Long-lost
capital of Khazar kingdom unearthed in southern Russia
Russian
archaeologists said Wednesday that they had found the long-lost capital
of the Khazar kingdom in southern Russia, a breakthrough for research
on the ancient Jewish state.
"This is a hugely important discovery," expedition organizer
Dmitry Vasilyev, of the Astrakhan State University, told AFP after
returning from excavations near the village of Samosdelka, just north
of the Caspian Sea.
"We can now shed light on one of the most intriguing mysteries
of that period – how the Khazars actually lived. We know very little
about the Khazars – about their traditions, their funerary rites, their
culture," he said.
The city was the capital of the Khazars, semi-nomadic Turkic peoples who
adopted Judaism as a state religion, from between the eighth and
the 10th centuries, when it was captured and sacked by the rulers of
ancient Russia.
At its height, the Khazar state and its tributaries controlled
much of what is now southern Russia, western Kazakhstan, eastern
Ukraine, Azerbaijan and large parts of Russia's North Caucasus region.
The capital is referred to as Itil in Arab chronicles, but
Vasilyev said the word may actually have been used to refer to the
Volga River on which the city was founded or to the surrounding river
delta region.
Itil was said to be a multi-ethnic place with houses of
worship and judges for Christians, Jews, Muslims and pagans. Its
remains have until now never been identified and were said to have been
washed away by the Caspian Sea.
Archaeologists have been excavating in the area if Samosdelka
for the past nine years but have only now collected enough material
evidence to back their thesis, including the remains of an ancient
brick fortress, he added.
"Within the fortress, we have found huts similar to yurts,
which are characteristics of Khazar cities… The fortress had a
triangular shape and was made with bricks. It's another argument that
this was no ordinary city."
Around 10 university archaeologists and some 50 students took
part in excavations in the region this summer, which are partly
financed by the Jewish University in Moscow and the Russian Jewish
Congress.