The Durdzuks (Georgian: დურძუკები, romanized: durdzuk'ebi), also known as Dzurdzuks, was a medieval exonym of the 9th-18th centuries used mainly in Georgian, Arabic, but also Armenian sources in reference to the Ingush people and Bats.
Geography
Researchers unanimously identify the Durdzuks as the ancestors of modern Ingush and Bats.[1] Some historians link the Durdzuks to mountainous Ingushetia and identify them with the Ingush people,[2] others believe that in the period of the Middle Ages, the population of Chechnya was known to the Eastern Caucasian peoples under the name "Chachans",[3][4][5] while the population of Ingushetia under the names "Durdzuks", "Glighvi", "Ghilighvi". In 1745, Georgian geographer Vakhushti of Kartli noted that the country "Durdzuketi consists of Kisti, Durdzuki and Gligvi", placing the first in the vicinity of the Darial Gorge and the latter the more east of the three, bordering Pankisi, Tusheti and Didoeti.[6]
Georgian historian Vakhtang Gamrekeli claims that "Durdzuk" is definitely and, with all its references, uniformly localized, between Didoeti-Dagestan in the east and the gorge of the Terek River, in the west.[7] The village Zurzuka[8] in the Vedensky District of Chechnya has been theorized to be connected to the ethnonym Durdzuk.[9] Historians often place the "Gate of the Durdzuks" in the Assa Gorge of Ingushetia, which is a path connecting the North and South Caucasus regions.[10][11]
History
The supposed eponymous progenitor of the Durdzuks is mentioned in The Georgian Chronicles:
ხოლო შვილთა ზედა კავკასისთა იყო უფალ დურძუკ, ძე ტირეთისი.
And as for upon the sons of Caucasus there was a lord Durdzuk, son of Tiretis.[12]
ხოლო დურძუკ, რომელი უწარჩინებულეს იყო შვილთა შორის კავკასისთა, მივიდა და დაჯდა ნაპრალსა შინა მთისასა, და უწოდა სახელი თჳსი დურძუკეთი.
And as for this Durdzuk, who was one of the most honorable sons of Kavkas, came and set at the mountains, and gave it the name of his as Durdzuketi.[13]
In the Armenian adaptation of The Georgian Chronicles, the Durdzuks defeated the Scythians and became a significant power in the area in the region in the first millennium BC.[14]
According to The Georgian Chronicles, the Durdzuks allied themselves with Georgia, and helped the first Georgian king Pharnavaz I of Iberia consolidate his reign against his unruly vassals. The alliance with Georgia was cemented when King Pharnavaz married a Durdzuk girl.[10]
და მოიყვანა ცოლი დურძუკელთა, ნათესავი კავკასისი.
And married he [Pharnavaz] a Durdzuk wife, a relative of the Caucasus.[15]
The Durdzuks are said to have raided Kakheti and Bazaleti during the reign of Mirian I, who invaded and ravaged the land of the Durdzuks in retaliation. Later on, the Durdzuks are mentioned fighting the Mongols alongside their Georgian allies as well as the Ossetians.[16] Durdzuk soldiers are also mentioned fighting alongside Georgians against the troops of Jalal al-Din Mangburni.[10] Queen Tamar of Georgia was highly esteemed, and the Durdzuks named daughters as well as bridges and other buildings after her.[17]
The Durdzuks are mentioned in the 7th-century work Geography of Armenia by Anania Shirakatsi as the Dourtsk (Armenian: Դուրծկք).[10][18]
See also
Notes
References
- ↑ Какабадзе 1967, p. 471; Робакидзе 1968, p. 27; Крупнов 1971, p. 34; Волкова 1973, p. 135; Гольдштейн 1977, p. 203; Rapp 2003, p. 276
- ↑ Klaproth 1814, p. 239; Koch 1843, p. 30; Brosset 1847, p. 18; Генко 1930, p. 712; Eremian 1973, p. 270; Волкова 1973, pp. 136–137; Пиотровский & Нарочницкий 1988, p. 152; Сотавов & Мейер 1991, p. 207; Rapp 2003, p. 276
- ↑ Merzbacher Aus den Hochregionen des Kaukasus. Wanderungen, Erlebnisse, Beobachtungen, G. (1901). Aus den Hochregionen des Kaukasus. Wanderungen, Erlebnisse, Beobachtungen.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ↑ Markovin, V.I. (1965). In the gorges of Argun and Fortanga.
- ↑ Merzbacher, G. (1905). To the ethnography of the inhabitants of the Caucasian Alps.
- ↑ Багратиони, Вахушти (1745). Известия грузинских летописей и историков о северном Кавказе и России. М.Г. Джанашвили (1897). p. 65, 77-79.
- ↑ Гамрекели, В. Н. (1961). Двалы и Двалетия в I—XV вв (in Russian). p. 27.
- ↑ "Military topographic map of Caucasus region, 1926". www.etomesto.com. Retrieved 2023-04-11.
- ↑ Nataev, S. A.; Натаев, С. А. (2013). Chechenskie taĭpy : problemy izuchenii︠a︡ prirody, struktury i istoricheskoĭ dinamiki sot︠s︡ialʹnykh institutov chechent︠s︡ev. Makhachkala. p. 413. ISBN 978-5-4242-0117-2. OCLC 842907585.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - 1 2 3 4 Anchabadze, George. "The Vainakhs." (2009).
- ↑ Генко 1930, p. 712.
- ↑ Georgian royal annals, Life of Kartli, 2-20
- ↑ Georgian royal annals, Life of Kartli, 2-23
- ↑ Jaimoukha, Amjad (2004-11-10). The Chechens. doi:10.4324/9780203356432. ISBN 9780203356432.
