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Pannonian Avars

The Pannonian Avars (/ˈævɑːrz/) were an alliance of several groups of European nomads of various origins.[8][9][10][11][12][13] The peoples were also known as the Obri in chronicles of Rus, the Abaroi or Varchonitai[14] (Greek: Βαρχονίτες, romanizedVarchonítes), or Pseudo-Avars[15] in Byzantine sources, and the Apar (Old Turkic: 𐰯𐰺) to the Göktürks (Kultegin Inscription: Apar – Avars were called "Apar"). They established the Avar Khaganate, which spanned the Pannonian Basin and considerable areas of Central and Eastern Europe from the late 6th to the early 9th century.[16]

Avar Khaganate
567 – after 822[1]
The Avar Khaganate () and main contemporary polities c. 576
The Avar Khaganate and surroundings circa 602.
Common languages
Religion
Originally shamanism and animism, Christianity after 796
GovernmentKhanate
Khagan 
History 
• Established
567 
• Defeated by Pepin of Italy
796
• Disestablished
 after 822[1]

The name Pannonian Avars (after the area in which they settled) is used to distinguish them from the Avars of the Caucasus, a separate people with whom the Pannonian Avars may or may not have had links. Although the name Avar first appeared in the mid-5th century, the Pannonian Avars entered the historical scene in the mid-6th century,[17] on the Pontic–Caspian steppe as a people who wished to escape the rule of the Göktürks. They are probably best known for their invasions and destruction in the Avar–Byzantine wars from 568 to 626 and influence on the Slavic migrations to the Balkans. Recent archaeogenetic studies indicate that the ruling class of the Pannonian Avar population had varying degrees of Northeast Asian ancestry similar to those of modern-day people from Mongolia and the Amur River region in Manchuria, while the average commoner population resembled surrounding European groups.[18][19][20][21][22][23] Linguistic evidence may also point to the presence of an Iranian component among the migrating Avars, based on Iranian loanwords in local Slavic languages.[24]

Origins Edit

Avars and pseudo-Avars Edit

The earliest clear reference to the Avar ethnonym comes from Priscus the Rhetor, who recounts that in c. 463 the Šaragurs and Onogurs were attacked by the Sabirs, who had been attacked by the Avars. In turn, the Avars had been driven off by people fleeing "man-eating griffins" coming from "the ocean" (Priscus Fr 40).[25] Whilst Priscus' accounts provide some information about the ethno-political situation in the Don-Kuban-Volga region after the demise of the Huns, no unequivocal conclusions can be reached. Denis Sinor has argued that whoever the "Avars" referred to by Priscus were, they differed from the Avars who appear a century later, during the time of Justinian (who reigned from 527 to 565).[26]

The next author to discuss the Avars, Menander Protector, appeared during the 6th century and wrote of Göktürk embassies to Constantinople in 565 and 568 AD. The Turks appeared angry at the Byzantines for having made an alliance with the Avars, whom the Turks saw as their subjects and slaves. Turxanthos, a Turk prince, calls the Avars "Varchonites" and "escaped slaves of the Turks", who numbered "about 20 thousand" (Menander Fr 43).[27]

 
 
 
 
Grave goods (saber and sheath, harness mountings, rings, reflex bow) from the Avar cemetery of Gyenesdiás, Hungary
 
Coins of the Avars 6th–7th centuries AD, imitating Ravenna mint types of Heraclius[28]

Many more, but somewhat confusing, details come from Theophylact Simocatta, who in c. 629, describes the final two decades of the 6th century. In particular, he claims to quote a triumph letter from Turxanthos:

For this very Chagan had in fact outfought the leader of the nation of the Abdali (I mean indeed, of the Hephthalites, as they are called), conquered him, and assumed the rule of the nation.

Then he ... enslaved the Avar nation.

But let no one think that we are distorting the history of these times because he supposes that the Avars are those barbarians neighbouring on Europe and Pannonia, and that their arrival was prior to the times of the emperor Maurice. For it is by a misnomer that the barbarians on the Ister have assumed the appellation of Avars; the origin of their race will shortly be revealed.

So, when the Avars had been defeated (for we are returning to the account) some of them made their escape to those who inhabit Taugast. Taugast is a famous city, which is a total of one thousand five hundred miles distant from those who are called Turks, ... Others of the Avars, who declined to humbler fortune because of their defeat, came to those who are called Moukri; this nation is the closest neighbour to the men of Taugast;

Then the Chagan embarked on yet another enterprise, and subdued all the Ogur, which is one of the strongest tribes on account of its large population and its armed training for war. These make their habitations in the east, by the course of the Til, which Turks are accustomed to call Melas. The earliest leaders of this nation were named Var and Chunni; from them some parts of those nations were also accorded their nomenclature, being called Var and Chunni.

Then, while the emperor Justinian was in possession of the royal power, a small section of these Var and Chunni fled from that ancestral tribe and settled in Europe. These named themselves Avars and glorified their leader with the appellation of Chagan. Let us declare, without departing in the least from the truth, how the means of changing their name came to them. ...

When the Barsils, Onogurs, Sabirs, and other Hun nations in addition to these, saw that a section of those who were still Var and Chunni had fled to their regions, they plunged into extreme panic, since they suspected that the settlers were Avars. For this reason they honoured the fugitives with splendid gifts and supposed that they received from them security in exchange.

Then, after the Var and Chunni saw the well-omened beginning to their flight, they appropriated the ambassadors' error and named themselves Avars: for among the Scythian nations that of the Avars is said to be the most adept tribe. In point of fact even up to our present times the Pseudo-Avars (for it is more correct to refer to them thus) are divided in their ancestry, some bearing the time-honoured name of Var while others are called Chunni.

 
Gold Avar bowl, found in modern Albania

According to the interpretation of Dobrovits and Nechaeva, the Turks insisted that the Avars were only "pseudo-Avars", so as to boast that they were the only formidable power in the Eurasian steppe. The Göktürks claimed that the "real Avars" remained loyal subjects of the Turks, farther east.[26][29] A political name *(A)Par 𐰯𐰻 was indeed mentioned in inscriptions honoring Kul Tigin and Bilge Qaghan, yet in Armenian sources (Egishe Vardapet, Ghazar Parpetsi, and Sebeos) Apar seemingly indicated "a geographical area (Khorasan), which might also intimate a political formation once there"; additionally, "'Apar-shar', that is, the country of the Apar" was named after possibly Hephthalites, who were known as 滑 MC *ɦˠuɛt̚ > Ch.Huá in Chinese sources. Even so, *Apar could not be linked to the European Avars, notwithstanding any link, if there were, between the Hephthalites and Rourans.[30][page needed] Furthermore, Dobrovits has questioned the authenticity of Theophylact's account. As such, he has argued that Theophylact borrowed information from Menander's accounts of Byzantine–Turk negotiations to meet political needs of his time – i.e. to castigate and deride the Avars during a time of strained political relations between the Byzantines and Avars (coinciding with Emperor Maurice's northern Balkan campaigns).[26]

Uar, Rouran and other Central Asian peoples Edit

According to some scholars, the Pannonian Avars originated from a confederation formed in the Aral Sea region, by the Uar (also known as the Ouar, Warr or Var) and the Xionites.[31][page needed][32] The Xionites had likely been speakers of Iranian and/or Turkic languages.[33] The Hephthalites, affiliated previously to the Uar and Xionites, had remained in Central and northern South Asia. The Pannonian Avars were also known by names including Uarkhon or Varchonites—which may have been a portmanteau combining Var and Chunni.

The 18th-century historian Joseph de Guignes postulates a link between the Avars of European history with the Rouran Khaganate of Inner Asia based on a coincidence between Tardan Khan's letter to Constantinople and events recorded in Chinese sources, notably the Wei Shu and Bei Shi.[34] Chinese sources state that Bumin Qaghan, founder of the First Turkic Khaganate, defeated the Rouran, some of whom fled and joined the Western Wei. Later, Bumin's successor Muqan Qaghan defeated the Hephthalites as well as the Turkic Tiele. Superficially these victories over the Tiele, Rouran and Hephthalites echo a narrative in the Theophylact, boasting of Tardan's victories over the Hephthalites, Avars and Oghurs. However, the two series of events are not synonymous: the events of the latter took place during Tardan's rule, c. 580–599, whilst Chinese sources referring to the Turk defeat of the Rouran and other Central Asian peoples occurred 50 years earlier, at the founding of the First Turkic Khaganate. It is for this reason that the linguist János Harmatta rejects the identification of the Avars with the Rouran.

According to Edwin G. Pulleyblank, the name Avar is the same as the prestigious name Wuhuan in the Chinese sources.[35] Several historians, including Peter Benjamin Golden, suggest that the Avars are of Turkic origin, likely from the Oghur branch.[36] Another theory suggests that some of the Avars were of Tungusic origin.[3] A study by Emil Heršak and Ana Silić suggests that the Avars were of heterogeneous origin, including mostly Turkic (Oghuric) and Mongolic groups. Later in Europe some Germanic and Slavic groups were assimilated into the Avars. They concluded that their exact origin is unknown but state that it is likely that the Avars were originally mainly composed of Turkic (Oghuric) tribes.[37][page needed]

Steppe empire dynamics and ethnogenesis Edit

 
The Pontic steppe, c. 650, showing the early territories of the Khazars, Bulgars, and Avars

In 2003, Walter Pohl summarized the formation of nomadic empires:[38]

1. Many steppe empires were founded by groups who had been defeated in previous power struggles but had fled from the dominion of the stronger group. The Avars were likely a losing faction previously subordinate to the (legitimate)[clarification needed] Ashina clan in the Western Turkic Khaganate, and they fled west of the Dnieper.

2. These groups usually were of mixed origin, and each of its components was part of a previous group.

3. Crucial in the process was the elevation of a khagan, which signified a claim to independent power and an expansionist strategy. This group also needed a new name that would give all of its initial followers a sense of identity.

4. The name for a new group of steppe riders was often taken from a repertoire of prestigious names which did not necessarily denote any direct affiliation to or descent from groups of the same name; in the Early Middle Ages, Huns, Avars, Bulgars, and Ogurs, or names connected with -(o)gur (Kutrigurs, Utigurs, Onogurs, etc.), were most important. In the process of name-giving, both perceptions by outsiders and self-designation played a role. These names were also connected with prestigious traditions that directly expressed political pretensions and programmes, and had to be endorsed by success. In the world of the steppe, where agglomerations of groups were rather fluid, it was vital to know how to deal with a newly-emergent power. The symbolical hierarchy of prestige expressed through names provided some orientation for friend and foe alike.

Such views are mirrored by Csanád Bálint [hu]. "The ethnogenesis of early medieval peoples of steppe origin cannot be conceived in a single linear fashion due to their great and constant mobility", with no ethnogenetic "point zero", theoretical "proto-people" or proto-language.[39][page needed] Moreover, Avar identity was strongly linked to Avar political institutions. Groups who rebelled or fled from the Avar realm could never be called "Avars", but were rather termed "Bulgars". Similarly, with the final demise of Avar power in the early 9th century, Avar identity disappeared almost instantaneously.[40][page needed]

Savelyev and Jeong in "Early nomads of the Eastern Steppe and their tentative connections in the West" concluded that the initial Pannonian Avars originated in Central Asia from various ethno-linguistic groups, including Iranian peoples, Ugrians, Oghur-Turks, and Rouran tribes. They further note that "the broadly East Asian component in the archaeological record of the European Avars is limited even in the earlier period of their history; elements originating from West Asia, the Caucasus, the Southern Russian steppes and the local Central European cultures can be traced alongside each other".[41]

Anthropology Edit

 
 
Skeleton and grave goods from the Avar cemetery of Szolnok, János Damjanich Museum

In the Stuttgart Psalter there is an image of mounted archers riding backwards on their horses, a noted "Asian" tactic, which may depict the Avars.[42] According to mid-20th century physical anthropologists such as Pál Lipták, human remains from the early Avar (7th century) period had mostly "Europoid" features, while grave goods indicated cultural links to the Eurasian Steppe.[43] Cemeteries dated to the late Avar period (8th century) included many human remains with physical features typical of East Asian people or Eurasians (i.e., people with both East Asian and European ancestry).[44] Remains with East Asian or Eurasian features were found in about one third of the Avar graves from the 8th century.[45] According to Lipták, 79% of the population of the Danube-Tisza region during the Avar period showed Europoid characteristics.[43] However, Lipták used racial terms later deprecated or regarded as obsolete, such as "Mongoloid" for northeast Asian and "Turanid" for individuals of mixed ancestry.[46][page needed] Several theories suggest that the ruling class of the Avars were of Tungusic East Asian origin or of partially Tungusic origin.[3]

Genetics Edit

 
Reconstruction of a lamellar helmet from Niederstotzingen. Dated 560–600 AD. This is considered as an Avar lamellar helmet.[47]

A genetic study published in Scientific Reports in September 2016 examined the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) of 31 people buried in the Carpathian Basin between the 7th and 9th centuries.[48] They were found to be mostly carrying European haplogroups such as H, K, T and U, while about 15% carried Asian haplogroups such as C, M6, D4c1 and F1a.[49] Their mtDNA were found to be primarily characteristic of Eastern and Southern Europe.[50]

A genetic study published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology in 2018 examined 62 individuals buried in the 8th and 9th centuries at an Avar-Slavic burial in Cífer‐Pác, Slovakia.[51] Of the 46 samples of mtDNA extracted, 93% belonged to west Eurasian lineages, while 6% belonged to east Eurasian lineages.[52] The amount of east Eurasian lineages was higher than among modern European populations, but lower than what has been found in other genetic studies on the Avars.[53] The mtDNA of the examined individuals was found to be quite similar to medieval and modern Slavs, and it was suggested that the mixed population examined had emerged through intermarriage between Avar males and Slavic females.[54]

