The Sauromatai
It has been known about Sauromatians since Herodotus' times, and from his
description it seems that this was a single ethnic group, because he did not indicate that they
included various tribes. Later Pliny noted that the Sauromatians are a Greek form of the
name of the Sarmatians and did not write anything about their ethnic unity:
From this point (from the Danube mouth – V.S.) all the races in general are
Scythian, though various sections have occupied the lands adjacent to the coast, in one
place the Getae (called by the Romans Dacians), at another the Sarmatae (called by
the Greeks Sauromatae), .. [PLINY, 1961, 80].
The idea of the identity of the names of the Sauromatians and Sarmatians survived to
the present day, but if a distinction was made between these peoples, both of them were
considered Iranian-speaking. After the data were obtained showing the predominance of the
Bulgars among the Scythians, also the Iranian language of the Sauromatians was in doubt.
In search of an answer to the question about their ethnicity, it was suggested that, like the
Sarmatians, they were the ancestors of the modern Hungarians [STETSYUK VALENTYN,
2000: 32-35]. During further study of this issue, it was becoming clear that the
Sauromatians and Sarmatians are different categories.
The difference between the Sarmatians and Sauromatians was already seen by M.I.
Rostovtsev who considered the Sauromatians and the Sarmatians absolutely different ethnoi
and adduced weighty evidences to that, such as, signs of matriarchy at the Sauromatians;
and complete absence of it at the Sarmatians [HARMATTA J. 1970, 9]. In due time,
Rostovtsev's conclusions were contested by other scholars with bringing evidences from
ancient authors.
Considering the ethnicity of the Sauromatians and Sarmatians more deeply, we have
in mind a well-known fact in the scientific community that the ancient historians did not
care about the correct use of ethnic names or understand them in its very peculiar way:
The Huns were often called Scythians; contrariwise the Avars and Bulgars were
Huns; Goths and after them even occasionally Slavs were called Getae; and the
legendary Gog and Magog in the Bible could be found on the high medieval maps
[POHL WALTER, 2002: 4].
Even the Russes, at the time of Prince Svyatoslav, were called Scythians, in particular,
Leo the Deacon certainly did call them so [LEO the DEAKON, 1988]. Consequently, one
should be cautious about the evidence given by ancient historians when it comes to the
identification of individual nations on the outskirts of the civilized world. In general, the
prevailing view among scholars was that the Sauromatians during Herodotus’s time and the
Sarmatians of later historians’ are of the same ethnic group; at least, that they were
genetically related. The reasons for the alleged identity of the Sauromatians and of the
Sarmatians are rather not by the same area of settlement and of similar nomadic walks of
life peoples described by historians than their similar ethnonyms. Reliable interpretation of
the names of people would clear ethnic identity, but the etymology of the given by the
Greeks names Σαυρωμαται and Σαρμαται for these two peoples living at different times
around the northern Black Sea region, is still dark. It also remains unclear whether the name
"Sarmatians" is a simplification of the formerly used "Sauromatians" or the words have
entirely different roots. Obviously, both words are complex and just the the second part of
them – mat presents great difficulties for decoding. The variants of its Indo-Aryan origin are
more often considered, for example:
We can assume complexity of the common in ethnonymy suffix complex -
mata (Σαυρωμαται, Ευρομαται, Σαρμαται, Ιξομαται, Ιαξαμαται), consisting of the
possessive suffix *-ma- and the indicator of collecting plurality *-ta (out of the suffix *-
t- and the flexion *-a) [SHAPOSHNIKOV A.K. 2005, 34].
Contrariwise, the first partial word assumes the most different interpretation,
especially as other similar ethnonyms exist: Savires (Suwares), Severianes (Sever'), Seberes,
Serbians. One can add to them also words meaning "a neighbour, friend", originated from
Gmc *gabūr "dweller", "host". (Rus siabior, Ukr siaber, Blr siabr and many other). The
ethnonym can have Iranian or Turkic origin. Just the name Sauromatians could be
explicated by Iranian words meaning "a rider" (Pers sävar, Kurd suwar, Shugn sawor etc).
At this rate, the second partial word must mean "people", i. e., "people of riders" and such
name for the people could be given by neighboring people who were themselves not riders.
At least three words may be used from the Turkic languages to explain – 1. the word
meaning "blow" (Tur sovurmak, Uzb sowormoq, Tat suyru, Chuv săvăr and other); 2. the
word meaning "a marmot" (Chuv săvăr); 3. the word meaning "a croup of horse, hide of
horse" (Kaz, Tat savyr, Karach saury etc). Scott Littleton and Linda Malcor
interpret Σαυρωμαται as “Lizard People” according Gr σαυρωσ “a lizard” [LITTLETON C.
SCOTT & MALCOR LINDA A., 1999: 13].
A picture of ethnic composition of Scythia can got by the map of ancient place names
interpreted by means of different languages, the alleged ancestors of which speakers could
reside in Scythia and the surrounding area (see the map below). Especially important for us
is the toponymy of Ossetic origin in order to refute the widespread opinion about the
predominance of Iranian-speaking ancestors of Ossetians among the entire population of the
Northern Pontic region. Accordingly, the Savromats are considered one of the Iranian tribes.
