Niketas Choniates, a Byzantine historian, describes fighting style of the Cumans; "They [The Cumans] fought in their habitual manner, learnt from their fathers. They would attack, shoot their arrows and begin to fight with spears. Before long they would turn their attack into flight and induce their enemy to pursue them. Then they would show their faces instead of their backs, like birds cutting through the air, and would fight face to face with their assailants and struggle even more bravely. This they would do several times, and when they gained the upper hand over the Romans [Byzantines], they would stop turning back again. Then they would draw their swords, release an appalling roar, and fall upon the Romans quicker than a thought. They would seize and massacre those who fought bravely and those who behaved cowardly alike". [Vásáry, István (2005). Cumans and Tatars Oriental Military in the Pre-Ottoman Balkans 1185-1365. Cambridge University Press]
Niketas Choniates wrote that in the 12th century, about Cuman battle tactics of that century or before. The Cumans in this story of Kingdom Come Deliverance are from 1403, two hundred years later. At this time the Cumans and the other migrators from the steppes were almost all Christianized and citizens or at least subjects of their respective communities, principalities, voivodships or kingdoms. By this time, the 1400s, due to European influences and battle necessities, the Cuman cavalry was mostly heavy cavalry and the warriors wilded war hammers and axes.
This was incredibly useful as a resource. The game doesnt really give much information about the cumans. After this video, I feel like I know everything I need to about the Cumans.
Currently playing through KCD but I'm glad that they don't go into detail from an immersion point. Why would a lowly peasant like Henry know about them? And why would highborn/knights tell Henry of such matters? It keeps them as the boogeymen in Bohemia! But I agree, a great video to fill in the details!
“Blond” cumans is a late myth based on incorrect interpretation of their ethnic name. They called themselves Sari-kipchaq (yellow kipchaqs) and so their Slavic neighbours called them “Polovtsy” (yellows) and some dumb historians attributed to the colour of their hair. In nomadic steppe cultures, colours often denote either cardinal direction (north, south, centre etc) or colours of their banners. No peoples call themselves by the colour of their hair, otherwise the Irish would call themselves “reds”. While some of them could indeed be blond due to gene flow from Slavs, majority would have dark hair and black eyes. Their appearance would be closer to modern Bashkirs & Kazakhs, who are their direct descendants
That's a common miscommunication about Irish having red hair. Scots have the most red hair by population. BUT there are more redheads in America because it has a bigger population. I'm a Scot and I have red hair in my bloodline, also it's not uncommon to see lots of redheads on a daily basis.
@@УильямДефо-э2е My Cuman heritage comes from my father. And my father's side has both Tatars and Kumyks. Kumyks live in Dagestan in Northern Caucasia. So no Kazakh, Tatar and Kumyk.
Seriously, Turkic clans and tribes are a bit underrated in Pax Mongolia era. They really mixed things up with their migrations and mercenary work. By the way, I can really understand what the writing at 4:15 says, as a Turk. It's clear as day, Lord's prayer. The suffixes and certain sounds are different than modern Turkish but if you are familiar with Anatolian Turkmen dominated rural areas' dialects, you'll not have a problem whatsoever
My major complaint with kcd is that they didn't do more with the cumans. Nomadic steppe raiders are such an interesting foil to the setting and people of the game. It could have been a lot more interesting. They aren't even really relevant after the beginning of the game and they don't even ride horses in combat after the skalitz invasion
@@Stephen-uz8dm It's because the written documentation is scarce and most of it are written by their adversaries I suppose. And a lot of concepts for settled warfare, is just ain't there for nomads. I was once watching a video about steppe warfare, and the ''expert'' was insisting that a bunch of nomads can't be good at ''holding positions'' Which sounds a reasonable argument, right? But why would a steppe horse archer army even want to hold a position? They usually give ground and flee under charge instead of facing it head on
I'm Bulgarian and my family tree /300 years old/ can be traced to the village Cumans near the Turnovo/capital of second bulgarian kingdom/.now there are only 2 inhabitants in that village.I came here to find out , who possibly my ancestors were :) .great video
Stop telling stories, you idiot! The descendants of the Cumans are Kazakhs and Crimean Tatars, but since there are fewer Crimean Tatars and they do not have statehood, today there is only Kazakhstan, the Kazakhs have a tribe of Kipchaks, of which we have almost 2 million and they are the most direct descendants of the Cumans. Now tell me, do you have a Kipchak tribe and what is its size?
