"In Khazaria, sheep, honey, and Jews exist in large
quantities." Muqaddasi, Descriptio Imperii Moslemici
(tenth century).
"IT was", wrote D. Sinor,1 "in the second half of the eighth
century that the Khazar empire reached the acme of its glory"
that is, between the conversion of Bulan and the religious reform
under Obadiah. This is not meant to imply that the Khazars owed
their good fortune to their Jewish religion. It is rather the
other way round: they could afford to be Jews because they were
economically and militarily strong. .A
living symbol of their power was the Emperor Leo the Khazar,
who ruled Byzantium in 775-80 - so named after his mother, the
Khazar Princess "Flower" - the one who created a new fashion
at the court. We remember that her marriage took place shortly
after the great Khazar victory over the Muslims in the battle
of Ardabil, which is mentioned in the letter of Joseph and other
sources. The two events, Dunlop remarks, "are hardly unrelated".2.However, amidst the cloak-and-dagger intrigues
of the period, dynastic marriages and betrothals could be dangerous.
They repeatedly gave cause - or at least provided a pretext
- for starting a war. The pattern was apparently set by Attila,
the erstwhile overlord of the Khazars. In 450 Attila is said
to have received a message, accompanied by an engagement ring,
from Honoria, sister to the West Roman Emperor Valentinian III.
This romantic and ambitious lady begged the Hun chieftain to
rescue her from a fate worse than death - a forced marriage
to an old Senator - and sent him her ring. Attila promptly claimed
her as his bride, together with half the Empire as her dowry;
and when Valentinian refused, Attila invaded Gaul..Several variations on this quasi-archetypal
theme crop up throughout Khazar history. We remember the fury
of the Bulgar King about the abduction of his daughter, and
how he gave this incident as the main reason for his demand
that the Caliph should build him a fortress against the Khazars.
If we are to believe the Arab sources, similar incidents (though
with a different twist) led to the last flare-up of the Khazar-Muslim
wars at the end of the eighth century, after a protracted period
of peace. .According to al-Tabari, in AD 798,*[The date,
however, is uncertain.] the Caliph ordered the Governor of Armenia
to make the Khazar frontier even more secure by marrying a daughter
of the Kagan. This governor was a member of the powerful family
of the Barmecides (which, incidentally, reminds one of the prince
of that eponymous family in the Arabian Nights who invited the
beggar to a feast consisting of rich dish-covers with nothing
beneath). The Barmecide agreed, and the Khazar Princess with
her suite and dowry was duly dispatched to him in a luxurious
cavalcade (see I, 10). But she died in childbed; the newborn
died too; and her courtiers, on their return to Khazaria, insinuated
to the Kagan that she had been poisoned. The Kagan promptly
invaded Armenia and took (according to two Arab sources)3 50000
prisoners. The Caliph was forced to release thousands of criminals
from his gaols and arm them to stem the Khazar advance. .The Arab sources relate at least one more eighth-century
incident of a misfired dynastic marriage followed by a Khazar
invasion; and for good measure the Georgian Chronicle has a
particularly gruesome one to add to the list (in which the royal
Princess, instead of being poisoned, kills herself to escape
the Kagan's bed). The details and exact dates are, as usual,
doubtful,4 and so is the real motivation behind these campaigns.
But the recurrent mention in the chronicles of bartered brides
and poisoned queens leaves little doubt that this theme had
a powerful impact on people's imagination, and possibly also
on political events.
2
No more is heard about Khazar-Arab fighting after the end of
the eighth century. As we enter the ninth, the Khazars seemed
to enjoy several decades of peace at least, there is little
mention of them in the chronicles, and no news is good news
in history. The southern frontiers of their country had been
pacified; relations with the Caliphate had settled down to a
tacit non-aggression pact; relations with Byzantium continued
to be definitely friendly. .Yet
in the middle of this comparatively idyllic period there is
an ominous episode which foreshadowed new dangers. In 833, or
thereabouts, the Khazar Kagan and Bek sent an embassy to the
East Roman Emperor Theophilus, asking for skilled architects
and craftsmen to build them a fortress on the lower reaches
of the Don. The Emperor responded with alacrity. He sent a fleet
across the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov up the mouth of the
Don to the strategic spot where the fortress was to be built.
Thus came Sarkel into being, the famous fortress and priceless
archaeological site, virtually the only one that yielded clues
to Khazar history - until it was submerged in the Tsimlyansk
reservoir, adjoining the Volga-Don canal. Constantine Porphyrogenitus,
who related the episode in some detail, says that since no stones
were available in the region, Sarkel was built of bricks, burnt
in specially constructed kilns. He does not mention the curious
fact (discovered by Soviet archaeologists while the site was
still accessible) that the builders also used marble columns
of Byzantine origin, dating from the sixth century, and probably
salvaged from some Byzantine ruin; a nice example of Imperial
thrift.5 .The potential
enemy against whom this impressive fortress was built by joint
Roman-Khazar effort, were those formidable and menacing newcomers
on the world scene, whom the West called Vikings or Norsemen,
and the East called Rhous or Rhos or Rus. .Two centuries earlier, the conquering Arabs
had advanced on the civilized world in a gigantic pincer movement,
its left prong reaching across the Pyrenees, its right prong
across the Caucasus. Now, during the Viking Age, history seemed
to create a kind of mirror image of that earlier phase. The
initial explosion which had triggered off the Muslim wars of
conquest took place in the southernmost region of the known
world, the Arabian desert. The Viking raids and conquests originated
in its northernmost region, Scandinavia. The Arabs advanced
northward by land, the Norsemen southward by sea and waterways.
The Arabs were, at least in theory, conducting a Holy War, the
Vikings waged unholy wars of piracy and plunder; but the results,
as far as the victims were concerned, were much the same. In
neither case have historians been able to provide convincing
explanations of the economical, ecological or ideological reasons
which transformed these apparently quiescent regions of Arabia
and Scandinavia quasi overnight into volcanoes of exuberant
vitality and reckless enterprise. Both eruptions spent their
force within a couple of centuries but left a permanent mark
on the world. Both evolved in this time-span from savagery and
destructiveness to splendid cultural achievement..About the time when Sarkel was built by joint
Byzantine-Khazar efforts in anticipation of attack by the eastern
Vikings, their western branch had already penetrated all the
major waterways of Europe and conquered half of Ireland. Within
the next few decades they colonized Iceland, conquered Normandy,
repeatedly sacked Paris, raided Germany, the Rhne delta, the
gulf of Genoa, circumnavigated the Iberian peninsula and attacked
Constantinople through the Mediterranean and the Dardanelles
- simultaneously with a Rus attack down the Dnieper and across
the Black Sea. As Toynbee wrote:6 "In the ninth century, which
was the century in which the Rhos impinged on the Khazars and
on the East Romans, the Scandinavians were raiding and conquering
and colonizing in an immense arc that eventually extended south-westward
... to North America and southeastward to ... the Caspian Sea.".No wonder that a special prayer was inserted
in the litanies of the West: A furore Normannorum libera nos
Domine. No wonder that Constantinople needed its Khazar allies
as a protective shield against the carved dragons on the bows
of the Viking ships, as it had needed them a couple of centuries
earlier against the green banners of the Prophet. And, as on
that earlier occasion, the Khazars were again to bear the brunt
of the attack, and eventually to see their capital laid in ruins.