A genetic study published in Scientific Reports in November 2019 examined the remains of fourteen Avar males. Eleven of them were dated to the early Avar period, and three were dated to the middle and late Avar period.[55] The eleven early Avar males were found to be carrying the paternal haplogroups N1a1a1a1a3 (four samples), N1a1a (two samples), R1a1a1b2a (two samples), C2, G2a, and I1.[55] The three males dated to the middle and late Avar period carried the paternal haplogroups C2, N1a1a1a1a3 and E1b1b1a1b1a.[55] In short, mostly carried "east Eurasian Y haplogroups typical for modern north-eastern Siberian and Buryat populations". The Avars studied were all determined to have had dark eyes and dark hair, and the majority of them were found to be primarily of East Asian origin.[56]

A genetic study published in Scientific Reports in January 2020 examined the remains of 26 individuals buried at various elite Avar cemeteries in the Pannonian Basin dated to the 7th century.[57] The mtDNA of these Avars belonged mostly to East Asian haplogroups, while the Y-DNA was exclusively of East Asian origin and "strikingly homogenous", belonging to haplogroups N-M231 and Q-M242.[58] The evidence suggests that the Avar elite were largely patrilineal and endogamous for a period of around one century, and entered the Pannonian Basin through migrations from East Asia involving both men and women.[59] Another 2020 study, but of Xiongnu remains in East Asia, found that the Xiongnu shared certain paternal (N1a, Q1a, R1a-Z94 and R1a-Z2124) and maternal haplotypes with the Huns and Avars, and suggested on this basis that they were descended from Xiongnu, who they in turn suggested were descended from Scytho-Siberians.[60]

 
Genomic evidence from human remains shows that the Avars were essentially derived from Ancient Northeast Asians (ANA).[61]

A genetic study published in scientific journal Cell in April 2022 analyzed 48 Pannonian Avar samples from the early, middle and late period, and found them to be of nearly exclusively Ancient Northeast Asian (ANA), with predominant paternal lineage N1a1a1a1a3a-F4205, with some Q1a, Q1b, R1a, R1b and E1b subclades, with strong affinity to modern peoples inhabiting the region from Mongolia to the Amur, including a historical Rouran Khaganate sample and those from Xiongnu-Xianbei periods in the eastern Asian steppe.[61] The Avar individuals showed their highest genetic affinity with present-day Mongolic and Tungusic peoples, as well as Nivkhs.[62]

A genetic study published in scientific journal Current Biology in May 2022 examined 143 Avar samples from various periods, including elite and commoners. It confirmed the Ancient Northeast Asian (ANA) paternal and maternal origin for the Avar elite, with N1a-F4205 being their predominant and characteristic paternal lineage, alongside incorporated Q1a2a1 and R1a-Z94 Hunnic-Iranian remnants, and the rest belonging to local haplogroups found among surrounding populations. Autosomally, the Elite Avar samples "preserved very ancient Mongolian pre-Bronze Age genomes, with ca 90% [Ancient North-East Asian] ancestry", shared deep ancestry with European Huns, but although since Early Avar period started mixing with local and immigrant Hunnic-Iranian related populations, "people with different genetic ancestries were seemingly distinguished, as samples with Hun-related genomes were buried in separate cemeteries". The majority of the Avar Khaganate general population consisted of local European peoples (EU_core) but did not display Northeast Asian admixture, supporting a model of elite dominance of arriving horse nomads over a large sedentary population. Genetic data on later Avar elite samples showed an increase of Iranian associated ancestry, suggesting either further migration from the Western Steppe, or substructure among the initial Avars not observed before.[63]

History Edit

Arrival in Europe Edit

In 557, the Avars sent an embassy to Constantinople, presumably from the northern Caucasus. This marked their first contact with the Byzantine Empire. In exchange for gold, they agreed to subjugate the "unruly gentes" on behalf of the Byzantines: subsequently they conquered and incorporated various nomadic tribes—Kutrigurs and Sabirs—and defeated the Antes.

Pohl 1998, p. 18: [...] the first thing the Avars did when they came near the Caucasus on their flight from Central Asia was to send an embassy to the aging emperor Justinian. That took place sometime in winter 558/59, and they struck the usual deal: the Avars were to fight for the Empire against unruly gentes and in turn would receive annual payments and other benefits. Indeed, for 20 years to come the Avars, under their Khagan Baian, fought Utigurs and Antes, Gepids and Slavs, whereas their policy towards the Empire relied more on negotiation than on war."

By 562 the Avars controlled the lower Danube basin and the steppes north of the Black Sea.[64][need quotation to verify] By the time they arrived in the Balkans, the Avars formed a heterogeneous group of about 20,000 horsemen.[65] After the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I bought them off, they pushed northwestwards into Germania. However, Frankish opposition halted the Avars' expansion in that direction. Seeking rich pastoral lands, the Avars initially demanded land south of the Danube in present-day Bulgaria, but the Byzantines refused, using their contacts with the Göktürks as a threat against Avar aggression.[66] The Avars turned their attention to the Carpathian Basin and to the natural defenses it afforded.[67] The Carpathian Basin was occupied by the Gepids. In 567 the Avars formed an alliance with the Lombards—enemies of the Gepids—and together they destroyed much of the Gepid kingdom. The Avars then persuaded the Lombards to move into northern Italy, an invasion that marked the last Germanic mass-movement in the Migration Period.[citation needed]

Continuing their successful policy of turning the various barbarians against each other, the Byzantines persuaded the Avars to attack the Sclavenes in Scythia Minor, a land rich with goods.[65][page needed] After devastating much of the Sclavenes' land, the Avars returned to Pannonia after many of the khagan's subjects deserted to the Byzantine emperor.

Early Avar period (580–670) Edit

 
Avars plundering Balkan lands

By about 580, the Avar Khagan Bayan I had established supremacy over most of the Slavic, Germanic and Bulgar tribes living in Pannonia and the Carpathian Basin.[64] When the Byzantine Empire was unable to pay subsidies or hire Avar mercenaries, the Avars raided their Balkan territories. According to Menander, Bayan commanded an army of 10,000 Kutrigur Bulgars and sacked Dalmatia in 568, effectively cutting the Byzantine terrestrial link with northern Italy and western Europe.

In the 580s and 590s, many of the imperial armies were busy fighting the Persians, and the remaining troops in the Balkans were no match for the Avars.[68] By 582, the Avars had captured Sirmium, an important fort in Pannonia. When the Byzantines refused to increase the stipend amount as requested by Bayan's son and successor Bayan II, the Avars proceeded to capture Singidunum (Belgrade) and Viminacium. They suffered setbacks, however, during Maurice's Balkan campaigns in the 590s.

By 600 the Avars had established a nomadic empire ruling over a multitude of peoples and stretching from modern Austria in the west to the Pontic–Caspian steppe in the east.[citation needed] After being defeated at the Battles of Viminacium in their homeland, some Avars defected to the Byzantines in 602, but Emperor Maurice decided not to return home as was customary.[69] He maintained his army camp beyond the Danube throughout the winter, but the hardship caused the army to revolt, giving the Avars a desperately needed respite and they attempted an invasion of northern Italy in 610. The Byzantine civil war prompted a Persian invasion in the Byzantine–Sasanian War, and after 615 the Avars enjoyed a free hand in the undefended Balkans.

While negotiating with Emperor Heraclius beneath the walls of Constantinople in 617, the Avars launched a surprise attack. While they were unable to capture the city centre, they pillaged the suburbs and took 270,000 captives. Payments in gold and goods to the Avars reached a sum of 200,000 solidi shortly before 626.[70][page needed] In 626, the Avars cooperated with the Sassanid force in the failed siege of 626. Following this defeat, the political and military power of the Avars declined. Byzantine and Frankish sources documented a war between the Avars and their western Slav clients, the Wends.[65]

Each year, the Huns [Avars] came to the Slavs, to spend the winter with them; then they took the wives and daughters of the Slavs and slept with them, and among the other mistreatments [already mentioned] the Slavs were also forced to pay levies to the Huns. But the sons of the Huns, who were [then] raised with the wives and daughters of these Wends could not finally endure this oppression anymore and refused obedience to the Huns and began, as already mentioned, a rebellion. When now the Wendish army went against the Huns, the [aforementioned] merchant Samo accompanied the same. And so Samo's bravery proved itself in wonderful ways and a huge mass of Huns fell to the sword of the Wends.

— Chronicle of Fredegar, Book IV, Section 48, written c. 642

In the 630s, Samo, the ruler of the first Slavic polity known as Samo's Tribal Union or Samo's realm, increased his authority over lands to the north and west of the Khaganate at the expense of the Avars, ruling until his death in 658.[71] The Chronicle of Fredegar records that during Samo's rebellion in 631, 9,000 Bulgars led by Alciocus left Pannonia to modern-day Bavaria where Dagobert I massacred most of them. The remaining 700 joined the Wends.

At about the time of Samo's realm, Bulgar leader Kubrat of the Dulo clan led a successful uprising to end Avar authority over the Pannonian Plain, establishing Old Great Bulgaria, or Patria Onoguria, "the homeland of Onogurs". The civil war, possibly a succession struggle in Onoguria between the Kutrigurs under Alciocus on one side and Utigur forces on the other, raged from 631 to 632. After Alciocus fled to Bavaria, the power of the Avars' Kutrigur forces was shattered, and Kubrat established peace between the Avars and Byzantium in 632. According to Constantine VII's 10th century work De Administrando Imperio, a group of Croats who had separated from the White Croats in White Croatia had also fought against the Avars, after which they organized the Duchy of Croatia.[72] The Unknown Archon's people from Samo's realm were also resettled at this time.

Middle (670–720) and late (720–804) Avar periods Edit

 
A golden jug from the Treasure of Nagyszentmiklós depicting a warrior with his captive. Experts cannot agree if this warrior is Bulgar, Khazar or Avar

With the death of Samo in 658 and Kubrat in 665, some Slavic tribes again came under Avar rule. Despite their father's advice, Kubrat's sons failed to maintain cohesion in Old Great Bulgaria which began to disintegrate. A few years later in the time of Batbayan, Old Great Bulgaria dissolved into five branches. From western Onoguria the first group of folk moved to Ravenna under Alzeco in the 650s. According to Book II of the Miracles of Saint Demetrius, a certain Avar Chagan seized his opportunity to coalesce in the regions further north in response to the secession of the Diocese of Sirmium in the 670s by a "Kuber" Chagan.

"Finally, the (Avar) Chagan, considering them to constitute a people with an identity of its own put, in accordance to the custom of his race, a chieftain upon them, a man by the name of Kouver. When Kouver (Chagan) learned from some of his most intimate associates the desire of the exiled Romans for their ancestral homes, he gave the matter some thought, then took them together with other peoples, i.e., the foreigners who had joined them, [as is said in the Book of Moses about the Jews at the time of their exodus,] with all their baggage and arms. According to what is said, they rebelled and separated themselves from the (Avar) Chagan. The (Avar) Chagan, when he learned this, set himself in pursuit of them, met them in five or six battles and, being defeated in each one by them, took flight and retired to the regions further north. After the victory, Kouver (Chagan), together with the aforementioned people, crossed the aforementioned river Danube, came to our regions and occupied the Keramesion plain."[73]

About this time, Mark of Kalt records that in 677, the principality of Ungvar (Ung fortress) was established in the regions further north where Kotrag's group also fled following the chaos, and a third group of Onogur-Bulgarians led by Batayan was subdued by Ziebel's emerging Khazar Empire according to Nikephoros I of Constantinople. Under Mauros, a fourth group of folk eventually settled in the present-day region of North Macedonia. The fifth group from Onogur, Bulgaria, led by Khan Asparukh—the father of Khan Tervel—settled permanently along the Danube (c. 679–681), establishing the First Bulgarian Empire, stabilized by the victory at the battle of Ongal south of the eastern Carpathians. The Bulgarians turned on Byzantium who had established an alliance with Ziebel's Khazars.

Although the Avar empire had diminished to half its original size, the Avar-Slav alliance consolidated their rule west from the central parts of the mid-Danubian basin and extended their sphere of influence west to the Vienna Basin. The new ethnic element marked by hair clips for pigtails; curved, single-edged sabres; and broad, symmetrical bows marks the middle Avar-Bulgar period (670–720). New regional centers, such as those near Ozora and Igar appeared. This strengthened the Avars' power base, although most of the Balkans lay in the hands of Slavic tribes since neither the Avars nor Byzantines were able to reassert control.[citation needed]

There are very few sources that cover the last century of Avar history. They only talk about the relations between the Avars and Lombards but little about the internals of the khaganate, so information about the Carpathian Basin is mostly from archaeology. Even here, elites are almost invisible, and there is little evidence of nomadic behavior. This transformation is little understood, but may have something to do with population growth.[74]

 
Avar Khaganate around 650
 
Avar Khaganate, Slavs and Bulgars
 
The Avar settlement area from the 7th to the 9th century, according to Éva Garam

A new type of ceramics—the so-called "Devínska Nová Ves" pottery—emerged at the end of the 7th century in the region between the Middle Danube and the Carpathians.[75] These vessels were similar to the hand-made pottery of the previous period, but wheel-made items were also found in Devínska Nová Ves sites.[75] Large inhumation cemeteries found at Holiare, Nové Zámky and other places in Slovakia, Hungary and Serbia from the period beginning around 690 show that the settlement network of the Carpathian Basin became more stable in the Late Avar period.[75][76] The most popular Late Avar motifs—griffins and tendrils decorating belts, mounts and a number of other artifacts connected to warriors—may either represent nostalgia for the lost nomadic past or evidence a new wave of nomads arriving from the Pontic steppes at the end of the 7th century.[77][78] According to historians who accept the latter theory, the immigrants may have been either Onogurs[79] or Alans.[80] Anthropological studies of the skeletons point at the presence of a population with mongoloid features.[77]

The Khaganate in the Middle and Late periods was a product of cultural symbiosis between Slavic and original Avar elements with a Slavic language as a lingua franca or the most common language.[2] In the 7th century, the Avar Khaganate opened a door for Slavic demographic and linguistic expansion to Adriatic and Aegean regions (see Slavic migrations to the Balkans).