But at least they are interesting baddies. And really only subjectively bad from the Bohemian point of view. From the Hungarian point of view, the cumans are effective mercenaries.
@@Anonymous-ek2rh again my point was that these people weren't predestined to win They had to work hard and make use of smart tactics to achieve what they did. Your making it sound as if it was an auto win and I know you know this is a stupid idea. The Delhi did win but they tried multiple times to attack mongol land outside of India and it always failed which means Delhi doesn't always win. The mameluks still lost a battle to the mongols so it's not this magic video game hard counter and tamerlane basically was a mongol but both the dehli and tamerlane were fighting a fractured pathetic version of what the mongol empire was. Only the mameluks really fought a united mongol empire so their victory stands far above the others
@@jonjonboi3701 Those contemporary blond/blue eyed 'specifically Turkish people' are the result of the Ottoman empire occupying Slavic lands in which there are and were many blue-eyed people. I agree with him that in the early middle ages it would be highly improbable to find to find an Asiatic people fresh from the steppes and beyond the Urals with blond hair and blue eyes.
You're forgetting that before the mongol and turkic expansion much of central Asia was inhabited by indo european peoples and this includes steppe people such as the Scythians and Khazars (who were majority ginger) the Huns, Magyars all the way to the Cumans one of the last Indo european steppe people. The mongol invasions drove many indo european people from central Asia and into Europe.
As a Balkan Turk I really enjoyed this one. It sometimes surprises people when they learn there are caucassian (white) looking Turks. But we existed ever since Attila first stepped foot into the Balkans and some say even before that. Since Turks originate from Siberia (according to some sources) we look more caucassian than other Asian people. Not to mention how we mixed with the local Slav, Thracian, East Germanic population. This was really well detailed, great job man.
its because europeans are very ignorant when it comes to this. they think they are special and no one outside of europe can have blue eyes or blonde hair. half of my family has blue eyes and blonde hair and we literally came from the east and have no mixing with westerners.
@@youdontseeanoldmanhavinatw4904 The thing is most of people assume Anatolian Turks as different. Even though they have alot of asian ancestry infact some look very asian
As a Kazan tatar who live in Russia, i would like to say hungarians and some nationalities who places in Russia have similar languages and same words. Most similar is Khanty-Mansy (because of one languages group), then coming chuvash and tatars with how i heard, we have some similar words with one meaning.
And i want to say my text can have grammar mistakes, because of english lessons on Russians school is not so good then they can be, and this reason why i prefer teaching by myself. So please, be patience when you read my text.
That is very interesting, but makes sense. Many peoples of the Steppe would settle in much of what is now Russia, so Russian is likely a derivative of at least some of them.
Dude thank you for this video, as a person who’s interested in European history it is very informative and interesting to watch, do more history videos about events,people and nationalities which figured in kingdoms come delivarence) thank you
Glad you enjoyed it! I have some other videos in this series already that you would likely be interested in. th-cam.com/play/PLDsADVyAXB4FlheY4ugI4bHZUx6jDBJD9.html
In Hungary: Kun (Cuman), Kunos (Cuman like) Is a common family name. I know many Kun in my work place. Village and town names like Kiskunfélegyháza, Kiskunhalas, Kunsziget, Kunszentmárton, Kunszentmiklós, Kunmadaras, Kunhegyes etc.
@wratch i never said im a Cuman descendant. My family is from "Upper Hungary" 😂😂😂, so i think im mostly a slav... I just said how many Cuman towns and family names in hungary...
@wratch King Ladislaus the Cuman of Hungary, who was raised by the Cumans, identified as one, wore their clothes and had a Cuman hairstyle, said that the Cumans, Hungarians and the Huns are the same people, and that the Cumans practiced the original religion of the Hungarians. He might've been wrong regarding some of that, but it shows the us the views the Cumans would've had on the Hungarians.