.Not only Byzantium had reason to be grateful
to the Khazars for blocking the advance of the Viking fleets
down the great waterways from the north. We have now gained
a better understanding of the cryptic passage in Joseph's letter
to Hasdai, written a century later: "With the help of the Almighty
I guard the mouth of the river and do not permit the Rus who
come in their ships to invade the land of the Arabs.... I fight
heavy wars [with the Rus]."
3
The particular brand of Vikings which the Byzantines called
"Rhos" were called "Varangians" by the Arab chroniclers. The
most probable derivation of "Rhos", according to Toynbee, is
"from the Swedish word 'rodher', meaning rowers".7 As for "Varangian",
it was used by the Arabs and also in the Russian Primary Chronicle
to designate Norsemen or Scandinavians; the Baltic was actually
called by them "the Varangian Sea".8 Although this branch of
Vikings originated from eastern Sweden, as distinct from the
Norwegians and Danes who raided Western Europe, their advance
followed the same pattern. It was seasonal; it was based on
strategically placed islands which served as strongholds, armouries
and supply bases for attacks on the mainland; and its nature
evolved, where conditions were favourable, from predatory raids
and forced commerce to more or less permanent settlements and
ultimately, amalgamation with the conquered native populations.
Thus the Viking penetration of Ireland started with the seizure
of the island of Rechru (Lambay) in Dublin Bay; England was
invaded from the isle of Thanet; penetration of the Continent
started with the conquest of the islands of Walcheren (off Holland)
and Noirmoutier (in the estuary of the Loire)..At
the eastern extreme of Europe the Northmen were following the
same blueprint for conquest. After crossing the Baltic and the
Gulf of Finland they sailed up the river Volkhov into Lake Ilmen
(south of Leningrad), where they found a convenient island -
the Holmgard of the Icelandic Sagas. On this they built a settlement
which eventually grew into the city of Novgorod.*[Not to be
confused with Nizhny Novgorod (now re-named Gorky).] From here
they forayed on southward on the great waterways: on the Volga
into the Caspian, and on the Dnieper into the Black Sea. .The
former route led through the countries of the militant Bulgars
and Khazars; the latter across the territories of various Slavonic
tribes who inhabited the north-western outskirts of the Khazar
Empire and paid tribute to the Kagan: the Polyane in the region
of Kiev; the Viatichi, south of Moscow; the Radimishchy east
of the Dnieper; the Severyane on the river Derna, etc.*[Constantine
Porphyrogenitus and the Russian Chronicle are in fair agreement
concering the names and locations of these tribes and their
subjection to the Khazars.] These Slavs seemed to have developed
advanced methods of agriculture, and were apparently of a more
timid disposition than their "Turkish" neighbours on the Volga,
for, as Bury put it, they became the "natural prey" of the Scandinavian
raiders. These eventually came to prefer the Dnieper, in spite
of its dangerous cataracts, to the Volga and the Don. It was
the Dnieper which became the "Great Waterway" - the "Austrvegr"
of the Nordic Sagas - from the Baltic to the Black Sea, and
thus to Constantinople. They even gave Scandinavian names to
the seven major cataracts, duplicating their Slavonic names;
Constantine conscientiously enumerates both versions (e.g.,
Baru-fors in Norse, Volnyi in Slavonic, for "the billowy waterfall")..These
Varangian-Rus seem to have been a unique blend unique even among
their brother Vikings - combining the traits of pirates, robbers
and meretricious merchants, who traded on their own terms, imposed
by sword and battle-axe. They bartered furs, swords and amber
in exchange for gold, but their principal merchandise were slaves.
A contemporary Arab chronicler wrote:
- In this island [Novgorod] there are men to the number of
100000, and these men constantly go out to raid the Slavs
in boats, and they seize the Slavs and take them prisoner
and they go to the Khazars and Bulgars and sell them there.
[We remember the slave market in Itil, mentioned by Masudi].
They have no cultivated lands, nor seed, and [live by] plunder
from the Slavs. When a child is born to them, they place a
drawn sword in front of him and his father says: "I have neither
gold nor silver, nor wealth which I can bequeath to thee,
this is thine inheritance, with it secure prosperity for thyself."9
A modern historian, McEvedy, has summed it up nicely:
- Viking-Varangian activity, ranging from Iceland to the borders
of Turkestan, from Constantinople to the Arctic circle, was
of incredible vitality and daring, and it is sad that so much
effort was wasted in plundering. The Northern heroes did not
deign to trade until they failed to vanquish; they preferred
bloodstained, glorious gold to a steady mercantile profit.10
Thus the Rus convoys sailing southward in the summer season
were at the same time both commercial fleets and military armadas;
the two roles went together, and with each fleet it was impossible
to foretell at what moment the merchants would turn into warriors.
The size of these fleets was formidable. Masudi speaks of a
Rus force entering the Caspian from the Volga (in 912-13) as
comprising "about 500 ships, each manned by 100 persons". Of
these 50000 men, he says, 35000 were killed in battle.*[See
below, Chapter IV, 1.] Masudi may have been exaggerating, but
apparently not much. Even at an early stage of their exploits
(circa 860) the Rus crossed the Black Sea and laid
siege on Constantinople with a fleet variously estimated as
numbering between 200 and 230 ships. .In
view of the unpredictability and proverbial treacherousness
of these formidable invaders, the Byzantines and Khazars had
to "play it by ear" as the saying goes. For a century and a
half after the fortress of Sarkel was built, trade agreements
and the exchange of embassies with the Rus alternated with savage
wars. Only slowly and gradually did the Northmen change their
character by building permanent settlements, becoming Slavonized
by intermingling with their subjects and vassals, and finally,
adopting the faith of the Byzantine Church. By that time, the
closing years of the tenth century, the "Rus" had become transformed
into "Russians". The early Rus princes and nobles still bore
Scandinavian names which had been Slavonized: Rurik from Hröekr,
Oleg from Helgi, Igor from Ingvar, Olga from Helga, and so on.
