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Sudak

Sudak (Ukrainian and Russian: Судак; Crimean Tatar: Sudaq; Greek: Σουγδαία; sometimes spelled Sudac or Sudagh) is a town, multiple former Eastern Orthodox bishopric and double Latin Catholic titular see. It is of regional significance in Crimea, a territory recognized by most countries as part of Ukraine but annexed by Russia as the Republic of Crimea. Sudak serves as the administrative center of Sudak Municipality, one of the regions Crimea is divided into. It is situated 57 km (35 mi) to the west of Feodosia (the nearest railway station) and 104 km (65 mi) to the east of Simferopol, the republic's capital. Population: 16,492 (2014 Census).[1]

Sudak
Судак
Sudaq
Sudak
Sudak
Location of Sudak (red dot) within Crimea
Sudak
Location of Sudak within Ukraine
Sudak
Location of Sudak within the Black Sea Region
Coordinates: 44°51′5″N 34°58′21″E / 44.85139°N 34.97250°E / 44.85139; 34.97250
Country Ukraine (occupied by Russia)
Autonomous republicCrimea (de jure)
RaionFeodosia Raion (de jure)
Federal subjectCrimea (de facto)
MunicipalitySudak Municipality (de facto)
Government
 • MayorVladimir Serov
Area
 • Total15 km2 (6 sq mi)
Elevation
50 m (160 ft)
Population
 (2014)
 • Total16,492
 • Density1,086.6/km2 (2,814/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+3 (MSK)
Postal code
98000 — 98015
Area code+7-36566
Former namesSoldaia (until 1475), Sougdeia, Sidagios
ClimateCfa

A city of antiquity, today it is a popular resort, best known for its Genoese fortress, the best preserved on the northern shore of the Black Sea.

History edit

 
Map of the Khazar Khaganate and surrounding states, c. 820 CE. Area of direct Khazar control shown in dark blue, sphere of influence in purple. Other boundaries shown in dark red.

Foundation and early Middle Ages edit

The date and circumstances of the city's foundation are uncertain. The first written reference to the city dates to the 7th century (in the Ravenna Cosmography[2]), but later local tradition places its foundation in 212 CE, and archaeological evidence supports its foundation in Roman times. The city was in all likelihood founded by the Alans, as its name in Greek sources, Sougdaia is a cognate of the adjective sugda ("pure, holy") or derives from the word sugded/sogdad in the Ossetian language.[3]

In the early Middle Ages, the city appears to have been under very loose Byzantine control, like other cities in the region.[3] Archaeological remains indicate considerable construction activity near the shore in the 6th century.[2] Under Byzantine influence, the city was subject to Christianization, and became the seat of a bishopric under the Patriarch of Constantinople, attested for the first time in the Second Council of Nicaea in 787. Bishop Stephen, who attended the council, was an iconophile persecuted by Emperor Constantine V. He was later canonized (St. Stephen of Surozh; Russian: св. Стефан Сурожский[4]), and buried at the Hagia Sophia cathedral in Sougdaia, which according to later tradition was built in 793.[3] Although a Greek-speaking population was probably settled in the city, the area remained dominated by the Alans: a 9th-century hagiography of Apostle Andrew places "Upper Sougdaia" elsewhere, between Zichia and the Cimmerian Bosporus, "in the land of the Alans", while the hagiographer of Constantine the Philosopher mentions the tribe of Sougdoi, situated between the Iberians and the Crimean Goths, which the historian Francis Dvornik identifies as the Alans.[2]

The period between the 8th and 11th centuries is obscure, but the available evidence points to a sharp decline in Sougdaia's fortunes. Archaeological evidence shows that the 6th-century constructions were abandoned in the 8th/9th century, while later Russian legends (probably apocryphal) claim that the city was captured by the Rus' chieftain, Bravlin, at around the same time. Byzantine control lapsed, and the city probably came under Khazar suzerainty thereafter, which lasted until the early 11th century.[3][2] In the early 10th century, the local see was promoted to an archbishopric.[3]