Cool fact. Also keep in mind that the surname Kun, was usually given to a person who left a Cuman community or region associated with them, the people who lived in those areas didn't all receive those surnames. So there's probably a lot more people with Cuman origin.
@wratch I recognise that Crimean Tatars are descended party from Cumans, but there definitely is Cuman heritage in Hungary. Hungarians are in fact white Europeans and always have been but Cuman and other shared heritage with Turks exist. I don't see what your problem is with that. Also, the Huns definitely had partial Scythian ancestry and admixtures which is also true for the Hungarians, it's evident in the language.
Cumans arrived in Europe in the 10 century. They frequently crossed the Byzantine borders. On some occations they aslo became their allies against other tribes.
well a few things to add. in Hungary even novadays there are 2 counties which has got the name Kun/Cuman in it were privileged territories for a few centuries.
Kumandin people of Siberia (another Turkic people) are probably descendants of eastern Cumans. Most of Cuman descents living in Hungary (as Catholic). Some are in Egypt (as Sunni Muslim) from Mamluk era and Moldovia (as Orthodox Gagauz). I also think that Cumans did not speak a single language. They spoke various Turkic languages. Eastern was Kipchak-Kyrgyz or a Siberian Turkic language and western was Cuman-Kipchak language.
It is likely that the languages adopted by these peoples would be regional, just given how many of them there are/were that are spread out across so much land.
cuman-qypchaq tribes are living now in many turkic countries, Kazakhstan, Tatarstan, Uzbekistan etc. Also there are for example lithuanian Tatars, this ethnicity also is made of many tribes and one of them as i know is Qypchaq.
@@ParryThis Only few of Cumans are in Hungary. There are 2 cities in Hungary that Cumans live in, Cumans are Turkic (both language and genetic). Cumans in Hungary forgot Turkish, because when they became christian (from Tengrism which s known as one God belief), they also married with Hungarians so language could not continue in next generations, but there s a historical praying in Cuman Turkish in Hungary i it s very understandable with Turkish. Mahmud Kashgari who wrote first Turkish dictionary in 1072 named Diwan Lugat Türk, knew all Turkic dialects. He told about Turkic tribes with their name meaning and where they live in. He says Cumans are a Turkish tribe. He explains Kuman (cuman) word in Turkish (as he tells all Turkish words in his dictionary. And he knew Turkic tribes with their tamga (symbols ). They used these symbols (put on animals) to differ their animals from other tribes not to mix.also on swords etc, and also on grave stones,
Stop telling stories, you idiot! The descendants of the Cumans are Kazakhs and Crimean Tatars, but since there are fewer Crimean Tatars and they do not have statehood, today there is only Kazakhstan, the Kazakhs have a tribe of Kipchaks, of which we have almost 2 million and they are the most direct descendants of the Cumans. Now tell me, do you have a Kipchak tribe and what is its size?
Hungarians called the Cumans Kun and there are two county in Hungary bears the name today. Kiskunság és Nagykunság and many city names contain Kun, like Kiskunhalas(Small cuman fishery)
@@teovu5557 "only 20,000 mongols" lol, It's funny that you underestimate the importance of the Battle of Ayn-Jalut while historians do not discuss it. Even in the Battle of Stirling Bridge, for which an epic movie was made with a huge budget, 5000 people fought against 10000 people. The Mongols were the superpower of their time and 20000 of them was "only" in your opinion.
@@tylerclayton6081 I didn't, fck Putin. It's not about where Ukraine stems from, it's even about the word itself that wasn't invented 800 years ago. Unfortunately, presenting false history is common nowadays and it is needed to remind about facts. It's like considering tribal US indians as first USA pioneers. Or saying that China is culturally equal to Taiwan while the original chinese culture persisted in Taiwan, not in communist, continental China. Some countries are just younger than others, no need to feel pain about it
There are still descendants of cumans in west Kazakhstan primarily known as Junior Juz. The famous Beybarys mamluk also was from Junior Juz tribe. My family line also starts from Junior Juz and the name of my great grand father is Qul Tuma (which translates as "someone who is not to be a slave" and direct translation is dont be a slave).