The topic of Ossetic toponymy, which is very important for establishing truth, is examined
in detail separately, but here we will focus on the main points. In general, the whole set of
Ossetic place names reflects the paths of motion of the Ossetians from their ancestral home
in the Sozh River basin (see Iranic Tribes in the Eastern Europe at the Bronze Age ) to the
places of their present habitat in the Caucasus. Basic "milestones" are outlined by the
following chain of names:
Shchygry, two village in Kaluga Region an two villages in Kursk and Oriol Region,
Russua.
Ors, a river, lt of the Nugr' River, lt of the Oka River.
Oskol, a river, lt of the Siv. Donets River and two towns with similar names on it.
Khalan', a river, rt of the Oskol River and two villages with similar names on it –
Os khalon "crow".
Kalitva, some villages and two rivers In Russia have this word in the names.
Malakeyevo, a village in Veydelevo district of Belgorod Region, Russia .
Tsarivka, two villages in Luhans'k Region, Ukraine.
Atiukhta, a town in Oktiabrsk district of Rostov Region, Russia.
Bataysk, a town in the mouth of the Don River.
Azov, Sea of Azov and a town.
Primorsko-Akhtarsk, a town on the shore of the Seaa of Azov in Krasnodar Krai,
Russia.
Betta, a hamlet in Pshada district of Krasnodar Krai, Russia.
Agoy, a village in Tuapskinski dictrict of Kracnodsr Krai, Russia.
Sochi, , a health resort on the shore of Black Sea, Russia.
Arkhyz, a village in Zelenchuk district iv Karachayevo-Cherkessia, Russia.
A small part of Ossetic place names as if separated from the main here goes along the
Vorskla River to the Dnieper. They may be a stretch Akhtyrka, Kotelva, Kobelaky, and
Tsarychanka. Here a few place names of Greek origin are noted: Abazivka, Kolomak,
Manachynivka, Poltava, Stasy, Takhtaulove. Presence of the Greeks in these areas is
discussed in the article Ancient Greeks and Italics in Ukraine in Russia. Thus the Greeks
and Ossetians came in close contact at some time, as evidenced by Greek-Ossetic lexical
correspondences, which gave V.I. Abayev in Historical and Etymological Dictionary of the
Ossetic Language. [ABAYAV V.I. 1958-1989]. As an example, the following:
Os. mylazon "dark" – Gr. μελασ "black", Os. mæsyg "fighting tower" – гр. μόσ(σ)υν
"wooden tower".
Obviously, the Ossetians lingered in these places for a long time and stayed here
during Scythian time. East of their settlements, right next to the basin of Khoper and along
the Medveditsa River, are the main bulk of Hungarian place names – the ancestral home of
the Hungarians. Hence, a well-sighted chain stretches up to the Seversky Donets basin.
According to Herodotus in these places lived the Savromats if he took take the lower
reaches of the Don and the Seversky Donets River as Tanais. In the steppes of the Ukraine,
there was no Ossetic name to be found. This suggests that the majority of the Ossetians (in
the post-Scythian time) moved to the Northern Caucasus. But their traces in place names
here are not seen except for a strip along the coast of the Azov and Black Seas. Obviously,
the new migration waves pushed the Ossetians to the Caucasus Mountains. The names of
their settlements and geographical objects have been replaced by newcomers bearing the
latter’s own names.
Great Scythia at Herodotus' time
There are marked on the map place names of Bulgarish origin by red signs, by deep-red – Anglo-Saxon, by blue –
Kurdish, by violet – Mordvinic, by green – Ossetic, by azure – Hungarian, by yellow – Greek. The red line marks the
border of Scythia of Herodotus.
The yellow rhomb marks Bil'sk Hillfort which would be an ancient town of Gelonos.
The red rhomb – the hillfort at the village of Chotynies (Poland).
More toponymic research is discussed in the part Ethnic Composition of the Population of Great Scythia According
Toponymy
Herodotus wrote about the Savromat language as a spoiled Scythian. Since the
overwhelming majority of Scythians were Bulgars, who settled at the same time on Left-
Bank Ukraine, it was they who were to contact the Savromats. If we take Ossetians as
Savromats, then the Ossetian language should have a sufficiently large resemblance to
Chuvash. But the facts of such a similarity are so scanty that they do not give reason to talk
about some kind of closeness of these languages. The existing Ossetic-Chuvash lexical
correspondences can often be found in Hungarian:
Chuv. kavrăç "ash-tree" – Osset. kärz "ash-tree" – Hung. köris "ash-tree",
Chuv. takana "a trough" – Osset. tägända "a trough " – Hung. teknö "a trough",
Chuv. čăkăt "cheese" – Osset. cyxt "cheese " – Hung. sajt "cheese ".
However, some separate Ossetic-Chuvash lexical correspondences are found, but they
can date back to the times of the Khazar Kaganate, when the Ossetians and Bulgars could
have contacts. They can be such:
Osset. ärğaj "salmon" – Chuv. ărkay "trout",
Osset. bäläg "a trough" – Chuv. valak "shoot, trough",
Osset. byräğ "nome-made beer" – Chuv. păraka "draf, mash".
The Ossetic language has clearly more connections with Hungarian, what is obviously
due to long-term neighborhood of the Ossetians and ancient Hungarians who are called here
Magyars. A few examples of lexical Ossetic-Hungarian correspondences were given by V.