High and late Middle Ages edit

The 11th–14th centuries represent a period of prosperity for the city, as shown in archaeological evidence of renewed activity both in the harbour as well as the hinterland and the area of the citadel. It became an important location for trading on the Silk Road in the 12th and 13th centuries, as a terminus for Black Sea trade. The 14th-century Arab traveller Ibn Battuta even compares its harbour with that of Alexandria.[2] The 13th-century chronicler Ibn al-Athir writes of it as the "city of the Qifjaq from which (flow) their material possessions. It is on the Khazar Sea. Ships come to it bearing clothes. The Qifjiqs buy from them and sell them slaves. Burtas furs, beaver, squirrels ..."[5]

By the mid-11th century, Sougdaia had returned to Byzantine control, probably following the defeat of the Khazar warlord Georgius Tzul in 1016. An inscription of 1059 mentions Leo Aliates, "strategos of Cherson and Sougdaia".[3][2] By the end of the century, however, the city passed under Cuman control, which lasted until the 13th century. In c. 1222 the Seljuk Turks besieged it, followed by destructive raids by the Mongol Empire in 1223 and 1238. Finally, in c. 1249 the city came under the control of the Mongol Golden Horde, although it retained considerable autonomy. Contemporary sources place its population at the time to 8,300, including Greeks, Alans, Mongols, Armenians, Latins, and Jews.[3][6]

 
Crimea in the middle of the 15th century

Under Tatar rule, the city was governed by the notables of the city and the 18 villages surrounding it. In the Greek sources they are mentioned by the Byzantine title sebastos, while the Latin sources use the Latinized Greek term proti ("first men").[3] Sometime between 1275 and 1282, the local see, which after being united with Phoulloi in the late 11th century was known as Sougdophoulloi, was raised to the status of a metropolitan see.[3]

The city's prosperity was increased by the establishment of Venetian and Genoese commercial colonies in the Crimea during the late 13th century, but at the same time, the area was drawn into the constant disputes between these two rival cities.[3] In the early 14th century, the city was eclipsed by the Genoese colonies of Tana and Kaffa: the Florentine merchant Francesco Balducci Pegolotti, who visited the area in c. 1330, neglects to mention the city altogether.[2] At about the same time, the Tatars converted to Islam, which led to a deterioration of their relations with the Greek-speaking and Christian inhabitants of the city, many of whom were forced to leave it.[3]

As a result, on 19 July 1365, the Genoese from Kaffa seized the city, which became a Genoese trading colony. The Genoese refortified the city, constructing the citadel that is still visible today, and induced a large part of the deported Greeks to return.[3] Genoese rule lasted until 1475, when the Ottoman Grand Vizier Gedik Ahmed Pasha captured it after a long siege.[3]

 
The Genoese fortress

Ottoman and modern periods edit

 
Lutheran Church, 1887 (German colony since 1804)

The Ottomans took control of Soldaia and all other Genoese colonies, as well as the Principality of Theodoro in 1475. Although Sudak was the strategical center of a qadılıq, the smallest administrative unit in the Ottoman Empire, the town lost much of its military and commercial importance, until the Crimean Khanate took over.

In 1771, Sudak was occupied by Rumyantsev's army. In 1783, it definitively passed to the Russian Empire, with the rest of Crimea. Though sometimes contested, it seems that a mass emigration occurred as a result of the ensuing instability in that period. Even Potemkin ordered in 1778 the eviction of the Christian population from Crimea. The town rapidly turned into a small village, and according to the 1805 census, Sudak had just 33 inhabitants.

In 1804, the first Russian school of viticulture was opened there.

The town acquired its present status in 1982.

 
Panorama of Sudak

Ecclesiastical history edit

Byzantine metropolis of Sougdaia edit

It is unknown when the Byzantine see of Sougdaia was established, but it is attested for the first time in 787. It was in the sway of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, where it ranked 35th according to the Notitia Episcopatuum edited by Byzantine emperor Leo VI (r. 886–912). In the 10th century it was promoted to an archbishopric. After merging with the nearby see of Phoulloi towards the end of the 11th century, it was known as Sougdophoulloi. It was raised to metropolitan status in 1275/82.

Its historical bishops were :

  • St. Stephen, 787
  • Constantine, in 997.

See also Russian Orthodox Diocese of Surozh for Surozh, the old name of the city as an episcopal see in the Russian Orthodox Church, which has been nominally transferred to the Russian Orthodox Diocese in Great Britain and Ireland.

