Many historians consider the
Huns (meaning "person" in Mongolian language) the first
Mongolian and
Turkic people mentioned in European history. They originated from lands between modern-day Siberia and Korea, then migrated progressively westward. References in Chinese sources to peoples called the Xiong-Nu (''Hsiung-nu'') go back to 1200 BC. Their Xiong (匈) rulers, first mentioned as a family in 1766 BC in the story of Chunwei and the fall of the
Xia dynasty, may be the ancestors of the later "Huns" better-known to western scholars, though not all scholars agree on this. A
Korean legend asserts that an alliance of northern Altaic tribes under a "Huan" ruler from 7193 BC pre-dated the establishment of
China.
Ever since
Joseph de Guignes in the
18th century identified the Huns with the
(H)siung-nu, the debate about the Asian ancestral origins has continued. Recent research has shown that none of the great confederations of steppe warriors was ethnically pure, and to make matters worse, many clans claimed the same name, based on prestige or fame of the name; or it was attributed to them by outsiders describing their common characteristics, believed place of origin, or reputation (to use a modern example,
Germans in
World War I were often called "Huns" by their opponents). Thus it is fruitless to speculate on the blood origins of the group; rather, the name "Huns" seems to have originally described a prestigious ruling group of steppe warriors.
European Huns
A group known as the "European Huns" arrived in Europe ca. 375, led by
Attila the Hun, and is considered, with little certainty, to be the western extension of the royal Xiong family centered around
Karaganda. The establishment of the first Hun state marks one of the first well-documented appearances of the culture of horseback migration in history. These tribespeople achieved superiority over their rivals (most of them highly cultured) by their splendid state of military readiness, amazing mobility, and weapons like the
Hun bow.
Attila's European Huns, like the eastern
Xiongnu, incorporated groups of unrelated tributary peoples. In the European case
Alans, Gepids, Scrir,
Rugians,
Sarmatians, Slavs and especially
Gothic tribes all united under the Hun family military elite. Attila's Huns eventually settled
Hungary, a country that derives its name from them.
The memory of the Hunnish invasion was transmitted orally among the Germanic tribes, and are an important component in the Old Norse Völsunga saga and the Old German
Nibelungenlied, both portraying events in the
Migrations Period, almost one millennia before their recordings. In both of these stories, king Attila (''Atli'' in Norse and
Etzel in German) defeat the Frankish king
Sigebert I (''Sigurðr'' or
Siegfried) and the Burgundian king
Guntram I (''Gunnar'' or
Gunther), but is subsequently assassinated by Queen
Fredegund (''
Gudrun or Kriemhild''), the sister of the latter and wife of the former.
Recently, Hungarians who claim to be descendants of Attila have applied to be an officially recognized minority in Hungary. To do so, a group must be able to prove that they have lived in the country for more than 100 years, and get 1000 signatures on a petition. Modern day Huns in Hungary describe themselves as peaceful and gentle. They are far removed from the stereotype of the tribe that raped and pillaged its way across parts of Europe. According to
Gyorgy Kisfaludy, who describes himself as the high priest of the Huns, there may be as many as 100,000 Huns in Hungary and beyond its borders. Some commentators have suggested that the move for minority status is just a ploy to receive financial grants.
Indian Hunas
The Huns also played an important part in early
Indian history.
:''Main articles: Hephthalites,
Indo-Hephthalites
Xiong-Nu Dynasty
:''Main article:
Xiongnu
The earliest reference in Chinese sources to a people called the
Xiong-Nu (Hsiung-nu) dates to the early
12th century BC, in writings about the campaign by King Wuding (武丁 wǔdīng) of the
Shang Dynasty against the Gui Fang 鬼方 (guǐfāng) tribe, regarded as a name of one of the Huns' vassal
Nu (奴) tribes. Some vague
archaeological finds support this account, but await verification. Bronze inscriptions, and oracular turtle-back bones used in sacrificial worship, prove the historical existence of the campaign, but the Gui Fang did not necessarily equate with the core Hun clan
per se.
Many scholars identify the Xiong Nu Xiong with the Huns, because of similar descriptions of their appearance and living habits. Other scholars, confusing the Xiong with their
Nu serf and vassal tribes, find differences. Still others argue that any common appearance and habits also appear among various other tribes residing on the
Mongolian steppes, and are not identifying characteristics specific to the Xiong and the Huns. Nevertheless, all agree that the two peoples shared aspects that are more than a coincidence.
With the exception of the 43-
118 AD "North-South" feud, the Hun dynasty survived as a fairly tight-knit political
power until the
4th C., when the
Nu (奴) tribes decisively threw off the yoke of the Xiong dynasty. Whether increased squabbling within the Xiong dynasty caused their subjects to lose faith in them, or some other cause occurred, Hun unity came to an end. The rock was shattered, and clans claiming the Hun name (''Hunnoi, Chionites, Choni, Xiong'', etc.) dispersed as nothing more than piratical raiding bands. They appear to the south in
Persia (the Xiyon camel tribes – Chionites – in AD 320, also known as
Red Huns), while another portion remained east in China (the Xiong deer people); and finally, in one last brilliant flare, to the west in
Russia (the Hun horse tribes in AD 360).
The
Hua managed to succeed to the Hun legacy in a campaign that spread from
Bactria to Europe. After the failure of Xiong's Zhou county, the influence of the Hua dragon tribe started to expand. The influence of the northern deer-people retreated north up the Yenisei, as the Hua chased a western portion of the
Hunnoi (''Alchon/Alchoni'', often called "'''White Huns'''" and confused with
Hephthalites) into what is now
Uzbekistan in the late
4th century; meanwhile the easternmost branch somewhat later founded the Xiong's last eastern dynasty,
Xia (407-431). The colour names of the European, Persian, Bactrian and Chinese Hun tribes may have had something to do with their flank designations. Though apparently fleeing China from the Hua in the mid-4th century, the Huns' Alchon component is later recorded as uniting with them (Varkun) against the westernmost branch.
