- Iazyges
The Iazyges (Jazyges is an orthographic variant) were a nomadic tribe. Known also as Jaxamatae, Ixibatai, Iazygite, Jászok, Ászi. They were a branch of the
Sarmatian people who, c. 200 BC, swept westward fromcentral Asia onto thesteppes of what is nowUkraine . [Christian 136.] Little is known about their language, but it was one of theIranian languages .Antiquity
The Iazyges first make their appearance along the
Sea of Azov , known to the Ancient Greeks and Romans as the Maeotis. For this reason they are referred to by the geographerPtolemy as the "Iazyges Metanastae". From there, the Jazyges moved west along the shores of theBlack Sea to what is nowMoldova and the southwestern Ukraine.They served as allies of
Mithradates VI Eupator , king ofPontus (in what is now westernTurkey ), in his wars against the Romans (c. 88-84 BC). In 78-76 BC, the Romans sent apunitive expedition over theDanube in an attempt to overawe the Jazyges.The prime enemy of Rome along the lower Danube at this time were the
Dacians . In 7 BC when the Dacian kingdom built up byBurebista began to collapse, the Romans took advantage and encouraged the Jazyges to settle in thePannonian plain , between the Danube and theTisza (Theiss) Rivers.Roman times
They were divided into freemen and serfs ("Sarmatae Limigantes"). These serfs had a different manner of life and were probably an older settled population, enslaved by nomadic masters. They rose against them in
34 AD, but were repressed by foreign aid.The Romans wanted to finish off Dacia, but the Iazyges refused to cooperate. The Iazyges remained nomads, herding their cattle across what is now southern Romania every summer to water them along the Black Sea; a Roman conquest of Dacia would cut that route. The Roman emperor
Domitian became so concerned with the Iazyges that he interrupted a campaign against Dacia to harass them and theSuebi , aGermanic tribe also dwelling along the Danube.In early
92 , the Iazyges, in alliance with the Sarmatians proper and the GermanicQuadi , crossed the Danube into the Roman province ofPannonia (mod.Croatia , northernSerbia , and westernHungary ). In May, the Iazyges shattered the RomanLegio XXI Rapax , soon afterwards disbanded in disgrace. The fighting continued until Domitian’s death in96 .In 101-105, the warlike Emperor
Trajan finally conquered the Dacians, reducing their lands to a Roman province. In107 , Trajan sent his general,Hadrian , to force the Iazyges to submit. In117 , Trajan died, and was succeeded as emperor by Hadrian, who moved to consolidate and protect his predecessor's gains. While the Romans kept Dacia, the Iazyges stayed independent, accepting a client relationship with Rome.As long as Rome remained powerful, the situation could be maintained, but in the late second century, the Empire was becoming increasingly overstretched. In the summer of
166 , while the Romans were tied down in a war withParthia , the nomadic peoples north of the Danube, theMarcomanni , theNaristi , theVandals , theHermanduri , theLongobardi and theQuadi , all swept south over the Danube to invade and plunder the exposed Roman provinces. The Iazyges joined in this general onslaught in which they killed Calpurnius Proculus the Roman governor of Dacia . The Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius spent the rest of his life trying to restore the situation. In170 , the Iazyges defeated and killed Claudius Fronto, Roman governor of LowerMoesia . Operating fromSirmium (todaySremska Mitrovica ,Vojvodina ,Serbia ) on theSava river, Marcus Aurelius moved against the Iazyges personally. After hard fighting, the Iazyges were pressed to their limits.But in
175 ,Avidius Cassius led a revolt in the East, interrupting the campaign. At this point, the leading king among the Iazyges, Zanticus, made peace with Marcus Aurelius, yielding up, it is said, 100,000 Roman captives. The Iazyges were also forced to provide the Romans with 8,000 cavalry to serve in the Roman army as auxiliaries. Some 5,500 of these were shipped off to serve in the Roman army in Britain; it is theorized they may have played a part in the development of theArthurian legend. Marcus' victory was decisive in that the Iazyges did not again appear as a major threat to Rome.Around 230, the
Asding Vandals pushed in to the north of the Iazyges. The Vandals, and new Germanic tribal coalitions like theAlamanni and theFranks now became the Roman’s primary security concerns. But as late as371 , the Romans saw fit to build a fortified trading center,Commercium , to control the trade with the Iazyges.Late Antiquity
In
Late Antiquity , records become much more diffuse, and the Iazyges generally cease to be mentioned as a tribe.Middle Ages
In the Middle Ages another Iranian people appeared in Eastern-Europe, the Jazones (named in Latin diplomas also from Philistei/Filistei from the Biblical nation) who probably came to the
Kingdom of Hungary together with theCumans in the 13th century after they were defeated by theMongols .Béla IV , king of Hungary granted them asylum and they became a privileged community with the right of self-government. But shortly after their entry, the relationship worsened dramatically between the Hungarian nobility and the Cumanian-Jassic tribes and they left the country. After the end of the Mongol-Tatar occupation they returned and were settled in the central part of theHungarian Plain . Initially, their main occupation was animal husbandry. During the next two centuries they were fully assimilated to the Hungarian population, their language disappeared, but they preserved their Jassic identity and their regional autonomy until 1876. Over a dozen settlements in Central Hungary (eg.Jászberény ,Jászárokszállás ,Jászfényszaru ) still bear their name.They remained a distinct ethnographical group until today under the Hungarian name "jászok" (or "jász" in singular).
The only literary record of the Jassic language was found in the 1950s in the Hungarian National Széchényi Library on the backside of a diploma from 1443. It contains a short Jász-Latin vocabulary for monks in the newly founded monastery in Pilis mountains (N-W from Budapest), since the Jász people were settled in the area (e.g. the village Pilisjászfalu of today - a different area from the autonomous Jász territory around Jászberény).
The Iazyges' name is preserved in that of the Romanian city
Iaşi (Jászvásár in Hungarian).The connection between the Jazones (Yazones) and the Iazyges is disputed. Most Hungarian scholars claim that they were two different Sarmatian groups, and the Jazones are relatives of the
Alans and theOssetes . Others think that the Iazyges either migrated back east onto the steppes in the confusion of theHun and Avar invasions of the 5th-7th centuries, or the Iazones were a fresh branch of the Iazyges that had never moved west before and remained throughout this period in what is now southernRussia . But based on the above diploma their languages should be very close.Notes
ources
*Bennett, Julian: "Trajan: Optimus Princeps" (1997) Indianapolis University Press, Bloomington
*Birley, Anthony: "Marcus Aurelius: A Biography" (1987) Yale University Press, New Haven.
*Bunson, Matthew: "Encyclopedia of the Roman Empire" (1994) Facts on File Inc., NY
*Christian, David. "A History of Russia, Mongolia and Central Asia." Vol. 1. Blackwell: 1999.
*Kerr, William George: "A Chronological Study of the Marcomannic Wars of Marcus Aurelius" (1995) Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1995, 295 p.
*Macartney, C.A.: "Hungary: A Short History" (1962) Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh.
*Maenchen-Helfen, J. Otto: "The World of the Huns" (1973) University of California Press, Berkeley.
*Strayer, Joseph R., Editor in Chief: "A Dictionary of the Middle Ages" (1987), Charles Scribner’s Sons, NY
* Gyarfas Istvan: A jaszkunok törtenete (in Hungarian) [http://vfek.vfmk.hu/gyarfas_istvan/jaszkunok/ ]References
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