Latin bishopric of Soldaia edit

Under Genoese rule, a Latin Catholic diocese of Soldaia was established in 1390, which has had the following residential bishops :

  • Bonifacius (19 August 1393 – ? death)
  • John Greenlaw, O.F.M. (18 September 1400 – ?)
  • Ludovico, O.P. (? – 15 December 1427)
  • Agostino di Caffa, O.P. (23 July 1432 – ? death)
  • Giovanni di Pera, O.P. (9 July 1456 – ? death)
  • Leonard Wisbach, O.P. (6 October 1480 – ? death)

It was suppressed circa 1500 after the Ottoman conquest of the Crimea in 1475.

Latin titular metropolitan see of Sugdaea edit

In 1933 the see was nominally restored as titular bishopric of Sugdæa (Sugdaea), which was promoted in 1948 to metropolitan titular archbishopric.

It is vacant for decades, having had a single incumbent :

  • Titular Archbishop Thomas Roberts, S.J. (1950.12.04 – 1970.12.07), emeritus as former Metropolitan Archbishop of Bombay (India) (1937.08.12 – 1950.12.04).

Latin titular episcopal see of Soldaia edit

In 1933 the diocese was nominally restored as a Latin Catholic titular bishopric.

It has been vacant for decades, having had a single incumbent:

Demographics edit

As of the 2001 Ukrainian census, Sudak had a population of 29,448. More than half of the population were ethnic Russians. In a addition to the ethnic Russian majority, the city is also inhabited by big Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar minorities, which combined make up 35% of the population. Smaller minority groups include Belarusians, Armenians, Tatars and Poles.[7]

Ethnic groups in Sudak
percent
Russians
59.23%
Ukrainians
17.57%
Crimean Tatars
17.42%
Belarusians
1.31%
Tatars
0.97%
Armenians
0.47%
Moldovans
0.14%
Poles
0.12%
Azerbaijanis
0.12%

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Russian Federal State Statistics Service (2014). "Таблица 1.3. Численность населения Крымского федерального округа, городских округов, муниципальных районов, городских и сельских поселений" [Table 1.3. Population of Crimean Federal District, Its Urban Okrugs, Municipal Districts, Urban and Rural Settlements]. Федеральное статистическое наблюдение «Перепись населения в Крымском федеральном округе». ("Population Census in Crimean Federal District" Federal Statistical Examination) (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved January 4, 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Pritsak, Omeljan (1991). "Sougdaia". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 1931. ISBN 978-0-19-504652-6.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Papageorgiou, Angeliki. "Sougdaia". Encyclopaedia of the Hellenic World, Black Sea. Retrieved 24 June 2017.
  4. ^ The Old East Slavic name of the city is Surozh (Сурож). There is a monastery (Кизилташский монастырь святого Стефана Сурожского) bearing his name in the village of Qızıltaş.
  5. ^ H. B. Paksoy, Central Asian Monuments, p.31.
  6. ^ Members of the Polo family and other Venetian merchants having resided in the town since the 12th century.
  7. ^ https://datatowel.in.ua/pop-composition/ethnic-cities

Sources edit

External links edit

  • GCatholic Soldaia
  • GCatholic Sugdaea
  • History and monuments of Sudak (in Russian)
  • Monastery of St. Stephen of Surozh (in Russian)
  • The murder of the Jews of Sudak during World War II, at Yad Vashem website.

