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Cumania

The name Cumania originated as the Latin exonym for the Cuman–Kipchak confederation, which was a tribal confederation in the western part of the Eurasian Steppe, between the 10th and 13th centuries. The confederation was dominated by two Turkic nomadic tribes: the Cumans (also known as the Polovtsians or Folban) and the Kipchaks. Cumania was known in Islamic sources as Desht-i Qipchaq, which means "Steppe of the Kipchaks"; or "foreign land sheltering the Kipchaks", in Persian[1] and al-Qumāniyīn in Arabic.[2][3] Russian sources have referred to Cumania as the "Polovtsian Steppe" (Polovetskaia Step), or the "Polovtsian Plain" (Pole Polovetskoe).[4]

Cuman–Kipchak Confederation
Desht-i Qipchaq
10th century–1241
Cumania (Desht-i Qipchaq) c. 1200
The Cumans in relation to main Central Asian polities c. 1000
StatusKhanate
Common languagesKipchak languages
(including Cuman)
Religion
Tengrism, Christianity, Islam
Demonym(s)Cuman, Kipchak
History 
• Established
10th century
• Disestablished
1241

A different, more organized entity that came later known as the Golden Horde was also referred to as "Comania" by Armenian chronicler Hethum (Hayton) of Korykos.[5]: 38  "Cumania" was also the source of names, or alternate names, for several smaller areas – some of them unconnected geographically to the area of the federation – in which Cumans and/or Kipchaks settled, such as the historic region of Kunság in Hungary, and the former Roman Catholic Diocese of Cumania (in Romania and Hungary). Hethum of Korykos described Cumania as "wholly flat and with no trees".[5]: 38  Ibn Battuta said of Cumania, "This wilderness is green and grassy with no trees, nor hills, high or low ... there is no means of travelling in this desert except in wagons." Battuta's contemporary, Hamdallah Mustawfi, elaborated, "This is of the Sixth Clime, its plains bear excellent pasturage ... but there are here few houses or towns or villages. Most of the inhabitants are nomads of the plain ... Most of the lands here are swamps ... The pasturage, however, being excellent, horses and cattle are numerous, and the population for the most part subsists on the produce thereof. The climate is cold, and their water comes from springs and wells."[5]: 40 

Meaning

 
Kazakh Tamga of Kypchak tribe

By the 11th and 12th centuries, the nomadic confederacy of the Cumans and (Eastern) Kipchaks (who were a distinct tribe with whom the Cumans created a confederacy, although other sources say that Cumans and Kipchak are simply different names for the same tribe [6]) were the dominant force over the vast territories stretching from the present-day Kazakhstan, southern Russia, Ukraine, to southern Moldavia and eastern Wallachia in present-day Romania. Considering the nomadic way of life of these peoples, these frontiers can be regarded only as approximate; hence there were various definitions over what Cumania meant over the course of time. Depending on their region and their time, different sources each used their own vision to denote different sections of the vast Cuman territory: in Byzantine, Russian, Georgian, Armenian, Persian and Muslim sources, Cumania meant the Pontic steppe, that is the steppelands to the north of the Black Sea and on its eastern side as far as the Caspian Sea, where the lowlands between the Dnieper, the Volga, the Ural and the Irtysh rivers were favorable to the nomadic lifestyle of the Cumans. Later, for a short time period, in Western sources Cumania also referred to the area in eastern Wallachia and southern Ukraine (centered on the lowlands of Budjak and the Bărăgan Plain), referring to the area where the first contact between the Cumans and the Western Christians took place, and where, later, the Cumans of the region would accept Roman Catholicism.

Using the traditional Turkic assignment of colours to the cardinal points, White Cumania used to be located to the west and may have denoted eastern Wallachia, while Black Cumania was located to its north and may have denoted Moldavia.