Abaєv in his etymological dictionary:
Osset. arg "price" – Hung. ár "price", alku "trade";
Osset. avg "glass" – Hung. üveg "glass";
Osset. ävzist "silver" – Hung. ezüst "silver";
Osset. bud "smell" – Hung. büz "stench";
Osset. käsag "a fish" – Hung. keszeg "a bream";
Osset. marg "poison" – Hung. mereg "poison"; Osset. nymät "felt" –
Hung. nemez "felt";
Osset. qád "a tree" – Hung. gaz "a forest";
Osset. sak'adax "a sleeve of the river" – Hung. szakdék "a gorge";
Osset. säfyn "to clean" – Hung. seper "to sweep";
Osset. säv "wide" – Hung. sáv "a strip", etc .
Such pairs can be added too:
Osset. kar "age" – Hung. kor "age", Osset. cäf "a wound" – Hung. seb "a wound ",
Osset. cavd "impact" – Hung. sötni "to beat".
Toponymy did not evidence the prolonged stay of the bulk of the Ossetians on the
banks of the Don River. This contradicts the accepted etymology of its name, supposedly
derived from Os. don "water, river". However, it could be vice versa – the nominal Ossetic
word was derived from a proper name Don. The word don meaning "water, river" is
available only in Ossetian among all the modern Iranian languages, although a similar
word dānu "a river" was also recorded in Avesta. Ossetian is very far from the Avesta
language, there are Iranian languages more similar to it. If we take the Avesta language as
ancient Iranian, which is not entirely true, then we must assume that the original Iranian
word in the meaning of "river" has disappeared from all Iranian except Ossetian. This
already seems doubtful, nevertheless, it is concluded that during the time of Herodotus and
later the Ossetians populated the Black Sea and Azov steppes for a long period and they
gave the name to The Don. Let us consider this question in more detail.
The Iranian languages have another common word darja for calling rivers. This word
derives out of I.-E. der- “to hurry, flow” (Av drāvaya-) therefore its antiquity is not in
doubt. The Ossetic word don is connected with other the Indo-European root meaning in
most cases not fluid water, but the melted fat (OGr δημωσ, Alb dhjamе, Kurd don},
moisture in general (Arm tamuk), drops of water (OInd dana, danu), and in German even
clay (Ton). The prevalence of the word darja puts a question, why Iranians named the Don
River just Don, not Darja and whether Os don is derived from the name of the Don, not vice
versa? An output out of this difficult situation could be prompted by the etymology of this
name by means of the Turkic languages.
The ancient name of the Don River (ταναισ), recorded by Herodotus and Strabo, is
like Old Turkic *tanas “calmness, quiet” (Chuv tănăç “calmness, peace of mind”,
Kaz tanyš, “calmness, peace of mind”, Tat. tyn "still" etc). The Don River has the usual
epithet "still" which is among Russians till now and it is also called tān in some Turkic
languages [RADLOFF W. 1905, v. 3: 1052]. Therefore, the name "Don" as a calm river was
given by Turks, who have long populated its shores, and the Iranians, only borrowed the
name from them, though it began to be pronounced differently. Not Osset. don but
Av. dānu- is more like Turkic words, so we can assume that the speakers of some Iranian
language (the most similar to the language of the Avesta, which for a long time after the
Turks settled bank of the Don River), generalized its proper name in the wide meaning
"river". Also the Ossetians just learned that word in this later sense when they moved to its
banks from the north.
If we take into account Herodotus' note that the language of Savromats being an
“impure” form of Scythian, it must be some Turkic. The Ossetic language, being Iranian,
does not resemble the language of the Scythian Bulgars, and the Kurds, whose language is
akin to the Ossetic, remained on the Right Bank of the Dnieper.Caucasian appearance of
some Turkic peoples says that their ancestors were all the time in Europe. There are no
places for their ettlements in Europe as just in the North Caucasus. It is quite possible that
the Sauromatians were one of Turkic ethnic group. However, we should consider other
options.
Now we know that the ancient Bulgars, Kurds, Boudins (Mordvins), Anglo-Saxons,
Balts, Hungarians, the ancestors of the Ossetians, Cheremis, and one or two of other Finno-
Ugric tribe had to live in the basin of the Dnieper and Don at the Scythian time. Jordan
wrote the following about the tribes who inhabit a certain part of the East European Plain:
Soon Geberich, king of the Goths, departed from human affairs and Hermanaric,
noblest of the Amali, succeeded to the throne. He subdued many warlike peoples of the
north and made them obey his laws, and some of our ancestors have justly compared
him to Alexander the Great. Among the tribes he conquered were the Golthescytha,
Thiudos, Inaunxis, Vasinabroncae, Merens, Mordens, Imniscaris, Rogas, Tadzans,
Athaul, Navego, Bubegenae and Coldae [JORDANES. THE ORIGIN AND DEEDS
OF THE GOTHS, translated by Charles C. Mierow: 116].