sudak, ukrainian, russian, Судак, crimean, tatar, sudaq, greek, Σουγδαία, sometimes, spelled, sudac, sudagh, town, multiple, former, eastern, orthodox, bishopric, double, latin, catholic, titular, regional, significance, crimea, territory, recognized, most, co. Sudak Ukrainian and Russian Sudak Crimean Tatar Sudaq Greek Soygdaia sometimes spelled Sudac or Sudagh is a town multiple former Eastern Orthodox bishopric and double Latin Catholic titular see It is of regional significance in Crimea a territory recognized by most countries as part of Ukraine but annexed by Russia as the Republic of Crimea Sudak serves as the administrative center of Sudak Municipality one of the regions Crimea is divided into It is situated 57 km 35 mi to the west of Feodosia the nearest railway station and 104 km 65 mi to the east of Simferopol the republic s capital Population 16 492 2014 Census 1 Sudak SudakSudaqCitySudakCoat of armsSudakLocation of Sudak red dot within CrimeaShow map of CrimeaSudakLocation of Sudak within UkraineShow map of UkraineSudakLocation of Sudak within the Black Sea RegionShow map of Black SeaCoordinates 44 51 5 N 34 58 21 E 44 85139 N 34 97250 E 44 85139 34 97250CountryUkraine occupied by Russia Autonomous republicCrimea de jure RaionFeodosia Raion de jure Federal subjectCrimea de facto MunicipalitySudak Municipality de facto Government MayorVladimir SerovArea Total15 km2 6 sq mi Elevation50 m 160 ft Population 2014 Total16 492 Density1 086 6 km2 2 814 sq mi Time zoneUTC 3 MSK Postal code98000 98015Area code 7 36566Former namesSoldaia until 1475 Sougdeia SidagiosClimateCfa A city of antiquity today it is a popular resort best known for its Genoese fortress the best preserved on the northern shore of the Black Sea Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation and early Middle Ages 1 2 High and late Middle Ages 1 3 Ottoman and modern periods 2 Ecclesiastical history 2 1 Byzantine metropolis of Sougdaia 2 2 Latin bishopric of Soldaia 2 3 Latin titular metropolitan see of Sugdaea 2 4 Latin titular episcopal see of Soldaia 3 Demographics 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Map of the Khazar Khaganate and surrounding states c 820 CE Area of direct Khazar control shown in dark blue sphere of influence in purple Other boundaries shown in dark red Foundation and early Middle Ages edit The date and circumstances of the city s foundation are uncertain The first written reference to the city dates to the 7th century in the Ravenna Cosmography 2 but later local tradition places its foundation in 212 CE and archaeological evidence supports its foundation in Roman times The city was in all likelihood founded by the Alans as its name in Greek sources Sougdaia is a cognate of the adjective sugda pure holy or derives from the word sugded sogdad in the Ossetian language 3 In the early Middle Ages the city appears to have been under very loose Byzantine control like other cities in the region 3 Archaeological remains indicate considerable construction activity near the shore in the 6th century 2 Under Byzantine influence the city was subject to Christianization and became the seat of a bishopric under the Patriarch of Constantinople attested for the first time in the Second Council of Nicaea in 787 Bishop Stephen who attended the council was an iconophile persecuted by Emperor Constantine V He was later canonized St Stephen of Surozh Russian sv Stefan Surozhskij 4 and buried at the Hagia Sophia cathedral in Sougdaia which according to later tradition was built in 793 3 Although a Greek speaking population was probably settled in the city the area remained dominated by the Alans a 9th century hagiography of Apostle Andrew places Upper Sougdaia elsewhere between Zichia and the Cimmerian Bosporus in the land of the Alans while the hagiographer of Constantine the Philosopher mentions the tribe of Sougdoi situated between the Iberians and the Crimean Goths which the historian Francis Dvornik identifies as the Alans 2 The period between the 8th and 11th centuries is obscure but the available evidence points to a sharp decline in Sougdaia s fortunes Archaeological evidence shows that the 6th century constructions were abandoned in the 8th 9th century while later Russian legends probably apocryphal claim that the city was captured by the Rus chieftain Bravlin at around the same time Byzantine control lapsed and the city probably came under Khazar suzerainty thereafter which lasted until the early 11th century 3 2 In the early 10th century the local see was promoted to an archbishopric 3 High and late Middle Ages edit The 11th 14th centuries represent a period of prosperity for the city as shown in archaeological evidence of renewed activity both in the harbour as well as the hinterland and the area of the citadel It became an important location for trading