As in the case of many other large nomadic Eurasian confederacies, the ethnonym "Cuman" (referring to the inhabitants of Cumania) denoted different ethnic realities. While the main component was probably the Turkic-speaking tribes, the confederacy included other ethnic components as well. Cumania was primarily a political name, referring to the leading, integrating tribe or clan of the confederacy or state. The Cumans, when they first appear in written sources, are members of a confederacy irrespective of their tribal origin. Former tribal names disappeared when the tribe in question became part of a political unit. For instance, when we hear of an incursion of Cumans, it means that certain tribes of the Cuman confederacy took part in a military enterprise. In his "History of the Mongols", the Persian historian Rashid-al-Din Hamadani, referred to Cumania around 1236–1237, during the Mongol invasion of Möngke, the future Great Khan of the Mongol Empire. Among others, he mentions the Kipchaks, the Turkophone Asi (probably the same as the later Jassic tribe) and the "Karaulaghi" (Black, i.e. "from the north", Vlachs).[7]

 
Cuman/Kipchak statue, 12th century, Luhansk
 
Cuman statues. Moscow State Historical Museum.

The vast territory of this Cuman-Kipchak realm, consisting of loosely connected tribal units who were the military dominating force, was never politically united by a strong central power. Cumania was neither a state nor an empire, but different groups under independent rulers, or khans, who acted on their own initiative, meddling in the political life of the surrounding states: the Russian principalities, Bulgaria, Byzantium and the Wallachian states in the Balkans, Armenia and Georgia (see Kipchaks in Georgia) in the Caucasus, and Khwarezm, having reached as far as to create a powerful caste of warriors, the Mamluks, serving the Muslim Arab and Turkish Caliphs and Sultans.

In the Balkans, we find the Cumans in contact with all of the statal entities of that time, fighting with the Kingdom of Hungary, allied with the Bulgarians and Vlachs against the Byzantine Empire For example, Thocomerius, by name apparently a Cuman warlord (also known as Tihomir, he might have been a Bulgarian noble), was possibly the first one to unite the Bulgarian states, north from the Danube, from the west and the east of the Olt River, and his son Basarab I is considered the first ruler of the united and independent Wallachia. This interpretation corresponds with the general view of the situation of the Romanian lands in the 11th century, with the natives living in collections of village communities, united in various small confederacies, with more or less powerful chiefs trying to create little kingdoms, some paying tribute to the various militarily dominant nomadic tribes (see Romania in the Middle Ages).

This pontic Cumania, (and the rest of the Cumanias to the east), ended its existence in the middle of the 13th century, with the Great Mongol Invasion of Europe. In 1223, Genghis Khan defeated the Cumans and their Rus' allies at the Battle of Kalka (in modern Ukraine), and the final blow came in 1241, when the Cuman confederacy ceased to exist as a political entity, with the remaining Cuman tribes being dispersed, either becoming subjects of the Mongol conquerors as part of what was to be known as the Golden Horde, or fleeing to the west, to the Byzantine Empire, the Bulgarian Empire, and the Kingdom of Hungary.

Kunság and the Catholic Diocese of Cumania

 
Coat of Arms of early modern Kunság

On the Great Hungarian Plain, Cuman settlers gave their name to two regions known as Kunság, the Hungarian word for Cumania: Greater Cumania (Nagykunság) and Little Cumania (Kiskunság), located on the Great Hungarian Plain. Here, the Cumans maintained their language and some ethnic customs well into the modern era.

Cumania name was also preserved as part of the Roman Catholic ecclesiastical structure with a "Diocese of Cumania" existing until 1523 in what is now Romania, long after the Cumans ceased to be a distinct group in the area. At Milcovul, years earlier, in 1227, the Cuman warlord Bortz accepted Catholic Christianity from missionary Dominican friars. Pope Gregory IX heard about the mass conversion of the Cumans, and on 1 July 1227 empowered Robert, Archbishop of Esztergom, to represent him to Cumania and in neighbouring Land of the Brodnici. Teodoric, the bishop of this new diocese, became the guardian of the Dominican Order in the Kingdom of Hungary.[8]

 
Cuman-Kipchak statue, 12th-13th century, Ukraine.