- ↑ Georgian royal annals, Life of Kartli, 3-47
- ↑ Howorth, Henry Hoyle. History of the Mongols, from the 9th to the 19th century. No. 85. Burt Franklin, 1888. Page 11.
- ↑ WAKIZAKA, KEISUKE. "LIVING AS “NORTH CAUCASIANS” IN GEORGIA: IDENTITY AND INTEGRATION IN GEORGIA AMONG THE OSSETIAN AND THE CHECHEN-KIST COMMUNITIES." (2019). Page 78: "According to Kartlis Tskhovreba (History of Georgia) and works of the Georgian historian Leonti Mroveli in the 11th century, these relations began before Christ. In these sources, Vainakhs are called “Nachkhs”, “Ghlighvs”, “Dzurdzuks” and “Durdzuks”. At the turn of the 4th and 3rd centuries B.C., Parnavaz, the king of Iberia, married a woman from a Vainakh tribe in order to get support from the Highlanders.209 They fought alongside the Georgian kings for centuries. Vainakhs loved Queen Tamar and named their daughters, bridges and other constructions after her. In this way, high-level interaction and fusion among Vainakhs, Georgians and many other highlander tribes existed in history .210 In the process of Vainakhs’ settlement in Georgia, they were assimilated into Georgian society. In fact, there are tribes who insist that their origins are based on Chechnya and Ingushetia among Tushs, Khevsurs, Pshavs and Georgians in Kakheti and Mtskheta-Mtianeti. Some tribes in Chechnya and Ingushetia insist that they are Georgian-origin and that they emigrated to Chechnya and Ingushetia afterward..."
- ↑ Eremian 1973, p. 270.
Bibliography
- Виноградов, В. Б. (1972). Центральный и Северо-Восточный Кавказ в скифское время (VII—IV вв. до н. э.). (Вопросы политической истории, эволюции культур и этногенеза) [Central and North-Eastern Caucasus in the Scythian time (7th-4th centuries BC). (Issues of political history, evolution of cultures and ethnogenesis)] (in Russian). Грозный: Чечено-Ингушское Книжное Издательство. pp. 1–392.
- Волкова, Н. Г. (1973). Этнонимы и племенные названия Северного Кавказа [Ethnonyms and tribal names of the North Caucasus] (in Russian). Москва: Наука. pp. 1–210.
- Генко, А. Н. (1930). "Из культурного прошлого ингушей" [From the cultural past of the Ingush]. Записки коллегии востоковедов при Азиатском музее [Notes of the College of Orientalists at the Asian Museum] (in Russian). Vol. 5. Ленинград: Издательство Академии наук СССР. pp. 681–761.
- Гольдштейн, А. Ф. (1977). Башни в горах [Towers in the mountains] (in Russian). Москва: Советский художник. pp. 1–330.
- Eremian, S. T. (1973). ""Աշխարհացոյցի" սկզբնական բնագրի վերականգնման փորձ" [An Attempt at Restoring the Original Text of „Aškharhacoyc"]. Patma-Banasirakan Handes. 2: 261–274 – via Pan-Armenian Digital Library.
- Какабадзе, С. С. (1967). Грузинские документы Института народов Азии АН СССР [Georgian documents of the Institute of the Peoples of Asia of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR] (PDF) (in Russian). М.: Наука. pp. 1–511.
- Klaproth, Julius Heinrich (1814). Reise in den Kaukasus und nach Georgien unter nommen in den Jahren 1807 and 1808 [Journeys to the Caucasus and Georgia made in 1807 and 1808] (in German). Halle und Berlin: In den Buchhandlungen des Hallischen Waisenhauses.
- Koch, Karl (1843). Reise durch Russland nach dem kankasischen Isthmus in den Jahern 1836, 1837 und 1838 [Journey through Russia to the Caucasian Isthmus in the years 1836, 1837 and 1838] (in German). Vol. 2. Stuttgart und Tübingen: Druck und Verlag der J. G. Cotta'sche Buchhandlung. pp. 1–559.
- Крупнов, Е. И. (1971). Средневековая Ингушетия [Medieval Ingushetia] (in Russian). Москва: Наука. pp. 1–211.
- Пиотровский, Б. Б.; Нарочницкий, А. Л., eds. (1988). История народов Северного Кавказа с древнейших времён до конца XVIII в. [The history of the peoples of the North Caucasus from ancient times to the end of the 18th century] (in Russian). Москва: Наука. pp. 1–544. ISBN 5-02-009486-2.
- Rapp, Stephen H. (2003). Studies in Medieval Georgian Historiography: Early Texts and Eurasian. Leuven: Peeters Publishers. p. 1–522. ISBN 9789042913189.
- Робакидзе, А. И., ed. (1968). Кавказский этнографический сборник. Очерки этнографии Горной Ингушетии [Caucasian ethnographic collection. Essays on the ethnography of Mountainous Ingushetia] (in Russian). Vol. 2. Тбилиси: Мецниереба. pp. 1–333.
- Сотавов, Н. А.; Мейер, М. С. (1991). Северный Кавказ в русско-иранских и русско-турецких отношениях в XVIII в. [North Caucasus in Russian-Iranian and Russian-Turkish relations in the 18th century] (in Russian). М.: Наука. pp. 1–221.
- Brosset, Marie-Félicité (1847). Quelques remarques sur un livre intitulé: Reise durch Russland nach dem kaukasischen Isthmus, in den Jahren 1836, 1837, 1838, von K. Koch, Doctor der Medicin und Philosophie [Some remarks on a book entitled: Voyages through Russia to the Caucasian Isthmus, in the years 1836, 1837, 1838, by K. Koch, doctor of medicine and philosophy] (in French).