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Caspian expeditions of the Rus'

The Caspian expeditions of the Rus' were military raids undertaken by the Rus' between the late 9th century[a] and c. 1041 on the Caspian Sea shores,[a] of what are nowadays Iran, Dagestan, and Azerbaijan. Initially, the Rus' appeared in Serkland in the 9th century traveling as merchants along the Volga trade route, selling furs, honey, and slaves. The first small-scale Viking raids took place in the late 9th and early 10th century. The Rus' undertook the first large-scale expedition in 913; having arrived on 500 ships, they pillaged in the Gorgan region, in the territory of present-day Iran, and more to the west, in Gilan and Mazandaran, taking slaves and goods. On their return, the northern raiders were attacked and defeated by the Khazars in the Volga Delta, and those who escaped were killed by the local tribes on the middle Volga.

Modern interpretation of Rus' Varangians and their longships in Gardariki, by Nicholas Roerich.

During their next expedition in 943, the Rus' captured Bardha'a, the capital of Arran, in the modern-day Republic of Azerbaijan. The Rus' stayed there for several months, killing many inhabitants of the city and amassing substantial plunder. It was only an outbreak of dysentery among the Rus' that forced them to depart with their spoils. Sviatoslav, prince of Kiev, commanded the next attack, which destroyed the Khazar state in 965. Sviatoslav's campaign established the Rus's hold on the north-south trade routes, helping to alter the demographics of the region. Raids continued through the time period with the last Scandinavian attempt to reestablish the route to the Caspian Sea taking place in c. 1041 by Ingvar the Far-Travelled.

Background and early raids Edit

The Rus' first penetrated to the Muslim areas adjacent to the Caspian Sea as traders rather than warriors. By the early 9th century, the Norsemen settled in northwestern Rus', where they established a settlement called Aldeigja (Slavic: Ladoga) about 6 miles (9.7 km) south of the Volkhov River entry into Lake Ladoga. From there, they began trading with the Byzantine Empire along the Dnieper trade route and with the Muslim lands around the Caspian Sea along the Volga trade route.[2] In the late 9th century, ibn Khordadbeh described the Rus' buying goods from the Khazars in the market areas on the lower Volga and selling them on the markets of Caspian towns;[3] these merchants brought furs, honey, and slaves.[2] Small groups of the Rus' even went on camels as far as Baghdad to sell their goods; their European slaves interpreted for them.[3]

Thomas S. Noonan suggested that the Rus' reached Baghdad as early as 800; this argument is supported by the finding of Sassanid, Arab, and Arabo-Sassanid dirham coins dated no later than 804–805 at Peterhof, near Saint-Petersburg.[4] In ibn Khordadbeh's account, the Rus' are described as "a kind of the Saqaliba", a term usually used to refer to Slavs, and anti-Normanist scholars have interpreted this passage as indicative of the Rus' being Slavs rather than Scandinavians. In the interpretation of the Normanist scholars, the word Saqaliba was also frequently applied to all fair-haired, ruddy-complexioned populations of Central, Eastern, and Northeastern Europe, so ibn Khordadbeh's language is ambiguous here.[5]

The first Caspian raid of the Rus' occurred sometime in the reign of Hasan ibn Zaid, ruler of Tabaristan between 864 and 884. The Rus' sailed into the Caspian Sea and unsuccessfully attacked its eastern shore at Abaskun.[6] This raid was probably on a very small scale.[a] The second raid took place in 909 or 910[7] and was likewise aimed at Abaskun;[5] just like the previous attack, this expedition was a minor one with only sixteen ships participating in it.[8] The third minor raid took place in 911 or 912.[5]

Raid of 913 Edit

 
Map showing the locations of major Rus' raids around the Caspian Sea, mid-9th to mid-11th century. Blue dates indicate major Rus' raids; purple outline indicates area affected by the 913 Caspian invasion. Names of polities shown depict the situation c. 950.