Hence, Cumania diocese became part of the superior archbishopric of Esztergom, determining King Béla IV of Hungary to add "Rex Cumaniae" (King of Cumania)[9] to his titles in 1228, and later to grant asylum to the Cumans in face of the Mongol invasion. The Diocese of Cumania, or of Milcovul, had subordinated in Transylvania the abbacy of Sibiu, the dioceses of Burzenland, Brasso and Orbai, and over the Carpathians, in the lands of the "infidel" Orthodox Vlachs (in partibus infidelium), all the Christian Catholics, irrespective of their ethnicity, despite the fact that many believers fell under the influence of the Romanian Orthodox "pseudo" bishops (episcopo Cumanorum, qui loci diocesanus existit, sed a quibusdam pseudoepiscopis Graecorum ritum tenentibus).[10]

So, at that moment, Hungarian and Papal documents use the name Cumania to refer to the land between the eastern border of the lands of Seneslau and the land of the Brodnici (Buzău, southern Vrancea and southern Galați): that is Cumania meant, more or less, Muntenia. At that time, the use of the name Cumania should not to be understood as asserting the existence of a Cuman state, nor even a land inhabited by Cuman tribes (as the bulk of them had either fled, or were destroyed by the Mongols, and the rest had been absorbed) but rather to the Diocese of Cumania. From the military point of view, the land comprising the Diocese of Cumania was held either by the Teutonic Order (as early as 1222), or by the Vlachs (Brodnics or the Vlachs of Seneslau). The term Cumania had come to mean any Catholic subordinated to the Milcovul Diocese, so much so that in some cases, the terms Cuman and Wallach (more precisely, Roman Catholic Wallach, as the Orthodox Christians were considered schismatic, and the Pope did not officially recognise them) were interchangeable.[11]

In a charter from 1247, parts of this earlier Cumania were granted to the Knights Hospitaller, as were the Banate of Severin and the Romanian cnezats of Ioan and Lupu (a fluvio Olth et Alpibus Ultrasylvanis totam Cumaniam …excepta terra Szeneslai Woiavode Olacorum).[12] These, from a juridical point of view, had an inferior status than the states of Seneslau (east of the Olt River) and Litovoi (west of the Olt River), cnezats which continued to belong to the Romanians (quam Olacis relinquimus prout iidem hactenus tenuerant), "like they held them so far".

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Adjiev M. Eskenderovich, The Kipchaks, An Ancient History of the Turkic People and the Great Steppe, Moscow 2002, p.30
  2. ^ Al-Idrisi (1989). Kitab nuzhat al-mushtaq fi'khtiraq al-'afaq. Beirut. pp. 428–429.
  3. ^ Vásáry. Cumans. p. 5.
  4. ^ Drobny, Jaroslav (2012), Cumans and Kipchaks: Between Ethnonym and Toponym (PDF), pp. 205–217
  5. ^ a b c Spinei, Victor (2009). The Romanians and the Turkic Nomads North of the Danube Delta from the Tenth to the Mid-thirteenth Century. Leiden; Boston: Brill Publishers. ISBN 9789004175365. OCLC 1015991131.
  6. ^ Curta, Florin (2019). Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages (500-1300) (2 Vols). Boston: BRILL. p. 177. ISBN 978-90-04-39519-0. OCLC 1111434007.
  7. ^ Alexandru D. Xenopol in "Histoire des Roumains", Paris, 1896, i, 168 quotes Rashid al-Din:

    In the middle of spring the princes crossed the mountains in order to enter the country of the Bulares and of the Bashguirds. Orda, who was marching to the right, passed through the country of the Haute, where Bazarambam met him with an army, but was beaten. Boudgek crossed the mountains to enter the Kara-Ulak, and defeated the Ulak people.

