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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CumansCumans - Wikipedia

    The name Cuman is the name of several villages in Turkey, such as Kumanlar, including the Black Sea region. The indigenous people in the Altai Republic, Kumandins (Kumandy), are descended from the Cumans. [173] By the 17th century, the Kumandins lived along the river Charysh, near its confluence with the river Ob.

  2. Bortz (Burchi, Boricius), Hungary, prince of the Cumans that settled in Hungary. [33] Under his leadership, he and 15,000 Cumans got baptized in 1227. [34] Bachman Khan, he rallied the Cuman-Kipchak clans after a Mongol surprise attack in 1237 – they hid in the forests along the Dnieper River.

    • Biography
    • Marriages and Children
    • Memorials
    • Bibliography

    Birth

    Yuri was the sixth son of Vladimir Monomakh. It is unclear when Yuri was born. Some chronicles report that Yuri's elder brother, Viacheslav, said to him: "I am much older than you; I was already bearded when you were born."[citation needed] Since Viacheslav was born in 1083, this supposedly pushes Yuri's birth to c. 1099/1100.[citation needed] However, the Primary Chronicle records the first marriage of Yuri – on 12 January 1108. It means that Yuri was born before c. 1099/1100 (as he could no...

    Activities in Rostov and Suzdal

    In 1108 Vladimir Monomakh sent his young son Yuri to govern in his name the vast Vladimir-Suzdal principality in the north-east of Kievan Rus'. In 1121 Yuri quarreled with the boyars of Rostov and moved the capital of his lands from that city to Suzdal. As the area was sparsely populated, Yuri founded many fortresses there. He established the towns of Ksniatin (in 1134), Pereslavl-Zalesski and Yuriev-Polski (in 1152), and Dmitrov (in 1154). The establishment of Tver, Kostroma, and Vologda is...

    Struggle for Kiev

    For all the interest he took in fortifying his Northern lands, Yuri still coveted the throne of Kiev. It is his active participation in the Southern affairs that earned him the epithet of Dolgorukiy, "the far-reaching". His elder brother Mstislav of Kiev died in 1132, and "the Rus lands fell apart", as one chronicle put it. Yuri instantaneously declared war on the princes of Chernigov, the reigning Grand Prince and his brother Yaropolk II of Kiev, enthroned his son in Novgorod, and captured h...

    The Primary Chronicle records the first marriage of Yuri on 12 January 1108. His first wife was a daughter of Aepa Ocenevich, Khan of the Cumans. Her paternal grandfather was Osen. Her people belonged to the Cumans, a confederation of pastoralists and warriors of Turkic origin.[citation needed] His second wife Helena survived him and moved to Const...

    Yuri's memory is cherished as the legendary founder of Moscow. His patron saint, Saint George appears on the coat of arms of Moscow slaying a dragon. In 1954, a monument to him designed by sculptor Sergei Orlov was erected on Moscow's Tverskaya Street, the city's principal avenue, in front of the Moscow municipality.[citation needed] Dolgoruki's im...

    Martin, Janet (2007). Medieval Russia: 980–1584. Second Edition. E-book. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-511-36800-4.

  3. La actividad principal de los cumanos era la ganadería. Criaban caballos, ovejas, cabras, camellos y otros tipos de ganado. En verano se desplazaban al norte con sus rebaños y en invierno, al sur. Algunos cumanos llevaban una vida semisedentaria y trabajaban en el comercio y la agricultura.

    • Pólovtsy o Pólovtsi
    • Estepa Eurasiática
  4. Towards the end of the thirteenth century and in the first decades of the fourteenth, Bulgaria was in direct dependence on the Golden Horde. It is the Cumans and Tatars, nomadic warriors of the steppe, who are the focus of this book. I shall trace their historical fate in the Balkans, the westernmost stage of their wanderings, from 1185 until ...

  5. The religious aspect, the problematic conversion of the newcomers, as well as the ‘ethnic’ aspect – the language, the attire and pagan customs the Cumans followed – must have played an important role in their perception as uninvited strangers.5 A fourth, economic aspect, the damage the Cumans’ herds made in the crops, and their custom of taking Christians as prisoners and force them ...

  6. The Image of the Cumans in Medieval Chronicles: Old Russian and Georgian sources in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. By Karolina Gurevich. Master’s Thesis, Central European University, 2017. Cuman representation in the Radziwiłł Chronicle. Abstract: Being the most numerous and military active people of the Eurasian steppe, the Cumans ...