The Rus' launched the first large-scale raid in 913. A fleet of 500 ships reached the southern shores of the Caspian Sea through the country of the Khazars. In order to secure a peaceful passage through the land of the Khazars, the Rus' promised the Khazars half of their spoils. They sailed down the Dnieper River into the Black Sea, then into the Sea of Azov, then up the Don River past the Khazar city of Sarkel, and then by a portage reached the Volga, which led them into the Caspian Sea.[8]

The Rus' attacked in the Gorgan region around Abaskun, as well as Tabaristan, pillaging the countrysides as they went.[9] An attempt to repel them as they lay in anchor near islands in the southwestern part of the Caspian Sea proved unsuccessful; and they were then able to roam and raid at will. Across the sea they raided at Baku, penetrating inland a distance of three days' journey,[8] and plundering the regions of Arran, Tabaristan, Beylagan, and Shirvan.[5][10] Everywhere they looted as much as they could, taking women and children as slaves. The news of their outrages preceded them as they headed homeward[8] and, in the Volga Delta, the Rus' were attacked by Khazars, as well as by some Christians, apparently with the acquiescence of the Khazar ruler. According to al-Masudi, those who escaped were finished off by the Burtas and Volga Bulgars.[5]

Raid of 943 Edit

The second large-scale campaign is dated to 943, when Igor was the supreme leader of the Rus', according to the Primary Chronicle. During the 943 expedition, the Rus' rowed up the Kura River, deep into the Caucasus, defeated the forces of Marzuban bin Muhammad,[11] and captured Bardha'a, the capital of Arran. The Rus' allowed the local people to retain their religion in exchange for recognition of their overlordship; it is possible that the Rus' intended to settle permanently there.[12] According to ibn Miskawaih, the local people broke the peace by stone-throwing and other abuse directed against the Rus', who then demanded that the inhabitants evacuate the city. This ultimatum was rejected, and the Rus' began killing people and holding many for ransom. The slaughter was briefly interrupted for negotiations, which soon broke down.[13] The Rus' stayed in Bardha'a for several months,[14] using it as a base for plundering the adjacent areas, and amassed substantial spoils.[15]

The city was saved only by an outbreak of dysentery among the Rus'.[16] Ibn Miskawaih writes that the Rus' "indulged excessively in the fruit of which there are numerous sorts there. This produced an epidemic among them . . . and their numbers began thereby to be reduced." Encouraged by the epidemic among the Rus', the Muslims approached the city. The Rus', their chief riding on a donkey, made an unsuccessful sally after which they lost 700 warriors, but evaded encirclement and retreated to the Bardha'a fortress, where they were besieged by the Muslims. Exhausted by the disease and the siege, the Rus' "left by night the fortress in which they had established their quarters, carrying on their backs all they could of their treasure, gems, and fine raiment, boys and girls as they wanted, and made for the Kura River, where the ships in which they had issued from their home were in readiness with their crews, and 300 Russes whom they had been supporting with portions of their booty."[15] The Muslims then exhumed from the Rus' graves the weapons that had been buried beside the warriors.[16]

George Vernadsky proposed that Oleg of Novgorod was the donkey-riding chief of the Rus' who attacked Bardha'a. Vernadsky identified Oleg with Helgu, a figure mentioned in the Schechter Letter. According to that document, Helgu went to Persia by boat and died there after a failed attack on Constantinople in 941.[17] On the other hand, Lev Gumilev, drawing on the name of the Rus' leader (as recorded in Arabian sources), hypothesizes that this leader was Sveneld, a Varangian chieftain whose wealth was noted in the Primary Chronicle under 945.[18]

Destruction of Khazaria Edit

 
The site of the Khazar fortress at Sarkel, sacked by Sviatoslav c. 965. Aerial photo from excavations conducted by Mikhail Artamonov in the 1930s.

The sources are not clear about the roots of the conflict between Khazaria and Rus', so several possibilities have been suggested. The Rus' had an interest in removing the Khazar hold on the Volga trade route because the Khazars collected duties from the goods transported by the Volga. Byzantine incitement also apparently played a role. Khazars were the allies of the Byzantines until the reign of Romanus I Lecapenus, who persecuted the Jews of his empire.

The conflict may also have been spurred by the Khazars' decision to close passage down the Volga in response to the raid of 943. In the Khazar Correspondence, written around 950–960, the Khazar ruler Joseph reported his role as defender of the Muslim polities of the Caspian region against Rus' incursions: "I have to wage war with them [Rus], for if I would give them any chance at all they would lay waste the whole land of the Muslims as far as Baghdad."[19] Earlier conflict between Muslim elements of the Khazar army and Rus' marauders in c. 912 may have contributed to this arrangement and the hostility of the Rus' against Khazaria.[20]