  8. ^ The letter of Pope Gregory the IXth:

    Gregorius Episcopus … venerabili fratri … Strigoniensi Archiepiscopo apostolicae sedis legato salutem … Nuper siquidem per litteras tuas nobis transmissas accepimus, quod Jesus Christus … super gentem Cumanorum clementer respiciens, eis salvationis ostium aperuit his diebus. Aliqui enim nobiles gentis illius per te ad baptismi gratiam pervenerunt, et quidam princeps Bortz nomine de terra illorum cum omnibus sibi subditis per ministerium tuum fidem desiderat suscipere christianam; propter quod unicum filium suum una cum fratribus praedicatoribus, messis dominicae operariis in terra praedicta, ad te specialiter destinavit, attentius obsecrans, ut personaliter accedens ad ipsum et suos viam vitae ostenderes ipsis … Unde quamvis pro executione voti tui, quod emiseras pro terrae sanctae succursu, in peregrinationis esses itinere constitutus, confidei exinde pervenire posse, si piis eorum desideriis condescendas, intermisso dictae peregrinationis itinere, dilectum filium … Archidiaconum de Zala ad nos destinare curasti … supplicans ut tibi hoc faciendi, non obstante voto praedicto, licentiam praeberemus, et … in Cumania et Brodnic terra illae vicina, de cuius gentis conversione speratur, legationis officium tibi committere dignaremur … Datum Anagniae II. Kal. Aug. Pontificatus nostri anno I.

  9. ^ The full list of titles was
    • Bela Dei gratia Hungariae
    • Dalmatiae
    • Croatiae
    • Romae
    • Serviae
    • Gallicie
    • Lodomerie
    • Cumanieque Rex
    .
  10. ^ The full text of the letter of Pope Gregory the IXth to King Béla of Hungary (14 November 1234) is:

    In Cumanorum episcopatu, sicut accepimus, quidam populi, qui Walati vocantur, existunt, qui etsi censeantur nomine christiano, sub una tamen fide varios ritos habentes et mores, illa committunt, que huic sunt nomini inimica… Nam Romanam ecclesiam contempnentes, non a venerabili fratre nostro… episcopo Cumanorum,qui loci diocesanus existit, sed a quibusdam pseudoepiscopis, Grecorum ritum tenentibus, universa recipiunt ecclesiastica sacramenta, et nonnulli de regno Ungarie, tam Ungari, quam Theutonici et alii orthodoxi, morandi causa cum ipsis transeunt ad eosdem, et sic cum eis, quia populus unus facti cum eisdem Walathis eo contempto, premissa recipiunt sacramenta, in grave orthodoxorum scandalum et derogationem non modicam fidei christiane. Ne igitur ex diversitate rituum pericula proveniant animarum, nos volentes huiusmodi periculum obviare, ne prefati Walathi materiam habeant pro defectu sacramentorum ad scismathicos episcopos accedendi, eidem episcopo nostris damus litteris in mandatis, ut catholicum eis episcopum illi natione conformem provida deliberatione constituat sibi iuxta generalis statuta concilii vicarium in predictis, qui ei per omnia sit obediens et subiectus

    .
  11. ^ The Diploma of King Andrew of Hungary, 11 March 1291, mentions the 'universities' of Saxon, Siculian and Wallachian nobles at Alba Iulia, yet at the assembly of Buda on 29 July 1292 there is mention of the 'universitas nobilium Ongarorum, Siculorum, Saxonum et Comanorum'; the term Cumans simply replacing that of Wallachs.
  12. ^ The text of the letter is

    Bela dei gratia Hungariae … Rex … Contulimus … a fluvio Olth et Alpibus Ultrasylvanis totam Cumaniam …excepta terra Szeneslai Woiavode Olacorum, quam eisdem relinquimus, prout iidem hactenus tenuerunt … a primo introitu … fratrum usque ad viginti quinque annos omnes reditus Cumaniac terrae integraliter domus percipiat iam praefecta, praeterquam de terre Szeneslay antedicta …; Anno ab incurnatione domini MXXXLVII. IIII. Nonas Junii. Regni autem nostri anno duodecimo.