In the early 8th century, a new archaeological culture—the so-called "griffin and tendril" culture—appeared in the Carpathian Basin. Some theories, including the "double conquest" theory of archaeologist Gyula László, attribute it to the arrival of new settlers, such as early Magyars, but this is still under debate. Hungarian archaeologists Laszló Makkai and András Mócsy attribute this culture to an internal evolution of Avars resulting from the integration of the Bulgar émigrés from the previous generation of the 670s. According to Makkai and Mócsy, "the material culture—art, clothing, equipment, weapons—of the late Avar/Bulgar period evolved autonomously from these new foundations". Many regions that had once been important centers of the Avar Empire had lost their significance while new ones arose. Although Avaric material culture found over much of the northern Balkans may indicate an existing Avar presence, it probably represents the presence of independent Slavs who had adopted Avaric customs.[67] Radovan Bunardžić dated Avar-Bulgar graves excavated in Čelarevo (near Sirmium), containing skulls with Mongolian features and Judaic symbols, to the late 8th century and 9th century.[81]

Collapse Edit

 
Frankish Avar March and neighbouring provinces in the time of Charlemagne (reigned 800–814)

The gradual decline of Avar power accelerated to a rapid fall. A series of Frankish campaigns, beginning from 788, ended with the conquest of the Avar realm within a decade. Initial conflict between Avars and Franks occurred soon after the Frankish deposition of Bavarian duke Tassilo III and the establishment of direct Frankish rule over Bavaria in 788. At that time, the border between Bavarians and Avars was situated on the river Enns. An initial Avarian incursion into Bavaria was repelled, and Franco-Bavarian forces responded by taking the war to neighbouring Avarian territories, situated along the Danube, east of Enns. The two sides collided near the river Ybbs, on Ybbs Field (German: Ybbsfeld), where the Avars suffered a defeat in 788. This heralded the rise of Frankish power and Avarian decline in the region.[82][83]

In 790, the Avars tried to negotiate a peace settlement with the Franks, but no agreement was reached.[83] A Frankish campaign against the Avars, initiated in 791, ended successfully for the Franks. A large Frankish army, led by Charlemagne, crossed from Bavaria into the Avarian territory beyond the Enns, and started to advance along the Danube in two columns, but found no resistance and soon reached the region of the Vienna Woods, near the Pannonian Plain. No pitched battle was fought,[84] since the Avars had fled before the advancing Carolingian army, while disease left most of the Avar horses dead.[84] Tribal infighting began, showing the weakness of the khaganate.[84]

The Franks had been supported by the Slavs, who established polities on former Avar territory.[85] Charlemagne's son Pepin of Italy captured a large, fortified encampment known as "the Ring", which contained much of the spoils from earlier Avar campaigns.[86] The campaign against the Avars again gathered momentum. By 796, the Avar chieftains had surrendered and became open to the acceptance of Christianity.[84] In the meantime, all of Pannonia was conquered.[87] According to the Annales Regni Francorum, the Avars began to submit to the Franks in 796. The song "De Pippini regis Victoria Avarica" celebrating the defeat of the Avars at the hands of Pepin of Italy in 796 still survives. The Franks baptized many Avars and integrated them into the Frankish Empire.[88] In 799, some Avars revolted.[89]

In 804, Bulgaria conquered the southeastern Avar lands in Transylvania and southeastern Pannonia up to the Middle Danube, and many Avars became subjects of the Bulgarian Empire. Khagan Theodorus, a convert to Christianity, died after asking Charlemagne for help in 805; he was succeeded by Khagan Abraham, who was baptized as the new Frankish client (and should not be assumed from his name alone to have been Khavar rather than Pseudo-Avar). Abraham was succeeded by Khagan (or Tudun) Isaac (Latin Canizauci), about whom little is known. The Franks turned the Avar lands under their control into a frontier march. The March of Pannonia—the eastern half of the Avar March—was then granted to the Slavic Prince Pribina, who established the Lower Pannonia principality in 840.

Whatever was left of Avar power was effectively ended when the Bulgars expanded their territory into the central and eastern portions of traditional Avar lands around 829.[90] According to Pohl, an Avar presence in Pannonia is certain in 871, but thereafter the name is no longer used by chroniclers. Pohl wrote, "It simply proved impossible to keep up an Avar identity after Avar institutions and the high claims of their tradition had failed",[91] although Regino wrote about them in 889.[92][93] The growing amount of archaeological evidence in Transdanubia also presumes an Avar population in the Carpathian Basin in the late 9th century.[92] Archaeological findings suggest a substantial, late Avar presence on the Great Hungarian Plain; however, it is difficult to determine their proper chronology.[92] The preliminary results of the new excavations also imply that the known and largely accepted theory of the destruction of the Avar settlement area is outdated; a disastrous depopulation of the Avar Khaganate never happened.[94][page needed]

Byzantine records, including the "Notitia episcopatuum", the "Additio patriarchicorum thronorum" by Neilos Doxapatres, the "Chronica" by Petrus Alexandrinus and the "Notitia patriarchatuum" mention the 9th century Avars as an existing Christian population.[92] The Avars had already been mixing with the more numerous Slavs for generations, and they later came under the rule of external polities, such as the Franks, Bulgaria, and Great Moravia.[95] Fine presumes that Avar descendants who survived the Hungarian Conquest in the 890s were likely absorbed by the Hungarian population.[95] After the mid to late 8th-century Frankish conquest of Pannonia, Avar and Bulgar refugees migrated to settle in the area of Bulgaria and along its western periphery.[96] The Avars in the region known as solitudo avarorum—currently called the Great Hungarian Plain—vanished in an arc of three generations. They slowly merged with the Slavs to create a bilingual Turkic-Slavic-speaking people who were subjected to Frankish domination; the invading Magyars found this composite people in the late 9th century.[97] The De Administrando Imperio, written around 950 and based on older documents, states that "there are still descendants of the Avars in Croatia, and are recognized as Avars". Modern historians and archaeologists until now proved the opposite, that Avars never lived in Dalmatia proper (including Lika), that statement occurred somewhere in Pannonia, and the information belongs to the 9th century.[98][99] There has been speculation that the modern Avar people of the Caucasus might have an uncertain connection to the historical Avars, but direct descent from them is rejected or doubted by many scholars.[90]

List of known khagans Edit

The recorded Avar khagans were:[100]

  • Kandik (c. 552 – c. 562)
  • Bayan I (562–602)
  • Bayan II (602–617)
  • Bayan III (617–630)
  • Kouver Chagan (677–?)
  • Theodorus (795–805)
  • Abraham (805–?)
  • Isaac (?–835)

Social and tribal structure Edit

 
Avar finds from Ozora-Tótipuszta, Hungary

The Pannonian Basin was the centre of the Avar power base. The Avars resettled captives from the peripheries of their empire to more central regions. Avar material culture is found south to Macedonia. However, to the east of the Carpathians, there are next to no Avar archaeological finds, suggesting that they lived mainly in the western Balkans. Scholars propose that a highly structured and hierarchical Avar society existed, having complex interactions with other "barbarian" groups. The khagan was the paramount figure, surrounded by a minority of nomadic aristocracy.

A few exceptionally rich burials have been uncovered, confirming that power was limited to the khagan and a close-knit class of "elite warriors". In addition to hoards of gold coins that accompanied the burials, the men were often buried with symbols of rank, such as decorated belts, weapons, stirrups resembling those found in central Asia, as well as their horse. The Avar army was composed from numerous other groups: Slavic, Gepidic and Bulgar military units. There also appeared to have existed semi-independent "client" (predominantly Slavic) tribes which served strategic roles, such as engaging in diversionary attacks and guarding the Avars' western borders abutting the Frankish Empire.

Initially, the Avars and their subjects lived separately, except for Slavic and Germanic women who married Avar men. Eventually, the Germanic and Slavic peoples were included in the Avaric social order and culture, which was Persian-Byzantine in fashion.[67] Scholars have identified a fused Avar-Slavic culture, characterized by ornaments such as half-moon-shaped earrings, Byzantine-styled buckles, beads, and bracelets with horn-shaped ends.[67] Paul Fouracre notes, "[T]here appears in the seventh century a mixed Slavic-Avar material culture, interpreted as peaceful and harmonious relationships between Avar warriors and Slavic peasants. It is thought possible that at least some of the leaders of the Slavic tribes could have become part of the Avar aristocracy".[101][page needed] Apart from the assimilated Gepids, a few graves of Carolingian peoples have been found in the Avar lands. They perhaps served as mercenaries.[67]

Language Edit

The language or languages spoken by the Avars are unknown.[8][10][102][103] Classical philologist Samu Szádeczky-Kardoss states that most of the Avar words used in contemporaneous Latin or Greek texts appear to have their origins in possibly Mongolian or Turkic languages.[104][page needed][105] Other theories propose a Tungusic origin.[3] According to Szádeczky-Kardoss, many of the titles and ranks used by the Pannonian Avars were also used by Turks, Proto-Bulgars, Uighurs and/or Mongols, including khagan (or kagan), khan, kapkhan, tudun, tarkhan, and khatun.[105] There is also evidence, however, that ruling and subject clans spoke a variety of languages. Proposals by scholars include Caucasian,[10] Iranian,[2] Tungusic,[106][page needed][107][page needed][108] Hungarian[citation needed] and Turkic.[14][109] A few scholars speculated that Proto-Slavic became the lingua franca of the Avar Khaganate.[110] Historian Gyula László has suggested that the late 9th-century Pannonian Avars spoke a variety of Old Hungarian, thereby forming an Avar-Hungarian continuity with then-newly arrived Hungarians.[111] Based on archeologic and linguistic data, Florin Curta and Johanna Nichols concluded that there is no convincing evidence for the presence of any Turkic or Mongolic languages among the Avars, but evidence for the presence of Iranian languages, further strengthened by Iranian-derived loanwords and toponyms in the region and among languages within the range of the Avars.[112]

Warfare Edit

The Avars were skilled warriors and almost exclusively fought on horseback. They often used light horse archers armed with powerful composite bows, as many other steppe peoples. These archers wore little to no armour, besides occasional helmets or knee guards. The Avars also employed the use of heavy cavalry, fully armoured in chainmail or scale armour as well as helmets. These heavier troops were armed with long lances, swords, and daggers.[113][page needed] Upon subjugating the Slavic tribes in Pannonia, they often allied with the Slavs and employed them as foot soldiers even together laying siege to Constantinople, along with large numbers of Persians. These Slav warriors were usually armed with bows, axes, various types of spears, and round shields.

The Byzantine Emperor Maurice wrote of the Avars and other nomad peoples in the Strategikon:

"They give special attention to training in archery on horseback. A vast herd of male and female horses follows them, both to provide nourishment and to give the impression of a huge army. They do not encamp within entrenchments, as do the Persians and the Romans [Byzantines], but until the day of battle, spread about according to tribes and clans, they continuously graze their horses both summer and winter... Also in the event of battle, when opposed by an infantry force in close formation they stay on their horses and do not dismount, for they do not last long fighting on foot. They have been brought up on horseback, and owing to their lack of exercise they simply cannot walk about on their own feet..."-Maurice[114][page needed]

Avar-Hungarian continuity theory Edit

Gyula László suggests that late Avars, arriving to the khaganate in 670 in great numbers, lived through the time between the destruction and plunder of the Avar state by the Franks during 791–795 and the arrival of the Magyars in 895. László points out that the settlements of the Hungarians (Magyars) complemented, rather than replaced, those of the Avars. Avars remained on the plough fields, good for agriculture, while Hungarians took the river banks and river flats, suitable for pasturage. He also notes that while the Hungarian graveyards consist of 40–50 graves on average, those of the Avars contain 600–1,000. According to these findings, the Avars not only survived the end of the Avar polity but lived in great masses and far outnumbered the Hungarian conquerors of Árpád.

He also shows that Hungarians occupied only the centre of the Carpathian basin, but Avars lived in a larger territory. Looking at those territories where only the Avars lived, there are only Hungarian geographical names, not Slavic or Turkic as would be expected interspersed among them. This is further evidence for the Avar-Hungarian continuity. Names of the Hungarian tribes, chieftains and the words used for the leaders, etc., suggest that at least the leaders of the Hungarian conquerors were Turkic speaking. However, Hungarian is not a Turkic language, rather Uralic, and so they must have been assimilated by the Avars that outnumbered them.