In 965, Sviatoslav I of Kiev finally went to war against Khazaria. He employed Oghuz and Pecheneg mercenaries in this campaign, perhaps to counter the Khazars' superior cavalry.[21] Sviatoslav destroyed the Khazar city of Sarkel around 965, and possibly sacked (but did not occupy) the Khazar city of Kerch on the Crimea.[22] He subsequently (probably in 968 or 969) destroyed the Khazar capital of Atil.[23] A visitor to Atil wrote soon after Sviatoslav's campaign: "The Rus' attacked, and no grape or raisin remained, not a leaf on a branch."[16] Ibn Hawqal is the only author who reports the sack of Semender, after which the Rus' departed for "Rûm and al-Andaluz".[24]

Sviatoslav's campaign brought the prosperity and independence of Khazaria to an abrupt end. The destruction of Khazar imperial power paved the way for Kievan Rus' to dominate north-south trade routes through the steppe and across the Black Sea, routes that formerly had been a major source of revenue for the Khazars. Moreover, Sviatoslav's campaigns led to increased Slavic settlement in the region of the Saltovo-Mayaki culture, greatly changing the demographics and culture of the transitional area between the forest and the steppe.[22]

Later expeditions Edit

 
The Gripsholm Runestone commemorates Scandinavians who died in the expedition of Ingvar the Far-Travelled.

In 987, Maymun, emir of Derbent, asked the Rus' to help him against local chiefs. The Rus', many of whom appear to have been professional soldiers, arrived on 18 ships. Uncertain of their reception, they sent only one ship to reconnoitre the situation. When its crew were massacred by the local population, the Rus' went on to loot the city of Maskat. In 989, this same Maymun is reported to have refused the demand of a local preacher to turn over his Rus' mercenaries to him for either conversion to Islam or death. In the ensuing struggle, Maymun was driven from the city and forced to surrender the Rus' soldiers, but he returned in 992.[5]

In 1030, the Rus' raided the region of Shirvan; the ruler of Ganja then paid them much money to help suppress a revolt in Beylagan. Afterwards, the Rus' returned home. According to one source, in November 1031 the Rus' returned, but were defeated near Baku and expelled. The year of 1032 saw another Rus' raid into Shirvan; they were joined by the Alans and Sarir. Local Muslims defeated the Rus' in 1033. It is unclear to which Rus' grouping these raiders belonged. Omeljan Pritsak suggests that they operated out of a base near the Terek estuary and had their principal home in Tmutarakan. Pritsak also speculated that the Rus', operating from the Caspian basin, shortly thereafter lent support to the Oghuz in a power struggle in Khwarezm.[5]

in 1042 Ingvar the Far-Travelled led an unsuccessful large Viking attack against Persia with a fleet of 200 ships (around 15–20 thousand men).[5]

The legendary saga Yngvars saga víðförla describes the last expedition of the Vikings into the Caspian, dated to 1041 and possibly connected with the Georgian-Byzantine Battle of Sasireti in which a Varangian force participated around the same time; in the saga much legend is conflated with the historical facts. This expedition was launched from Sweden by Ingvar the Far-Travelled, who went down the Volga into the land of the Saracens (Serkland in Norse).[25][26] There are no less than twenty-six Ingvar Runestones, twenty-three of them being in the Lake Mälaren region of Uppland in Sweden, referring to Swedish warriors who went out with Ingvar on his expedition to the Saracen lands, an expedition whose purpose was probably to reopen old trade routes, now that the Bulgars and the Khazars no longer proved obstacles. A stone to Ingvar's brother indicates that he went east for gold but that he died in the Saracen land.[27] Afterwards, no attempts were made by the Norsemen to reopen the route between the Baltic and Caspian seas.[16]

Khaqani tells about the invasion of Shirvan in 1173 or 1174. In his odes, Khaqani names the Rus' and Khazars, Rus' and Alans, Rus' and Sarir as the invaders. Peter Golden argued that the Rus' mentioned by Khaqani were Volga pirates who came in 73 ships. Yevgeni Pakhomov and Vladimir Minorsky thought the invasion was initiated by the ruler of Darbent, Bek-Bars b. Muzaffar. According to Minorsky, "the initiative of Bek-Bars was independent of Kiev, and he must have used bands of free-lances (бродники) who were roaming in the south, as a prototype of the future Cossacks".[28] The shirvanshah Ahsitan I turned to the Georgian king, George III for aid and a combined army, which also included the future Byzantine emperor Andronikos Komnenos,[28] defeated the invaders and recaptured the fortress of Shabaran. Georgian sources speak of the Khazars, but do not mention Rus' in connection with this event.[5]

Timeline Edit

Yaroslav the WiseSviatopolk IYaroslav the WiseSviatopolk IVladimir the GreatYaropolk I of KievSviatoslav IIgor of KievOleg of NovgorodRurik