Notes

  • Istvan Vasary: "Cumans and Tatars", Cambridge University Press, 2005;
  • Binder Pál: "Antecedente şi consecinte sud-transilvanene ale formarii voievodatului Munteniei (sec. XIII-XIV.)" II.; Századok 1995, Budapest;
  • Norman Angell: "Peace Theories and the Balkan War"; 1912.

Further reading

cumania, this, article, about, historical, state, modern, hungarian, region, kunság, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed. This article is about the historical state For the modern Hungarian region see Kunsag This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Cumania news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The name Cumania originated as the Latin exonym for the Cuman Kipchak confederation which was a tribal confederation in the western part of the Eurasian Steppe between the 10th and 13th centuries The confederation was dominated by two Turkic nomadic tribes the Cumans also known as the Polovtsians or Folban and the Kipchaks Cumania was known in Islamic sources as Desht i Qipchaq which means Steppe of the Kipchaks or foreign land sheltering the Kipchaks in Persian 1 and al Qumaniyin in Arabic 2 3 Russian sources have referred to Cumania as the Polovtsian Steppe Polovetskaia Step or the Polovtsian Plain Pole Polovetskoe 4 Cuman Kipchak ConfederationDesht i Qipchaq10th century 1241Cumania Desht i Qipchaq c 1200KARAKHANID KHANATECUMANSKHAZARSKIMEKSKHITAN EMPIRE1000QOCHOKHOTANGHAZNAVIDEMPIREHINDUSHAHISBUYIDSWESTERNCHALUKYASPALAEMPIREOGHUZYABGUS The Cumans in relation to main Central Asian polities c 1000StatusKhanateCommon languagesKipchak languages including Cuman ReligionTengrism Christianity IslamDemonym s Cuman KipchakHistory Established10th century Disestablished1241Preceded by Succeeded byKimek Kipchak confederationKhazaria Golden HordeA different more organized entity that came later known as the Golden Horde was also referred to as Comania by Armenian chronicler Hethum Hayton of Korykos 5 38 Cumania was also the source of names or alternate names for several smaller areas some of them unconnected geographically to the area of the federation in which Cumans and or Kipchaks settled such as the historic region of Kunsag in Hungary and the former Roman Catholic Diocese of Cumania in Romania and Hungary Hethum of Korykos described Cumania as wholly flat and with no trees 5 38 Ibn Battuta said of Cumania This wilderness is green and grassy with no trees nor hills high or low there is no means of travelling in this desert except in wagons Battuta s contemporary Hamdallah Mustawfi elaborated This is of the Sixth Clime its plains bear excellent pasturage but there are here few houses or towns or villages Most of the inhabitants are nomads of the plain Most of the lands here are swamps The pasturage however being excellent horses and cattle are numerous and the population for the most part subsists on the produce thereof The climate is cold and their water comes from springs and wells 5 40 Contents 1 Meaning 2 Kunsag and the Catholic Diocese of Cumania 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Footnotes 4 2 Notes 5 Further readingMeaning Edit Kazakh Tamga of Kypchak tribe By the 11th and 12th centuries the nomadic confederacy of the Cumans and Eastern Kipchaks who were a distinct tribe with whom the Cumans created a confederacy although other sources say that Cumans and Kipchak are simply different names for the same tribe 6 were the dominant force over the vast territories stretching from the present day Kazakhstan southern Russia Ukraine to southern Moldavia and eastern Wallachia in present day Romania Considering the nomadic way of life of these peoples these frontiers can be regarded only as approximate hence there were various definitions over what Cumania meant over the course of time Depending on their region and their time different sources each used their own vision to denote different sections of the vast Cuman territory in Byzantine Russian Georgian Armenian Persian and Muslim sources Cumania meant the Pontic steppe that is the steppelands to the north of the Black Sea and on its eastern side as far as the Caspian Sea where the lowlands between the Dnieper the Volga the Ural and the Irtysh rivers were favorable