Roxolani
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The Roman empire under Hadrian (ruled 117–138), showing the location of the Roxolani Sarmatians in the Wallachian plain (Romania)
The Roxolani were a Sarmatian people (a large Iranian confederation that existed in classical antiquity) [1] and are believed to be an offshoot of the Alans. However, according to Strabo, they were the most remote of Scythian peoples.[2]
Contents
Name
In his Getica (c. 551 CE), Jordanes uses a variant name, Rosomoni (or Rosomones) for the Roxolani. The following tribal names in Bavarian Geographer apparently belong here[where?]:
Sebbirozi habent ciuitates XC.
Attorozi habent ciuitates XLVIII, populus ferocissimus.
Vuillerozi habent ciuitates LXXX.
Zabrozi habent ciuitates CCXII.
Chozirozi habent ciuitates CCL.
The etymology of Roxolani may combine ruxh or rukhs Alanic "radiant light" + Alani. This would make Roxolani an endonym translatable as "bright Alans".[3][4] George Vernadsky suggested, along similar lines, that the Rocas (or Rogas), a tribe conquered by the Ostrogoths in the 4th century, may have been synonymous with the Roxolani/Rosomoni. To be specific, Vernadsky suggested that Rocas may have its origins in ruxh and the name of the Asii, a steppe tribe whose name may have been interchangeable with that of the Alans.[3]
Other theories suggest that Iranian-speaking steppe peoples, such as the Alans, merged in a variety of forms with early Slavic peoples. According to one hypothesis, the Antes originated as a sub-group of Alans.[5] A similar theory, reported by Vernadsky, suggests that Roxolani originated as a portmanteau of the names of the Slavic regions (Rus' Khaganate, Kievan Rus'', 'Rus' people) and the Alani.[3]
Geography
Their first recorded homeland lay between the Volga, Don and Dnieper rivers; they migrated in the 1st century AD toward the Danube, to what is now the Baragan steppes in Romania.
History
1st century BC
Around 100 BC, they invaded the Crimea under their king Tasius in support of the Scythian warlord Palacus but were defeated by Diophantus, general of Mithradates VI.[1]
1st century AD
In the mid-1st century AD, the Roxolani began incursions across the Danube into Roman territory. One such raid in AD 68/69 was intercepted by the Legio III Gallica with Roman auxiliaries, who destroyed a raiding force of 9,000 Roxolanian cavalry encumbered by baggage. Tacitus (Hist. Bk1.79) describes the weight of the armour worn by the "princes and most distinguished persons" made "it difficult for such as have been overthrown by the charge of the enemy to regain their feet". The long two-handed kontos lance, the primary melee weapon of the Sarmatians, was unusable in these conditions. The Roxolani avenged themselves in AD 92, when they joined the Dacians in destroying the Roman Legio XXI Rapax.
2nd century
During Trajan's Dacian Wars, the Roxolani at first sided with the Dacians, providing them with most of their cavalry strength, but they were defeated in the first campaign of AD 101–102 at Nicopolis ad Istrum. They appear to have stood aside as neutrals during Trajan's final campaign of AD 105–106, which ended in the complete destruction of the Dacian state. The creation of the Roman province of Dacia brought Roman power to the very doorstep of Roxolani territory. The Emperor Hadrian reinforced a series of pre-existing fortifications and built numerous forts along the Danube to contain the Roxolani threat. Later, Marcus Aurelius also campaigned against the Roxolani along the Danubian frontier.
3rd century
They are known to have attacked the Roman Province of Pannonia in 260; shortly afterwards contingents of Roxolani troops entered Roman military service.
4th century
Like other Sarmatian peoples, the Roxolani were conquered by the Huns in the mid-4th century.
Culture
The Greco-Roman historian Strabo (late 1st century BC-early 1st century AD) described them as "wagon-dwellers" (i.e. nomads).[6]
See also
References
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