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b c 'Sometime during the reign of Hasan Ibn Zaid, ruler of Tabaristan (r. 864–884), the Rus sailed into the Caspian Sea and unsuccessfully attacked the eastern shore at Abaskun. This was probably a raid on very small scale (...) Great raids, however, took place in c. 913, in 943, in 965 and in c. 1041.'[1]

References Edit

  1. ^ Logan 2005, p. 182.
  2. ^ a b Brøndsted (1965), pp. 64–65
  3. ^ a b Logan (1992), p. 200
  4. ^ Noonan (1987–1991)
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Rus". Encyclopaedia of Islam
  6. ^ Abaskun, first recorded by Ptolemy as Socanaa, was documented in Arab sources as "the most famous port of the Khazarian Sea". It was situated within three days' journey from Gorgan. The southern part of the Caspian Sea was known as the "Sea of Abaskun". See: B.N. Zakhoder (1898–1960). The Caspian Compilation of Records about Eastern Europe (online version).
  7. ^ Information about the Rus' raids comes largely from Muslim sources, which use the Islamic calendar. Because the years of the Islamic calendar do not map exactly to the years of the Gregorian calendar, an event dated to a certain year of the Islamic calendar may have occurred in either of the two consecutive years of the Gregorian calendar.
  8. ^ a b c d Logan (1992), p. 201
  9. ^ Gunilla Larsson. Ship and society: maritime ideology in Late Iron Age Sweden Uppsala Universitet, Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, 2007 ISBN 9150619152 p 208
  10. ^ Cahiers du monde russe et soviétique, Volume 35, Number 4. Mouton, 1994. (originally from the University of California, digitalised on 9 March 2010)
  11. ^ "Bardha'a". Encyclopaedia of Islam
  12. ^ Logan (1992), pp. 201–202; "Rus". Encyclopaedia of Islam
  13. ^ Logan (1992), pp. 201–202
  14. ^ According to Yaqut, they stayed for a whole year. "Bardha'a". Encyclopaedia of Islam
  15. ^ a b Vernadsky (1959), p. 269
  16. ^ a b c d Logan (1992), p. 202
  17. ^ Vernadsky (1959), p. 270; see also, e.g., Zuckerman 257–268; Christian 341–345.
  18. ^ The Kievan chronicle mentions that the fabulous richness of Sveneld's troops (druzhina) incited such envy of Igor's warriors that they attempted to levy tribute from the Drevlians for the second time in one month. The Drevlians revolted and killed Igor in 944 or 945. Gumilev suggests that, while engaged in his successful Caspian expedition, Sveneld did not take part in Igor's unfortunate raid on Constantinople, which ended ignominiously. This scenario also explains the glaring absence of Sveneld's name from Igor's treaty with Byzantium (944), as preserved in the Primary Chronicle.
  19. ^ "Khazar". Encyclopaedia of Islam
  20. ^ Christian (1999), p. 296
  21. ^ Christian (1999), p. 298; Pletneva (1990), p. 18
  22. ^ a b Christian (1999), p. 298
  23. ^ See, generally Christian (1999), pp. 297–298; Dunlop (1954). Artamonov proposed that the sack of Sarkel came after the destruction of Atil. Artamonov (1962), p. 428.
  24. ^ Ibn Hawkal also wrote that the Rus', "are the ones who of old went to Andalus and then to Barda." The earlier attack on Muslim Spain by "a nation of the Majus" [Muslim name for Zoroastrians and occasionally other pagans] is mentioned by al-Masudi. "Rus", Encyclopaedia of Islam
  25. ^ Thunberg, Carl L. (2010). Ingvarståget och dess monument. Göteborgs universitet. CLTS. ISBN 978-91-981859-2-8.
  26. ^ Thunberg, Carl L. (2011). Särkland och dess källmaterial. Göteborgs universitet. CLTS. ISBN 978-91-981859-3-5.
  27. ^ Thunberg (2010), pp. 25-26
  28. ^ a b Minorsky (1945), pp. 557–558