on the Silk Road in the 12th and 13th centuries as a terminus for Black Sea trade The 14th century Arab traveller Ibn Battuta even compares its harbour with that of Alexandria 2 The 13th century chronicler Ibn al Athir writes of it as the city of the Qifjaq from which flow their material possessions It is on the Khazar Sea Ships come to it bearing clothes The Qifjiqs buy from them and sell them slaves Burtas furs beaver squirrels 5 By the mid 11th century Sougdaia had returned to Byzantine control probably following the defeat of the Khazar warlord Georgius Tzul in 1016 An inscription of 1059 mentions Leo Aliates strategos of Cherson and Sougdaia 3 2 By the end of the century however the city passed under Cuman control which lasted until the 13th century In c 1222 the Seljuk Turks besieged it followed by destructive raids by the Mongol Empire in 1223 and 1238 Finally in c 1249 the city came under the control of the Mongol Golden Horde although it retained considerable autonomy Contemporary sources place its population at the time to 8 300 including Greeks Alans Mongols Armenians Latins and Jews 3 6 nbsp Crimea in the middle of the 15th century Under Tatar rule the city was governed by the notables of the city and the 18 villages surrounding it In the Greek sources they are mentioned by the Byzantine title sebastos while the Latin sources use the Latinized Greek term proti first men 3 Sometime between 1275 and 1282 the local see which after being united with Phoulloi in the late 11th century was known as Sougdophoulloi was raised to the status of a metropolitan see 3 The city s prosperity was increased by the establishment of Venetian and Genoese commercial colonies in the Crimea during the late 13th century but at the same time the area was drawn into the constant disputes between these two rival cities 3 In the early 14th century the city was eclipsed by the Genoese colonies of Tana and Kaffa the Florentine merchant Francesco Balducci Pegolotti who visited the area in c 1330 neglects to mention the city altogether 2 At about the same time the Tatars converted to Islam which led to a deterioration of their relations with the Greek speaking and Christian inhabitants of the city many of whom were forced to leave it 3 As a result on 19 July 1365 the Genoese from Kaffa seized the city which became a Genoese trading colony The Genoese refortified the city constructing the citadel that is still visible today and induced a large part of the deported Greeks to return 3 Genoese rule lasted until 1475 when the Ottoman Grand Vizier Gedik Ahmed Pasha captured it after a long siege 3 nbsp The Genoese fortress Ottoman and modern periods edit nbsp Lutheran Church 1887 German colony since 1804 The Ottomans took control of Soldaia and all other Genoese colonies as well as the Principality of Theodoro in 1475 Although Sudak was the strategical center of a qadiliq the smallest administrative unit in the Ottoman Empire the town lost much of its military and commercial importance until the Crimean Khanate took over In 1771 Sudak was occupied by Rumyantsev s army In 1783 it definitively passed to the Russian Empire with the rest of Crimea Though sometimes contested it seems that a mass emigration occurred as a result of the ensuing instability in that period Even Potemkin ordered in 1778 the eviction of the Christian population from Crimea The town rapidly turned into a small village and according to the 1805 census Sudak had just 33 inhabitants In 1804 the first Russian school of viticulture was opened there The town acquired its present status in 1982 nbsp Panorama of SudakEcclesiastical history editByzantine metropolis of Sougdaia edit It is unknown when the Byzantine see of Sougdaia was established but it is attested for the first time in 787 It was in the sway of the Patriarchate of Constantinople where it ranked 35th according to the Notitia Episcopatuum edited by Byzantine emperor Leo VI r 886 912 In the 10th century it was promoted to an archbishopric After merging with the nearby see of Phoulloi towards the end of the 11th century it was known as Sougdophoulloi It was raised to metropolitan status in 1275 82 Its historical bishops were St Stephen 787 Constantine in 997 See also Russian Orthodox Diocese of Surozh for Surozh the old name of the city as an episcopal see in the Russian Orthodox Church which has been nominally transferred to the Russian Orthodox Diocese in Great Britain and Ireland Latin bishopric of Soldaia edit Under Genoese rule a Latin Catholic diocese of Soldaia was established in 1390 which has had the following residential bishops Bonifacius 19 August 1393 death John Greenlaw O F M 18 September 1400 Ludovico O P 15 December 1427 Agostino di Caffa O P 23 July 1432 death Giovanni di Pera O P 9 July 1456 death Leonard Wisbach O P 6 October 1480 death It