The commercial treaty which Prince Igor-Ingvar concluded with
the Byzantines in 945 contains a list of his companions, only
three of which have Slavonic names among fifty Scandinavian
names.11 But the son of Ingvar and Helga assumed the Slavonic
name Svyatoslav, and from there onward the process of assimilation
got into its stride, the Varangians gradually lost their identity
as a separate people, and the Norse tradition faded out of Russian
history. .It is difficult
to form a mental picture of these bizarre people whose savagery
sticks out even in that savage age. The chronicles are biased,
written by members of nations who had suffered from the northern
invaders; their own side of the story remains untold, for the
rise of Scandinavian literature came long after the Age of the
Vikings, when their exploits had blossomed into legend. Even
so, early Norse literature seems to confirm their unbridled
lust for battle, and the peculiar kind of frenzy which seized
them on these occasions; they even had a special word for it:
berserksgangr - the berserk way. .The Arab chroniclers were so baffled by them
that they contradict not only each other, but also themselves,
across a distance of a few lines. Our old friend Ibn Fadlan
is utterly disgusted by the filthy and obscene habits of the
Rus whom he met at the Volga in the land of the Bulgars. The
following passage on the Rus occurs just before his account
of the Khazars, quoted earlier on:
- They are the filthiest creatures of the Lord. In the morning
a servant girl brings a basin full of water to the master
of the household; he rinses his face and hair in it, spits
and blows his nose into the basin, which the girl then hands
on to the next person, who does likewise, until all who are
in the house have used that basin to blow their noses, spit
and wash their face and hair in it.12
In contrast to this, Ibn Rusta writes about the same time:
"They are cleanly in regard to their clothing" - and leaves
it at that.13.Again, Ibn Fadlan is indignant about the Rus
copulating and defecating in public, including their King, whereas
Ibn Rusta and Gardezi know nothing of such revolting habits.
But their own accounts are equally dubious and inconsistent.
Thus Ibn Rusta: "They honour their guests and are kind to strangers
who seek shelter with them, and everyone who is in misfortune
among them.14 They do not allow anyone among them to tyrannize
them, and whoever among them does wrong or is oppressive, they
find out such a one and expel him from among them.".But
a few paragraphs further down he paints a quite different picture
- or rather vignette, of conditions in Rus society:
- Not one of them goes to satisfy a natural need alone, but
he is accompanied by three of his companions who guard him
between them, and each one of them has his sword because of
the lack of security and treachery among them, for if a man
has even a little wealth, his own brother and his friend who
is with him covet it and seek to kill and despoil him.15
Regarding their martial virtues, however, the sources are Unanimous:
- These people are vigorous and courageous and when they descend
on open ground, none can escape from them without being destroyed
and their women taken possession of, and themselves taken
into slavery.16
4
Such were the prospects which now faced the Khazars..Sarkel was built just in time; it enabled them
to control the movements of the Rus flotillas along the lower
reaches of the Don and the Don-Volga portage (the "Khazarian
Way"). By and large it seems that during the first century of
their presence on the scene*[Very roughly, 830 1.-930.] the
plundering raids of the Rus were mainly directed against Byzantium
(where, obviously, richer plunder was to be had), whereas their
relations with the Khazars were essentially on a trading basis,
though not without friction and intermittent clashes. At any
rate, the Khazars were able to control the Rus trade routes
and to levy their 10 per cent tax on all cargoes passing through
their country to Byzantium and to the Muslim lands. .They also exerted some cultural influence on
the Northmen, who, for all their violent ways, had a naive willingness
to learn from the people with whom they came into contact. The
extent of this influence is indicated by the adoption of the
title "Kagan" by the early Rus rulers of Novgorod. This is confirmed
by both Byzantine and Arab sources; for instance, Ibn Rusta,
after describing the island on which Novgorod was built, states
"They have a king who is called Kagan Rus." Moreover, Ibn Fadlan
reports that the Kagan Rus has a general who leads the army
and represents him to the people. Zeki Validi has pointed out
that such delegation of the army command was unknown among the
Germanic people of the North, where the king must be the foremost
warrior; Validi concludes that the Rus obviously imitated the
Khazar system of twin rule. This is not unlikely in view of
the fact that the Khazars were the most prosperous and culturally
advanced people with whom the Rus in the early stages of their
conquests made territorial contact. And that contact must have
been fairly intense, since there was a colony of Rus merchants
in Itil - and also a community of Khazar Jews in Kiev. .It is sad to report in this context that more
than a thousand years after the events under discussion, the
Soviet regime has done its best to expunge the memory of the
Khazars' historic role and cultural achievements. On January
12, 1952, The Times carried the following news item:
EARLY
RUSSIAN CULTURE BELITTLED
SOVIET HISTORIAN REBUKED
Another Soviet historian has been criticized by Pravda
for belittling the early culture and development of the Russian
people. He is Professor Artamonov, who, at a recent session
of the Department of History and Philosophy at the USSR Academy
of Sciences, repeated a theory which he had put forward in a
book in 1937 that the ancient city of Kiev owed a great deal
to the Khazar peoples. He pictures them in the role of an advanced
people who fell victim to the aggressive aspirations of the
Russians. ."All these things," says Pravda, "have
nothing in common with historical facts. The Khazar kingdom
which represented the primitive amalgamation of different tribes,
played no positive role whatever in creating the statehood of
the eastern Slavs. Ancient sources testify that state formations
arose among the eastern Slavs long before any record of the
Khazars. The Khazar kingdom, far from promoting the development
of the ancient Russian State, retarded the progress of the eastern
Slav tribes. The materials obtained by our archaeologists indicate
the high level of culture in ancient Russia. Only by flouting
the historical truth and neglecting the facts can one speak
of the superiority of the Khazar culture. The idealization of
the Khazar kingdom reflects a manifest survival of the defective
views of the bourgeois historians who belittled the indigenous
development of the Russian people. The erroneousness of this
concept is evident. Such a conception cannot be accepted by
Soviet historiography." .Artamonov, whom I have frequently quoted, published
(besides numerous articles in learned journals) his first book,
which dealt with the early history of the Khazars, in 1937.
His magnum opus, History of the Khazars, was apparently
in preparation when Pravda struck. As a result, the
book was published only ten years later - 1962 - carrying a
recantation in its final section which amounted to a denial
of all that went before - and, indeed, of the author's life-work.
The relevant passages in it read:
- The Khazar kingdom disintegrated and fell into pieces, from
which the majority merged with other related peoples, and
the minority, settling in Itil, lost its nationality and turned
into a parasitic class with a Jewish coloration. .The
Russians never shunned the cultural achievements of the East....
