(Redirected from Bolgars)
The 'Bulgars' (also ''Bolgars'' or ''proto-Bulgarians'') were a seminomadic people, originally from
Central Asia, who from the AD
2nd century inhabited the
steppe north of
Caucasus and the banks of river
Itil (now
Volga).
Ethnic origin and linguistic affiliations
The oldest and most widely accepted theory is that the
Bulgar language, now extinct, is a distant branch of the
Turkic languages, and broadly classified as ''Bulgar Turkic'', whose only living relative is the
Chuvash language [1], thus the Bulgars were a
Turkic people.
[2][3][4] It is supported, among other things, by the facts that some Bulgar words contained in the few surviving stone inscriptions
[5], and in other documents (mainly military and hierarchical terms such as
tarkan,
bagatur, and probably
kan and kanartikin "prince") appear to be of Turkic origin, that the Bulgars apparently used a 12-year cyclic calendar similar to the one adopted by Turkic and Mongolian peoples from the
Chinese, with names and numbers that are deciphered as Turkic, and that the Bulgars' supreme god was probably called
Tangra, a deity widely known among the Turkic peoples.
[6] Some also point out the presence of a (fairly small) number of Turkic loanwords in the Slavic
Old Bulgarian language, and the fact that the Bulgars used an
alphabet similar to the Turkic
Orkhon script, although this alphabet hasn't been satisfactorily deciphered yet: fortunately, the Bulgar inscriptions were sometimes written in
Greek or
Cyrillic characters, most commonly in
Greek, thus allowing the scholars to identify some of the Bulgar glosses. Accordingly, the name Bulgar is derived from the Turkic verb ''bulģa'' "to mix, shake, stir" and its derivative ''bulgak'' "revolt, disorder".
[7]

Toponyms that are identical or similar in proposed Bulgar locations as an argument for the Iranian theory.
A newer theory, the ''Iranian theory'', is that the Bulgar language was originally an
Iranian language, and so the Bulgar people were an Iranian people, although some of its proponents concede that the language was later influenced by Turkic due to
Hunnic military domination. This notion became popular in Bulgaria in the 1990s, with the works of
Petar Dobrev, a specialist in
economic history. Supporters of this theory are mostly Bulgarian historians such as Georgi Bakalov and
Bozhidar Dimitrov. The theory is supported mostly by linguistic arguments, as authors (who are usually not linguists) attempt to prove the Iranian origin of a number of words and sometimes even grammatical features in Bulgar and
modern Bulgarian.
[8] Archeological and cultural evidence is also used: for example, advocates of the theory state that Bulgars wrote from left to right, unlike Turkic peoples, and point out that some ancient authors differentiated between Turkic and Bulgar populations. However, this last argument is not endorsed by the fact that the term "
Turk" was not used either exclusively, or particularly, for a certain, well-defined group of peoples, until much later. Petar Dobrev also dismisses the general view of all the above-mentioned titles, names of animals etc. as Turkic (except for the ordinal numbers for which he gives his own Pamirian etymologies). He maintains that these words, far from being evidence for the Bulgars being Turkic, were actually borrowed by Turkic and Mongol tribes from the Bulgars, as the Bulgars possessed, in his view, a more ancient and sophisticated civilization with roots in
Sumerian and
Akkadian culture.
Contemporary sources like
Procopius,
Agathias and
Menander called the
Kutrigur and
Utigur Bulgars "
Huns"
[9] while others, like the Byzantine Patriarch
Michael of Antioch, called them "
Scythians" or "
Sarmatians". But this latter identification is clearly due to the Byzantine tradition of naming peoples geographically; for example, centuries later the obviously Turkic
Petchenegs and
Cumans, were still addressed with the respective terms.
Archaeological remains show that the Bulgars had the typical culture of the
nomadic equestrians of Central Asia.
Anthropological data collected from early Bulgar
necropolises from
Bulgaria and the
Ukrainian steppe shows that Bulgars were a high-statured
Caucasoid people with slight
Mongoloid features, and practiced
artificial cranial deformation of the round type
[10]. The same sort of anthropological type and burial rites are common in Central Asia, where the practice of artificial skull deformation was also common in the area
Ancient Greeks called
Bactria and locals call
Bukhara, Bokhara or Balhara. It has been argued that the latter was the land of origin of the Bulgars.
History of Dzhagfar
The Bulgars had scytho-cimmerian origins according to Dzhagfar Tarihi (History of Dzhagfar - a medieval history of the Bulgarians. Volga Bulgaria.) , Bulgarian revolutionary and many ancient and modern historians.
