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'''Kudarkin''' was the title of a high-ranking official among the [[Oghuz Turks]]. The title is reported by [[ibn Fadlan]], who passed through Oghuz territory in the early 920s CE. Ibn Fadlan described the Kudarkin as the deputy of the Oghuz khan; the position may have been analagous to the [[Khagan Bek]] of the Khazars. The Kudarkin's authority was not universally recognized among the Oghuz. When ibn Fadlan was waylaid by an Oghuz tribesman, the Arab emmissary attempted to convince tribesman to let him pass by claiming to be a friend of the Kudarkin but was told by the man "I shit on the Kudarkin's beard." |
'''Kudarkin''' was the title of a high-ranking official among the [[Oghuz Turks]]. The title is reported by [[ibn Fadlan]], who passed through Oghuz territory in the early 920s CE. Ibn Fadlan described the Kudarkin as the deputy of the Oghuz [[yabghu]] or [[khan]]; the position may have been analagous to the [[Khagan Bek]] of the Khazars. The Kudarkin's authority was not universally recognized among the Oghuz. When ibn Fadlan was waylaid by an Oghuz tribesman, the Arab emmissary attempted to convince tribesman to let him pass by claiming to be a friend of the Kudarkin but was told by the man "I shit on the Kudarkin's beard." |
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Krachkovsky conjectured that the title should actually be read "Kudar-Khan". |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 16:11, 14 June 2007
Kudarkin was the title of a high-ranking official among the Oghuz Turks. The title is reported by ibn Fadlan, who passed through Oghuz territory in the early 920s CE. Ibn Fadlan described the Kudarkin as the deputy of the Oghuz yabghu or khan; the position may have been analagous to the Khagan Bek of the Khazars. The Kudarkin's authority was not universally recognized among the Oghuz. When ibn Fadlan was waylaid by an Oghuz tribesman, the Arab emmissary attempted to convince tribesman to let him pass by claiming to be a friend of the Kudarkin but was told by the man "I shit on the Kudarkin's beard." Krachkovsky conjectured that the title should actually be read "Kudar-Khan".
References
- Dunlop, Douglas M. The History of the Jewish Khazars, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1954.
- Krachkovsky, I.J., transl. Ibn Fadlan's Travel to Volga. Leningrad, 1939.