But from the Itil Khazars the Russians took nothing. Thus
also by the way, the militant Khazar Judaism was treated by
other peoples connected with it: the Magyars, Bulgars, Pechenegs,
Alans and Polovtsians.... The need to struggle with the exploiters
from Itil stimulated the unification of the Ghuzz and the
Slavs around the golden throne of Kiev, and this unity in
its turn created the possibility and prospect for a violent
growth not only of the Russian state system, but also of ancient
Russian culture. This culture had always been original and
never depended on Khazar influence. Those insignificant eastern
elements in Rus culture which were passed down by the Khazars
and which one usually bears in mind when dealing with the
problems of culture ties between the Rus and the Khazars,
did not penetrate into the heart of Russian culture, but remained
on the surface and were of short duration and small significance.
They offer no ground at all for pointing out a "Khazar" period
in the history of Russian culture.
The dictates of the Party line completed the process of obliteration
which started with the flooding of the remains of Sarkel.
5
Intensive trading and cultural interchanges did not prevent
the Rus from gradually eating their way into the Khazar Empire
by appropriating their Slavonic subjects and vassals. According
to the Primary Russian Chronicle, by 859 - that is, some twenty-five
years after Sarkel was built - the tribute from the Slavonic
peoples was "divided between the Khazars and the Varangians
from beyond the Baltic Sea". The Varangians levied tribute on
"Chuds", "Krivichians", etc. - i.e., the more northerly Slavonic
people - while the Khazars continued to levy tribute on the
Viatichi, the Seviane, and, most important of all, the Polyane
in the central region of Kiev. But not for long. Three years
later if we can trust the dating (in the Russian Chronicle),
the key town of Kiev on the Dnieper, previously under Khazar
suzerainty, passed into Rus hands. .This was to prove a decisive event in Russian
history, though it apparently happened without an armed struggle.
According to the Chronicle, Novgorod was at the time ruled by
the (semilegendary) Prince Rurik (Hröekr), who held under his
sway all the Viking settlements, the northern Slavonic, and
some Finnish people. Two of Rurik's men, Oskold and Dir, on
travelling down the Dnieper, saw a fortified place on a mountain,
the sight of which they liked; and were told that this was the
town of Kiev, and that it "paid tribute to the Khazars". The
two settled in the town with their families, "gathered many
Northmen to them, and ruled over the neighbouring Slavs, even
as Rurik ruled at Novgorod. Some twenty years later Rurik's
son Oleg [Helgi] came down and put Oskold and Dir to death,
and annexed Kiev to his sway." .Kiev soon outshone Novgorod in importance:
it became the capital of the Varangians and "the mother of Russian
towns"; while the principality which took its name became the
cradle of the first Russian state. .Joseph's
letter, written about a century after the Rus occupation of
Kiev, no longer mentions it in his list of Khazar possessions.
But influential Khazar-Jewish communities survived both in the
town and province of Kiev, and after the final destruction of
their country they were reinforced by large numbers of Khazar
emigrants. The Russian Chronicle keeps referring to heroes coming
from Zemlya Zhidovskaya, "the country of the Jews";
and the "Gate of the Khazars" in Kiev kept the memory of its
erstwhile rulers alive till modern times.
6
We have now progressed into the second half of the ninth century
and, before continuing with the tale of the Russian expansion,
must turn our attention to some vital developments among the
people of the steppes, particularly the Magyars. These events
ran parallel with the rise of Rus power and had a direct impact
on the Khazars - and on the map of Europe. .The Magyars had been the Khazars' allies,
and apparently willing vassals, since the dawn of the Khazar
Empire. "The problem of their origin and early wanderings have
long perplexed scholars", Macartney wrote;17 elsewhere he calls
it "one of the darkest of historical riddles".18 About their
origin all we know with certainty is that the Magyars were related
to the Finns, and that their language belongs to the so-called
Finno-Ugrian language family, together with that of the Vogul
and Ostyak people living in the forest regions of the northern
Urals. Thus they were originally unrelated to the Slavonic and
Turkish nations of the steppes in whose midst they came to live
- an ethnic curiosity, which they still are to this day. Modern
Hungary, unlike other small nations, has no linguistic ties
with its neighbours; the Magyars have remained an ethnic enclave
in Europe, with the distant Finns as their only cousins. .At
an unknown date during the early centuries of the Christian
era this nomadic tribe was driven out of its erstwhile habitat
in the Urals and migrated southward through the steppes, eventually
settling in the region between the Don and the Kuban rivers.
They thus became neighbours of the Khazars, even before the
latter's rise to prominence. For a while they were part of a
federation of semi-nomadic people, the Onogurs ("The Ten Arrows"
or ten tribes); it is believed that the name "Hungarian" is
a Slavonic version of that word;19 while "Magyar" is the name
by which they have called themselves from time immemorial..From about the middle of the seventh to the
end of the ninth centuries they were, as already said, subjects
of the Khazar Empire. It is a remarkable fact that during this
whole period, while other tribes were engaged in a murderous
game of musical chairs, we have no record of a single armed
conflict between Khazars and Magyars, whereas each of the two
was involved at one time or another in wars with their immediate
or distant neighbours: Volga Bulgars, Danube Bulgars, Ghuzz,
Pechenegs, and so on - in addition to the Arabs and the Rus.
Paraphrasing the Russian Chronicle and Arab sources, Toynbee
writes that throughout this period the Magyars "took tribute",
on the Khazars' behalf, from the Slav and Finn peoples in the
Black Earth Zone to the north of the Magyars' own domain of
the Steppe, and in the forest zone to the north of that. The
evidence for the use of the name Magyar by this date is its
survival in a number of place-names in this region of northerly
Russia. These place-names presumably mark the sites of former
Magyar garrisons and outposts."20 Thus the Magyars dominated
their Slavonic neighbours, and Toynbee concludes that in levying
tribute, "the Khazars were using the Magyars as their agents,
though no doubt the Magyars made this agency profitable for
themselves as well".21 .The
arrival of the Rus radically changed this profitable state of
affairs. At about the time when Sarkel was built, there was
a conspicuous movement of the Magyars across the Don to its
west bank. From about 830 onward, the bulk of the nation was
re-settled in the region between the Don and the Dnieper, later
to be named Lebedia. The reason for this move has been much
debated among historians; Toynbee's explanation is both the
most recent and the most plausible:
- We may ... infer that the Magyars were in occupation of
the Steppe to the west of the Don by permission of their Khazar
suzerains.... Since the Steppe-country had previously belonged
to the Khazars, and since the Magyars were the Khazars' subordinate
allies, we may conclude that the Magyars had not established
themselves in this Khazar territory against the Khazars' will....