An early Armenian historian Moses Khorenatsi mentions the Bulgars as the "people Bulh" , who settled in a region in Armenia(with the permission of king Arshak I 127-114 BC ), later called Vanand(after the Bulgarian king Vanand /Vund ,who lead the Bulgars to Caucasus).He uses the information provided by an earlier author - The Syrian Mar Abas Katina.In the geographical book Ashharacujc, Based on earlier researches by Claudius Ptolemaeus, the land of origin of the Bulgars is poinnted to be the mountain Imeon(Pamir and Hindu Kush).
http://www.kroraina.com/armen_ca/map_casia_b.jpg (map from Ashharacujc.See north of India - the Bulhi Tribe)
According to the history of Dzhagfar the Bulgars were skythians from Pre-Turkic Turan/Pamir who later mixed with Cimmerians. They traveled a lot and established different countries with towns made out of stone.
A Bulgarian revolutionary, nationalist and ethnologist/historian Georgi Rakovski refers to the Proto-Bulgarians as Aryans and Gimmerians/Cimmerians (He called the Bulgarians Bolg-Arians/Bolg-Aryans).
A Muslim medieval scientist, Ibn Fadlan, who traveled to Volga Bulgaria calls the Bulgars "Sakalibi" and mentions the differences between the Turkic people he met and the Bulgars. He says that the Turkic tribes live primitively and savagely, they eat mainly meat, unlike them the Bulgarians have towns, laws, greeted him with bread (this tradition is trill preserved in Both Danube and Volga Bulgaria) and grow different crops as well as breeding cattle.
The names of towns, regions, peoples and mountains in the regions Bulgars inhabited also point to Imeon:
Shuman(Bactria-Pamir) = Shumen(Danube Bulgaria) = Shumanai(east side of the Caspian sea)
Ispara(Bactria) = Ispor(Bulgarian ruler)
Balgar(Bactria) = Bolgar(Volga Bulgaria) = Bulgar
Balkh(Bactria) = Balkhar(Balkaria-Caucas) = Bulkar-Balkh(Balkaria-Caucas)
Varnu(Bactria) = Varna(Bulgaria)
Madar(Bactria) = Madara(Dunabe Bulgaria)
Boil(Bactria) = Boil(Bulgarian title)
Balkhani (Mountains on the eastern side of the Caspian) = Balk (h)an(Mountain range on the Balkan Peninsula)
Suvar(Bactria) = Suvar(Voga Bulgaria) = Suvar/Sevar(Bulgarian Ruler)
Osh(Bactria) = Oshed(Volga Bulgaria)
etc.
The names of the Bulgarian rulers were also Indo-European in origin and some were identical with the names of sarmatian kings - Asparukh(Ispor), Kuber, Kubrat(Kurt), Suvar(Sevar), Gostun, Baian, Avitohol, Omurtag, Krum etc.
Their language was also Indo European - from the Indo -Iranian group.
Words such as Shar, Kushta, Kuche, Hubost, Zhena, Brat, Kaka, Kurpa, Chembas, Na, Nana, Khazna etc. have survived in the Bulgarian language to this day.
http://www.kroraina.com/b_lang/bl_oldwords.html (Words from archeological findings from Dunabe,Great and Volga Bulgaria and their analogues in Ramir,Persia,Caucas,Western Europe and Shumer)
http://www.kroraina.com/b_lang/bl_double.html (Features of the old Bulgar language, preserved in the modern Bulgarian language)
http://www.kroraina.com/b_lang/bl_phonet.html (A phonetic model of the language of the Asparukh and Kuber Bulgars)
The anthropological type of 60% of the modern Bulgarians is Mediterranean - Caucasian (as well as of the Volga Bulgarians, although there were quite a few uralids there) and there were quite a few Pamirids - the same racial types are the skulls found in ancient Bulgarian burials. The ancient Bulgarians also practiced artificial skull deformation which was typical for the Sarmatians.
The Bulgarian Gods,Myths,Temples and Culture have mostly Iranian and Finno-Ugric elements(Either the Bulgarians got some things from the Ugric peoples or it was the other way around).
Culture and society
The Bulgars were governed by hereditary rulers. For three of these, the native form of their title, ''kanasubigi'', is attested. This is generally assumed to include the word ''
khan'', probably in its archaic form ''kan''. There is additional evidence suggesting that the latter title was used, e.g. the fact that the name of early Bulgarian ruler
Pagan occurs in
Patriarch Nicephorus's so-called
Breviarium as (''Kampaganos''), likely an erroneous rendition of the phrase "Kan Pagan"
[11]. Among the proposed translations for the phrase ''kanasubigi'' as a whole are ''lord of the army'', from the reconstructed Turkic phrase
★ sü begi, parallelling the attested
Old Turkic sü baši,
[12] and, more recently, ''(ruler) from God'', from the Indo-European
★ su- and baga-, i.e.