to the nomadic lifestyle of the Cumans Later for a short time period in Western sources Cumania also referred to the area in eastern Wallachia and southern Ukraine centered on the lowlands of Budjak and the Bărăgan Plain referring to the area where the first contact between the Cumans and the Western Christians took place and where later the Cumans of the region would accept Roman Catholicism Using the traditional Turkic assignment of colours to the cardinal points White Cumania used to be located to the west and may have denoted eastern Wallachia while Black Cumania was located to its north and may have denoted Moldavia As in the case of many other large nomadic Eurasian confederacies the ethnonym Cuman referring to the inhabitants of Cumania denoted different ethnic realities While the main component was probably the Turkic speaking tribes the confederacy included other ethnic components as well Cumania was primarily a political name referring to the leading integrating tribe or clan of the confederacy or state The Cumans when they first appear in written sources are members of a confederacy irrespective of their tribal origin Former tribal names disappeared when the tribe in question became part of a political unit For instance when we hear of an incursion of Cumans it means that certain tribes of the Cuman confederacy took part in a military enterprise In his History of the Mongols the Persian historian Rashid al Din Hamadani referred to Cumania around 1236 1237 during the Mongol invasion of Mongke the future Great Khan of the Mongol Empire Among others he mentions the Kipchaks the Turkophone Asi probably the same as the later Jassic tribe and the Karaulaghi Black i e from the north Vlachs 7 Cuman Kipchak statue 12th century Luhansk Cuman statues Moscow State Historical Museum The vast territory of this Cuman Kipchak realm consisting of loosely connected tribal units who were the military dominating force was never politically united by a strong central power Cumania was neither a state nor an empire but different groups under independent rulers or khans who acted on their own initiative meddling in the political life of the surrounding states the Russian principalities Bulgaria Byzantium and the Wallachian states in the Balkans Armenia and Georgia see Kipchaks in Georgia in the Caucasus and Khwarezm having reached as far as to create a powerful caste of warriors the Mamluks serving the Muslim Arab and Turkish Caliphs and Sultans In the Balkans we find the Cumans in contact with all of the statal entities of that time fighting with the Kingdom of Hungary allied with the Bulgarians and Vlachs against the Byzantine Empire For example Thocomerius by name apparently a Cuman warlord also known as Tihomir he might have been a Bulgarian noble was possibly the first one to unite the Bulgarian states north from the Danube from the west and the east of the Olt River and his son Basarab I is considered the first ruler of the united and independent Wallachia This interpretation corresponds with the general view of the situation of the Romanian lands in the 11th century with the natives living in collections of village communities united in various small confederacies with more or less powerful chiefs trying to create little kingdoms some paying tribute to the various militarily dominant nomadic tribes see Romania in the Middle Ages This pontic Cumania and the rest of the Cumanias to the east ended its existence in the middle of the 13th century with the Great Mongol Invasion of Europe In 1223 Genghis Khan defeated the Cumans and their Rus allies at the Battle of Kalka in modern Ukraine and the final blow came in 1241 when the Cuman confederacy ceased to exist as a political entity with the remaining Cuman tribes being dispersed either becoming subjects of the Mongol conquerors as part of what was to be known as the Golden Horde or fleeing to the west to the Byzantine Empire the Bulgarian Empire and the Kingdom of Hungary Kunsag and the Catholic Diocese of Cumania EditMain articles Kunsag and Diocese of Cumania Coat of Arms of early modern Kunsag On the Great Hungarian Plain Cuman settlers gave their name to two regions known as Kunsag the Hungarian word for Cumania Greater