Bibliography Edit

caspian, expeditions, were, military, raids, undertaken, between, late, century, 1041, caspian, shores, what, nowadays, iran, dagestan, azerbaijan, initially, appeared, serkland, century, traveling, merchants, along, volga, trade, route, selling, furs, honey, . The Caspian expeditions of the Rus were military raids undertaken by the Rus between the late 9th century a and c 1041 on the Caspian Sea shores a of what are nowadays Iran Dagestan and Azerbaijan Initially the Rus appeared in Serkland in the 9th century traveling as merchants along the Volga trade route selling furs honey and slaves The first small scale Viking raids took place in the late 9th and early 10th century The Rus undertook the first large scale expedition in 913 having arrived on 500 ships they pillaged in the Gorgan region in the territory of present day Iran and more to the west in Gilan and Mazandaran taking slaves and goods On their return the northern raiders were attacked and defeated by the Khazars in the Volga Delta and those who escaped were killed by the local tribes on the middle Volga Modern interpretation of Rus Varangians and their longships in Gardariki by Nicholas Roerich During their next expedition in 943 the Rus captured Bardha a the capital of Arran in the modern day Republic of Azerbaijan The Rus stayed there for several months killing many inhabitants of the city and amassing substantial plunder It was only an outbreak of dysentery among the Rus that forced them to depart with their spoils Sviatoslav prince of Kiev commanded the next attack which destroyed the Khazar state in 965 Sviatoslav s campaign established the Rus s hold on the north south trade routes helping to alter the demographics of the region Raids continued through the time period with the last Scandinavian attempt to reestablish the route to the Caspian Sea taking place in c 1041 by Ingvar the Far Travelled Contents 1 Background and early raids 2 Raid of 913 3 Raid of 943 4 Destruction of Khazaria 5 Later expeditions 6 Timeline 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 BibliographyBackground and early raids EditThe Rus first penetrated to the Muslim areas adjacent to the Caspian Sea as traders rather than warriors By the early 9th century the Norsemen settled in northwestern Rus where they established a settlement called Aldeigja Slavic Ladoga about 6 miles 9 7 km south of the Volkhov River entry into Lake Ladoga From there they began trading with the Byzantine Empire along the Dnieper trade route and with the Muslim lands around the Caspian Sea along the Volga trade route 2 In the late 9th century ibn Khordadbeh described the Rus buying goods from the Khazars in the market areas on the lower Volga and selling them on the markets of Caspian towns 3 these merchants brought furs honey and slaves 2 Small groups of the Rus even went on camels as far as Baghdad to sell their goods their European slaves interpreted for them 3 Thomas S Noonan suggested that the Rus reached Baghdad as early as 800 this argument is supported by the finding of Sassanid Arab and Arabo Sassanid dirham coins dated no later than 804 805 at Peterhof near Saint Petersburg 4 In ibn Khordadbeh s account the Rus are described as a kind of the Saqaliba a term usually used to refer to Slavs and anti Normanist scholars have interpreted this passage as indicative of the Rus being Slavs rather than Scandinavians In the interpretation of the Normanist scholars the word Saqaliba was also frequently applied to all fair haired ruddy complexioned populations of Central Eastern and Northeastern Europe so ibn Khordadbeh s language is ambiguous here 5 The first Caspian raid of the Rus occurred sometime in the reign of Hasan ibn Zaid ruler of Tabaristan between 864 and 884 The Rus sailed into the Caspian Sea and unsuccessfully attacked its eastern shore at Abaskun 6 This raid was probably on a very small scale a The second raid took place in 909 or 910 7 and was likewise aimed at Abaskun 5 just like the previous attack this expedition was a minor one with only sixteen ships participating in it 8 The third minor raid took place in 911 or 912 5 Raid of 913 Edit nbsp Map showing the locations of major Rus raids around the Caspian Sea mid 9th to mid 11th century Blue dates indicate major Rus raids purple outline indicates area affected by the 913 Caspian invasion Names of polities shown depict the situation c 950 The Rus launched the first large scale raid in 913 A fleet of 500 ships reached the southern shores of the Caspian Sea through the country of the Khazars In order to secure a peaceful passage through the land of the Khazars the Rus promised the Khazars half of their spoils They sailed down the Dnieper River into the Black Sea then into the Sea of Azov then up the Don River past the Khazar city of Sarkel and then by a portage reached the Volga which led them into the Caspian Sea 8 The Rus attacked in