Indeed we may conclude that the Khazars had not merely permitted
the Magyars to establish themselves to the west of the Don,
but had actually planted them there to serve the Khazars'
own purposes. The re- location of subject peoples for strategic
reasons was a device that had been practised by previous nomad
empire builders.... In this new location, the Magyars could
help the Khazars to check the south-eastward and southward
advance of tile Rhos. The planting of the Magyars to the west
of the Don will have been all of a piece with the building
of the fortress Sarkel on tile Don's eastern bank.22
7
This arrangement worked well enough for nearly half a century.
During this period the relation between Magyars and Khazars
became even closer, culminating in two events which left lasting
marks on the Hungarian nation. First, the Khazars gave them
a king, who founded the first Magyar dynasty; and, second, several
Khazar tribes joined the Magyars and profoundly transformed
their ethnic character. .The
first episode is described by Constantine in De Administrando
(circa 950), and is confirmed by the fact that the names he
mentions appear independently in the first Hungarian Chronicle
(eleventh century). Constantine tells us that before the Khazars
intervened in the internal affairs of the Magyar tribes, these
had no paramount king, only tribal chieftains; the most prominent
of these was called Lebedias (after whom Lebedia was later named):
- And the Magyars consisted of seven hordes, but at that time
they had no ruler, either native or foreign, but there were
certain chieftains among them, of which the principal chieftain
was the aforementioned Lebedias.... And the Kagan, the ruler
of Khazaria, on account of their [the Magyars'] valour and
military assistance, gave their first chieftain, the man called
Lebedias, a noble Khazar lady as wife, that he might beget
children of her; but Lebedias, by some chance, had no family
by that Khazar woman.
Another dynastic alliance which had misfired. But the Kagan
was determined to strengthen the ties which bound Lebedias and
his tribes to the Khazar kingdom:
- After a little time had passed, the Kagan, the ruler of
Khazaria, told the Magyars ... to send to him their first
chieftain. So Lebedias, coming before the Kagan of Khazaria,
asked him for the reason why he had sent for him. And the
Kagan said to him: We have sent for you for this reason: that,
since you are well-born and wise and brave and the first of
the Magyars, we may promote you to be the ruler of your race,
and that you may be subject to our Laws and Orders.
But Lebedias appears to have been a proud man; he declined,
with appropriate expressions of gratitude, the offer to become
a puppet king, and proposed instead that the honour should be
bestowed on a fellow chieftain called Almus, or on Almus's son,
Arpad. So the Kagan, "pleased at this speech", sent Lebedias
with a suitable escort back to his people; and they chose Arpad
to be their king. The ceremony of Arpad's installation took
place "after the custom and usage of the Khazars, raising him
on their shields. But before this Arpad the Magyars never had
any other ruler; wherefore the ruler of Hungary is drawn from
his race up to this day." ."This
day" in which Constantine wrote was circa 950, that is, a century
after the event. Arpad in fact led his Magyars in the conquest
of Hungary; his dynasty reigned till 1301, and his name is one
of the first that Hungarian schoolboys learn. The Khazars had
their fingers in many historic pies.
8
The second episode seems to have had an even more profound
influence on the Hungarian national character. At some unspecified
date, Constantine tells us,23 there was a rebellion (apostasia)
of part of the Khazar nation against their rulers. The insurgents
consisted of three tribes, "which were called Kavars [or Kabars],
and which were of the Khazars' own race. The Government prevailed;
some of the rebels were slaughtered and some fled the country
and settled with the Magyars, and they made friends with one
another. They also taught the tongue of the Khazars to the Magyars,
and up to this day they speak the same dialect, but they also
speak the other language of the Magyars. And because they proved
themselves more efficient in wars and the most manly of the
eight tribes [i.e., the seven original Magyar tribes plus the
Kabars], and leaders in war, they were elected to be the first
horde, and there is one leader among them, that is in the [originally]
three hordes of the Kavars, who exists to this day." .To
dot his i's, Constantine starts his next chapter with a list
"of the hordes of Kavars and Magyars. First is that which broke
off from the Khazars, this above-mentioned horde of the Kavars.",
etc.24 The horde or tribe which actually calls itself "Magyar"
comes only third. .It
looks as if the Magyars had received - metaphorically and perhaps
literally - a blood transfusion from the Khazars. It affected
them in several ways. First of all we learn, to our surprise,
that at least till the middle of the tenth century both the
Magyar and Khazar languages were spoken in Hungary. Several
modern authorities have commented on this singular fact. Thus
Bury wrote: "The result of this double tongue is the mixed character
of the modern Hungarian language, which has supplied specious
argument for the two opposite opinions as to the ethnical affinities
of the Magyars."25 Toynbee26 remarks that though the Hungarians
have ceased to be bilingual long ago, they were so at the beginnings
of their state, as testified by some two hundred loan-words
from the old Chuvash dialect of Turkish which the Khazars spoke
(see above, Chapter I, 3). .The Magyars, like the Rus, also adopted a modified
form of the Khazar double-kingship. Thus Gardezi: "... Their
leader rides out with 20000 horsemen; they call him Kanda [Hungarian:
Kende] and this is the title of their greater king, but the
title of the person who effectively rules them is Jula. And
the Magyars do whatever their Jula commands." There is reason
to believe that the first Julas of Hungary were Kabars.27 .There is also some evidence to indicate that
among the dissident Kabar tribes, who de facto took over the
leadership of the Magyar tribes, there were Jews, or adherents
of "a judaizing religion".28 It seems quite possible - as Artamonov
and Bartha have suggested29 - that the Kabar "apostasia" was
somehow connected with, or a reaction against, the religious
reforms initiated by King Obadiah. Rabbinical law, strict dietary
rules, Talmudic casuistry might have gone very much against
the grain of these steppe-warriors in shining armour. If they
professed "a judaizing religion", it must have been closer to
the faith of the ancient desert-Hebrews than to rabbinical orthodoxy.
They may even have been followers of the fundamentalist sect
of Karaites, and hence considered heretics. But this is pure
speculation.
9
The close cooperation between Khazars and Magyars came to an
end when the latter, AD 896, said farewell to the Eurasian steppes,
crossed the Carpathian mountain range, and conquered the territory
which was to become their lasting habitat. The circumstances
of this migration are again controversial, but one can at least
grasp its broad outlines..During the closing decades of the ninth century
yet another uncouth player joined the nomad game of musical
chairs: the pechenegs.*[Or "Paccinaks", or in Hungarian, "Bescnyk".]