László's Avar-Hungarian continuity theory posits that the modern Hungarian language descends from that spoken by the Avars rather than the conquering Magyars.[115][page needed] Based on DNA evidence from graves, the original Magyars most resembled modern Bashkirs, a Turkic people located near the Urals, whereas the Khanty and Mansi, whose languages most resemble Hungarian, live some ways to the northeast of the Bashkirs.[116][117][118]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Waldman & Mason 2006, p. 769.
  2. ^ a b c Curta 2004, pp. 125–148.
  3. ^ a b c d Helimski 2004, pp. 59–72.
  4. ^ de la Fuente 2015.
  5. ^ Curta 2004, p. 132.
  6. ^ Some sources claim that Khagan Theodorus and his predecessor Zodan were one and the same; that is, Zodan assumed the name Thedours after converting to Christianity.
  7. ^ The name of Khagan Isaac appears to have been corrupted into Latin as Canizauci princeps Avarum ("Khagan Isaac, Prince of the Avars").
  8. ^ a b Encyclopædia Britannica & Avar.
  9. ^ Frassetto 2003, pp. 54–55.
  10. ^ a b c Waldman & Mason 2006, pp. 46–49.
  11. ^ Beckwith 2009, pp. 390–391: "... the Avars certainly contained peoples belonging to several different ethnolinguistic groups, so that attempts to identify them with one or another specific eastern people are misguided."
  12. ^ Kyzlasov 1996, p. 322: "The Juan-Juan state was undoubtedly multi-ethnic, but there is no definite evidence as to their language... Some scholars link the Central Asian Juan-Juan with the Avars who came to Europe in the mid-sixth century. According to widespread but unproven and probably unjustified opinion, the Avars spoke a language of the Mongolic group."
  13. ^ Pritsak 1982, p. 359.
  14. ^ a b Encyclopedia of Ukraine & Avars.
  15. ^ Grousset 1939, p. 171:According to Grousset, Theophylact Simocatta called them pseudo-Avars because he thought the true Avars were the Rouran.
  16. ^ Pohl 2002, pp. 26–29.
  17. ^ Curta 2006.
  18. ^ Neparáczki & Maróti 2019.
  19. ^ Csáky & Gerber 2020.
  20. ^ Gnecchi-Ruscone et al. 2022.
  21. ^ Maróti, Neparáczki & Schütz 2022.
  22. ^ David 2022.
  23. ^ Saag & Staniuk 2022, pp. 38–41.
  24. ^ Curta, Florin (2004). "The Slavic lingua franca (Linguistic notes of an archaeologist turned historian)". East Central Europe/L'Europe du Centre-Est. 31: 125–148. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  25. ^ Maenchen-Helfen 1976, p. 436.
  26. ^ a b c Dobrovits 2003.
  27. ^ Whitby & Whitby 1986, p. 226, footnote 48.
  28. ^ CNG 2009.
  29. ^ Nechaeva 2011.
  30. ^ Tezcan 2004.
  31. ^ Gulyamov 1957.
  32. ^ Muratov 2008.
  33. ^ Golden 2006, p. 19.
  34. ^ Harmatta 2001, pp. 109–118.
  35. ^ Pulleyblank 1999, pp. 35, 44.
  36. ^ Golden 1992.
  37. ^ Silić & Heršak 2002.
  38. ^ Jarnut & Pohl 2003, pp. 477–478.
  39. ^ Bálint 2010, p. 150.
  40. ^ Pohl 1998.
  41. ^ Savelyev, Alexander; Jeong, Choongwon (2020). "Early nomads of the Eastern Steppe and their tentative connections in the West". Evolutionary Human Sciences. 2: e20. doi:10.1017/ehs.2020.18. hdl:21.11116/0000-0007-772B-4. ISSN 2513-843X. PMC 7612788. PMID 35663512.
  42. ^ Golden 1984, pp. 11–12, 26.
  43. ^ a b Fóthi 2000, pp. 87–94.
  44. ^ Acta Archaeologica, 1967 & 86.
  45. ^ Oshanin 1964, p. 21.
  46. ^ Lipták 1955.
  47. ^ Kubik 2008, p. 151.
  48. ^ Csősz et al. 2016, p. 1.
  49. ^ Csősz et al. 2016, pp. 2–4.
  50. ^ Csősz et al. 2016, p. 1. "[T]he analyzed Avars represents a certain group of the Avar society that shows East and South European genetic characteristics..."
  51. ^ Šebest et al. 2018, p. 1.
  52. ^ Šebest et al. 2018, pp. 1, 6.
  53. ^ Šebest et al. 2018, p. 14.
  54. ^ Šebest et al. 2018, p. 14. "The most probable explanation of our findings could be that the assimilation rate of Avars and Slavs was already relatively high in theanalyzed mixed ancient population, where a majority of the inter-ethnic marriages involved Avar men and Slavic women."
  55. ^ a b c Neparáczki et al. 2019, p. 3, Figure 1.
  56. ^ Neparáczki et al. 2019, pp. 5–7. "All Hun and Avar age samples had inherently dark eye/hair colors... 8/15 Avar age individuals showed predominantly East Asian origin with both methods, 4 individuals were definitely European, while two showed evidence of admixture."
  57. ^ Csáky et al. 2020, p. 1.
  58. ^ Csáky et al. 2020, pp. 1, 4.
  59. ^ Csáky et al. 2020, pp. 1, 9–10.
  60. ^ Keyser et al. 2020:[O]ur findings confirmed that the Xiongnu had a strongly admixed mitochondrial and Y-chromosome gene pools and revealed a significant western component in the Xiongnu group studied.... [W]e propose Scytho-Siberians as ancestors of the Xiongnu and Huns as their descendants... [E]ast Eurasian R1a subclades R1a1a1b2a-Z94 and R1a1a1b2a2-Z2124 were a common element of the Hun, Avar and Hungarian Conqueror elite and very likely belonged to the branch that was observed in our Xiongnu samples. Moreover, haplogroups Q1a and N1a were also major components of these nomadic groups, reinforcing the view that Huns (and thus Avars and Hungarian invaders) might derive from the Xiongnu as was proposed until the eighteenth century but strongly disputed since... Some Xiongnu paternal and maternal haplotypes could be found in the gene pool of the Huns, the Avars, as well as Mongolian and Hungarian conquerors.
  61. ^ a b Gnecchi-Ruscone, Guido Alberto (14 April 2022). "Ancient genomes reveal origin and rapid trans-Eurasian migration of 7th century Avar elites". Cell. 185 (8): 1402–1413.e21. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2022.03.007. ISSN 0092-8674. PMC 9042794. PMID 35366416. All of these individuals, albeit variably mixed with other sources, have been shown to trace their eastern Eurasian ancestry component to a genetic profile referred to as the "ancient northeast Asians" (ANA) (...) All of the early-Avar-period individuals (DTI_early_elite), except for an infant and a burial with typical characteristics of the Transtisza group (Figure 2B), form a tight cluster with a high level of ANA ancestry.
  62. ^ Gnecchi-Ruscone et al. 2022:They are located between present-day Mongolic- (e.g., Buryats and Khamnigans) and Tungusic/Nivkh-speaking populations (e.g., Negidals, Nanai, Ulchi, and Nivkhs) together with the only available ancient genome from the Rouran-period Mongolia and are close to the three AR_Xianbei_P_2c individuals in the PCA
  63. ^ Maróti et al. 2022.
  64. ^ a b Pohl 1998, p. 18.
  65. ^ a b c Curta 2001.
  66. ^ Evans 2005, p. xxxv: An Avar embassy first appeared in Constantinople in 558, asking for land within the empire and calling for an annual subsidy. Justinian granted them a subsidy, but for land he directed them elsewhere.
  67. ^ a b c d e Makkai & Mócsy 2001.
  68. ^ Curta 2019, p. 65.
  69. ^ Pohl 2002, p. 158.
  70. ^ Pohl 1988.
  71. ^ The fate of Samo's empire after his death is unclear; it is generally assumed to have disappeared. Archaeological findings show that the Avars returned to their previous territories—at least to southernmost part of present-day Slovakia—and entered into a symbiotic relationship with the Slavs, whereas to the north of the Avar empire was purely Wend territory. The first specific knowledge of the presence of Slavs and Avars in this area is the existence in the late 8th century of the Moravian and Nitrian principalities (see Great Moravia) that were attacking the Avars and the defeat of the Avars by the Franks under Charlemagne in 799 or 802–803.
  72. ^ Kardaras 2019, p. 94.
  73. ^ All the Slavs of the Miracles of Saint Demetrius – Book II: V. Concerning the Civil War Planned Secretly Against our City by the Bulgars Mauros and Kouver
  74. ^ Curta 2019, p. 61.
  75. ^ a b c Barford 2001, p. 78.
  76. ^ Curta 2006, pp. 92–93.
  77. ^ a b Barford 2001, p. 79.
  78. ^ Curta 2006, p. 92.
  79. ^ Kristó 1996, p. 93.
  80. ^ Havlík 2004, p. 228.
  81. ^ Exhibition Menoroth from čelarevo : Jewish Historical Museum in Belgrade, Museum of the City of Novi Sad = Izložba Menore iz čelareva. Authors:Exposition itinérante nationale, Radovan Bunardžić. Fedération of Jewish Communities in Yugoslavia, Belgrade, 1980.
  82. ^ Bowlus 1995, pp. 47, 80.
  83. ^ a b Pohl 2018, pp. 378–379.
  84. ^ a b c d Schutz 2004, p. 61.
  85. ^ Schutz 2004, pp. 61–62.
  86. ^ Duruy 1891, p. 446.
  87. ^ Sinor 1990, pp. 218–220.
  88. ^ ...(sc. Avaros) autem, qui obediebant fidei et baptismum sunt consecuti...
  89. ^ Schutz 2004, p. 62.
  90. ^ a b Skutsch 2005, p. 158.
  91. ^ Pohl 1998, p. 19.
  92. ^ a b c d Olajos 2001, pp. 50–56.
  93. ^ "Et primo quidem Pannoniorum et Avarum solitudines pererrantes"
  94. ^ Ančić, Shepard & Vedriš 2017.
  95. ^ a b Fine 1991, p. 79.
  96. ^ Fine 1991, pp. 251–252.
  97. ^ Róna-Tas 1999, p. 264.
  98. ^ Živković 2012, pp. 51, 117–118.
  99. ^ Sokol 2008, pp. 185–187.
  100. ^ Lukács.
  101. ^ Fouracre 2005.
  102. ^ Beckwith 2009, pp. 390–391.
  103. ^ Kyzlasov 1996, p. 322.
  104. ^ Dopsch 2004.
  105. ^ a b Szadeczky-Kardoss 1990, p. 221.
  106. ^ Futaky 2001.
  107. ^ Helimski 2000a.
  108. ^ Helimski 2000b, pp. 43–56.
  109. ^ Róna-Tas 1999, p. 116.
  110. ^ Curta 2004, pp. 132–148.
  111. ^ Gyula 1982.
  112. ^ Curta, Florin (2004). "The Slavic lingua franca (Linguistic notes of an archaeologist turned historian)". East Central Europe/L'Europe du Centre-Est. 31: 125–148. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  113. ^ Kiley 2012.
  114. ^ Maurice 1984.
  115. ^ László 1978.
  116. ^ Neparáczki 2017, pp. 61–65.
  117. ^ Neparáczki & et al. 2017, pp. 201–214:According to Neparáczki: "From all recent and archaic populations tested the Volga Tatars show the smallest genetic distance to the entire conqueror population" and "a direct genetic relation of the Conquerors to Onogur-Bulgar ancestors of these groups is very feasible."
  118. ^ Neparáczki & et al. 2018, p. e0205920.

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External links Edit

  • "The largest Cemetery from the Avar period in the Carpathian Basin"