★ su-baga (a counterpart of the Greek phrase , ''ho ek Theou archon'', which is common in Bulgar inscriptions)
[13]. This titulature presumably persisted until the Bulgars adopted
Christianity.
[14] Some Bulgar inscriptions written in
Greek and later in
Slavonic refer to the Bulgarian ruler respectively with the
Greek title ''archon'' or the
Slavic title ''
knyaz''.
[15] Other similar but non-kingly titles attested among the Bulgarian noble class include ''kavkan'' (vicekan), ''tarkan'', and ''boritarkan''. The aristocratic families, whose members were called ''boila'' (
boyars), bore military titles and formed the tribal and state governing class. The religion of the Bulgars is also obscure but it is supposed that it was
monotheistic, worshipping the Turkic Sky god
Tangra.
History
Migration to Europe

Map showing the location of Bulgars, ''c.'' 650.
In the early
2nd century, some groups of Bulgars migrated from
Central Asia to the European continent and settled on the plains between the
Caspian Sea and the
Black Sea. Between
351 and
389, some of these crossed the
Caucasus and settled in
Armenia.
Toponymic data testify to the fact that they remained there and were eventually assimilated by the
Armenians.
Swept by the
Hunnish wave at the beginning of the
4th century, other Bulgar tribes broke loose from their settlements in Central Asia to migrate to the fertile lands along the lower valleys of the
Donets and the
Don rivers and the
Azov seashore, assimilating what was left of the
Sarmatians. Some of these remained for centuries in their new settlements, whereas others moved on with the
Huns towards
Central Europe, settling in
Pannonia.
Those Bulgars took part in the Hun raids on
Central and
Western Europe between
377 and
453. After the death of
Attila in
453, and the subsequent disintegration of the
Hunnish empire, the Bulgar tribes dispersed mostly to the eastern and southeastern parts of Europe.
At the end of the
5th century (probably in the years
480,
486, and
488) they fought against the
Ostrogoths as allies of the
Byzantine emperor Zeno. From
493 they carried out frequent attacks on the western territories of the
Byzantine Empire. Later raids were carried out at the end of the
5th century and the beginning of the
6th century.
In the middle of the
6th century, war broke out between the two main Bulgar tribes, the Kutrigur and Utigur. At the end of the
6th century, the Kutrigur allied with the
Avars to conquer the Utigur. The Bulgars fell under the domination of the
Göktürk Khanate in
568.
Establishment of Great Bulgaria
''Main article:
Old Great Bulgaria''
United under
Kubrat or Kurt of the
Dulo clan (supposed to be identical to the ruler mentioned by
Arabic chronist
At-Tabari under the name of
Shahriar), the joined forces of the
Onogur and
Kutrigur Bulgars broke loose from the Turkic khanate in the
630s. They formed an independent state, often called by
Byzantine sources
[16] ‘the
Old Great Bulgaria’, between the lower course of the
Danube to the west, the
Black Sea and the
Azov Sea to the south, the
Kuban River to the east, and the
Donets River to the north. It is assumed that the state capital was
Phanagoria, an ancient city on the
Taman peninsula (''see''
Tmutarakan). However, the archaeological evidence shows that the city became predominantly Bulgarian only after Kubrat's death and the consequent disintegration of his state.
Subsequent migrations
The legend tells that on his death-bed, Khan Kubrat had his sons gather sticks and bring them to him, which he then bundled together and told his eldest son
Bayan to break the bundle. Bayan failed under the strength of the combined sticks, and, after the rest of the sons failed this test as well, Kubrat took the sticks back, separated each one, and broke them all one-by-one even in his weakened state. Then he told his sons the words "Unity makes strength", which have become a very popular Bulgarian slogan and now appears on the modern
Bulgarian coat of arms.
The Byzantine Patriarch
Nicephorus I [17] tells that Kubrat's sons, however, did not heed these very specific words, and thus soon after the death of Kubrat around
665, the Khazar expansion eventually led to the dissolution of
Great Bulgaria.
The khan’s eldest son,
Batbayan (also Bayan or Boyan), remained the ruler of the land north of the
Black and the
Azov Seas, which was, however, soon subdued by the
Khazars. Those Bulgars converted to
Judaism in the
9th century, along with the Khazars, and were eventually assimilated. A different theory claims that the
Balkars in
Kabardino-Balkaria may be the descendants of this Bulgar branch.
