The Pechenegs or Patzinaks (Turkish: Peçenekler, Hungarian: Besenyő, Greek: Patzinaki/Petsenegi or Πατζινάκοι/Πετσενέγοι/Πατζινακίται, Latin: Pacinacae, Bisseni /in Hungarian diplomas) were a semi-nomadic Turkic people of the Central Asian steppes speaking the Pecheneg language which belonged to the Turkic language family. In 1766 Pechenegs are mentioned in Pécs and Surroundings.[1]
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Pechenegs.
|
|---|
|
| Khazar rulers |
- Irbis
- Busir
- Barjik
- Bihar
- Zachariah
- Bulan
- Obadiah
- Hezekiah
- Manasseh I
- Hanukkah
- Isaac
- Zebulun
- Manasseh II
- Nisi
- Aaron I
- Menahem
- Benjamin
- Aaron II
- Joseph
- David
- George
|
|
|---|
| Other figures |
- Parsbit
- Alp Iluetuer
- Alp Tarkhan
- Balgitzin
- Bulchan
- Hazer Tarkhan
- HLGW
- John of Gothia
- Leo IV
- Papatzys
- Pesakh
- Ras Tarkhan
- Serach
- Sfengus
- Sviatoslav
- Theodora
- Tzitzak
- Yitzhak ha-Sangari
|
|---|
| Places |
- Atil
- Azaq
- Balanjar
- Bar
- Chersonesus
- Dagestan
- Güsliyev
- Golden Hills
- Kaffa
- Kavkaz
- Kazarki
- Kerch
- Kerem
- Khazaran
- Khumar
- Levedia
- Saltovo-Mayaki
- Samandar
- Sambat
- Samosdelka
- Saqsin
- Sarkel
- Semikarakorsk Fortress
- Sudak
- Taman
- Tamatarkha
|
|---|
| Tributaries | |
|---|
| Scholars |
- Mikhail Artamonov
- Vasily Bartold
- Douglas M. Dunlop
- Norman Golb
- Peter B. Golden
- Lev Gumilev
- Judah Halevi
- Alexander Harkavy
- Arthur Koestler
- Thomas S. Noonan
- Svetlana Pletnyova
- Omeljan Pritsak
|
|---|
| Legacy |
- Khazar Correspondence
- Khazar language
- Khazar ancestry claims
- Khazars in fiction
- Kuzari
- Kievan Letter
- Mandgelis Document
- Schechter Letter
- The Thirteenth Tribe
|
|---|