By 460 the Hua had begun to take over Central Eurasia. The
Yuezhis Hephthal family had become their ruling clan in Xinjiang by 507, and sometime during Sarosios rule (507-531) the Hua, now a unit with the Choni, left under his father to conquer the Hunnic remnants in the West, leaving their Hephthalite brethren to fend off
Juan Juan advances alone, and relocate their seat of power with the Indian branch.
After this, the Huns as a power unit disappear from history, though certain nations and noble families of Turanian origin continued to carry variations of the name into the present.
For more information on the formation of the eastern Huns'
Nu (奴) empire see also:
Wu Hu.
List of Important Hun Rulers (''Tengrikut/Tangriqut/Shanyu/TarKhaan'')
:''This list is incomplete and needs correction''
1st Dynasty
2nd dynasty (Name unknown)
3rd dynasty
|-
| 31 - 20 || Fu-Chu-Ley-Ju-Di / Pozhulonuti / 復株累若提
|-
| 20 - 12 || Su-Xie-Ju-Di / Shuzhunoti / 搜諧若提
|-
| 12 - 8 || Che-Ya-Ju-Di/Qiyanoti/車牙若提
opposed by...
:Ulunoti / 烏累若提 11 - 10
|-
| 8 BC - AD 13 || Wu-Zhou-Liu-Ju-Di / Uchilonoti / 烏珠留若提
4th (The Split) dynasty
|-
| 46 || Wu-Ta-Ti-Ho 烏達提侯
|-
| 46 - 48 || Pu-Nu / Panu / 蒲奴
North South Feud
From 48, the Hsiung-Nu began a North-South feud lasting until 98.
Rulers of the Northern (or "Western") Xiong-Nu:
Rulers of the Southern (or Eastern) Xiong-Nu:
Hereafter, the Western/Northern
tangriquts are no more, and the Eastern
Tangriquts take over the whole empire. Wanchi Shisu Quti inherited Finghey's united empire in 118, but it was never what it used to be.
Reunited Xiongnu
Some sources indicate that in 140 AD, after Kutino Shisu Quti committed suicide, a
Tengriqut was not elected and the Hun throne remained vacant until 143 AD.
5th dynasty (Name missing)
6th dynasty (Name missing)
7th dynasty (name missing)
8th dynasty (name missing)
9th dynasty (Bei Han 北漢)
10th Dynasty
Bei Han is known from 319 as "Former Zhao". During this dynasty, Xiyonites/Chionites or "Red Huns" start to harry Persia. The sovereignty of Han and Former Zhao was collectively known as the
Han Zhao.
12th Dynasty (Name ?Kama?)
The Hua & Xiong divided the Huns, and drove most of the remaining Huns westward out of China during their expansion. Kama was a legendary ancestor-King, mentioned in Eastern Hunnic sources, particularly among those who formed the Altyn Oba Horde. There is no one among the Hsiung rulers whose name sounds much like "Kama Tarkhan", but if he existed, he might have been the otherwise unnamed chief who took the Huns westward into the
Ukrainian steppes. He may have been the ruler of
Alchoni who pushed the Kidarite Huns into India. His realm may therefore have spread from the Ukraine to Bactria. The last remnants of the Huns east of the
Hua in China managed to raise their heads again from 407–431 as the Hun Xia dynasty, before coming under the
Juan Juan. They (the Deer) later absorbed a Turkic (Blue Wolf) influence and later emerged as the Mongols. Interestingly, some Hunnic vocabulary documented by the Chinese still occurs in Japanese, while
Hungarian allegedly has some words in common with Xia.
Onogur Dynasty
Chaotic conditions followed the rise of Avar power in Europe, and the time of the Huns came to a close. Whether the Onoghur were truly a Hun, Bolgar, or proto-Magyar, rather than an Avar reign, remains a matter of debate. However, it is from the name "Hun" that the English name for
Magyarország,
Hungary, derives, allowing some space for their inclusion in the list of Hun Dynasties.
Germany
On
July 27, 1901, during the
Boxer Rebellion in China, Kaiser
Wilhelm II gave the order to "make the name
German remembered in China for a thousand years, so that no Chinaman will ever again dare to even squint at a German". This speech, wherein Wilhelm invoked the memory of the
5th-century Huns, coupled with the
Pickelhaube or spiked helmet worn by German forces until 1916, that was reminiscent of ancient Hun (and Hungarian) helmets, gave rise to the later derogatory English usage of the latter term for their German enemy during
World War I. This usage was reinforced by Allied propaganda throughout the war, prompting hatred of the Germans by invoking the idea that they were brutal savages.
See also
Further reading
- J. Otto Mänchen-Helfen (ed. Max Knight): The World of the Huns: Studies in Their History and Culture (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1973)
- J. Otto Mänchen-Helfen: Huns and Hsiung-Nu (published in Byzantion, vol. XVII, 1944-45, pp. 222-243)
- J. Otto Mänchen-Helfen: The Legend of the Origin of the Huns (published in Byzantion, vol. XVII, 1944-45, pp. 244-251)
- E. A. Thompson: A History of Attila and the Huns (London, Oxford University Press, 1948)
Category:Ancient peoples of China
Category:Ancient peoples
Category:History of China
Category:Late Antiquity
Category:Turkic peoples
Category:Ancient Roman enemies and allies
Category:History of Hungary
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