What little we know about this Turkish tribe is summed up in
Constantine's description of them as an insatiably greedy lot
of Barbarians who for good money can be bought to fight other
Barbarians and the Rus. They lived between the Volga and the
Ural rivers under Khazar suzerainty; according to Ibn Rusta,30
the Khazars "raided them every year" to collect the tribute
due to them. .Toward the end of the ninth century a catastrophe
(of a nature by no means unusual) befell the Pechenegs: they
were evicted from their country by their eastern neighbours.
These neighbours were none other than the Ghuzz (or Oguz) whom
Ibn Fadlan so much disliked - one of the inexhaustible number
of Turkish tribes which from time to time cut loose from their
Central-Asiatic moorings and drifted west. The displaced Pechenegs
tried to settle in Khazaria, but the Khazars beat them off.*[This
seems to be the plausible interpretation of Constantine's statement
that "the Ghuzz and the Khazars made war on the Pecheisegs".
[Cf. Bury, p. 424.]] The Pechenegs continued their westward
trek, crossed the Don and invaded the territory of the Magyars.
The Magyars in turn were forced to fall back further west into
the region between the Dnieper and the Sereth rivers. They called
this region Etel-Kz, "the land between the rivers".
They seem to have settled there in 889; but in 896 the Pechenegs
struck again, allied to the Danube Bulgars, whereupon the Magyars
withdrew into present-day Hungary. .This, in rough outline, is the story of the
Magyars' exit from the eastern steppes, and the end of the Magyar-Khazar
connection. The details are contested; some historians31 maintain,
with a certain passion, that the Magyars suffered only one defeat,
not two, at the hands of the Pechenegs, and that Etel-Kz
was just another name for Lebedia, but we can leave these quibbles
to the specialists. More intriguing is the apparent contradiction
between the image of the Magyars as mighty warriors, and their
inglorious retreat from successive habitats. Thus we learn from
the Chronicle of Hinkmar of Rheims32 that in 862 they raided
the Fast Frankish Empire - the first of the savage incursions
which were to terrorize Europe during the next century. We also
hear of a fearful encounter which St Cyril, the Apostle of the
Slavs, had with a Magyar horde in 860, on his way to Khazaria.
He was saying his prayers when they rushed at him luporum
more ululantes - "howling in the manner of wolves". His
sanctity, however, protected him from harm.33 Another chronicle34
mentions that the Magyars, and the Kabars, came into conflict
with the Franks in 881; and Constantine tells us that, some
ten years later, the Magyars "made war upon Simeon (ruler of
the Danube Bulgars) and trounced him soundly, and came as far
as Preslav, and shut him up in the fortress called Mundraga,
and returned home."35 .How
is one to reconcile all these valiant deeds with the series
of retreats from the Don into Hungary, which took place in the
same period? It seems that the answer is indicated in the passage
in Constantine immediately following the one just quoted:
- "... But after Symeon the Bulgar again made peace with the
Emperor of the Greeks, and got security, he sent to the Patzinaks,
and made an agreement with them to make war on and annihilate
the Magyars. And when the Magyars went away on a campaign,
the Patzinaks with Symeon came against the Magyars, and completely
annihilated their families, and chased away miserably the
Magyars left to guard their land. But the Magyars returning,
and finding their country thus desolate and ruined, moved
into the country occupied by them today [i.e. Hungary].
Thus the bulk of the army was "away on a campaign" when their
land and families were attacked; and to judge by the chronicles
mentioned above, they were "away" raiding distant countries
quite frequently, leaving their homes with little protection.
They could afford to indulge in this risky habit as long as
they had only their Khazar overlords and the peaceful Slavonic
tribes as their immediate neighbours. But with the advent of
the land-hungry Pechenegs the situation changed. The disaster
described by Constantine may have been only the last of a series
of similar incidents. But it may have decided them to seek a
new and safer home beyond the mountains, in a country which
they already knew from at least two previous forays. .There is another consideration which speaks
in favour of this hypothesis. The Magyars seem to have acquired
the raiding habit only in the second half of the ninth century
- about the time when they received that critical blood-transfusion
from the Khazars. It may have proved a mixed blessing. The Kabars,
who were "more efficient in war and more manly", became, as
we saw, the leading tribe, and infused their hosts with the
spirit of adventure, which was soon to turn them into the scourge
of Europe, as the Huns had earlier been. They also taught the
Magyars "those very peculiar and characteristic tactics employed
since time immemorial by every Turkish nation - Huns, Avars,
Turks, Pechenegs, Kumans - and by no other ... light cavalry
using the old devices of simulated flight, of shooting while
fleeing, of sudden charges with fearful, wolf-like howling."36
.These methods proved murderously effective
during the ninth and tenth centuries when Hungarian raiders
invaded Germany, the Balkans, Italy and even France - but they
did not cut much ice against the Pechenegs, who used the same
tactics, and could howl just as spine-chillingly. .Thus
indirectly, by the devious logic of history, the Khazars were
instrumental in the establishment of the Hungarian state, whereas
the Khazars themselves vanished into the mist. Macartney, pursuing
a similar line of thought, went even further in emphasizing
the decisive role played by the Kabar transfusion:
- The bulk of the Magyar nation, the true Finno-Ugrians, comparatively
(although not very) pacific and sedentary agriculturalists,
made their homes in the undulating country ... west of the
Danube. The plain of the Alfld was occupied by the nomadic
race of Kabars, true Turks, herdsmen, horsemen and fighters,
the driving force and the army of the nation. This was the
race which in Constantine's day still occupied pride of place
as the "first of the hordes of the Magyars". It was, I believe,
chiefly this race of Kabars which raided the Slavs and Russians
from the steppe; led the campaign against the Bulgars in 895;
in large part and for more than half a century afterwards,
was the terror of half Europe.37
And yet the Hungarians managed to preserve their ethnic identity.
"The brunt of sixty years of restless and remorseless warfare
fell on the Kabars, whose ranks must have been thinned by it
to an extraordinary extent. Meanwhile the true Magyars, living
in comparative peace, increased their numbers."38 They also
succeeded, after the bilingual period, in preserving their original
Finno-Ugric language in the midst of their German and Slav neighbours
- in contrast to the Danube Bulgars, who lost their Original
Turkish language, and now speak a Slavonic dialect. .However,
the Kabar influence continued to make itself felt in Hungary,
and even after they became separated by the Carpathian Mountains,
the Khazar-Magyar connection was not completely severed. According
to Vasiliev,39 in the tenth century the Hungarian Duke Taksony
invited an unknown number of Khazars to settle in his domains.