Let's try to understand his testimony. Jordan’s translator and commentator pointed out
that “Latin Jordan is incorrect and sometimes grammatically completely inconsistent”
[JORDANES. 1960: 9]. In this regard, it is assumed that the names of some tribes are
distorted. This possibility was taken into account, but only in one case was taken the
interpretation of the phrase Thiudos Inaunxis as Thiudos in Aunxis what was made by many
aithors. The remaining names were deciphered in their original form, for what a wider
number of languages was drawn in the hope of finding a different interpretation of
controversial cases in languages that were usually left unattended in favor of Iranian ones.
This refers primarily to the Turkic, Finno-Ugric, Germanic, Baltic, Slavic languages, as well
as the languages of the peoples of the Caucasus.
Even before the analysis, one can note such matches: Merens – Finno-Ugric tribe
Meria (Mari, called by us here Cheremis), Mordent – Mordvins. The name Golthescytha is
Germanic (for example Got gulđ "gold"), so it may be a "Golden Scythian" or "Royal
Scythians". Apparently, the word Thiudos means not the name of the tribe of Thiuds, but
means simply "the people" if the Goth Jordan used in the text the Gothic
word þiuda "people" to mean tribes. The same root is concluded in the ethnonyms
"Teutons" and "Dudlebs (Dulebs)". However it can be the Slavic name of a Germanic (and
later Finnish) tribe "Chud’". The translation of the word Inaunxis depends on the
interpretation of the previous word. If it means "people", then this word should be read as
In-Aunxis, where “in” es a preposition, Aunxis – the name of the area, which may be of
Baltic origin (Lit. auksas "gold"), and moreover, the secondary mention of gold should be
noted. The word Vasinabroncae is Slavic (cf. p., Ukr. vasn’ "dispute, dissension”, Cz,
Slvk vášeň "passion", Pol. bronić, Cz. brániti "to defend" etc.).
The Mari word imne "a horse" suits to decipher the names of Imniscaris and the
combination sk was often transliterated the sound š in many languages having no such
sound, especially in Latin as used by Jordan. In this case, the second part of the word could
be Mari šar "hair", i.e., the name of the tribe was a "horse hair" though the motivation of the
name is unclear. Did the people of this tribe have long hair like a pony tail? The name of the
people Tadzans can be deciphered by means of different languges but no decryption looks
quite convincing. Athaul was most likely a Turkic tribe (cf. Turk. at "name" ata "father",
Tat atauly "nominal", Karach ata ulla "a founder"). Navego could be a tribe called by
Anglo-Saxons – OE næfig "poor”. The people called Bubegenae were probably a Hungarian
tribe or dubbed by the Hungarians (a combination of bub égen can be translated as "top in
the sky", ie, the "tall people"). Using Hungarian language the name of the tribe Coldae ccan
be explained too: Hung. koldus "a poor". It is clear that the Hungarians cpuld not call
themselves poor, but they could disparagingly call their closest neighbors. The name of the
tribe of Rogas can be referred to an East Germanic tribe Rugii.
In addition to these, there were other tribes conquered the by Goths tribes in the
Northern Black Sea coast. Jordan gave their names later in connection with the Hun
invasion:
Like a whirlwind of nations they swept across the great swamp and at once fell
upon the Alpidzuri, Alcildzuri, Itimari, Tuncarsi and Boisci, who bordered on that part
of Scythia [Ibid: 126].
All the names of the tribes listed here are decrypted only with the help of Turkic
languages. Alpidzuri – Chuv ulăp "a giant", jura, çура "a child" that is "children of
giants"; Alcildzuri – Chuv alčăr “squint” that is "squint children" that could have affected
people of Mongoloid appearance (cf. the name of the Sarmatians); Itimari– Chuv yită "a
dog" (other Turkic it), ămăr "chest of an animal”. The name of Tunkars belong the group of
ethnonyms and anthroponyms containing a component with the meaning "goose" (for
example, Khazars – "people-geese" from Türk. qaz „goose”, er „man”; Kazakhs – "white
geese" from the Türk. qaz and aq „white” etc). Obviously, this is not an accident, because,
for example, in Celtic mythology the goose is a symbol of warriorism and often
accompanies the god of war [BOTHEROYD SYLVIA and PAUL F. 1999]. In this case
Turk. *qař (qarz) "a goose" (now qaz) suits to Turkic tun/tyn "quiet, calm". The existence in
the ancient languages of the fricative trill was already considered our work more than once.
The name of Boisci, maybe, has the Old Turkic boj (Turkish boy) "tribe, clan". In this case,
the name of the tribe must sound like boy-iski, where the second part of the Turkic word is
good eski/iski "old", ie "the old, the original race".
We found that in the Scythian times the ancestors of the Kurds were present on the
right bank of the Dnieper. Until we saw no their distinct traces amond the names of the
tribes of the Northern Black Sea Coast. However Jordanes mentions in his work the
"perfidious" tribe of the Rosomoni. Just they could be the ancestors of the Kurds that have
fallen out of our sight. With certain difficulties, the name of the tribe can be deciphered with
the help of the Kurdish language, but it could not necessarily be their self-name. The
Rosomoni could obtained the name from neighbors, in particular from the Anglo-Saxons,
because it can be deciphered as a "people of horsemen" with OE hros/hors "horse"
and mann "man". A small phonetic discrepancy can be explained by the fact that the name
came to Jordanes already in a distorted form. However the name of the insidious
Rosomonian women Sunilda sounds completely Germanic, and similar names of Germanic
women are known, despite the fact that OE. hild, OIcl. hild-r "war, fight" seems not suitable
for a woman's name. At the same time, the names of her brothers Sarus and Ammius did not
receive a convincing explain. All this allows us to speak only about the presence of the
Anglo-Saxons in the Northern Black Sea region, no more.