pannonian, avars, modern, ethnic, group, native, north, caucasus, avars, caucasus, other, uses, avar, disambiguation, ɑːr, were, alliance, several, groups, european, nomads, various, origins, peoples, were, also, known, obri, chronicles, abaroi, varchonitai, g. For the modern ethnic group native to the North Caucasus see Avars Caucasus For other uses see Avar disambiguation The Pannonian Avars ˈ ae v ɑːr z were an alliance of several groups of European nomads of various origins 8 9 10 11 12 13 The peoples were also known as the Obri in chronicles of Rus the Abaroi or Varchonitai 14 Greek Barxonites romanized Varchonites or Pseudo Avars 15 in Byzantine sources and the Apar Old Turkic 𐰯𐰺 to the Gokturks Kultegin Inscription Apar Avars were called Apar They established the Avar Khaganate which spanned the Pannonian Basin and considerable areas of Central and Eastern Europe from the late 6th to the early 9th century 16 Avar Khaganate567 after 822 1 576FIRST TURKIC KHAGANATESASANIANEMPIREALCHONSCHALU KYASNORTH ZHOUNORTH QICHENBYZANTINEEMPIREAVAR KHAGANATEKhitansPaleo SiberiansTungusGOGU RYEOMERO VINGIANSVISIGOTHSTARUMA The Avar Khaganate and main contemporary polities c 576The Avar Khaganate and surroundings circa 602 Common languagesTurkic Mongolic and or Tungusic languages ruling class 2 3 4 page needed Proto Slavic possibly late lingua franca 5 ReligionOriginally shamanism and animism Christianity after 796GovernmentKhanateKhagan History Established567 Defeated by Pepin of Italy796 Disestablished after 822 1 Preceded by Succeeded byLombardsKingdom of the GepidsHunnic EmpireByzantine Empire under the Justinian dynastySamo s Empire Frankish EmpireFirst Bulgarian EmpireSamo s EmpirePannonian SlavsAvar MarchThe name Pannonian Avars after the area in which they settled is used to distinguish them from the Avars of the Caucasus a separate people with whom the Pannonian Avars may or may not have had links Although the name Avar first appeared in the mid 5th century the Pannonian Avars entered the historical scene in the mid 6th century 17 on the Pontic Caspian steppe as a people who wished to escape the rule of the Gokturks They are probably best known for their invasions and destruction in the Avar Byzantine wars from 568 to 626 and influence on the Slavic migrations to the Balkans Recent archaeogenetic studies indicate that the ruling class of the Pannonian Avar population had varying degrees of Northeast Asian ancestry similar to those of modern day people from Mongolia and the Amur River region in Manchuria while the average commoner population resembled surrounding European groups 18 19 20 21 22 23 Linguistic evidence may also point to the presence of an Iranian component among the migrating Avars based on Iranian loanwords in local Slavic languages 24 Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Avars and pseudo Avars 1 2 Uar Rouran and other Central Asian peoples 1 3 Steppe empire dynamics and ethnogenesis 1 4 Anthropology 1 5 Genetics 2 History 2 1 Arrival in Europe 2 2 Early Avar period 580 670 2 3 Middle 670 720 and late 720 804 Avar periods 2 4 Collapse 3 List of known khagans 4 Social and tribal structure 5 Language 6 Warfare 7 Avar Hungarian continuity theory 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksOrigins EditAvars and pseudo Avars Edit The earliest clear reference to the Avar ethnonym comes from Priscus the Rhetor who recounts that in c 463 the Saragurs and Onogurs were attacked by the Sabirs who had been attacked by the Avars In turn the Avars had been driven off by people fleeing man eating griffins coming from the ocean Priscus Fr 40 25 Whilst Priscus accounts provide some information about the ethno political situation in the Don Kuban Volga region after the demise of the Huns no unequivocal conclusions can be reached Denis Sinor has argued that whoever the Avars referred to by Priscus were they differed from the Avars who appear a century later during the time of Justinian who reigned from 527 to 565 26 The next author to discuss the Avars Menander Protector appeared during the 6th century and wrote of Gokturk embassies to Constantinople in 565 and 568 AD The Turks appeared angry at the Byzantines for having made an alliance with the Avars whom the Turks saw as their subjects and slaves Turxanthos a Turk prince calls the Avars Varchonites and escaped slaves of the Turks who numbered about 20 thousand Menander Fr 43 27 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Grave goods saber and sheath harness mountings rings reflex bow from the Avar cemetery of Gyenesdias Hungary nbsp Coins of the Avars 6th 7th centuries AD imitating Ravenna mint types of Heraclius 28 Many more but somewhat confusing details come from Theophylact Simocatta who in c 629 describes the final two decades of the 6th century In particular he claims to quote a triumph letter from Turxanthos For this very Chagan had in fact outfought the leader of the nation of the Abdali I mean indeed of the Hephthalites as they are called conquered him and assumed the rule of the nation Then he enslaved the Avar nation But let no one think that we are distorting the history of these times because he supposes that the Avars are those barbarians neighbouring on Europe and Pannonia and that their arrival was prior to the times of the emperor Maurice For it is by a misnomer that the barbarians on the Ister have assumed the appellation of Avars the origin of their race will shortly be revealed So when the Avars had been defeated for we are returning to the account some of them made their escape to those who inhabit Taugast Taugast is a famous city which is a total of one thousand five hundred miles distant from those who are called Turks Others of the Avars who declined to humbler fortune because of their defeat came to those who are called Moukri this nation is the closest neighbour to the men of Taugast Then the Chagan embarked on yet another enterprise and subdued all the Ogur which is one of the strongest tribes on account of its large population and its armed training for war These make their habitations in the east by the course of the Til which Turks are accustomed to call Melas The earliest leaders of this nation were named Var and Chunni from them some parts of those nations were also accorded their nomenclature being called Var and Chunni Then while the emperor Justinian was in possession of the royal power a small section of these Var and Chunni fled from that ancestral tribe and settled in Europe These named themselves Avars and glorified their leader with the appellation of Chagan Let us declare without departing in the least from the truth how the means of changing their name came to them When the Barsils Onogurs Sabirs and other Hun nations in addition to these saw that a section of those who were still Var and Chunni had fled to their regions they plunged into extreme panic since they suspected that the settlers were Avars For this reason they honoured the fugitives with splendid gifts and supposed that they received from them security in exchange Then after the Var and Chunni saw the well omened beginning to their flight they appropriated the ambassadors error and named themselves Avars for among the Scythian nations that of the Avars is said to be the most adept tribe In point of fact even up to our present times the Pseudo Avars for it is more correct to refer to them thus are divided in their ancestry some bearing the time honoured name of Var while others are called Chunni nbsp Gold Avar bowl found in modern AlbaniaAccording to the interpretation of Dobrovits and Nechaeva the Turks insisted that the Avars were only pseudo Avars so as to boast that they were the only formidable power in the Eurasian steppe The Gokturks claimed that the real Avars remained loyal subjects of the Turks farther east 26 29 A political name A Par 𐰯𐰻 was indeed mentioned in inscriptions honoring Kul Tigin and Bilge Qaghan yet in Armenian sources Egishe Vardapet Ghazar Parpetsi and Sebeos Apar seemingly indicated a geographical area Khorasan which might also intimate a political formation once there additionally Apar shar that is the country of the Apar was named after possibly Hephthalites who were known as 滑 MC ɦˠuɛt gt Ch Hua in Chinese sources Even so Apar could not be linked to the European Avars notwithstanding any link if there were between the Hephthalites and Rourans 30 page needed Furthermore Dobrovits has questioned the authenticity of Theophylact s account As such he has argued that Theophylact borrowed information from Menander s accounts of Byzantine Turk negotiations to meet political needs of his time i e to castigate and deride the Avars during a time of strained political relations between the Byzantines and Avars coinciding with Emperor Maurice s northern Balkan campaigns 26 Uar Rouran and other Central Asian peoples Edit nbsp nbsp nbsp CHAM PA500SASANIANEMPIREBYZANTINEEMPIRENORTHERNWEIHYMYARSOUTHERNQIAlchonHunsNezaksTOCHA RIANSZHANGZHUNGFUNANTUYUHUNGUPTAEMPIREHEPHTHALITESROURAN KHAGANATEKyrgyzsGaojuTurksYuebanMagyarsSabirsAlansKutrigursVenedaeFinnishUgriansYakutsBashkirsAntesGOGU RYEOAKSUM class notpageimage The Rouran Khaganate and contemporary Asian polities c 500 CE According to some scholars the Pannonian Avars originated from a confederation formed in the Aral Sea region by the Uar also known as the Ouar Warr or Var and the Xionites 31 page needed 32 The Xionites had likely been speakers of Iranian and or Turkic languages 33 The Hephthalites affiliated previously to the Uar and Xionites had remained in Central and northern South Asia The Pannonian Avars were also known by names including Uarkhon or Varchonites which may have been a portmanteau combining Var and Chunni The 18th century historian Joseph de Guignes postulates a link between the Avars of European history with the Rouran Khaganate of Inner Asia based on a coincidence between Tardan Khan s letter to Constantinople and events recorded in Chinese sources notably the Wei Shu and Bei Shi 34 Chinese sources state that Bumin Qaghan founder of the First Turkic Khaganate defeated the Rouran some of whom fled and joined the Western Wei Later Bumin s successor Muqan Qaghan defeated the Hephthalites as well as the Turkic Tiele Superficially these victories over the Tiele Rouran and Hephthalites echo a narrative in the Theophylact boasting of Tardan s victories over the Hephthalites Avars and Oghurs However the two series of events are not synonymous the events of the latter took place during Tardan s rule c 580 599 whilst Chinese sources referring to the Turk defeat of the Rouran and other Central Asian peoples occurred 50 years earlier at the founding of the First Turkic Khaganate It is for this reason that the linguist Janos Harmatta rejects the identification of the Avars with the Rouran According to Edwin G Pulleyblank the name Avar is the same as the prestigious name Wuhuan in the Chinese sources 35 Several historians including Peter Benjamin Golden suggest that the Avars are of Turkic origin likely from the Oghur branch 36 Another theory suggests that some of the Avars were of Tungusic origin 3 A study by Emil Hersak and Ana Silic suggests that the Avars were of heterogeneous origin including mostly Turkic Oghuric and Mongolic groups Later in Europe some Germanic and Slavic groups were assimilated into the Avars They concluded that their exact origin is unknown but state that it is likely that the Avars were originally mainly composed of Turkic Oghuric tribes 37 page needed Steppe empire dynamics and ethnogenesis Edit nbsp The Pontic steppe c 650 showing the early territories of the Khazars Bulgars and AvarsIn 2003 Walter Pohl summarized the formation of nomadic empires 38 1 Many steppe empires were founded by groups who had been defeated in previous power struggles but had fled from the dominion of the stronger group The Avars were likely a losing faction previously subordinate to the legitimate clarification needed Ashina clan in the Western Turkic Khaganate and they fled west of the Dnieper 2 These groups usually were of mixed origin and each of its components was part of a previous group 3 Crucial in the process was the elevation of a khagan which signified a claim to independent power and an expansionist strategy This group also needed a new name that would give all of its initial followers a sense of identity 4 The name for a new group of steppe riders was often taken from a repertoire of prestigious names which did not necessarily denote any direct affiliation to or descent from groups of the same name in the Early Middle Ages Huns Avars Bulgars and Ogurs or names connected with o gur Kutrigurs Utigurs Onogurs etc were most important In the process of name giving both perceptions by outsiders and self designation played a role These names were also connected with prestigious traditions that directly expressed political pretensions and programmes and had to be endorsed by success In the world of the steppe where agglomerations of groups were rather fluid it was vital to know how to deal with a newly emergent power The symbolical hierarchy of prestige expressed through names provided some orientation for friend and foe alike Such views are mirrored by Csanad Balint hu The ethnogenesis of early medieval peoples of steppe origin cannot be conceived in a single linear fashion due to their great and constant mobility with no ethnogenetic point zero theoretical proto people or proto language 39 page needed Moreover Avar identity was strongly linked to Avar political institutions Groups who rebelled or fled from the Avar realm could never be called Avars but were rather termed Bulgars Similarly with the final demise of Avar power in the early 9th century Avar identity disappeared almost instantaneously 40 page needed Savelyev and Jeong in Early nomads of the Eastern Steppe and their tentative connections in the West concluded that the initial Pannonian Avars originated in Central Asia from various ethno linguistic groups including Iranian peoples Ugrians Oghur Turks and Rouran tribes They further note that the broadly East Asian component in the archaeological record of the European Avars is limited even in the earlier period of their history elements originating from West Asia the Caucasus the Southern Russian steppes and the local Central European cultures can be traced alongside each other 41 Anthropology Edit nbsp nbsp Skeleton and grave goods from the Avar cemetery of Szolnok Janos Damjanich Museum In the Stuttgart Psalter there is an image of mounted archers riding backwards on their horses a noted Asian tactic which may depict the Avars 42 According to mid 20th century physical anthropologists such as Pal Liptak human remains from the early Avar 7th century period had mostly Europoid features while grave goods indicated cultural links to the Eurasian Steppe 43 Cemeteries dated to the late Avar period 8th century included many human remains with physical features typical of East Asian people or Eurasians i e people with both East Asian and European ancestry 44 Remains with East Asian or Eurasian features were found in about one third of the Avar graves from the 8th century 45 According to Liptak 79 of the population of the Danube Tisza region during the Avar period showed Europoid characteristics 43 However Liptak used racial terms later deprecated or regarded as obsolete such as Mongoloid for northeast Asian and Turanid for individuals of mixed ancestry 46 page needed Several theories suggest that the ruling class of the Avars were of Tungusic East Asian origin or of partially Tungusic origin 3 Genetics Edit See also Donghu people Genetics Rouran Khaganate Genetics Xianbei Genetics Xiongnu Genetics and Huns Genetics nbsp Reconstruction of a lamellar helmet from Niederstotzingen Dated 560 600 AD This is considered as an Avar lamellar helmet 47 A genetic study published in Scientific Reports in September 2016 examined the mitochondrial DNA mtDNA of 31 people buried in the Carpathian Basin between the 7th and 9th centuries 48 They were found to be mostly carrying European haplogroups such as H K T and U while about 15 carried Asian haplogroups such as C M6 D4c1 and F1a 49 Their mtDNA were found to be primarily characteristic of Eastern and Southern Europe 50 A genetic study published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology in 2018 examined 62 individuals buried in the 8th and 9th centuries at an Avar Slavic burial in Cifer Pac Slovakia 51 Of the 46 samples of mtDNA extracted 93 belonged to west Eurasian lineages while 6 belonged to east Eurasian lineages 52 The amount of east Eurasian lineages was