Another Bulgar tribe, led by Kubrat’s second son
Kotrag, migrated to the confluence of the
Volga and
Kama Rivers in what is now
Russia (see
Volga Bulgaria). The present-day republics of
Tatarstan and
Chuvashia are considered to be the descendants of
Volga Bulgaria in terms of territory and people, though only
Chuvash is thought to be similar to old
Bulgar language.
A third Bulgar tribe, led by the youngest son
Asparukh, moved westward, occupying today’s southern
Bessarabia. After a successful war with
Byzantium in
680,
Asparukh's khanate conquered
Moesia and
Dobrudja and was recognized as an independent state under the subsequent treaty signed with the
Byzantine Empire and emperor Constantine IV Pogonatus in
681. The same year is usually regarded as the year of the establishment of modern
Bulgaria (see
History of Bulgaria).
A fourth group of Bulgars, under
Kouber, initially moved to Pannonia and subsequently settled in western
Macedonia and eastern
Albania where it formed a khanate, which joined
Slavs to attack the Byzantine Empire.
The fifth and smallest group, of
Alcek (also transliterated as 'Altsek' and 'Altzek'), after many peripeties, ended up led by
Emnetzur and settled in
Italy, northeast of
Naples.

The
Madara Rider (''c.'' 710), a famous example of Bulgar art
List of Bulgar tribes
Tribes thought to have been Bulgar in origin include:
★
Utigur
★
★ Oghondor (Olhontor)-blkar (Unogundur)
★
★
Kupi-bulgar
★
★
Duchi-bulkar
★
★
Chdar-b'lkar
★
Kutrigurs (Kotrags)
★
Onogurs
★ The Unok-vndur federation
After the dissolution of Great Bulgaria these tribes formed:
★
Asparukh’s Horde
★
Batbayan's Horde
★
Kotrag's Horde
★
Kuber’s Horde
★
Alcek’s Horde
See also
★
Bulgar language
★
Bulgarians
★
Pamir languages
★
Madara Rider
★
Chuvash
★
Volga Bulgaria
★
Bactrians
★
Balkar
★
Bolghar
★
Yuezhi
References
1. Britannica Online - Bolgar Turkic
2. Sedlar, Jean W. "East Central Europe in the Middle Ages, 1000-1500", page 6
3. Britannica Online - Bulgar
4. Bowersock, G. W. & Grabar, Oleg. ''Late Antiquity: A Guide to the Postclassical World''. Harvard University Press, 1998. ''web page''
5. Beshevliev, Vesselin. ''Proto-Bulgarian Epigraphic Monuments''. Sofia, 1981. ''web page''
6. Sedlar, Jean W. "East Central Europe in the Middle Ages, 1000-1500", page 141
7. Lebedynsky, Iaroslav. ''Les Nomades : Les peuples nomades de la steppe des origines aux invasions mongoles''. Paris: Errance, 2003: p.178.
8. Peter Dobrev,The language of the Asparukh and Kuber Bulgars, Vocabulary and grammar
9. The World of the Huns. Chapter IX. Language, by O. Maenchen-Helfen
10. D.Dimitrov,1987 History of the Proto-Bulgarians north and west of the Black Sea,
11. Източници за българската история - Fontes historiae bulgaricae. VI. Fontes graeci historiae Bulgaricae. БАН, София. p.305 (in Byzantine Greek and Bulgarian). Also available online
12. http://www.promacedonia.org/vb/vb_5.html
13. http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1111/1468-0254.00077
14. Sedlar, Jean W. "East Central Europe in the Middle Ages, 1000-1500", page 46
15. Manassias Chronicle, Vatican transcription, p. 145, see Battle of Pliska
16. Patriarch Nikephoros I of Constantinople, "Historia syntomos, breviarium"
17. Patriarch Nikephoros I of Constantinople, ''Historia syntomos, breviarium''
External links
★
History of Bulgaria
★
History of the Bulgars
★
Bulgars on Regnal Chronologies
★
The language of the Asparukh and Kuber Bulgars, Vocabulary and grammar by Peter Dobrev
★
Inscriptions and Alphabet of the Proto-Bulgarians, by Peter Dobrev
★
On the origins of the Proto-Bulgarians
★
Proto-Bulgarian Epigraphic Monuments, Vesselin Beshevliev
★
Conceptions of Ethnicity in Early Medieval Studies, by Walter Pohl
★
History of the Proto-Bulgarians north and west of the Black Sea
★
The origin of the Proto-Bulgarians: Korea's Bu-Yeo Tribe (부여족) (In Korean)