Referring to the decoding of the names of the tribes mentioned by Jordanes, the
southern part of the East European Plain could be inhabited by ancient Bulgars (the
ancestors of modern Chuvashes), several other Turkic tribes, ancient Mordvins, Anglo-
Saxons, Balts, Adyge, Slavs, Ossetians, Magyars, Cheremis. Previously, we concluded that
the Bulgars were the Scythians, the Kurds were the Alazonians, the Anglo-Saxons were the
Neuroi and Melanchlainoi, Mordvins were Budinoi. (see. Scythia: The Interpretation of the
Data of Ancient Historians. As you can see, the same tribes are present, but their names
were changed.
A large group of Germanic loanwords in the Ossetic language stem not from contact
with the Goths in the steppes of the Black Sea, but many of them were borrowed in former
times, when the ancestors of the Ossetians populated the basin of the river Sozh next to the
Germanic territory. Under the pressure of the Balts, ancestors of the Ossetians left their
Urheimat and moved to the southeast after the Iranian tribes of Talishi, Gilaki, Baluchis, and
Mazandarani, which we call by the common name of Cimmerians. They stopped at the
border of the forest-steppe in the headwaters of the Seversky Donets and the Don. Here they
had to coexist with Mordvins, and this neighborhood was reflected in the Ossetic language
(for example, Osset limän «a friend» corresponds to the Mord loman’ "a man"). Obviously,
the Proto-Ossetians have been cut off from the bulk of the Iranians by Magyars. The
Magyars, expanding their habitat, could massively shift to the right bank of the Don to the
Seversky Donets, displacing the Cimmerians in the Azov and the Kuban steppes.
After this analysis, we consider the question who else other than the Turks, may be
associated with Sauromatians? The available data give reason to suppose that Sauromatians
could be Magyars. I must say that Herodotus' statement about the similarity of the Scythian
and Sauromatian language cannot be understood on the basis of our current conception of
the present Hungarian and Chuvash languages. At that time the relative number of common
words in these languages were much greater than now, so the ancestors of the Chuvash and
Hungarians could understand each other without difficulty [FEIST SIGMUND, 1924: 11].
Hence informants of the Greek historian coild have an illusion of similarity of the
Sauromatian and Scythian languages. It is also possible to heed the opinion of the Khazars,
which considered being themselves related primarily to Ugric people [ARTAMONOV M.I.,
1962: 114]. The Urheimat of the Hungarians was on the left bank of the Don, that is on the
Sauromatian territory or in proximity to it. The Turkic element in the Hungarian language is
so strong that the scientists of the 19th century continued with persistence to debate for the
membership of the Hungarian language to the Finno-Ugric or Turkic languages. Despite the
efforts of János Sajnovics and Sámuel Gyarmathi, Hungarians would have a better
relationship with the Turks than with Voguls and Ostyaks [JOKI AULIS, 1973: 28]. Only
until recently, supporters of Finno-Ugric origin of the Hungarian language got the upper
hand. The matter was complicated by the fact that the Turkic loanwords in the Hungarian
language were divided into several layers, and the words of the ancient layers were sound
reminiscent of the Mongolic language. For example, Hung. ökör "a bull" is more like
Mong üker than the common Turk öküz "a bull". Only much later it was found that the
ancient Turkic loans in the Hungarian language have the Chuvash character. The conclusion
of experts can be expressed by the words of Zoltán Gombocs:
Ancient loanwords in the Hungarian language have such specific, inherent only
for them sound form which force to consider their Chuvash source of borrowing, more
precisely that formerly separated branch from the Turkic family, which successor is the
current Chuvash language, and which can be called Old Chuvash [GOMBOCZ
ZOLTÁN, 1985-1: 26].
Even the fact that in some cases matches to Hungarian words can be found only in the
Mongolian language, does not really matter, because the vocabulary of the Old Turkic
language remains insufficiently known [Ibid: 29]. Zoltán Gombocs wrote the following
about the scale of Turkic stock in Hungarian:
Of 225 undoubted loanwords or allowable comparisons, 90 words of the
Hungarian language have Chuvash matches [Ibid: 40].
From the time of this writing (the thirtieths of 20th century), the presented above
numbers were significantly increased by the efforts of researchers, but it is still believed that
Turkisms in the Hungarian language should be separated due to borrowings from Proto-
Turkic and Turkic-Bulgar elements [LIGETI LAJOS. 1985: 113-114]. N. Yegorov believes
that there can be found hundreds of Turkic elements with hard Bulgar-Chuvash features in
the Hungarian language [YEGOROV N.I., 1987: 24]. His opinion can be confirmed also by
the studies of G. Kornilov who found the Chuvash matches for more than two hundred
Hungarian words only with the initial a, b, and c [KORNILOV G.E., 1973] and A. Rona-
Tas who compiled a list of 450 Old Turkic loan-words in Hungarian [RONA-TAS
ANDRAS. 2005: 114]. However, we must bear in mind not only the general correspondence
of Hungarian and Chuvash words, but also their external and internal similarities
The relevant words to Hungarian borz, cötkėny, irö, kecske, kucsiny, szücs
exist in othr Turkic languages but the corresponding Hungarisn derivate forms and
undertones of meaning can only be detected in the Chuvash langusge [GOMBOCZ
ZOLTÁN, 1985-1: 40].