higher than among modern European populations but lower than what has been found in other genetic studies on the Avars 53 The mtDNA of the examined individuals was found to be quite similar to medieval and modern Slavs and it was suggested that the mixed population examined had emerged through intermarriage between Avar males and Slavic females 54 A genetic study published in Scientific Reports in November 2019 examined the remains of fourteen Avar males Eleven of them were dated to the early Avar period and three were dated to the middle and late Avar period 55 The eleven early Avar males were found to be carrying the paternal haplogroups N1a1a1a1a3 four samples N1a1a two samples R1a1a1b2a two samples C2 G2a and I1 55 The three males dated to the middle and late Avar period carried the paternal haplogroups C2 N1a1a1a1a3 and E1b1b1a1b1a 55 In short mostly carried east Eurasian Y haplogroups typical for modern north eastern Siberian and Buryat populations The Avars studied were all determined to have had dark eyes and dark hair and the majority of them were found to be primarily of East Asian origin 56 A genetic study published in Scientific Reports in January 2020 examined the remains of 26 individuals buried at various elite Avar cemeteries in the Pannonian Basin dated to the 7th century 57 The mtDNA of these Avars belonged mostly to East Asian haplogroups while the Y DNA was exclusively of East Asian origin and strikingly homogenous belonging to haplogroups N M231 and Q M242 58 The evidence suggests that the Avar elite were largely patrilineal and endogamous for a period of around one century and entered the Pannonian Basin through migrations from East Asia involving both men and women 59 Another 2020 study but of Xiongnu remains in East Asia found that the Xiongnu shared certain paternal N1a Q1a R1a Z94 and R1a Z2124 and maternal haplotypes with the Huns and Avars and suggested on this basis that they were descended from Xiongnu who they in turn suggested were descended from Scytho Siberians 60 nbsp Genomic evidence from human remains shows that the Avars were essentially derived from Ancient Northeast Asians ANA 61 A genetic study published in scientific journal Cell in April 2022 analyzed 48 Pannonian Avar samples from the early middle and late period and found them to be of nearly exclusively Ancient Northeast Asian ANA with predominant paternal lineage N1a1a1a1a3a F4205 with some Q1a Q1b R1a R1b and E1b subclades with strong affinity to modern peoples inhabiting the region from Mongolia to the Amur including a historical Rouran Khaganate sample and those from Xiongnu Xianbei periods in the eastern Asian steppe 61 The Avar individuals showed their highest genetic affinity with present day Mongolic and Tungusic peoples as well as Nivkhs 62 A genetic study published in scientific journal Current Biology in May 2022 examined 143 Avar samples from various periods including elite and commoners It confirmed the Ancient Northeast Asian ANA paternal and maternal origin for the Avar elite with N1a F4205 being their predominant and characteristic paternal lineage alongside incorporated Q1a2a1 and R1a Z94 Hunnic Iranian remnants and the rest belonging to local haplogroups found among surrounding populations Autosomally the Elite Avar samples preserved very ancient Mongolian pre Bronze Age genomes with ca 90 Ancient North East Asian ancestry shared deep ancestry with European Huns but although since Early Avar period started mixing with local and immigrant Hunnic Iranian related populations people with different genetic ancestries were seemingly distinguished as samples with Hun related genomes were buried in separate cemeteries The majority of the Avar Khaganate general population consisted of local European peoples EU core but did not display Northeast Asian admixture supporting a model of elite dominance of arriving horse nomads over a large sedentary population Genetic data on later Avar elite samples showed an increase of Iranian associated ancestry suggesting either further migration from the Western Steppe or substructure among the initial Avars not observed before 63 History EditArrival in Europe Edit In 557 the Avars sent an embassy to Constantinople presumably from the northern Caucasus This marked their first contact with the Byzantine Empire In exchange for gold they agreed to subjugate the unruly gentes on behalf of the Byzantines subsequently they conquered and incorporated various nomadic tribes Kutrigurs and Sabirs and defeated the Antes Pohl 1998 p 18 the first thing the Avars did when they came near the Caucasus on their flight from Central Asia was to send an embassy to the aging emperor Justinian That took place sometime in winter 558 59 and they struck the usual deal the Avars were to fight for the Empire against unruly gentes and in turn would receive annual payments and other benefits Indeed for 20 years to come the Avars under their Khagan Baian fought Utigurs and Antes Gepids and Slavs whereas their policy towards the Empire relied more on negotiation than on war By 562 the Avars controlled the lower Danube basin and the steppes north of the Black Sea 64 need quotation to verify By the time they arrived in the Balkans the Avars formed a heterogeneous group of about 20 000 horsemen 65 After the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I bought them off they pushed northwestwards into Germania However Frankish opposition halted the Avars expansion in that direction Seeking rich pastoral lands the Avars initially demanded land south of the Danube in present day Bulgaria but the Byzantines refused using their contacts with the Gokturks as a threat against Avar aggression 66 The Avars turned their attention to the Carpathian Basin and to the natural defenses it afforded 67 The Carpathian Basin was occupied by the Gepids In 567 the Avars formed an alliance with the Lombards enemies of the Gepids and together they destroyed much of the Gepid kingdom The Avars then persuaded the Lombards to move into northern Italy an invasion that marked the last Germanic mass movement in the Migration Period citation needed Continuing their successful policy of turning the various barbarians against each other the Byzantines persuaded the Avars to attack the Sclavenes in Scythia Minor a land rich with goods 65 page needed After devastating much of the Sclavenes land the Avars returned to Pannonia after many of the khagan s subjects deserted to the Byzantine emperor Early Avar period 580 670 Edit nbsp Avars plundering Balkan landsBy about 580 the Avar Khagan Bayan I had established supremacy over most of the Slavic Germanic and Bulgar tribes living in Pannonia and the Carpathian Basin 64 When the Byzantine Empire was unable to pay subsidies or hire Avar mercenaries the Avars raided their Balkan territories According to Menander Bayan commanded an army of 10 000 Kutrigur Bulgars and sacked Dalmatia in 568 effectively cutting the Byzantine terrestrial link with northern Italy and western Europe In the 580s and 590s many of the imperial armies were busy fighting the Persians and the remaining troops in the Balkans were no match for the Avars 68 By 582 the Avars had captured Sirmium an important fort in Pannonia When the Byzantines refused to increase the stipend amount as requested by Bayan s son and successor Bayan II the Avars proceeded to capture Singidunum Belgrade and Viminacium They suffered setbacks however during Maurice s Balkan campaigns in the 590s By 600 the Avars had established a nomadic empire ruling over a multitude of peoples and stretching from modern Austria in the west to the Pontic Caspian steppe in the east citation needed After being defeated at the Battles of Viminacium in their homeland some Avars defected to the Byzantines in 602 but Emperor Maurice decided not to return home as was customary 69 He maintained his army camp beyond the Danube throughout the winter but the hardship caused the army to revolt giving the Avars a desperately needed respite and they attempted an invasion of northern Italy in 610 The Byzantine civil war prompted a Persian invasion in the Byzantine Sasanian War and after 615 the Avars enjoyed a free hand in the undefended Balkans While negotiating with Emperor Heraclius beneath the walls of Constantinople in 617 the Avars launched a surprise attack While they were unable to capture the city centre they pillaged the suburbs and took 270 000 captives Payments in gold and goods to the Avars reached a sum of 200 000 solidi shortly before 626 70 page needed In 626 the Avars cooperated with the Sassanid force in the failed siege of 626 Following this defeat the political and military power of the Avars declined Byzantine and Frankish sources documented a war between the Avars and their western Slav clients the Wends 65 Each year the Huns Avars came to the Slavs to spend the winter with them then they took the wives and daughters of the Slavs and slept with them and among the other mistreatments already mentioned the Slavs were also forced to pay levies to the Huns But the sons of the Huns who were then raised with the wives and daughters of these Wends could not finally endure this oppression anymore and refused obedience to the Huns and began as already mentioned a rebellion When now the Wendish army went against the Huns the aforementioned merchant Samo accompanied the same And so Samo s bravery proved itself in wonderful ways and a huge mass of Huns fell to the sword of the Wends Chronicle of Fredegar Book IV Section 48 written c 642 In the 630s Samo the ruler of the first Slavic polity known as Samo s Tribal Union or Samo s realm increased his authority over lands to the north and west of the Khaganate at the expense of the Avars ruling until his death in 658 71 The Chronicle of Fredegar records that during Samo s rebellion in 631 9 000 Bulgars led by Alciocus left Pannonia to modern day Bavaria where Dagobert I massacred most of them The remaining 700 joined the Wends At about the time of Samo s realm Bulgar leader Kubrat of the Dulo clan led a successful uprising to end Avar authority over the Pannonian Plain establishing Old Great Bulgaria or Patria Onoguria the homeland of Onogurs The civil war possibly a succession struggle in Onoguria between the Kutrigurs under Alciocus on one side and Utigur forces on the other raged from 631 to 632 After Alciocus fled to Bavaria the power of the Avars Kutrigur forces was shattered and Kubrat established peace between the Avars and Byzantium in 632 According to Constantine VII s 10th century work De Administrando Imperio a group of Croats who had separated from the White Croats in White Croatia had also fought against the Avars after which they organized the Duchy of Croatia 72 The Unknown Archon s people from Samo s realm were also resettled at this time Middle 670 720 and late 720 804 Avar periods Edit nbsp A golden jug from the Treasure of Nagyszentmiklos depicting a warrior with his captive Experts cannot agree if this warrior is Bulgar Khazar or AvarWith the death of Samo in 658 and Kubrat in 665 some Slavic tribes again came under Avar rule Despite their father s advice Kubrat s sons failed to maintain cohesion in Old Great Bulgaria which began to disintegrate A few years later in the time of Batbayan Old Great Bulgaria dissolved into five branches From western Onoguria the first group of folk moved to Ravenna under Alzeco in the 650s According to Book II of the Miracles of Saint Demetrius a certain Avar Chagan seized his opportunity to coalesce in the regions further north in response to the secession of the Diocese of Sirmium in the 670s by a Kuber Chagan Finally the Avar Chagan considering them to constitute a people with an identity of its own put in accordance to the custom of his race a chieftain upon them a man by the name of Kouver When Kouver Chagan learned from some of his most intimate associates the desire of the exiled Romans for their ancestral homes he gave the matter some thought then took them together with other peoples i e the foreigners who had joined them as is said in the Book of Moses about the Jews at the time of their exodus with all their baggage and arms According to what is said they rebelled and separated themselves from the Avar Chagan The Avar Chagan when he learned this set himself in pursuit of them met them in five or six battles and being defeated in each one by them took flight and retired to the regions further north After the victory Kouver Chagan together with the aforementioned people crossed the aforementioned river Danube came to our regions and occupied the Keramesion plain 73 About this time Mark of Kalt records that in 677 the principality of Ungvar Ung fortress was established in the regions further north where Kotrag s group also fled following the chaos and a third group of Onogur Bulgarians led by Batayan was subdued by Ziebel s emerging Khazar Empire according to Nikephoros I of Constantinople Under Mauros a fourth group of folk eventually settled in the present day region of North Macedonia The fifth group from Onogur Bulgaria led by Khan Asparukh the father of Khan Tervel settled permanently along the Danube c 679 681 establishing the First Bulgarian Empire stabilized by the victory at the battle of Ongal south of the eastern Carpathians The Bulgarians turned on Byzantium who had established an alliance with Ziebel s Khazars Although the Avar empire had diminished to half its original size the Avar Slav alliance consolidated their rule west from the central parts of the mid Danubian basin and extended their sphere of influence west to the Vienna Basin The new ethnic element marked by hair clips for pigtails curved single edged sabres and broad symmetrical bows marks the middle Avar Bulgar period 670 720 New regional centers such as those near Ozora and Igar appeared This strengthened the Avars power base although most of the Balkans lay in the hands of Slavic tribes since neither the Avars nor Byzantines were able to reassert control citation needed There are very few sources that cover the last century of Avar history They only talk about the relations between the Avars and Lombards but little about the internals of the khaganate so information about the Carpathian Basin is mostly from archaeology Even here elites are almost invisible and there is little evidence of nomadic behavior This transformation is little understood but may have something to do with population growth 74 nbsp Avar Khaganate around 650 nbsp Avar Khaganate Slavs and Bulgars nbsp The Avar settlement area from the 7th to the 9th century according to Eva GaramA new type of ceramics the so called Devinska Nova Ves pottery emerged at the end of the 7th century in the region between the Middle Danube and the Carpathians 75 These vessels were similar to the hand made pottery of the previous period but wheel made items were also found in Devinska Nova Ves sites 75 Large inhumation cemeteries found at Holiare Nove Zamky and other places in Slovakia Hungary and Serbia from the period beginning around 690 show that the settlement network of the Carpathian Basin became more stable in the Late Avar period 75 76 The most popular Late Avar motifs griffins and tendrils decorating belts mounts and a number of other artifacts connected to warriors may either represent nostalgia for the lost nomadic past or evidence a new wave of nomads arriving from the Pontic steppes at the end of the 7th century 77 78 According to historians who accept the latter theory the immigrants may have been either Onogurs 79 or Alans 80 Anthropological studies of the skeletons point at the presence of a population with mongoloid features 77 The Khaganate in the Middle and Late periods was a product of cultural symbiosis between Slavic and original Avar elements with a Slavic language as a lingua franca or the most common language 2 In the 7th century the Avar Khaganate opened a door for Slavic demographic and linguistic expansion to Adriatic and Aegean regions see Slavic migrations to the Balkans In the early 8th century a new archaeological culture the so called griffin and tendril culture appeared in the Carpathian Basin Some theories including the double conquest theory of archaeologist Gyula Laszlo attribute it to the arrival of new settlers such as early Magyars but this is still under debate Hungarian archaeologists Laszlo Makkai and Andras Mocsy attribute this culture to an internal evolution of Avars resulting from the integration of the Bulgar emigres from the previous generation of the 670s According to Makkai and Mocsy the material culture art clothing equipment weapons of the late Avar Bulgar