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Kurya (khan)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pecheneg khan
Kurya and the Pechenegs slaughter Sviatoslav and his army.

Kurya (Ukrainian: Куря,Pecheneg: *Kürä) was aPechenegprince[1] andkhan who allied withSvyatoslav I of Kiev in his campaigns in theBalkans. Later, after Svyatoslav's defeat by theByzantine Empire, Kurya ambushed and killed theKievan grand prince atKhortytsia.[2] According to theChronicle of Bygone Years, Kurya had Svyatoslav'sskull made into a goblet[3] (a known practice in Eurasian nomadic cultures for brave foes[4]), and gilded.[5][6] Dates of his rule are unknown, but he was no longer khan somewhere around 988 CE, being succeeded byMetiga.[7][8] It is also possible that he was the leader of the Pechenegs in the968 siege of Kiev,[9] but since a starting date is unknown, it is almost impossible to tell (and it could have been any of several other Pecheneg princes). Kurya appears as a villain in the 2006 animated filmPrince Vladimir.

Life

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Very little is known of Kurya's life; most of what can be reasonably inferred about him is taken from educated guessing and very vague. Apparently, Kurya and his wife drank from the gilded chalice made from Svyatoslav's skull and prayed for a son as brave as him (it is unknown if he had any children). Only mentioned in thePrimary Chronicle, Kurya was the most powerful of the Pecheneg princes[10] - Rus' historians included only his name in the Chronicle (a history of the Rus') when it was being compiled. In the late 1520s, however, the Nikonian Chronicle was created. A compilation of Rus' chronicles, it mentioned Pecheneg prince Ildeya as coming into the service ofYaropolk I. Around 988, Pecheneg leader Metiga did the same forVladimir the Great - therefore Kurya was no longer khan by 988. However, what occurred after the death of Svyatoslav is not recorded, and Kurya's reign can be pinpointed to the 970s; this is not to say that he was not in power earlier, as there is no timeline for his rule until 988, when Metiga had definitely replaced him.

Death of Svyatoslav

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Boris Chorikov'sThe Death of Svyatoslav (Konchina Svyatoslava)

The Pechenegs were allied withByzantium during Kurya's life (having a complicated relationship with the Rus'). Svyatoslav's Rus' hadinvaded the Balkan Bulgars in 967 or 968, assisting the Byzantines. However, the Slavic grand prince's campaign had greatly exceeded the expectations of the Byzantines, underEmperor Nikephoros Phokas. Svyatoslav refused to turn over his territorial victories to the Empire (he had been paid 15,000 pounds of gold), thus the two parties dropped their alliance. After some fighting and disturbances, Svyatoslav's retreat point was besieged by the Byzantines. He surrendered and left the Balkans, relinquishing his territory while doing so.[11]

Having ceded his territories in theDanube region, Svyatoslav began to return toKiev. Although he had been defeated, new Byzantine EmperorJohn I Tzimiskes (who had assassinated and overthrown Phokas) worried that the peace treaty he had forced Svyatoslav to sign between the Empire and Rus' would not last. Therefore, at the behest of Byzantium, the Pechenegs (led by Kurya) ambushed Svyatoslav and his army when he attempted to cross the cataracts nearKhortytsia, at theDnieper River, in March 972. His army took heavy losses, and the grand prince himself was slain.[12]

References

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  1. ^"The Russian Primary Chronicle"(PDF). Retrieved10 May 2016.
  2. ^Dimnik, Martin."Svyatoslav I".Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved11 May 2016.
  3. ^Peck, Robin (2004).Sculpture: A Journey to the Circumference of the Earth. Broken Jaw Press.ISBN 9781553910329. Retrieved12 May 2016.
  4. ^Duffy, James (22 June 2015).The Czars. New Word City.ISBN 9781612308869. Retrieved11 May 2016.
  5. ^"Popular Series: Anthropology".Google Books. Chicago Natural History Museum. 1922. Retrieved12 May 2016.
  6. ^Jankowski, Tomek (20 May 2014).Eastern Europe!. Steerforth Press.ISBN 9780985062330. Retrieved12 May 2016.
  7. ^Jelisavcic, Micha; Sloan, John."Rus - Rulers".Xenophon Group International. Retrieved11 May 2016.
  8. ^"Russian Interaction with Foreign Lands".strangelove.net. Archived fromthe original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved11 May 2016.
  9. ^Honemann, Volker (2 May 2012).German narrative literature of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Walter de Gruyter.ISBN 9783111544076. Retrieved11 May 2016.
  10. ^Waldman, Carl; Mason, Catherine (2006).Encyclopedia of European Peoples. Infobase.ISBN 9781438129181. Retrieved12 May 2016.
  11. ^"Svyatoslav I".Britannica. Retrieved11 May 2016.
  12. ^"Sviatoslav I Ihorovych".Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Retrieved10 May 2016.
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