Turkologists know that on the site of Old Turkic k, -g, we have the Old Chuvash
spirant γ which falls out in loanwords from Turkic to the Hungarian language: borz ←
*borsuγ, kút ← *kutuγ. However it is unclear why the final -k remains the in other Turkic
loanwords: árok, hurok, köldök [PALLO MARGIT K., 1985: 80]. This fact can be
explained in such way that the last loanwords had been borrowed at the time when the all
Turks were yet in Eastern Europe and the Magyars were their neighbors, while the examples
of falling/dropping out of the final -k come from contacts with the Bulgars at the time of the
Khazar Kaganate.
Collected from various sources The list of Hungarian words of Chuvash origin is
given separately in Russian. Here are some examples:
borjú "calf" – Chuv. păru "calf";
borz "badger" – Chuv. purӑsh "badger";
búza "wheat" – Chuv. pări "spelt";
csel "cunning, trick" – Chuv. chee "cunning, tricky";
csúszik "to slide" – Chyv. shuҫ "to slide";
disznó "pig"– Chuv. sysna "pig";
eke "plow" – Chuv. aka "plow, plowing";
ész "mind"– Chuv. ăs "mind";
gyaláz "to scold" – Chuv. kulăshçă "to laugh";
gyárt "produce" – Chuv. çurat "give birth";
gyékény "reedmace" – Chuv. kiken "hellebore";
gyermek "child" – Chuv. çarmăk "young";
gyertya "candle" – Chuv. ҫurta "candle";
gyom "weed" – Chuv. ҫум "weed";
gyöngy "pearl" – Chuv. ĕnchĕ "pearl";
gyötör "to torment" – Chuv. çĕter "to lose";
gyúr "to knead" – Chuv. çĕp "to rot";
gyümölcs "fruit" – Chuv. çimĕç "food, meal";
gyűrű "ring" – Chuv. çĕrĕ "ring";
hangya "ant" – Chuv. khănkăla "bug";
iker "twin" – Chuv. yĕkĕtesh "twins";
ír "to write" – Chuv. çyr "to write";
ív "arc" – Chuv. av "to bend";
kapzsi "greedy" – Chuv. küpen "greedy";
kicsi "small" – Chuv. kĕçĕn "younger";
komló "hop" – Chuv. khămla "hop";
köpeny "cloak" – Chuv. kӗpe "the dress";
kőris "ash-tree" – Chuv. kavrăç "ash-tree";
kút "well, draw-well" – Chuv. *kutuγ "well, draw-well";
láp "swamp, bog" – Chuv. lap "hollow, low place";
lepke "butterfly" – Chuv. lĕpĕ "butterfly";
nyár "summer" – Chuv. çur "spring".
Considering the facts of language matches of the Hungarian and Chuvash languages,
we can conclude that there is hardly another pair of languages from different language
families in the world that would be so much like one another as these two languages. This
similarity may indicate that the speakers of the Hungarian and Chuvash languages were in
very close contact with each other for a long period, at least not one or two centuries.
Scientists have long been looking for a time and place of such contacts, and it is believed
that they would have to occur in the South Eastern Europe:
Geobotanical data, the importance of which first drew the attention by István
Zicsi, also force us to look for a place for this Bulgar-Hungarian relations not in the
Middle Volga but more south. In this regard, the crucial role is played by the terms of
viticulture bor "wine", szöllö "grapes", szürni "to percolate", seprö "sediment (in
wine)”. Specific phonetic form of the last three words, which is characteristic only for
the Chuvash language, makes undoubted fact that the Hungarians met the
vine/grape/wine process owing to the Bulgars. But the northern border of the grape
culture passes through the Mogilev on the Dniester – Ekatironoslav on the Dnieper –
Serepta on the Volga River that is south of 49 degrees north latitude [GOMBOC
ZOLTÁN. 1985-2: 46-47].
These and other facts give grounds to assume that the place of the Hungarian-Bulgar
contact was the North Caucasus. Based on the fact that the ancient Turks in Eastern Europe
were the Bulgars of the Khazar Khanate times, it is concluded that these contacts occurred
around the 7-8th centuries A.D. However, the study of language processes of those times
causes us to doubt the adequacy of this restricted period to have extremely deep Chuvash-
Bulgar effects on the Hungarian language. Knowing that the Turks were present in Eastern
Europe since the time of splitting the Proto-Turkic language, we can not discard the
possibility of moving the time of these influences to an earlier and longer period.
Herodotus wrote that the Sauromatians inhabited the land beyond the Tanais. If he
considered the Tanais as the lower Don and the Seversky Donets Rivers, it can be assumed
that the Magyars (alleged Sauromatians) crossed the Don and for some time populated the
area between the Don and the Seversky Donets. Thus they had the contact simultaneous
with the Scythians, Bulgars and the ancestors of the Ossetians for a longer period – can
explain separate lexical matches of the Hungarian language with Chuvash and Ossetic.