@@yaqubebased1961 so he is right even considering from ancient times Iran and Cumans has nothing to do with except the part with mixing with Eastern Scythians mostly Sakas who had similar culture to Huns not Iran.
I know you didn’t meant in bad way, but abkhazia was part of georgian kingdom, so there was no need to add it. I am saying it because today there is propaganda that says abkhazia was different from georgia, but it not it was ruled and settled by georgian, but thanks for this video. wish u the best
Fun tidbit: You can also see a city in Macedonia that is named after the Cumans who settled in the region. See the map at 5:09, beyond the borders of south of Serbia is the city named 'Kumanovo'
I had been afraid that in Hardcore version cuman raiders would actually have horses in their camp and ambushed from saddle. Would be a bit harder game :D
I would love to see them do a Crusade. Show us the other side of things. They were the culmination of sentiments from those that had experiences like Henry, and they went on to treat those they invaded just as poorly.
I feel sad not understanding so much, dunno why, due to my English skills or my intelligence 😭, so many names and I'm lost. I think it's more about English skills. Anyways thank u so much, I Really love this game and would love to know so much about history because that, so hopefully one day I will perfectly understand all this but really thank u for all this effort 🙏❤
No, it's just a different transcription of the same name. We don't know who was exactly the ruler of the Cumans in Hungary after Kutjens death, most probably Seyhan/Zeyhan
3:14 , the Pechenegs are another type of Turkic People but also the name of a gun as shown but the gun got his name from the tribe. Anyway, the Pechenegs went to Bulgaria, Romania and Hungary before the Cumans because they were pushed by the Cumans.
Still today you can find people in Hungary that knows they are Kumans and some knew Turkish a generation ago. Hungary even had radio broadcasting in Turkish some time ago! Kumanova in macedonia is from them!
The history of the cumans is simple. WHat would the mongols be like in the 12th century if they were white and didn't have Genghis khan, Tusbodai or Jebe? Mind you a heap of cumans/Kipchaks joined with the mongols. Those who didn't had to flee as refugees to Hungary. In hungary they could have saved King Bela and Hungary form the mongols, only the stupid hungarian nobles killed the Cumans leader in a lynching, so the cuman refugees raided a bit then refused to help the Hungarians. Later on though they did, and they were really the only chance Hugnary had against the the sub-khanates, as they had similar skills to the mongols, and many had spent decades fighting them. The cumans also represented the best opportunity for the kings of hungary who were very weakened after the mongol raids. In medieval times, the king was really just the CEO. The head of the board. With each other high noble being a board member. Every board member including the CEO has 1 equal vote, but the CEO has the most influence. Also may of these high nobles had their own claim to be CEO. As king you really were just first amongst equals. The cumans weren't hungarian. They had no claims. SO the king gave them big swathes of land the mongols had "depopulated". But the contract was that the cumans were the kings personal fiefs. You fought only for the king. This essentially turned the cumans into the praetorian guard or the nazi's SS. A personal army. However by 1403 the cumans 100% did not dress like they do in the game. They were very earupoean/Hungarian by then, but retained their warrior culture and only some nomadic culture.
You have a way with words but you are mistaken about royalty. Nobles didn't have an equal claim to be CEO. Most of Hungarian kings weren't Hungarian 😉 Think of it, if 'blue blood' foreigner marries into 'blue blood' ruling family, their offsprings have a claim to be rulers because they aren't foreigners anymore. Sometimes blue blood isn't even necessary. Meritocracy can work too.
They were mercenaries of the King Milutin of Serbia. Cumans settled in a town that still holds their name, Kumanovo (now North Macedonia). Kumanovo literally means Cuman's (town or place).
The mongolian invasion of Hungary had unparallaled destruction. 1/3 of the country's population was completely annihilated. A good resource is the first-hand account of the Priest Rogerius in his Carmen miserabile; he describes the mongol invasion in vivid detail. When running from the mongols, he often went weeks without meeting a single other person, the only sign of humanity were burning villages, the howling of wolves and the mongol horde.
