(Redirected from Cuman)'Cuman', also called 'Polovtsy', 'Polovtsian', or the
Anglicized 'Polovzian' (, , , , ), is a
Western European exonym for the western
Kipchaks. The 'Cumans' were a
nomadic
Turkic tribe who inhabited a shifting area north of the
Black Sea known as
Cumania along the
Volga River.
History
Originally inhabiting the
steppes of southern
Siberia and northern
Kazakhstan the Cumans entered the lands of present-day southern
Ukraine, as well as historic
Moldavia,
Wallachia, and part of
Transylvania, in the
11th century. Having conquered the area, they continued their assaults by attacking and plundering the
Byzantine Empire, the
Kingdom of Hungary, and
Rus. In
1089, they were defeated by
Ladislaus I of Hungary.
Pechenegs, a
semi-nomadic Turkic people of the
steppes of southwestern
Eurasia, were annihilated as an independent force at the
Battle of Levounion by a combined
Byzantine and Cuman army under Byzantine Emperor
Alexios I Komnenos in 1091. Attacked again in 1094 by the Cumans, many Pechenegs were slain or absorbed.
In alliance with the
Vlachs and the
Bulgarians during the
Vlach-Bulgar Rebellion by brothers Asen and Peter of
Tarnovo, the Cumans are believed to have played a significant role in the rebellion's final victory over Byzantium and the restoration of Bulgaria's independence (
1185). The Cumans defeated the Great Prince
Vladimir Monomakh of Kievan Rus in the
12th century (at the
Battle of the Stugna River) but were crushed by the
Mongols in
1238, after which most of them fled Wallachia and Moldova and took refuge in Hungary,
Bulgaria, and the Byzantine Empire. After many clashes with the Hungarians, the Cumans were eventually evicted from Hungary to join their kin who lived in Bulgaria. Later, however, a large segment of them were re-invited back to Hungary. The Cumans who remained scattered in the steppe of what is now Russia joined the
Golden Horde khanate.
In the
11th century the Cumans established their own country named Cumania, in an area comprised of
Moldavia and
Walachia.
The Hungarian kings claimed supremacy on the territory of Cumania, among the 9 titles of the Hungarian kings of the Arpad and Anjou dynasties were the ''rex Cumaniae'' (further titles of Hungary, Croatia, Dalmatia—since
Ladislaus I of Hungary inherited the 2 kingdoms based on his sister's right from his brother in law, and of Servia (Serbia), Rama (Bosnia), Lodomeria, Galitia and Bulgaria—based on their possession of Vidin, ca. 2% of the whole territory, further the Anjous were princes of Salerno as well).
In the
13th century, the Western Cumans adopted
Roman Catholicism (in Hungary they later became all
Calvinist) and the
Gagauzes Pravoslav/Orthodox, while the Eastern Cumans converted to
Islam. The Catholic
Diocese of Cumania founded in
Milcov in
1227 and including what is now
Romania and
Moldova, retained its title until
1523. It was a suffragan of the
Archdiocese of Esztergom.
The Cuman influence in the region of
Wallachia and Moldavia was so strong that the earliest Wallachian rulers bore Cuman names. Given that the rulers Tihomir and Bassarab I governed territories formerly ruled by Romanian leaders (mentioned in
the Diploma of the Joannites of 1247), and given that there is no archaeological evidence to sustain the continuous presence of a Cuman population (only Hungarian documents mentioning a toll-paying Wallachian population), the ruler elite was gradually assimilated like in Bulgaria's case by the majority population they governed, which became Romanian.
Basarab I, son of the Wallachian prince
Tihomir of Wallachia obtained independence from Hungary at the beginning of the
14th century. The name Basarab is considered as being of Cuman origin, meaning "Father King".
Cuman influence also persisted in the Kingdom of Hungary with the Cuman language and customs persisting in autonomous Cuman territories (
Kunság) until the
17th century.
It is generally believed that the Bulgarian mediaеval dynasties
Asen,
Shishman and
Terter had some Cuman roots.
Legacy
While the Cumans were gradually assimilated into eastern European populations, their trace can still be found in placenames as widespread as the city of
Kumanovo in the Northeastern part of the
Republic of Macedonia,
Comăneşti in
Romania and
Comana in
Dobruja.
The Cumans settled in Hungary had their own self-government there in a territory that bore their name,
Kunság, that survived until the
19th century. There, the name of the Cumans (''Kun'') is still preserved in county names such as
Bács-Kiskun and
Jász-Nagykun-Szolnok and town names such as
Kiskunhalas and
Kunszentmiklós.
The Cumans were organized into four tribes in Hungary, Kolbasz / Olas in the big Cumania around Karcag, and the other three in the lesser Cumania.
The other Cuman group in Hungary is the paloc group, the name deriving from the Slav Polovetz. They live in the Northern Hungary and current Slovakia and have a specific dialect. Their Cuman origin is not documented as the other two Cuman territory but their name derives from the above word. They have a very special "a" sound close to Turkish "a", unlike Hungarian pronunciation.
Unfortunately, the Cuman language disappeared from Hungary in the 17 century, possibly following the Turkish occupation.
Their 19 century biographer, Gyarfas Istvan in 1870 was on the opinion that they speak Hungarian together with the
Iazyges population. Despite this mistake he has the best overview on the subject concerning details of material used.
[1]
Also, toponyms of
Cuman language origin can be found especially in the Romanian counties of
Vaslui and
Galaţi, including the names of both counties.
In the countries where the Cumans were assimilated, family surnames derived from the words for "Cuman" (such as ''coman'' or ''kun'', "kuman") are not uncommon. Among the people that have such a name are Romanian gymnast
Nadia Comăneci, Romanian poet
Otilia Coman (Ana Blandiana), contemporary painter
Nicolai Comănescu and Romanian football player
Gigel Coman.
Traces of the Cumans are also the Bulgarian surname Kumanov (feminine Kumanova), its Macedonian variant Kumanovski (feminine Kumanovska) and the widespread Hungarian surname Kun. This name was also used as a magyarized version of the Jewish-German name Kohn/Cohen , like for the communist leader
Bela Kun.
The Cumans appear in Russian culture in the ''
The Tale of Igor's Campaign'' and a set of "Polovtsian Dances" in
Alexander Borodin's
opera ''
Prince Igor''.
Further reading
★ Vasary, Istvan (2005) "Cumans and Tatars", Cambridge University Press.
★ Gyarfas Istvan: A Jaszkunok Törtenete: http://vfek.vfmk.hu/gyarfas_istvan/jaszkunok/
★ Györffy György: A Codex Cumanicus mai kerdesei
★ Györffy György: A magyarsag keleti elemei
★ Hunfalvy: Etnographia
See also
★
Cumania
★
Kipchak
★
Nomad
★
Crimean Tatars
★
Cumania
★
Pechenegs
★
Turkic peoples
★
Mongol invasion of Rus
★
Tatar invasions
★
Crimean Karaites, an ethnic group possibly with Cuman origins
★
Battle of the Stugna River
★
Battle of Levounion
External links
★
Catholics and Cumans
★
Mitochondrial DNA of ancient Cumanians: culturally Asian steppe nomadic immigrants with substantially more western Eurasian mitochondrial DNA lineages