-
Utigurs were
Turkic nomadic equestrians who
flourished in the Pontic–Caspian
steppe in the 6th
century AD. They
possibly were
closely related to the Kutrigurs...
- were the
similar Utigurs and both
possibly were
closely related to the Bulgars. They
warred with the
Byzantine Empire and the
Utigurs.
Towards the end...
-
Attila the Hun, dies
after a 34-year reign. He is
succeeded by his two sons (
Utigur and Kutrigur), who
share the
power with the
unified Bulgars.
October 17...
- Avars, Bulgars, and Ogurs, or
names connected with -(o)gur (Kutrigurs,
Utigurs, Onogurs, etc.), were most important. In the
process of name-giving, both...
-
Kirghiz Chigils Toquz Oghuz Orkhon Uyghurs Yagma Nushibi Duolu Kutrigurs Utigurs Yabaku Yueban Bulaqs Xueyantuo Torks Chorni Klobuky Berendei Yemeks Karamanlides...
- *Toqur(o)ğur < toqur; "nine" in Proto-Bulgar;
toquz in
Common Turkic) and
Utigur (Uturgur > Uturğur < utur/otur; "thirty" in Proto-Bulgar; otuz in Common...
-
Turkic as
their main language. The
Bulgars included the
tribes of Onogurs,
Utigurs and Kutrigurs,
among others. The
first clear mention of the
Bulgars in...
-
Onoguria under his brother, Ernakh. Its Hun
inhabitants became known as the
Utigur Bulgars when it
became part of the
Western Turkic Kaghanate under Sandilch...
- however,
argue that the Huns
continued under Ernak,
becoming the
Kutrigur and
Utigur Hunno-Bulgars.
These conclusions remain a
topic of
ongoing debate and controversy...
- *gur ("arrow" in the
sense of "tribe"), a
proposed division within the
Utigurs or
Onogurs ("ten tribes").
According to art. 25(1) of
Constitution of Bulgaria...