracijske i etnicke 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 Some remarks on the Chinese Bulgar PDF Sanping Chen External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bulgars Bulgars Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Arrival of the Bulgars Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bulgars amp oldid 1128874276, 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