Cumania Nagykunsag and Little Cumania Kiskunsag located on the Great Hungarian Plain Here the Cumans maintained their language and some ethnic customs well into the modern era Cumania name was also preserved as part of the Roman Catholic ecclesiastical structure with a Diocese of Cumania existing until 1523 in what is now Romania long after the Cumans ceased to be a distinct group in the area At Milcovul years earlier in 1227 the Cuman warlord Bortz accepted Catholic Christianity from missionary Dominican friars Pope Gregory IX heard about the mass conversion of the Cumans and on 1 July 1227 empowered Robert Archbishop of Esztergom to represent him to Cumania and in neighbouring Land of the Brodnici Teodoric the bishop of this new diocese became the guardian of the Dominican Order in the Kingdom of Hungary 8 Cuman Kipchak statue 12th 13th century Ukraine Hence Cumania diocese became part of the superior archbishopric of Esztergom determining King Bela IV of Hungary to add Rex Cumaniae King of Cumania 9 to his titles in 1228 and later to grant asylum to the Cumans in face of the Mongol invasion The Diocese of Cumania or of Milcovul had subordinated in Transylvania the abbacy of Sibiu the dioceses of Burzenland Brasso and Orbai and over the Carpathians in the lands of the infidel Orthodox Vlachs in partibus infidelium all the Christian Catholics irrespective of their ethnicity despite the fact that many believers fell under the influence of the Romanian Orthodox pseudo bishops episcopo Cumanorum qui loci diocesanus existit sed a quibusdam pseudoepiscopis Graecorum ritum tenentibus 10 So at that moment Hungarian and Papal documents use the name Cumania to refer to the land between the eastern border of the lands of Seneslau and the land of the Brodnici Buzău southern Vrancea and southern Galați that is Cumania meant more or less Muntenia At that time the use of the name Cumania should not to be understood as asserting the existence of a Cuman state nor even a land inhabited by Cuman tribes as the bulk of them had either fled or were destroyed by the Mongols and the rest had been absorbed but rather to the Diocese of Cumania From the military point of view the land comprising the Diocese of Cumania was held either by the Teutonic Order as early as 1222 or by the Vlachs Brodnics or the Vlachs of Seneslau The term Cumania had come to mean any Catholic subordinated to the Milcovul Diocese so much so that in some cases the terms Cuman and Wallach more precisely Roman Catholic Wallach as the Orthodox Christians were considered schismatic and the Pope did not officially recognise them were interchangeable 11 In a charter from 1247 parts of this earlier Cumania were granted to the Knights Hospitaller as were the Banate of Severin and the Romanian cnezats of Ioan and Lupu a fluvio Olth et Alpibus Ultrasylvanis totam Cumaniam excepta terra Szeneslai Woiavode Olacorum 12 These from a juridical point of view had an inferior status than the states of Seneslau east of the Olt River and Litovoi west of the Olt River cnezats which continued to belong to the Romanians quam Olacis relinquimus prout iidem hactenus tenuerant like they held them so far See also EditTurkic peoples Timeline of Turks 500 1300 List of Turkic dynasties and countries Cuman people Pechenegs Kipchaks Kunsag Mongol invasion of Europe History of Romania Crimean Karaites an ethnic group with possible Cuman origins Cuman languageReferences EditFootnotes Edit Adjiev M Eskenderovich The Kipchaks An Ancient History of the Turkic People and the Great Steppe Moscow 2002 p 30 Al Idrisi 1989 Kitab nuzhat al mushtaq fi khtiraq al afaq Beirut pp 428 429 Vasary Cumans p 5 Drobny Jaroslav 2012 Cumans and Kipchaks Between Ethnonym and Toponym PDF pp 205 217 a b c Spinei Victor 2009 The Romanians and the Turkic Nomads North of the Danube Delta from the Tenth to the Mid thirteenth Century Leiden Boston Brill Publishers ISBN 9789004175365 OCLC 1015991131 Curta Florin 2019 Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1300 2 Vols Boston BRILL p 177 ISBN 978 90 04 39519 0 OCLC 1111434007 Alexandru D Xenopol in Histoire des Roumains Paris 1896 i 168 quotes Rashid al Din In the middle of spring the princes crossed the mountains