period evolved autonomously from these new foundations Many regions that had once been important centers of the Avar Empire had lost their significance while new ones arose Although Avaric material culture found over much of the northern Balkans may indicate an existing Avar presence it probably represents the presence of independent Slavs who had adopted Avaric customs 67 Radovan Bunardzic dated Avar Bulgar graves excavated in Celarevo near Sirmium containing skulls with Mongolian features and Judaic symbols to the late 8th century and 9th century 81 Collapse Edit nbsp Frankish Avar March and neighbouring provinces in the time of Charlemagne reigned 800 814 Main article Avar Wars See also Avar March March of Pannonia and Pannonian Slavs The gradual decline of Avar power accelerated to a rapid fall A series of Frankish campaigns beginning from 788 ended with the conquest of the Avar realm within a decade Initial conflict between Avars and Franks occurred soon after the Frankish deposition of Bavarian duke Tassilo III and the establishment of direct Frankish rule over Bavaria in 788 At that time the border between Bavarians and Avars was situated on the river Enns An initial Avarian incursion into Bavaria was repelled and Franco Bavarian forces responded by taking the war to neighbouring Avarian territories situated along the Danube east of Enns The two sides collided near the river Ybbs on Ybbs Field German Ybbsfeld where the Avars suffered a defeat in 788 This heralded the rise of Frankish power and Avarian decline in the region 82 83 In 790 the Avars tried to negotiate a peace settlement with the Franks but no agreement was reached 83 A Frankish campaign against the Avars initiated in 791 ended successfully for the Franks A large Frankish army led by Charlemagne crossed from Bavaria into the Avarian territory beyond the Enns and started to advance along the Danube in two columns but found no resistance and soon reached the region of the Vienna Woods near the Pannonian Plain No pitched battle was fought 84 since the Avars had fled before the advancing Carolingian army while disease left most of the Avar horses dead 84 Tribal infighting began showing the weakness of the khaganate 84 The Franks had been supported by the Slavs who established polities on former Avar territory 85 Charlemagne s son Pepin of Italy captured a large fortified encampment known as the Ring which contained much of the spoils from earlier Avar campaigns 86 The campaign against the Avars again gathered momentum By 796 the Avar chieftains had surrendered and became open to the acceptance of Christianity 84 In the meantime all of Pannonia was conquered 87 According to the Annales Regni Francorum the Avars began to submit to the Franks in 796 The song De Pippini regis Victoria Avarica celebrating the defeat of the Avars at the hands of Pepin of Italy in 796 still survives The Franks baptized many Avars and integrated them into the Frankish Empire 88 In 799 some Avars revolted 89 In 804 Bulgaria conquered the southeastern Avar lands in Transylvania and southeastern Pannonia up to the Middle Danube and many Avars became subjects of the Bulgarian Empire Khagan Theodorus a convert to Christianity died after asking Charlemagne for help in 805 he was succeeded by Khagan Abraham who was baptized as the new Frankish client and should not be assumed from his name alone to have been Khavar rather than Pseudo Avar Abraham was succeeded by Khagan or Tudun Isaac Latin Canizauci about whom little is known The Franks turned the Avar lands under their control into a frontier march The March of Pannonia the eastern half of the Avar March was then granted to the Slavic Prince Pribina who established the Lower Pannonia principality in 840 Whatever was left of Avar power was effectively ended when the Bulgars expanded their territory into the central and eastern portions of traditional Avar lands around 829 90 According to Pohl an Avar presence in Pannonia is certain in 871 but thereafter the name is no longer used by chroniclers Pohl wrote It simply proved impossible to keep up an Avar identity after Avar institutions and the high claims of their tradition had failed 91 although Regino wrote about them in 889 92 93 The growing amount of archaeological evidence in Transdanubia also presumes an Avar population in the Carpathian Basin in the late 9th century 92 Archaeological findings suggest a substantial late Avar presence on the Great Hungarian Plain however it is difficult to determine their proper chronology 92 The preliminary results of the new excavations also imply that the known and largely accepted theory of the destruction of the Avar settlement area is outdated a disastrous depopulation of the Avar Khaganate never happened 94 page needed Byzantine records including the Notitia episcopatuum the Additio patriarchicorum thronorum by Neilos Doxapatres the Chronica by Petrus Alexandrinus and the Notitia patriarchatuum mention the 9th century Avars as an existing Christian population 92 The Avars had already been mixing with the more numerous Slavs for generations and they later came under the rule of external polities such as the Franks Bulgaria and Great Moravia 95 Fine presumes that Avar descendants who survived the Hungarian Conquest in the 890s were likely absorbed by the Hungarian population 95 After the mid to late 8th century Frankish conquest of Pannonia Avar and Bulgar refugees migrated to settle in the area of Bulgaria and along its western periphery 96 The Avars in the region known as solitudo avarorum currently called the Great Hungarian Plain vanished in an arc of three generations They slowly merged with the Slavs to create a bilingual Turkic Slavic speaking people who were subjected to Frankish domination the invading Magyars found this composite people in the late 9th century 97 The De Administrando Imperio written around 950 and based on older documents states that there are still descendants of the Avars in Croatia and are recognized as Avars Modern historians and archaeologists until now proved the opposite that Avars never lived in Dalmatia proper including Lika that statement occurred somewhere in Pannonia and the information belongs to the 9th century 98 99 There has been speculation that the modern Avar people of the Caucasus might have an uncertain connection to the historical Avars but direct descent from them is rejected or doubted by many scholars 90 List of known khagans EditThe recorded Avar khagans were 100 Kandik c 552 c 562 Bayan I 562 602 Bayan II 602 617 Bayan III 617 630 Kouver Chagan 677 Theodorus 795 805 Abraham 805 Isaac 835 Social and tribal structure Edit nbsp Avar finds from Ozora Totipuszta HungaryThe Pannonian Basin was the centre of the Avar power base The Avars resettled captives from the peripheries of their empire to more central regions Avar material culture is found south to Macedonia However to the east of the Carpathians there are next to no Avar archaeological finds suggesting that they lived mainly in the western Balkans Scholars propose that a highly structured and hierarchical Avar society existed having complex interactions with other barbarian groups The khagan was the paramount figure surrounded by a minority of nomadic aristocracy A few exceptionally rich burials have been uncovered confirming that power was limited to the khagan and a close knit class of elite warriors In addition to hoards of gold coins that accompanied the burials the men were often buried with symbols of rank such as decorated belts weapons stirrups resembling those found in central Asia as well as their horse The Avar army was composed from numerous other groups Slavic Gepidic and Bulgar military units There also appeared to have existed semi independent client predominantly Slavic tribes which served strategic roles such as engaging in diversionary attacks and guarding the Avars western borders abutting the Frankish Empire Initially the Avars and their subjects lived separately except for Slavic and Germanic women who married Avar men Eventually the Germanic and Slavic peoples were included in the Avaric social order and culture which was Persian Byzantine in fashion 67 Scholars have identified a fused Avar Slavic culture characterized by ornaments such as half moon shaped earrings Byzantine styled buckles beads and bracelets with horn shaped ends 67 Paul Fouracre notes T here appears in the seventh century a mixed Slavic Avar material culture interpreted as peaceful and harmonious relationships between Avar warriors and Slavic peasants It is thought possible that at least some of the leaders of the Slavic tribes could have become part of the Avar aristocracy 101 page needed Apart from the assimilated Gepids a few graves of Carolingian peoples have been found in the Avar lands They perhaps served as mercenaries 67 Language EditThe language or languages spoken by the Avars are unknown 8 10 102 103 Classical philologist Samu Szadeczky Kardoss states that most of the Avar words used in contemporaneous Latin or Greek texts appear to have their origins in possibly Mongolian or Turkic languages 104 page needed 105 Other theories propose a Tungusic origin 3 According to Szadeczky Kardoss many of the titles and ranks used by the Pannonian Avars were also used by Turks Proto Bulgars Uighurs and or Mongols including khagan or kagan khan kapkhan tudun tarkhan and khatun 105 There is also evidence however that ruling and subject clans spoke a variety of languages Proposals by scholars include Caucasian 10 Iranian 2 Tungusic 106 page needed 107 page needed 108 Hungarian citation needed and Turkic 14 109 A few scholars speculated that Proto Slavic became the lingua franca of the Avar Khaganate 110 Historian Gyula Laszlo has suggested that the late 9th century Pannonian Avars spoke a variety of Old Hungarian thereby forming an Avar Hungarian continuity with then newly arrived Hungarians 111 Based on archeologic and linguistic data Florin Curta and Johanna Nichols concluded that there is no convincing evidence for the presence of any Turkic or Mongolic languages among the Avars but evidence for the presence of Iranian languages further strengthened by Iranian derived loanwords and toponyms in the region and among languages within the range of the Avars 112 Warfare EditThe Avars were skilled warriors and almost exclusively fought on horseback They often used light horse archers armed with powerful composite bows as many other steppe peoples These archers wore little to no armour besides occasional helmets or knee guards The Avars also employed the use of heavy cavalry fully armoured in chainmail or scale armour as well as helmets These heavier troops were armed with long lances swords and daggers 113 page needed Upon subjugating the Slavic tribes in Pannonia they often allied with the Slavs and employed them as foot soldiers even together laying siege to Constantinople along with large numbers of Persians These Slav warriors were usually armed with bows axes various types of spears and round shields The Byzantine Emperor Maurice wrote of the Avars and other nomad peoples in the Strategikon They give special attention to training in archery on horseback A vast herd of male and female horses follows them both to provide nourishment and to give the impression of a huge army They do not encamp within entrenchments as do the Persians and the Romans Byzantines but until the day of battle spread about according to tribes and clans they continuously graze their horses both summer and winter Also in the event of battle when opposed by an infantry force in close formation they stay on their horses and do not dismount for they do not last long fighting on foot They have been brought up on horseback and owing to their lack of exercise they simply cannot walk about on their own feet Maurice 114 page needed Avar Hungarian continuity theory EditGyula Laszlo suggests that late Avars arriving to the khaganate in 670 in great numbers lived through the time between the destruction and plunder of the Avar state by the Franks during 791 795 and the arrival of the Magyars in 895 Laszlo points out that the settlements of the Hungarians Magyars complemented rather than replaced those of the Avars Avars remained on the plough fields good for agriculture while Hungarians took the river banks and river flats suitable for pasturage He also notes that while the Hungarian graveyards consist of 40 50 graves on average those of the Avars contain 600 1 000 According to these findings the Avars not only survived the end of the Avar polity but lived in great masses and far outnumbered the Hungarian conquerors of Arpad He also shows that Hungarians occupied only the centre of the Carpathian basin but Avars lived in a larger territory Looking at those territories where only the Avars lived there are only Hungarian geographical names not Slavic or Turkic as would be expected interspersed among them This is further evidence for the Avar Hungarian continuity Names of the Hungarian tribes chieftains and the words used for the leaders etc suggest that at least the leaders of the Hungarian conquerors were Turkic speaking However Hungarian is not a Turkic language rather Uralic and so they must have been assimilated by the Avars that outnumbered them Laszlo s Avar Hungarian continuity theory posits that the modern Hungarian language descends from that spoken by the Avars rather than the conquering Magyars 115 page needed Based on DNA evidence from graves the original Magyars most resembled modern Bashkirs a Turkic people located near the Urals whereas the Khanty and Mansi whose languages most resemble Hungarian live some ways to the northeast of the Bashkirs 116 117 118 See also EditKeszthely culture Treasure of Nagyszentmiklos Pannonian Romance Szekelys Paloc PeopleNotes Edit Waldman amp Mason 2006 p 769 a b c Curta 2004 pp 125 148 a b c d Helimski 2004 pp 59 72 de la Fuente 2015 Curta 2004 p 132 Some sources claim that Khagan Theodorus and his predecessor Zodan were one and the same that is Zodan assumed the name Thedours after converting to Christianity The name of Khagan Isaac appears to have been corrupted into Latin as Canizauci princeps Avarum Khagan Isaac Prince of the Avars a b Encyclopaedia Britannica amp Avar Frassetto 2003 pp 54 55 a b c Waldman amp Mason 2006 pp 46 49 Beckwith 2009 pp 390 391 the Avars certainly contained peoples belonging to several different ethnolinguistic groups so that attempts to identify them with one or another specific eastern people are misguided Kyzlasov 1996 p 322 The Juan Juan state was undoubtedly multi ethnic but there is no definite evidence as to their language Some scholars link the Central Asian Juan Juan with the Avars who came to Europe in the mid sixth century According to widespread but unproven and probably unjustified opinion the Avars spoke a language of the Mongolic group Pritsak 1982 p 359 a b Encyclopedia of Ukraine amp Avars Grousset 1939 p 171 According to Grousset Theophylact Simocatta called them pseudo Avars because he thought the true Avars were the Rouran Pohl 2002 pp 26 29 Curta 2006 Neparaczki amp Maroti 2019 Csaky amp Gerber 2020 Gnecchi Ruscone et al 2022 Maroti Neparaczki amp Schutz 2022 David 2022 Saag amp Staniuk 2022 pp 38 41 Curta Florin 2004 The Slavic lingua franca Linguistic notes of an archaeologist turned historian East Central Europe L Europe du Centre Est 31 125 148 Retrieved 29 May 2015 Maenchen Helfen 1976 p 436 a b c Dobrovits 2003 Whitby amp Whitby 1986 p 226 footnote 48 CNG 2009 Nechaeva 2011 Tezcan 2004 Gulyamov 1957 Muratov 2008 Golden 2006 p 19 Harmatta 2001 pp 109 118 Pulleyblank 1999 pp 35 44 Golden 1992 Silic amp Hersak 2002 Jarnut amp Pohl 2003 pp 477 478 Balint 2010 p 150 Pohl 1998 Savelyev Alexander Jeong Choongwon 2020 Early nomads of the Eastern Steppe and their tentative connections in the West Evolutionary Human Sciences 2 e20 doi 10 1017 ehs 2020 18 hdl 21 11116 0000 0007 772B 4 ISSN 2513 843X PMC 7612788 PMID 35663512 Golden 1984 pp 11 12 26 a b Fothi 2000 pp 87 94 Acta Archaeologica 1967 amp 86 Oshanin 1964 p 21 Liptak 1955 Kubik 2008 p 151 Csosz et al 2016 p 1 sfn error no target CITEREFCsosz et al 2016 help Csosz et al 2016 pp 2 4 sfn error no target CITEREFCsosz et al 2016 help Csosz et al 2016 p 1harvnb error no target CITEREFCsosz et al 2016 help T he analyzed Avars represents a certain group of the Avar society that shows East and South European genetic characteristics Sebest et al 2018 p 1 sfn error no target CITEREFSebest et al 2018 help Sebest et al 2018 pp 1 6 sfn error no target CITEREFSebest et al 2018 help Sebest et al 2018 p 14 sfn error no target