Tmutarakan
Tmutarakan (Russian:
Тмутаракань) is an ancient city that controlled the passage from the
Black Sea to the
Sea of Azov. It was situated on the
Taman peninsula, in the present-day
Krasnodar Krai of
Russia.
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Ancient Greek phial unearthed in Tmutarakan. |
Located near the ancient Greek colony of
Phanagoria, the town was built on the ruins of the minor Greek settlement of Germonassa. In the seventh century, the region fell to the Khazars, who built the fortress town of Tamatarkha. Arabic sources refer to it as Samkarsh al-Yahud (i.e., "Samkarsh the Jewish"), probably indicating a
Jewish majority.
Fortified with a strong brick wall and boasting a fine harbour, Samkarsh was a large city of merchants. It controlled much of the Northern European trade with the
Byzantine Empire and
Northern Caucasus. The inhabitants included the
Greeks,
Armenians,
Russians,
Jews,
Ossetians,
Lezgians,
Georgians, and
Circassians. After the destruction of the Khazar empire by
Svyatoslav of Rus in the mid-tenth century, a Jewish Khazar principality became centered on the
Taman region, though whether Tmutarakan was its capital or not is unknown.
Mstislav Vladimirovich was the prince of Tmutarakan from
988 to
1036. During his reign, a first stone church was dedicated to the
Theotokos, the ruins of it being still visible. In the twelfth century the city was isolated from the Russian mainland by the
Cumans and gradually declined. The last recorded mention was in a roll of
1378.
The site of Tmutarakan was discovered in
1792, when a local peasant found a stone with an inscription stating that Prince Gleb had measured the sea from here to
Kerch in
1068. The excavations of the site were conducted in the 19th century. In the modern
Russian language, Tmutarakan stands for "a distant and obscure province".