In general, these considerations are not contradicted by the discovery of
archaeological sites of ancient Magyars in the Lower Prikamye and the Bashkir Urals, since
they appeared there no earlier than the turn of the 6th-7th centuries [KHALIKOV A.Kh.,
1985: 28]. It can be assumed that some part of the Magyars could cross the Volga and settle
in the Kama basin, but most of them should have remained near their ancestral home. Let us
dwell on this issue in more detail.
After the defeat of the combined Russian-Cumanian troops with Mongols on the
Kalka River in 1223, a new political situation arose in Eastern Europe. Western Cumanian
tribes begin moving to the borders of Hungary. The eldest son of King András II Bela
supported missionary activity of Dominican friars among the advancing Cumans. Their
activity has been successful, and Bela knowing stories that the ancestral home of the
Hungarians was somewhere in the east, decided to organize searching for it by monk forces.
Expeditions to the east were a few, the most successful was held in 1235. The monk Julian,
who took part in it, left a detailed written report about the search. According the report
Julian found people who understood the Hungarian language in the basin of one of the
tributaries of the middle Volga. They held a reminiscence that some of ther tribesmen
moved away to the west.
In 1237, Julian, already as an ambassador was sent to the tribesmen for the second
time. However, by the time the Tatar-Mongols have already started their invasion, and he
did not get to the Magyars, and learned of their fate from the stories he had heard in the
town of Suzdal in Northeren Russia. The second report of the monk was containing many
contradictions and inaccuracies, so its identity is called into question, but the very existence
of "Great Hungary" is not disputed. [ZIMONYIJ ISTVÁN 2012: 43-50].Apparently, Julian
visited the area in the basin of the Sura and Sviyaga Rivers, right tributary of the Volga,
others in the description of travel would be indication that the "Great Hungary" was
"beyond the Volga". Detailing description of Julian’s journey on the left bank of the great
river would be of much relevance. On the other hand, Julian mentions about the city of
Bundaz, which some researchers have linked to the city of Penza, is located at the Sura
River.
Confirmation of the movement of the Magyars from the banks of the Don to the Urals
region can be an interesting fact, which was pointed out by the Turkish scientist Osman
Karatay. He drew attention to the similarity in the names of the Bashkir tribe Yurmaty and
Hungarian word gyarmat "colony, colonial territory". Hungarian gy often corresponds to the
sound j in most the Turkic languages, ç in chuvash and s in Yakut does. Assuming that the
sounds ç и s are more ancient than j, he concluded that the initial form for the Bashkir and
Hungarian words is *sarmat. It follows that the Sarmatians, and that the same, the
Saurmatians, were a Turkic tribe [KARATAY OSMAN, 2003-2: 12-13]. The argument is
controversial, but not about the Sarmatian ethnicity in this case. Important is the Bashkir-
Hungarian correspondence itself, which directly points to the secondary character of the
Magyar habitat in the Urals. The Magyar close ties with Bashkirs is described by Istvan
Simon in the above mentioned work. In the Southern Urals, in the basins of the Belaya,
Kama, Ik rivers in the VI-VIII cent. there were two kindred cultures – Kushnarenkovo and
Karayakupovo ones. However, some Russian scientists, believing that the Magyars were
their creators, see the deep sources of these cultures in the cultures of the forest-steppe
Irtysh basin and Southern Trans-Urals from the early Iron Age [KHALIKOVA E.A,
KHALIKOV A.Kh. 2018: 74). In this work as an evidence, the authors submit the final
research materials of the Bolshe-Tigan burial ground, which the scientific editors of the
publication summarized as follows:
It (burial ground – V.S.) is a kind of connecting link between the sites of the
Kushnarenkovo (or Kushnarenkovo-Karayakupovo) type and the burial grounds of the
steppe and forest-steppe belt of the steppes of the Northern Pontic area (for example,
the burial ground near the village of Manvelovka and others), and also located much
west of the Early Hungarian sites of the Danube-Carpathian basin of the era of
"finding a homeland" of IX-X centuries. Bright features of the funeral and memorial
rituals and a specific clothing complex gave rise to the first researchers of this
monument – E.A. Halikova and A.Kh. Halikov – consider it belonging to ancient
Magyar culture. Based on the study of a significant part of the burial ground, they
believed that there was every reason to consider it a burial monument left by the
population, which somewhat later began to move west to their new homeland (Ibid: 4).
The movement of Magyars from east to west is indisputable, but the origins of the
Kushnarenkovo and Karayakupovo cultures in the Trans-Urals do not fit into the prehistory
of the Magyars. The second conclusion of professional archaeologists about the creators of
these cultures is confirmed by toponymy. The Magyars left traces of their presence in the
area of their distribution in place names, which are deciphered using the Hungarian
language:
Almash, a rural locality (a village) in Sharansky district, Bashkortostan, –
Hung. almás "apple" (adjective).
Almetyevsk , a city in the Republic of Tatarstan – Hung. alma "apple" étel "food,
dish".
Blagovar, a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center in Republic of
Bashkortostan – Hung. bolgár vár "Bulgarish fortress".
Buzdyak, a rural locality and the administrative center of Buzdyaksky District in
Bashkortostan – hung. buzdít "to approve".