the Gorgan region around Abaskun as well as Tabaristan pillaging the countrysides as they went 9 An attempt to repel them as they lay in anchor near islands in the southwestern part of the Caspian Sea proved unsuccessful and they were then able to roam and raid at will Across the sea they raided at Baku penetrating inland a distance of three days journey 8 and plundering the regions of Arran Tabaristan Beylagan and Shirvan 5 10 Everywhere they looted as much as they could taking women and children as slaves The news of their outrages preceded them as they headed homeward 8 and in the Volga Delta the Rus were attacked by Khazars as well as by some Christians apparently with the acquiescence of the Khazar ruler According to al Masudi those who escaped were finished off by the Burtas and Volga Bulgars 5 Raid of 943 EditThe second large scale campaign is dated to 943 when Igor was the supreme leader of the Rus according to the Primary Chronicle During the 943 expedition the Rus rowed up the Kura River deep into the Caucasus defeated the forces of Marzuban bin Muhammad 11 and captured Bardha a the capital of Arran The Rus allowed the local people to retain their religion in exchange for recognition of their overlordship it is possible that the Rus intended to settle permanently there 12 According to ibn Miskawaih the local people broke the peace by stone throwing and other abuse directed against the Rus who then demanded that the inhabitants evacuate the city This ultimatum was rejected and the Rus began killing people and holding many for ransom The slaughter was briefly interrupted for negotiations which soon broke down 13 The Rus stayed in Bardha a for several months 14 using it as a base for plundering the adjacent areas and amassed substantial spoils 15 The city was saved only by an outbreak of dysentery among the Rus 16 Ibn Miskawaih writes that the Rus indulged excessively in the fruit of which there are numerous sorts there This produced an epidemic among them and their numbers began thereby to be reduced Encouraged by the epidemic among the Rus the Muslims approached the city The Rus their chief riding on a donkey made an unsuccessful sally after which they lost 700 warriors but evaded encirclement and retreated to the Bardha a fortress where they were besieged by the Muslims Exhausted by the disease and the siege the Rus left by night the fortress in which they had established their quarters carrying on their backs all they could of their treasure gems and fine raiment boys and girls as they wanted and made for the Kura River where the ships in which they had issued from their home were in readiness with their crews and 300 Russes whom they had been supporting with portions of their booty 15 The Muslims then exhumed from the Rus graves the weapons that had been buried beside the warriors 16 George Vernadsky proposed that Oleg of Novgorod was the donkey riding chief of the Rus who attacked Bardha a Vernadsky identified Oleg with Helgu a figure mentioned in the Schechter Letter According to that document Helgu went to Persia by boat and died there after a failed attack on Constantinople in 941 17 On the other hand Lev Gumilev drawing on the name of the Rus leader as recorded in Arabian sources hypothesizes that this leader was Sveneld a Varangian chieftain whose wealth was noted in the Primary Chronicle under 945 18 Destruction of Khazaria Edit nbsp The site of the Khazar fortress at Sarkel sacked by Sviatoslav c 965 Aerial photo from excavations conducted by Mikhail Artamonov in the 1930s The sources are not clear about the roots of the conflict between Khazaria and Rus so several possibilities have been suggested The Rus had an interest in removing the Khazar hold on the Volga trade route because the Khazars collected duties from the goods transported by the Volga Byzantine incitement also apparently played a role Khazars were the allies of the Byzantines until the reign of Romanus I Lecapenus who persecuted the Jews of his empire The conflict may also have been spurred by the Khazars decision to close passage down the Volga in response to the raid of 943 In the Khazar Correspondence written around 950 960 the Khazar ruler Joseph reported his role as defender of the Muslim polities of the Caspian region against Rus incursions I have to wage war with them Rus for if I would give them any chance at all they would lay waste the whole land of the Muslims as far as Baghdad 19 Earlier conflict between Muslim elements of the Khazar army and Rus marauders in c 912 may have contributed to this arrangement and the hostility of the Rus against Khazaria 20 In 965 Sviatoslav I of Kiev finally went to war against Khazaria He employed Oghuz and Pecheneg mercenaries in this campaign perhaps to counter the Khazars superior cavalry 21 Sviatoslav destroyed the Khazar city of Sarkel around 965 and possibly sacked but did not occupy the Khazar city of Kerch