CITEREFSebest et al 2018 help Sebest et al 2018 p 14harvnb error no target CITEREFSebest et al 2018 help The most probable explanation of our findings could be that the assimilation rate of Avars and Slavs was already relatively high in theanalyzed mixed ancient population where a majority of the inter ethnic marriages involved Avar men and Slavic women a b c Neparaczki et al 2019 p 3 Figure 1 sfn error no target CITEREFNeparaczki et al 2019 help Neparaczki et al 2019 pp 5 7harvnb error no target CITEREFNeparaczki et al 2019 help All Hun and Avar age samples had inherently dark eye hair colors 8 15 Avar age individuals showed predominantly East Asian origin with both methods 4 individuals were definitely European while two showed evidence of admixture Csaky et al 2020 p 1 sfn error no target CITEREFCsaky et al 2020 help Csaky et al 2020 pp 1 4 sfn error no target CITEREFCsaky et al 2020 help Csaky et al 2020 pp 1 9 10 sfn error no target CITEREFCsaky et al 2020 help Keyser et al 2020 O ur findings confirmed that the Xiongnu had a strongly admixed mitochondrial and Y chromosome gene pools and revealed a significant western component in the Xiongnu group studied W e propose Scytho Siberians as ancestors of the Xiongnu and Huns as their descendants E ast Eurasian R1a subclades R1a1a1b2a Z94 and R1a1a1b2a2 Z2124 were a common element of the Hun Avar and Hungarian Conqueror elite and very likely belonged to the branch that was observed in our Xiongnu samples Moreover haplogroups Q1a and N1a were also major components of these nomadic groups reinforcing the view that Huns and thus Avars and Hungarian invaders might derive from the Xiongnu as was proposed until the eighteenth century but strongly disputed since Some Xiongnu paternal and maternal haplotypes could be found in the gene pool of the Huns the Avars as well as Mongolian and Hungarian conquerors sfn error no target CITEREFKeyser et al 2020 help a b Gnecchi Ruscone Guido Alberto 14 April 2022 Ancient genomes reveal origin and rapid trans Eurasian migration of 7th century Avar elites Cell 185 8 1402 1413 e21 doi 10 1016 j cell 2022 03 007 ISSN 0092 8674 PMC 9042794 PMID 35366416 All of these individuals albeit variably mixed with other sources have been shown to trace their eastern Eurasian ancestry component to a genetic profile referred to as the ancient northeast Asians ANA All of the early Avar period individuals DTI early elite except for an infant and a burial with typical characteristics of the Transtisza group Figure 2B form a tight cluster with a high level of ANA ancestry Gnecchi Ruscone et al 2022 They are located between present day Mongolic e g Buryats and Khamnigans and Tungusic Nivkh speaking populations e g Negidals Nanai Ulchi and Nivkhs together with the only available ancient genome from the Rouran period Mongolia and are close to the three AR Xianbei P 2c individuals in the PCA Maroti et al 2022 sfn error no target CITEREFMaroti et al 2022 help a b Pohl 1998 p 18 a b c Curta 2001 Evans 2005 p xxxv An Avar embassy first appeared in Constantinople in 558 asking for land within the empire and calling for an annual subsidy Justinian granted them a subsidy but for land he directed them elsewhere a b c d e Makkai amp Mocsy 2001 Curta 2019 p 65 Pohl 2002 p 158 Pohl 1988 The fate of Samo s empire after his death is unclear it is generally assumed to have disappeared Archaeological findings show that the Avars returned to their previous territories at least to southernmost part of present day Slovakia and entered into a symbiotic relationship with the Slavs whereas to the north of the Avar empire was purely Wend territory The first specific knowledge of the presence of Slavs and Avars in this area is the existence in the late 8th century of the Moravian and Nitrian principalities see Great Moravia that were attacking the Avars and the defeat of the Avars by the Franks under Charlemagne in 799 or 802 803 Kardaras 2019 p 94 All the Slavs of the Miracles of Saint Demetrius Book II V Concerning the Civil War Planned Secretly Against our City by the Bulgars Mauros and Kouver Curta 2019 p 61 a b c Barford 2001 p 78 Curta 2006 pp 92 93 a b Barford 2001 p 79 Curta 2006 p 92 Kristo 1996 p 93 Havlik 2004 p 228 Exhibition Menoroth from celarevo Jewish Historical Museum in Belgrade Museum of the City of Novi Sad Izlozba Menore iz celareva Authors Exposition itinerante nationale Radovan Bunardzic Federation of Jewish Communities in Yugoslavia Belgrade 1980 Bowlus 1995 pp 47 80 a b Pohl 2018 pp 378 379 a b c d Schutz 2004 p 61 Schutz 2004 pp 61 62 Duruy 1891 p 446 Sinor 1990 pp 218 220 sc Avaros autem qui obediebant fidei et baptismum sunt consecuti Schutz 2004 p 62 a b Skutsch 2005 p 158 Pohl 1998 p 19 a b c d Olajos 2001 pp 50 56 Et primo quidem Pannoniorum et Avarum solitudines pererrantes Ancic Shepard amp Vedris 2017 a b Fine 1991 p 79 Fine 1991 pp 251 252 Rona Tas 1999 p 264 Zivkovic 2012 pp 51 117 118 Sokol 2008 pp 185 187 Lukacs Fouracre 2005 Beckwith 2009 pp 390 391 Kyzlasov 1996 p 322 Dopsch 2004 a b Szadeczky Kardoss 1990 p 221 Futaky 2001 Helimski 2000a Helimski 2000b pp 43 56 Rona Tas 1999 p 116 Curta 2004 pp 132 148 Gyula 1982 Curta Florin 2004 The Slavic lingua franca Linguistic notes of an archaeologist turned historian East Central Europe L Europe du Centre Est 31 125 148 Retrieved 29 May 2015 Kiley 2012 Maurice 1984 Laszlo 1978 Neparaczki 2017 pp 61 65 Neparaczki amp et al 2017 pp 201 214 According to Neparaczki From all recent and archaic populations tested the Volga Tatars show the smallest genetic distance to the entire conqueror population and a direct genetic relation of the Conquerors to Onogur Bulgar ancestors of these groups is very feasible Neparaczki amp et al 2018 p e0205920 References EditL N Gumilev 1967 New data on the history of the Khazars PDF Acta Archaeologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae Magyar Tudomanyos Akademia 19 86 Archived PDF from the original on 2018 11 02 Ancic Mladen Shepard Jonathan Vedris Trpimir 2017 Imperial Spheres and the Adriatic Byzantium the Carolingians and the Treaty of 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Harmatta Janos 2001 The letter sent by the Turk Khagan to the Emperor Mauricius PDF Acta Archaeologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 41 109 118 doi 10 1556 AAnt 41 2001 1 2 11 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 11 16 Havlik Lubomir E 2004 Great Moravia between the Franconians Byzantium and Rome In Champion T C ed Centre and Periphery Comparative Studies in Archaeology Routledge pp 227 237 ISBN 0 415 12253 8 Helimski Eugene 2000a Yazyk i avarov tunguso manchzhurskij aspekt Folia Orientalia 36 Festschrift for St Stachowski in Russian pp 135 148 Helimski Eugene 2000b On probable Tungus Manchurian origin of the Buyla inscription from Nagy Szentmiklos preliminary communication Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia 5 43 56 Helimski E 2004 Die Sprache n der Awaren Die mandschu tungusische Alternative Proceedings of the First International Conference on Manchu Tungus Studies Vol II 59 72 Jarnut Jorg Pohl Walter 2003 Regna and Gentes The Relationship Between Late Antique and Early Medieval Peoples and Kingdoms in the Transformation of the Roman World Brill ISBN 90 04 12524 8 Kardaras Geōrgios 2019 Byzantium and the Avars 6th 9th Century AD Political Diplomatic and Cultural Relations Brill p 94 ISBN 9789004248380 Keyser Christine Zvenigorosky Vincent July 30 2020 Genetic evidence suggests a sense of family parity and conquest in the Xiongnu Iron Age nomads of Mongolia Human Genetics Springer 557 7705 369 373 doi 10 1007 s00439 020 02209 4 PMID 32734383 S2CID 220881540 Retrieved September 29 2020 Kiley Kevin F 2012 An Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Uniforms of the Roman World Lorenz Books Kristo Gyula 1996 Hungarian History in the Ninth Century Szegedi Kozepkorasz Muhely ISBN 1 4039 6929 9 Kubik Adam 2008 The Kizil Caves as an terminus post quem of the Central and Western Asiatic pear shape spangenhelm type helmets The David Collection helmet and its place in the evolution of multisegmented dome helmets Historia i Swiat nr 7 2018 141 156 Histiria I Swiat 7 151 The Kultegin Inscription 1 40 lines Language Committee of Ministry of Culture and Information of RK Archived from the original on 2018 06 24 Retrieved 2022 08 29 Kyzlasov L R 1996 Northern Nomads In Litvinsky B A ed History of Civilizations of Central Asia The crossroads of civilizations A D 250 to 750 UNESCO pp 315 325 ISBN 978 9231032110 Retrieved 29 May 2015 YouTube Documentary with Gyula Laszlo in Hungarian on state television channel Duna Laszlo Gyula 1978 A kettos honfoglalas Magveto Konyvkiado Gyula Laszlo 1982 Historia 1982 01 Historia in Hungarian Digitalis Tankonyvtar Archived from the original on 2017 04 01 Retrieved 2022 08 29 Liptak Pal 1955 Recherches anthropologiques sur les ossements avares des environs d Ullo Acta Archaeologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae in French 6 231 314 Lukacs B For the Memory of the Avar Khagans Hungarian Academy of Sciences Luthar Oto ed 2008 The Land Between A History of Slovenia Frankfurt am Main Peter Lang ISBN 978 3631570111 Maenchen Helfen Otto 1976 The World of the Huns Studies in Their History and Culture University California Press ISBN 978 0520015968 Makkai Laszlo Mocsy Andras eds 2001 II 4 The Period of Avar Rule History of Transylvania Vol 1 Maroti Zoltan Neparaczki Endre Schutz Oszkar 2022 05 25 The genetic origin of Huns Avars and conquering Hungarians Current Biology 32 13 2858 2870 e7 doi 10 1016 j cub 2022 04 093 PMID 35617951 S2CID 246191357 Nechaeva Ekaterina 2011 The Runaway Avars and Late Antique Diplomacy In Mathisen Ralph W Shanzer Danuta eds Romans Barbarians and the Transformation of the Roman World Cultural Interaction and the Creation of Identity in Late Antiquity Ashgate Maurice 1984 500s Maurice s Strategikon Handbook of Byzantine Military Strategy Translated by Dennis George T University of Pennsylvania Press Retrieved 2022 08 29 Moravcsik Gyula ed 1967 1949 Constantine Porphyrogenitus De Administrando Imperio 2nd revised ed Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies ISBN 978 0884020219 Muratov B A 2008 06 27 Alany kavary i hionity v etnogeneze bashkir Alans Kavars and Chionites in the ethnogenesis of the Bashkirs Report Ural Altai through the centuries into the future Proceedings of the All Russian Scientific Conference Neparaczki Endre David 2017 A honfoglalok genetikai szarmazasanak es rokonsagi viszonyainak vizsgalata archeogenetikai modszerekkel Archeogenetic analysis of the origin and genetic relations of the Hungarian conquerors Doctoral thesis in Hungarian pp 61 65 doi 10 14232 phd 3794 Neparaczki Endre Juhasz Zoltan Pamjav Horolma Feher Tibor Csanyi Bernadett Zink Albert Maixner Frank Palfi Gyorgy Molnar Erika Pap Ildiko Kustar Agnes Revesz Laszlo Rasko Istvan Torok Tibor February 2017 Genetic structure of the early Hungarian conquerors inferred from mtDNA haplotypes and Y chromosome haplogroups in a small cemetery Molecular Genetics and Genomics 292 1 201 214 doi 10 1007 s00438 016 1267 z PMID 27803981 S2CID 4099313 Neparaczki Endre Maroti Zoltan Kalmar Tibor Kocsy Klaudia Maar Kitti Bihari Peter Nagy Istvan Fothi Erzsebet Pap Ildiko Kustar Agnes Palfi Gyorgy Rasko Istvan Zink Albert Torok Tibor 2018 10 18 Caramelli David ed Mitogenomic data indicate admixture components of Central Inner Asian and Srubnaya origin in the conquering Hungarians PLOS ONE Public Library of Science PLoS 13 10 e0205920 Bibcode 2018PLoSO 1305920N bioRxiv 10 1101 250688 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0205920 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 6193700 PMID 30335830 S2CID 90886641 Neparaczki Endre Maroti Zoltan November 12 2019 Y chromosome haplogroups from Hun Avar and conquering Hungarian period nomadic people of the Carpathian Basin Scientific Reports Nature Research 9 16569 16569 Bibcode 2019NatSR 916569N doi 10 1038 s41598 019 53105 5 PMC 6851379 PMID 31719606 Olajos Terez 2001 Az avar tovabbeles kerdeserol Tiszataj 50 56 Oshanin L V 1964 Penetration of the Territory of Kirghizia and Kazakhstan by the Europeoid Iranian speaking People from Sogdiana In Field Henry ed Anthropological Composition of the Population of Central Asia and the Ethnogenesis of its Peoples II Russian Translation Series of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology Vol 2 Translated by Maurin Vladimir M Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology Harvard University Pertz Georg Heinrich ed 1845 Einhardi Annales Hanover Pohl Walter 1988 Die Awaren Ein Steppenvolk im Mitteleuropa 567 822 n Chr in German C H Bech ISBN 978 3406333309 Pohl Walter 1998 Conceptions of Ethnicity in Early Medieval Studies In Little Lester K Rosenwein Barbara H eds Debating the Middle Ages Issues and Readings Wiley pp 13 24 ISBN 978 1577180081 Pohl Walter 2002 Die Awaren ein Steppenvolk im Mitteleuropa 567 822 n Chr in German 2nd ed C H Bech pp 26 29 ISBN 978 3 406 48969 3 Pohl Walter 2018 The Avars A Steppe Empire in Central Europe 567 822 Ithaca and London Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1501729409 Pulleyblank Edwin G 1999 The Peoples of the Steppe Frontier in Early Chinese Sources Migracijske i etnicke teme 15 1 2 Richards Ronald O 2003 The Pannonian Slavic Dialect of the Common Slavic Proto language The View from Old Hungarian Los Angeles University of California ISBN 978 0974265308 Sebest Lukas Baldovic Marian January 18 2018 Detection of mitochondrial haplogroups in a small avar slavic population from the eighth ninth century AD American Journal of Physical Anthropology American Association of Physical Anthropologists 165 3 536 553 doi 10 1002 ajpa 23380 PMID 29345305 Pritsak Omeljan 1982 The Slavs and the Avars Spoleto a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link ISBN missing Rona Tas Andras 1999 Hungarians and Europe in the Early Middle Ages An Introduction to Early Hungarian History Central European University Press p 116 ISBN 978 9639116481 Saag Lehti Staniuk Robert 11 July 2022 Historical human migrations From the steppe to the basin Current Biology 32 13 38 41 doi 10 1016 j cub 2022 05 058 PMID 35820383 S2CID 250443139 Retrieved 31 July 2022 Many migrations during human history have made the Carpathian Basin the melting pot of Europe New ancient genomes confirm the Asian origin of European Huns Avars and Magyars and huge within group variability that is linked with social structure Schutz Herbert 2004 The Carolingians in Central Europe Their History Arts and Architecture A Cultural History of Central Europe 750 900 Brill pp 61 ISBN 90 04 13149 3 Silic Ana Hersak Emil 2002 09 30 The Avars A Review of Their Ethnogenesis and History Migracijske I Etnicke Teme in Croatian 18 2 3 197 224 ISSN 1333 2546 Sinor Denis 1990 The Avars The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia Cambridge University Press pp 206 ISBN 978 0 521 24304 9 Scholz Bernhard Walter ed 1970 Carolingian Chronicles Royal Frankish Annals and Nithard s Histories University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472061860 Skutsch Carl ed 2005 Encyclopedia of the World s Minorities New York Routledge p 158 ISBN 1 57958 468 3 Sokol Vladimir 2008 Arheoloska istrazivanja u Lici i Arheologija peci i krsa Gospic 16 19 listopada 2007 An early Croatian spur from Brusani in Lika Some early historical aspects of the Lika region the banat problem Izdanja Hrvatskog arheoloskog drustva Zagreb Gospic 23 185 187 Szadeczky Kardoss Samuel 1990 The Avars In Sinor Denis ed The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia Vol 1 Cambridge University Press p 221 Tezcan Mehmet 2004 07 24 Apar in Turkish Inscriptions of VIIIth Century and Armenian Sources PDF Eran ud Aneran Webfestschrift Marshak Archived PDF from the original on 2005 03 10 Waldman Carl Mason Catherine 2006 Encyclopedia of European Peoples Infobase Publishing pp 46 49 ISBN 978 1 4381 2918 1 Retrieved 5 May 2013 Whitby Michael Whitby Mary 1986 The History of Theophylact Simocatta An English Translation with Introduction and Notes Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 822799 1 Zivkovic Tibor 2012 De conversione Croatorum et Serborum A Lost Source Belgrade The Institute of History pp 51 117 118 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pannonian Avars The largest Cemetery from the Avar period in the Carpathian Basin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pannonian Avars amp oldid 1174025734, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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