It is not unlikely that these immigrants contained a fair proportion
of Khazarian Jews. We may also assume that both the Kabars and
the later immigrants brought with them some of their famed craftsmen,
who taught the Hungarians their arts (see above, Chapter I,
13). .In the process
of taking possession of their new and permanent home, the Magyars
had to evict its former occupants, Moravians and Danube Bulgars,
who moved into the regions where they still live. Their other
Slavonic neighbours too - the Serbs and Croats - were already
more or less in situ. Thus, as a result of the chain-reaction
which started in the distant Urals - Ghuzz chasing Pechenegs,
chasing Magyars, chasing Bulgars and Moravians, the map of modern
Central Europe was beginning to take shape. The shifting kaleidoscope
was settling into a more or less stable jigsaw.
10
We can now resume the story of the Rus ascent to power where
we left it - the bloodless annexation of Kiev by Rurik's men
around AD 862. This is also the approximate date when the Magyars
were pushed westward by the Pechenegs, thus depriving the Khazars
of protection on their western flank. It may explain why the
Rus could gain control of Kiev so easily. .But the weakening of Khazar military power
exposed the Byzantines, too, to attack by the Rus. Close to
the date when the Rus settled in Kiev, their ships, sailing
down the Dnieper, crossed the Black Sea and attacked Constantinople.
Bury has described the event with much gusto:
- In the month of June, AD 860, the Emperor [Michael III],
with all his forces, was marching against the Saracens. He
had probably gone far when he received the amazing tidings,
which recalled him with all speed to Constantinople. A Russian
host had sailed across the Euxine [Black Sea] in two hundred
boats, entered the Bosphorus, plundered the monasteries and
suburbs on its banks, and overrun the Island of the Princes.
The inhabitants of the city were utterly demoralized by the
sudden horror of the danger and their own impotence. The troops
(Tagmata) which were usually stationed in the neighbourhood
of the city were far away with the Emperor ... and the fleet
was absent. Having wrought wreck and ruin in the suburbs,
the barbarians prepared to attack the city. At this crisis
... the learned Patriarch, Photius, rose to the occasion;
he undertook the task of restoring the moral courage of his
fellow-citizens.... He expressed the general feeling when
he dwelt on the incongruity that the Imperial city, "queen
of almost all the world", should be mocked by a band of slaves
[sic] a mean and barbarous crowd. But the populace was perhaps
more impressed and consoled when he resorted to the ecclesiastical
magic which had been used efficaciously at previous sieges.
The precious garment of the Virgin Mother was borne in procession
round the walls of the city; and it was believed that it was
dipped in the waters of the sea for the purpose of raising
a storm of wind. No storm arose, but soon afterwards the Russians
began to retreat, and perhaps there were not many among the
joyful citizens who did not impute their relief to the direct
intervention of the queen of heaven.40
We may add, for the sake of piquantry, that the "learned Patriarch",
Photius, whose eloquence saved the Imperial city, was none other
than "Khazar face" who had sent St Cyril on his proselytizing
mission. As for the Rus retreat, it was caused by the hurried
return of the Greek army and fleet; but "Khazar face" had saved
morale among the populace during the agonizing period of waiting.
.Toynbee too has interesting comments to make
on this episode. In 860, he writes, the Russians "perhaps came
nearer to capturing Constantinople than so far they have ever
come since then".41 And he also shares the view expressed by
several Russian historians, that the attack by the eastern Northmen's
Dnieper flotilla across the Black Sea was coordinated with the
simultaneous attack of a western Viking fleet, approaching Constantinople
across the Mediterranean and the Dardanelles:
- Vasiliev and Paszkievicz and Vernadsky are inclined to believe
that the two naval expeditions that thus converged on the
Sea of Marmara were not only simultaneous but were concerted,
and they even make a guess at the identity of the master mind
that, in their view, worked out this strategic plan on the
grand scale. They suggest that Rurik of Novgorod was the same
person as Rorik of Jutland.42
This makes one appreciate the stature of the adversary with
whom the Khazars had to contend. Nor was Byzantine diplomacy
slow in appreciating it - and to play the double game which
the situation seemed to demand, alternating between war, when
it could not be avoided, and appeasement in the pious hope that
the Russians would eventually be converted to Christianity and
brought into the flock of the Eastern Patriarchate. As for the
Khazars, they were an important asset for the time being, and
would be sold out on the first decent - or indecent - opportunity
that offered itself
11
For the next two hundred years Byzantine-Russian relations
alternated between armed conflict and treaties of friendship.
Wars were waged in 860 (siege of Constantinople), 907, 941,
944, 969- 71; and treaties concluded in 838-9, 861,911,945,
957, 971. About the contents of these more or less secret agreements
we know little, but even what we know shows the bewildering
complexity of the game. A few years after the siege of Constantinople
the Patriarch Photius (still the same) reports that the Rus
sent ambassadors to Constantinople and - according to the Byzantine
formula for pressurized proselytizing - "besought the Emperor
for Christian baptism". As Bury comments: "We cannot say which,
or how many, of the Russian settlements were represented by
this embassy, but the object must have been to offer amends
for the recent raid, perhaps to procure the deliverance of prisoners.
It is certain that some of the Russians agreed to adopt Christianity
... but the seed did not fall on very fertile ground. For upwards
of a hundred years we hear no more of the Christianity of the
Russians. The treaty, however, which was concluded between AD
860 and 866, led probably to other consequences."43 .Among these consequences was the recruiting
of Scandinavian sailors into the Byzantine fleet - by 902 there
were seven hundred of them. Another development was the famous
"Varangian Guard", an lite corps of Rus and other nordic mercenaries,
including even Englishmen. In the treaties of 945 and 971 the
Russian rulers of the Principality of Kiev undertook to supply
the Byzantine Emperor with troops on request.44 In Constantine
potphyrogenitus' day, i.e., the middle of the tenth century,
Rus fleets on the Bosphorus were a customary sight; they no
longer caine to lay siege on Constantinople but to sell their
wares. Trade was meticulously well regulated (except when armed
clashes intervened): according to the Russian Chronicle, it
was agreed in the treaties of 907 and 911 that the Rus visitors
should enter Constantinople through one city gate only, and
not more thin fifty at a time, escorted by officials; that they
were to receive during their stay in the city as much grain
as they required and also up to Six months' supply of other
provisions, in monthly deliveries, including bread, wine, meat,
fish, fruit and bathing facilities (if required). To make sure
that all transactions should be nice and proper, black-market
dealings in currency were punished by amputation of one hand.