in order to enter the country of the Bulares and of the Bashguirds Orda who was marching to the right passed through the country of the Haute where Bazarambam met him with an army but was beaten Boudgek crossed the mountains to enter the Kara Ulak and defeated the Ulak people The letter of Pope Gregory the IXth Gregorius Episcopus venerabili fratri Strigoniensi Archiepiscopo apostolicae sedis legato salutem Nuper siquidem per litteras tuas nobis transmissas accepimus quod Jesus Christus super gentem Cumanorum clementer respiciens eis salvationis ostium aperuit his diebus Aliqui enim nobiles gentis illius per te ad baptismi gratiam pervenerunt et quidam princeps Bortz nomine de terra illorum cum omnibus sibi subditis per ministerium tuum fidem desiderat suscipere christianam propter quod unicum filium suum una cum fratribus praedicatoribus messis dominicae operariis in terra praedicta ad te specialiter destinavit attentius obsecrans ut personaliter accedens ad ipsum et suos viam vitae ostenderes ipsis Unde quamvis pro executione voti tui quod emiseras pro terrae sanctae succursu in peregrinationis esses itinere constitutus confidei exinde pervenire posse si piis eorum desideriis condescendas intermisso dictae peregrinationis itinere dilectum filium Archidiaconum de Zala ad nos destinare curasti supplicans ut tibi hoc faciendi non obstante voto praedicto licentiam praeberemus et in Cumania et Brodnic terra illae vicina de cuius gentis conversione speratur legationis officium tibi committere dignaremur Datum Anagniae II Kal Aug Pontificatus nostri anno I The full list of titles was Bela Dei gratia Hungariae Dalmatiae Croatiae Romae Serviae Gallicie Lodomerie Cumanieque Rex The full text of the letter of Pope Gregory the IXth to King Bela of Hungary 14 November 1234 is In Cumanorum episcopatu sicut accepimus quidam populi qui Walati vocantur existunt qui etsi censeantur nomine christiano sub una tamen fide varios ritos habentes et mores illa committunt que huic sunt nomini inimica Nam Romanam ecclesiam contempnentes non a venerabili fratre nostro episcopo Cumanorum qui loci diocesanus existit sed a quibusdam pseudoepiscopis Grecorum ritum tenentibus universa recipiunt ecclesiastica sacramenta et nonnulli de regno Ungarie tam Ungari quam Theutonici et alii orthodoxi morandi causa cum ipsis transeunt ad eosdem et sic cum eis quia populus unus facti cum eisdem Walathis eo contempto premissa recipiunt sacramenta in grave orthodoxorum scandalum et derogationem non modicam fidei christiane Ne igitur ex diversitate rituum pericula proveniant animarum nos volentes huiusmodi periculum obviare ne prefati Walathi materiam habeant pro defectu sacramentorum ad scismathicos episcopos accedendi eidem episcopo nostris damus litteris in mandatis ut catholicum eis episcopum illi natione conformem provida deliberatione constituat sibi iuxta generalis statuta concilii vicarium in predictis qui ei per omnia sit obediens et subiectus The Diploma of King Andrew of Hungary 11 March 1291 mentions the universities of Saxon Siculian and Wallachian nobles at Alba Iulia yet at the assembly of Buda on 29 July 1292 there is mention of the universitas nobilium Ongarorum Siculorum Saxonum et Comanorum the term Cumans simply replacing that of Wallachs The text of the letter is Bela dei gratia Hungariae Rex Contulimus a fluvio Olth et Alpibus Ultrasylvanis totam Cumaniam excepta terra Szeneslai Woiavode Olacorum quam eisdem relinquimus prout iidem hactenus tenuerunt a primo introitu fratrum usque ad viginti quinque annos omnes reditus Cumaniac terrae integraliter domus percipiat iam praefecta praeterquam de terre Szeneslay antedicta Anno ab incurnatione domini MXXXLVII IIII Nonas Junii Regni autem nostri anno duodecimo Notes Edit Istvan Vasary Cumans and Tatars Cambridge University Press 2005 Binder Pal Antecedente si consecinte sud transilvanene ale formarii voievodatului Munteniei sec XIII XIV II Szazadok 1995 Budapest Norman Angell Peace Theories and the Balkan War 1912 Further reading EditGolden Peter B 2009 QEPCAQ Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cumania amp oldid 1138768829, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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