on the Crimea 22 He subsequently probably in 968 or 969 destroyed the Khazar capital of Atil 23 A visitor to Atil wrote soon after Sviatoslav s campaign The Rus attacked and no grape or raisin remained not a leaf on a branch 16 Ibn Hawqal is the only author who reports the sack of Semender after which the Rus departed for Rum and al Andaluz 24 Sviatoslav s campaign brought the prosperity and independence of Khazaria to an abrupt end The destruction of Khazar imperial power paved the way for Kievan Rus to dominate north south trade routes through the steppe and across the Black Sea routes that formerly had been a major source of revenue for the Khazars Moreover Sviatoslav s campaigns led to increased Slavic settlement in the region of the Saltovo Mayaki culture greatly changing the demographics and culture of the transitional area between the forest and the steppe 22 Later expeditions Edit nbsp The Gripsholm Runestone commemorates Scandinavians who died in the expedition of Ingvar the Far Travelled In 987 Maymun emir of Derbent asked the Rus to help him against local chiefs The Rus many of whom appear to have been professional soldiers arrived on 18 ships Uncertain of their reception they sent only one ship to reconnoitre the situation When its crew were massacred by the local population the Rus went on to loot the city of Maskat In 989 this same Maymun is reported to have refused the demand of a local preacher to turn over his Rus mercenaries to him for either conversion to Islam or death In the ensuing struggle Maymun was driven from the city and forced to surrender the Rus soldiers but he returned in 992 5 In 1030 the Rus raided the region of Shirvan the ruler of Ganja then paid them much money to help suppress a revolt in Beylagan Afterwards the Rus returned home According to one source in November 1031 the Rus returned but were defeated near Baku and expelled The year of 1032 saw another Rus raid into Shirvan they were joined by the Alans and Sarir Local Muslims defeated the Rus in 1033 It is unclear to which Rus grouping these raiders belonged Omeljan Pritsak suggests that they operated out of a base near the Terek estuary and had their principal home in Tmutarakan Pritsak also speculated that the Rus operating from the Caspian basin shortly thereafter lent support to the Oghuz in a power struggle in Khwarezm 5 in 1042 Ingvar the Far Travelled led an unsuccessful large Viking attack against Persia with a fleet of 200 ships around 15 20 thousand men 5 The legendary saga Yngvars saga vidforla describes the last expedition of the Vikings into the Caspian dated to 1041 and possibly connected with the Georgian Byzantine Battle of Sasireti in which a Varangian force participated around the same time in the saga much legend is conflated with the historical facts This expedition was launched from Sweden by Ingvar the Far Travelled who went down the Volga into the land of the Saracens Serkland in Norse 25 26 There are no less than twenty six Ingvar Runestones twenty three of them being in the Lake Malaren region of Uppland in Sweden referring to Swedish warriors who went out with Ingvar on his expedition to the Saracen lands an expedition whose purpose was probably to reopen old trade routes now that the Bulgars and the Khazars no longer proved obstacles A stone to Ingvar s brother indicates that he went east for gold but that he died in the Saracen land 27 Afterwards no attempts were made by the Norsemen to reopen the route between the Baltic and Caspian seas 16 Khaqani tells about the invasion of Shirvan in 1173 or 1174 In his odes Khaqani names the Rus and Khazars Rus and Alans Rus and Sarir as the invaders Peter Golden argued that the Rus mentioned by Khaqani were Volga pirates who came in 73 ships Yevgeni Pakhomov and Vladimir Minorsky thought the invasion was initiated by the ruler of Darbent Bek Bars b Muzaffar According to Minorsky the initiative of Bek Bars was independent of Kiev and he must have used bands of free lances brodniki who were roaming in the south as a prototype of the future Cossacks 28 The shirvanshah Ahsitan I turned to the Georgian king George III for aid and a combined army which also included the future Byzantine emperor Andronikos Komnenos 28 defeated the invaders and recaptured the fortress of Shabaran Georgian sources speak of the Khazars but do not mention Rus in connection with this event 5 Timeline EditSee also EditByzantine expeditions of the Rus Paphlagonian expedition of the Rus Ingvar the Far TravelledNotes Edit a b c Sometime during the reign of Hasan Ibn Zaid ruler of Tabaristan r 864 884 the Rus sailed into the Caspian Sea and unsuccessfully attacked the eastern shore at Abaskun This was probably a raid on very small scale Great raids however took place in c 913 in 943 in 965 and in c 1041 1 References Edit Logan 2005 p 182 a b Brondsted 1965 pp 64 65 a b Logan 1992 p 200 Noonan 1987 1991 a b c d e f g