Nor were proselytizing efforts neglected, as the ultimate means
to achieve peaceful coexistence with the increasingly powerful
Russians..But it was hard going. According to the Russian
Chronicle, when Oleg, Regent of Kiev, concluded the treaty of
911 with the Byzantines, "the Emperors Leo and Alexander [joint
rulers], after agreeing upon the tribute and mutually binding
themselves by oath, kissed the cross and invited Oleg and his
men to swear an oath likewise. According to the religion of
the Rus, the latter swore by their weapons and by their god
Perun, as well as by Volos, the god of cattle, and thus confirmed
the treaty."45 .Nearly half a century and several battles and
treaties later, victory for the Holy Church seemed in sight:
in 957 Princess Olga of Kiev (widow of Prince Igor) was baptized
on the occasion of her state visit to Constantinople (unless
she had already been baptized once before her departure - which
again is controversial). .The various banquets and festivities in Olga's
honour are described in detail in De Caerimonus, though
we are not told how the lady reacted to the Disneyland of mechanical
toys displayed in the Imperial throne-room - for instance, to
the stuffed lions which emitted a fearful mechanical roar. (Another
distinguished guest, Bishop Liutprand, recorded that he was
able to keep his sang-froid only because he was forewarned of
the surprises in store for visitors.) The occasion must have
been a major headache for the master of ceremonies (which was
Constantine himself), because not only was Olga a female sovereign,
but her retinue, too, was female; the male diplomats and advisers,
eighty-two of them, "marched self-effacingly in the rear of
the Russian delegation".46*[Nine kinsmen of Olga's, twenty diplomats,
forty-three commercial advisers, one priest, two interpreters,
six servants of the diplomats and Olga's special interpreter.]
.Just before the banquet there was a small incident,
symbolic of the delicate nature of Russian-Byzantine relations.
When the ladies of the Byzantine court entered, they fell on
their faces before the Imperial family, as protocol required.
Olga remained standing "but it was noticed, with satisfaction,
that she slightly if perceptibly inclined her head. She was
put in her place by being seated, as the Muslim state guests
had been, at a separate table."47 .The
Russian Chronicle has a different, richly embroidered version
of this state visit. When the delicate subject of baptism was
brought up, Olga told Constantine "that if he desired to baptize
her, he should perform this function himself; otherwise she
was unwilling to accept baptism". The Emperor concurred, and
asked the Patriarch to instruct her in the faith.
- The Patriarch instructed her in prayer and fasting, in almsgiving
and in the maintenance of chastity. She bowed her head, and
like a sponge absorbing water, she eagerly drank in his teachings....
.After her baptism, the Emperor summoned Olga
and made known to her that he wished her to become his wife.
But she replied, "How can you marry me, after yourself baptizing
me and calling me your daughter? For among Christians that
is unlawful, as you yourself must know." Then the Emperor
said, "Olga, you have outwitted me."48
When she got back to Kiev, Constantine "sent a message to her,
saying, 'Inasmuch as I bestowed many gifts upon you, you promised
me that on your return to Ros you would send me many presents
of slaves, wax and furs, and despatch soldiery to aid me.' Olga
made answer to the envoys that if the Emperor would spend as
long a time with her in the Pochayna as she had remained on
the Bosphorus, she would grant his request. With these words,
she dismissed the envoys."49 .This
Olga-Helga must have been a formidable Scandinavian Amazon.
She was, as already mentioned, the widow of Prince Igor, supposedly
the son of Rurik, whom the Russian Chronicle describes as a
greedy, foolish and sadistic ruler. In 941 he had attacked the
Byzantines with a large fleet, and "of the people they captured,
some they butchered, others they set up as targets and shot
at, some they seized upon, and after binding their hands behind
their backs, they drove iron nails through their heads. Many
sacred churches they gave to the flames."50 In the end they
were defeated by the Byzantine fleet, spouting Greek fire through
tubes mounted in the prows of their ships. "Upon seeing the
flames, the Russians cast themselves into the sea-water, but
the survivors returned home [where] they related that the Greeks
had in their possession the lightning from heaven, and had set
them on fire by pouring it forth, so that the Russes could not
conquer them."*[Toynbee does not hesitate to call this famous
secret weapon of the Greeks "napalm". It was a chemical of unknown
composition, perhaps a distilled petroleum fraction, which ignited
spontaneously on contact with water, and could not be put out
by water.] This episode was followed by another treaty of friendship
four years later. As a predominantly maritime nation, the Rus
were even more impressed by the Greek fire than others who had
attacked Byzantium, and the "lightning from heaven" was a strong
argument in favour of the Greek Church. Yet they were still
not ready for conversion..When Igor was killed in 945 by the Derevlians,
a Slavonic people upon which he had imposed an exorbitant tribute,
the widowed Olga became Regent of Kiev. She started her rule
by taking fourfold revenge on the Derevlians: first, a Derevlian
peace mission was buried alive; then a delegation of notables
was locked in a bath-house and burned alive; this was followed
by another massacre, and lastly the main town of the Derevlians
was burnt down. Olga's bloodlust seemed truly insatiable until
her baptism. From that day onward, the Chronicle informs us,
she became "the precursor of Christian Russia, even as daybreak
precedes the sun, and as the dawn precedes the day. For she
shone like the moon by night, and she was radiant among the
infidels like a pearl in the mire." In due course she was canonized
as the first Russian saint of the Orthodox Church.
12
Yet in spite of the great to-do about Olga's baptism and her
state visit to Constantine, this was not the last word in the
stormy dialogue between the Greek Church and the Russians. For
Olga's son, Svyatoslav, reverted to paganism, refused to listen
to his mother's entreaties, "collected a numerous and valiant
army and, stepping light like a leopard, undertook many campaigns"51
among them a war against the Khazars and another against the
Byzantines. It was only in 988, in the reign of his son, St
Vladimir, that the ruling dynasty of the Russians definitely
adopted the faith of the Greek Orthodox Church - about the same
time as Hungarians, Poles, and Scandinavians, including the
distant Icelanders, became converted to the Latin Church of
Rome. The broad outlines of the lasting religious divisions
of the world were beginning to take shape; and in this process
the Jewish Khazars were becoming an anachronism. The growing
rapprochement between Constantinople and Kiev, in spite of its
ups and downs, made the importance of Itil gradually dwindle;
and the presence of the Khazars athwart Rus-Byzantine trade-routes,
levying their 10 per cent tax on the increasing flow of goods,
became an irritant both to the Byzantine treasury and the Russian
warrior merchants. .Symptomatic of the changing Byzantine attitude
to their former allies was the surrender of Cherson to the Russians.
For several centuries Byzantines and Khazars had been bickering
and occasionally skirmishing, for possession of that important
Crimean port; but when Vladimir occupied Cherson in 987, the
Byzantines did not even protest; for, as Bury put it, "the sacrifice
was not too dear a price for perpetual peace and friendship
with the Russian state, then becoming a great power".52 .The sacrifice of Cherson may have been justified;
but the sacrifice of the Khazar alliance turned out to be, in
the long run, a short-sighted policy.