The era of Turkic predominance, 550–1200

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Also known as: Eurasian Steppe

A new Turkic confederacy

A new period of steppe history began in 552 when a powerful new Turkic confederacy, headquartered in the Altai Mountains, suddenly developed. Its geographic range was great, extending from the frontiers of China to the Caspian Sea. The new masters of the Asian steppe were skilled in ironwork and used their own runic script, of which a few examples survive. Some of the critical skills of civilization with which steppe peoples had become more familiar through the expanding trade patterns of preceding centuries were thus exploited by a nomad confederacy for the first time. Buddhism and then Islam also penetrated among the Turks, bringing steppe peoples still more closely into touch with other aspects of civilized life.

Nonetheless, the Turkic confederacy remained a tribal nomad polity with both the ferocious formidability and fragility associated with such systems of command. Disputed successions tore it apart more than once before its ultimate dissolution in 734; but prior to that time two principal consequences of the consolidation of Turkic power may be discerned. First, raids and rivalry with the Chinese helped to stimulate China’s reunification under the Sui (581–618) and early Tang (618–907) dynasties, thus renewing the mirror relationship that had previously existed between the Han and Xiongnu empires. Second, the rise of an aggressive Turkic power provoked recurrent flights and migrations across the steppe itself. As long as the prowess of Sasanian barons made the Iranian borderlands impenetrable, refugees from steppe warfare continued to be funnelled north of the Caspian into Europe. Consequently, hordes of Avars, Bulgars, Khazars, Pechenegs, and Magyars—to name only the most successful—followed one another in rapid succession onto the Western Steppe. Each of these peoples established a powerful raiding confederation and exercised domination for varying periods of time over adjacent cultivated lands in the Balkans and central Europe. Two of the tribes were ancestral to the modern states of Bulgaria and Hungary, but the rest, like the Huns before them, dissolved into the general population soon after their military power broke down.

Shift of attention from Europe to the Middle East

Encroachment by peoples of the steppe onto the cultivated lands of eastern Europe slackened in the 9th century and was reversed by the end of the 10th when more efficient protectors allowed European peasantries to begin moving out into grasslands along the Danube. Armoured cavalrymen on the Parthian model, known to the Byzantines as cataphracts and to the English as knights, reversed the balance between steppe raiders and settled folk in eastern Europe. The gradual rise of knighthood after 732, when Charles Martel first tried the experiment in western Europe, involved a drastic feudal decentralization of political power—decentralization that lasted longer in the east of Europe than in the west and has distracted such marcher states as Hungary and Poland down to modern times.

Yet the rise of knighthood along the European steppe frontier was not the only factor reversing the balance between nomads and settled agriculturalists. Nomad pressure on European cultivators also slackened in the 10th century because the Iranian borderland against the steppe had once again become permeable. Exactly why this happened is unclear. Nothing in military technology seems to explain the fact that Turkic tribesmen as well as detribalized slaves began to arrive within the realm of Islam in such numbers as to be able, after about 900, to exercise decisive military force throughout the Middle East. Perhaps the attractions of city life induced Sasanian barons to abandon their villages for the easy life of absentee landlords and to allow their military habits to decay. But no one really knows what altered the balance between steppe warriors and Iranian defenders of cultivated lands in such a way as to divert the pattern of steppe migration southward once again. The effect, nonetheless, was to spare eastern Europe from the sort of recurrent invasions it had been experiencing since the 2nd century ce.