h i Rus Encyclopaedia of Islam Abaskun first recorded by Ptolemy as Socanaa was documented in Arab sources as the most famous port of the Khazarian Sea It was situated within three days journey from Gorgan The southern part of the Caspian Sea was known as the Sea of Abaskun See B N Zakhoder 1898 1960 The Caspian Compilation of Records about Eastern Europe online version Information about the Rus raids comes largely from Muslim sources which use the Islamic calendar Because the years of the Islamic calendar do not map exactly to the years of the Gregorian calendar an event dated to a certain year of the Islamic calendar may have occurred in either of the two consecutive years of the Gregorian calendar a b c d Logan 1992 p 201 Gunilla Larsson Ship and society maritime ideology in Late Iron Age Sweden Uppsala Universitet Department of Archaeology and Ancient History 2007 ISBN 9150619152 p 208 Cahiers du monde russe et sovietique Volume 35 Number 4 Mouton 1994 originally from the University of California digitalised on 9 March 2010 Bardha a Encyclopaedia of Islam Logan 1992 pp 201 202 Rus Encyclopaedia of Islam Logan 1992 pp 201 202 According to Yaqut they stayed for a whole year Bardha a Encyclopaedia of Islam a b Vernadsky 1959 p 269 a b c d Logan 1992 p 202 Vernadsky 1959 p 270 see also e g Zuckerman 257 268 Christian 341 345 The Kievan chronicle mentions that the fabulous richness of Sveneld s troops druzhina incited such envy of Igor s warriors that they attempted to levy tribute from the Drevlians for the second time in one month The Drevlians revolted and killed Igor in 944 or 945 Gumilev suggests that while engaged in his successful Caspian expedition Sveneld did not take part in Igor s unfortunate raid on Constantinople which ended ignominiously This scenario also explains the glaring absence of Sveneld s name from Igor s treaty with Byzantium 944 as preserved in the Primary Chronicle Khazar Encyclopaedia of Islam Christian 1999 p 296 Christian 1999 p 298 Pletneva 1990 p 18 a b Christian 1999 p 298 See generally Christian 1999 pp 297 298 Dunlop 1954 Artamonov proposed that the sack of Sarkel came after the destruction of Atil Artamonov 1962 p 428 Ibn Hawkal also wrote that the Rus are the ones who of old went to Andalus and then to Barda The earlier attack on Muslim Spain by a nation of the Majus Muslim name for Zoroastrians and occasionally other pagans is mentioned by al Masudi Rus Encyclopaedia of Islam Thunberg Carl L 2010 Ingvarstaget och dess monument Goteborgs universitet CLTS ISBN 978 91 981859 2 8 Thunberg Carl L 2011 Sarkland och dess kallmaterial Goteborgs universitet CLTS ISBN 978 91 981859 3 5 Thunberg 2010 pp 25 26 a b Minorsky 1945 pp 557 558Bibliography EditArtamonov Mikhail 1962 Istoriya Khazar Leningrad LCCN 63 66080 See also second edition 2002 ISBN 5 8465 0032 3 Barthold W 1996 Khazar Encyclopaedia of Islam Brill Online Eds P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel and W P Heinrichs Brill Brondsted Johannes 1965 The Vikings transl by Kalle Skov Penguin Books LCCN 65 2868 Christian David 1999 A History of Russia Mongolia and Central Asia Inner Eurasia from Prehistory to the Mongol Empire History of the World Vol 1 Blackwell ISBN 0 631 20814 3 Dunlop Douglas Morton 2006 Bardha a Encyclopaedia of Islam Brill Online Eds P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel and W P Heinrichs Brill Dunlop Douglas Morton 1954 History of the Jewish Khazars Princeton University Press LCCN 52 13163 Golden P B 2006 Rus Encyclopaedia of Islam Brill Online Eds P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel and W P Heinrichs Brill Logan F Donald 1992 The Vikings in History Second edition Abingdon Routledge ISBN 0 415 08396 6 Logan F Donald 2005 The Vikings in History Third edition Abingdon Routledge p 224 ISBN 9781136527166 Retrieved 23 February 2023 Minorsky Vladimir 1945 Khaqani and Andronicus Comnenus Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London Vol 11 No 3 550 578 Noonan Thomas Schaub 1987 1991 When Did Rus Rus Merchants First Visit Khazaria and Baghdad Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi 7 pp 213 219 Pletneva Svetlana 1990 Polovtsy Moscow Nauka ISBN 5 02 009542 7 Thunberg Carl L 2010 Ingvarstaget och dess monument Goteborgs universitet CLTS ISBN 978 91 981859 2 8 ISBN 978 91 637 5724 2 Thunberg Carl L 2011 Sarkland och dess kallmaterial Goteborgs universitet CLTS ISBN 978 91 981859 3 5 ISBN 978 91 637 5727 3 Vernadsky George 1959 The Origins of Russia Oxford Clarendon Press LCCN 59 1228 Zuckerman Constantine 1995 On the Date of the Khazar s Conversion to Judaism and the Chronology of the Kings of the Rus Oleg and Igor Revue des Etudes Byzantines 53 237 270 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Caspian expeditions of the Rus 27 amp oldid 1164252741, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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