Dombrovka, a rural locality in Blagovarsky district, Bashkortostan –
Hung. dombra "on the hill".
Zay, a river, the left tributary of the Kama River and a village on it –
Hung. zaj "noisy".
Kandry, a rural locality in Tuymazinsky district, Bashkortostan – Hubg. kandúr "a
cat".
Sagadat, the abolished village of the Sarajevo village council of the Alsheevsky
district of Bashkortostan, now a natural boundary – Hung. szag "smell", adat "data".
Sharan, a village, the administrative center of Sharansky District and the Sharan
River, Bashkortostan – Hung. sáran "dirty".
Deciphering the words of the Sarmatian Onomasticon showed that at least thirteen of
them could be of Hungarian origin. It seems like a few, but more can be found by carefully
searching for explanations for dubious cases. Nevertheless according to these data, the
Magyars were in fifth place in the total population of Scythia after the Anglo-Saxons, Turks,
Iranians and Adyghe. The following glosses are confidently explained in Hungarian:
Αβνακος, Αβναγος (abnakos, abnagos), the father of Abnodz (see Αβνωζος) and
Ratagos (see Ραθαγωσος) [JUSTI FERDINAND. 1895: 2] – Hung. eb „dog”, nagy “great”.
Αβνωζοσ (abno:zos), a strategos in Olbia, Latyshev [Ibid] – Hung. eb „dog” and
nyuz "to rip off, flay” (together it can be a "flayer").
Βαγδοχος (baγdokhos), Tanias, Latyshev [Ibid: 59] – Hung. badogos " tinsmith".
Βορυσ (borus), an inscription on vases according M.Vasmer [ABAYEV V.I. 1979:
284] – absurd inscription for a vase “brown, red” (Os. bora „brown, red”).
Hung. boros „wine” fits perfectly.
Γιλγοσ (gilgos), the son of Mandas (see Μανδασος), Tanais, Latyshev [JUSTI
FERDINAND. 1895: 115] - Hung. gyilkos "killer".
Γωδιγασος (go:digasos), the brother of Bagdokh (see Βαγδοχος) and Dalosac (see
Δαλοσακος), Tanais, Latyshev [Ibid: 117] – Hung. gond "care" and igaz "true, real".
Δαλοσακος (dalosakos), the brother of Bagdokh (see Βαγδοχος) and Godigas (see
Γωδιγασος), Tanais, Latyshev [Ibid: 76] – Hung. dalos "singer", agg "old man".
Dula, [gen. Dulae], Prince of the Alans, father of the wives of Hunor and Mogor,
eponyms of the Huns and Magyars, Simon of Keza [ALEMANY AGUSTI. 2003: 4.43] –
Hung. gyula (pronounced dula), chief judge or commander-in-chief, probable loanword
from the Turkic language of the Chuvash type, later personal name (ZAICZ GÁBOR. 2006:
256).
Μανδασοσ (mandasos), the father of Gilg (see Γιλγοσ), Tanais, Latyshev [JUSTI
FERDINAND. 1895: 190] – Hung. mond "to speak", mondas "expression, aphorism”.
Οσσιγασος (ossigasos), Tanais [ABAYEV V.I. 1979: 297] – Hung. össz “common”,
egesz “whole”.
Ρασσογος (rassogos), the father of Rakhoysac (see Ραχοισακος), Tanais [Ibid: 259] –
Hung. rosz “bad”, szokas “habit”.
Ραθαγωσος (rathago:sos), the father of Abnodz (see Αβνωζος), the son of Abnak
(see. Αβνακος), Olbia, Latyshev [Ibid: 259-260] – Hung ró “to cut”, tag “member”
(derivatives tagos and tagozodik “divided into parts”).
Ραχοισακος, (rakhoisakos), the son of Rassog (see Ρασσογος), Tanais [Ibid: 258] –
Hung ró “to cut”, haj “hair”, szak “part”.
A few more words can also be of Hungarian or another origin. Thus, the identification
of the Sauromates with the Magyars came true. However, one might think that there were
few of them among the Sarmatians. Apparently, there were few Hungarians left in their
homeland after some of them emigrated to the Kama region. Hungarian place names, which
stretch along the Volga River to the mouth of the Kama, indicate the ways of this migration:
Karnovar, a village in Neverkinsky district of penza Region – Hung. káron
vár "ruined fortress".
Kanasayevo, avillage in Nikolayevsky district of Ulyanovsk Region –
Hung. kanász "swineherd".
Ulyanovsk (the primordial name Sinbirsk) – Hung. szín "coloured", pír "blush, flush".
Undory, a village of Ulyanovski district and Ulyanovsk Region –
Hung. undor "disgust".
Syukeyevo, a rural locality in Kamsko-Ustyinsky District of the Republic of
Tatarstan, – Hung. sük "narrow".
Apastovo, a town, the administrative center of Apastovsky district of Tatarstan –
венг. apaszt "убавлять".
Thus, the routes of migration and habitats of the Magyars are determined, but the
ethnicity of the Sauromatians is still in question. In the light of the available data, it should
be agreed that there are two answers to this question – either the Sauromatians were the
ancestors of the modern Hungarians, or they disappeared from the face of the earth and we
learn nothing else about them.
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