was suppressed circa 1500 after the Ottoman conquest of the Crimea in 1475 Latin titular metropolitan see of Sugdaea edit In 1933 the see was nominally restored as titular bishopric of Sugdaea Sugdaea which was promoted in 1948 to metropolitan titular archbishopric It is vacant for decades having had a single incumbent Titular Archbishop Thomas Roberts S J 1950 12 04 1970 12 07 emeritus as former Metropolitan Archbishop of Bombay India 1937 08 12 1950 12 04 Latin titular episcopal see of Soldaia edit In 1933 the diocese was nominally restored as a Latin Catholic titular bishopric It has been vacant for decades having had a single incumbent Titular Bishop Jose Romao Martenetz Basilian Order of Saint Josaphat O S B M 1958 05 10 1971 11 29 as Auxiliary Bishop of Brazil of the Eastern Rite Brazil 1958 05 10 1962 05 30 succeeded as Apostolic Exarch of Brazil of the Ukrainians Brazil 1962 05 30 1971 11 29 later Eparch Bishop of Sao Joao Batista em Curitiba of the Ukrainians Brazil 1971 11 29 1978 03 10 Demographics editAs of the 2001 Ukrainian census Sudak had a population of 29 448 More than half of the population were ethnic Russians In a addition to the ethnic Russian majority the city is also inhabited by big Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar minorities which combined make up 35 of the population Smaller minority groups include Belarusians Armenians Tatars and Poles 7 Ethnic groups in Sudak percent Russians 59 23 Ukrainians 17 57 Crimean Tatars 17 42 Belarusians 1 31 Tatars 0 97 Armenians 0 47 Moldovans 0 14 Poles 0 12 Azerbaijanis 0 12 See also editGazaria Genoese colonies the name for Genoese communities in Crimea List of Catholic dioceses in Ukraine Roman Crimea Krasnokam yanka Qiziltas KrasnokamyenkaReferences edit Russian Federal State Statistics Service 2014 Tablica 1 3 Chislennost naseleniya Krymskogo federalnogo okruga gorodskih okrugov municipalnyh rajonov gorodskih i selskih poselenij Table 1 3 Population of Crimean Federal District Its Urban Okrugs Municipal Districts Urban and Rural Settlements Federalnoe statisticheskoe nablyudenie Perepis naseleniya v Krymskom federalnom okruge Population Census in Crimean Federal District Federal Statistical Examination in Russian Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved January 4 2016 a b c d e f g Pritsak Omeljan 1991 Sougdaia In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium New York and Oxford Oxford University Press p 1931 ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Papageorgiou Angeliki Sougdaia Encyclopaedia of the Hellenic World Black Sea Retrieved 24 June 2017 The Old East Slavic name of the city is Surozh Surozh There is a monastery Kiziltashskij monastyr svyatogo Stefana Surozhskogo bearing his name in the village of Qiziltas H B Paksoy Central Asian Monuments p 31 Members of the Polo family and other Venetian merchants having resided in the town since the 12th century https datatowel in ua pop composition ethnic citiesSources editVus Oleh Sorochan Serhiy Early Byzantine Burgs on the Coast of the Taurica and the European Bosporus regarding the Question of the Military Presence of the Romans in the South Eastern Crimea in the 4th 6th centuries 2021 https www academia edu 86219660 Early Byzantine Burgs on the Coast of the Taurica and the European Bosporus regarding the Question of the Military Presence of the Romans in the South Eastern Crimea in the 4th 6th centuries Vus Oleh Defense doctrine of Byzantium in the Northern Black Sea region engineering defense of Taurika and the Bosphorus in the late 4th early 7th centuries 2010 https www academia edu 85524504 Defense doctrine of Byzantium in the Northern Black Sea region engineering defense of Taurika and the Bosphorus in the late 4th early 7th centuries Sugdea Surozh Soldaia in History and Culture of the Ruthenian Ukraine Scientific conference materials Kiev Sudaq 2002 prints only in Russian Sugdea Collection Kiev Sudaq Akademperiodika 2004 in Russian Miscellaneous publications by A Yu Vinogradov Pius Bonifacius Gams Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae Leipzig 1931 p 428 Michel Lequien Oriens christianus in quatuor Patriarchatus digestus Paris 1740 Vol I coll 1229 1232 Daniele Farlati Jacopo Coleti Illyricum Sacrum vol VIII Venice 1819 p 126 Konrad Eubel Hierarchia Catholica Medii Aevi vol 1 p 457 vol 2 p 240 Biblioteka Yakova Krotova in Russian External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sudak GCatholic Soldaia GCatholic Sugdaea History and monuments of Sudak in Russian Monastery of St Stephen of Surozh in Russian The murder of the Jews of Sudak during World War II at Yad Vashem website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sudak amp oldid 1223200971, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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