Nice to see my ancestors getting the attention they deserve. Sadly turkic people in history has a lot of affect in the world we know today but just because they accomplished so much on their own, people today hate turks in general a lot
@@metethenationalist2778 kypchaks and cumans are two different tribes from the same empire/confederation. Modern day cumans are the turkic kumandy and kumandins of the altai republic.....they literally still use the name cumans. Lol
I made my family tree years ago and then psihogenealogy. I'm romanian, but my origins are not so romanian( dacian and roman mixt). In the area where my great great grandparents lived( Valahia or Muntenia) are so many places or people with the name Coman, Comana, Cotmeana. In our history books are just mentioned, but no one says about them, about their strong influence in South Europe and Balkans.
The Cumans actually evolved their fighting style to what the Mongols did to them and they learned, adapt and overcame their enemies the same way the Mongols did. Some even argued that the Mongols were actually mixed Chinese with Turko-Caucasian people that had stayed on the steppes. That's besides the point tho. The Cumans and Kipcheks were strong horsemen that often raid China from time to time and when the Mongols went after them, they failed to mount an actual defense and fell to Genghis. However, even with the Cuman-Kipchek Alliance falling, many Cumans that survived took what they learnt and utilized it against the Mongols themselves or against other potential enemies as it works and they saw how a well-armoured Kievan Rus knights gets slaughtered by the Mongol horde on horseback and from there, they learnt. It was even recorded that the Cumans best strategy was what the Mongols liked to use the most and that's the "feint retreat" where they sent their light cavalry towards enemy lines, pelt them with arrows or skirmishes then retreat to a faux position that already had an ambush in an effort to lure their enemies out to fight them but instead lure them deep into the well placed ambush and got rid of every single one of the now ensnared enemy. That was the Cuman's best move. Also, the Cumans are warlike but they're not as brutal as people said. In war, brutality always comes into play but the Cumans were in fact as civilized as the next Christian lords of that time but it's just that because they were from "the outside", no one believed them to be civilized but treated them as tyrants and what-not. Like you said, it wasn't until Bela reinvited the Cumans back to Hungary that did they fully show that despite being a warlike council, they're great at civil stuff, just like the Mongols and the Golden Horde.
@@precursors They did learn from the Mongols. The sole reason on why early on that the Cumans & Kipchecks lost to what will become the Golden Horde early on was because yes, both culture were cavalry focused forces but the Cumans were using an unorthodox European style where instead of keeping the cavalry as a shock unit backup, they sent their units in frontal charge but adapt to find gaps and encircle the enemy. That shit won't fly with the Mongols as at that point of time, they were already adept to the fighting style of the Chinese which were almost the same to the Cumans when it came to cavalry warfare and with the Mongols often pulling back after a skirmish only for the Kipcheck-Cuman alliance warriors to step into the killing zone of the Mongols that the Kipchek-Cuman alliance lost hard. It wasn't until at least a decade later where the Cumans could find a proper home in the Bulgaria, Hungarian and Bohemian region that did they rebuild their own clans and adapted to the fighting, roaming combat style of the Mongols that they turned the tide against the western armies that often tried to get rid of them or the Golden Horde that kept trying to rid them too.
I was so scared of these guys in the game. I ended up around 12 hours in feeling pretty good about myself and had some gear. Then i found a treasure chest in the woods and got jumped by two of these guys who completely kicked my ass.
So for clearing some things in comments, the term Turk came after Scyhtians and Huns mixed so Turks were half Europeans from the start that's why old Karakhanid kurgans have around %20 North European genetics and Huns were Huns not Indo Europeans they are more close to Mongols and Magyars,Cumans are Turkic.
Scythians or their ancestors invaded Siberia way before in 8000BC. The first contact between Turkic people and Skythians dates way before than the Huns most likely. Thats why Turkic people were known as mixed-people unlike the Mongols.
I really dont want to be *that* guy, but cumans arent mentioned in the title at all and are therefore not titular. Sorry, just had to say something to quell the internal screaming
If it’s Cuman it ain’t human
- Henry
Thats a solid Henry of Skalitz quote.
Dude, now you just insulted ex-volga bulgars people and hungarians
@@Kremlinbot-mz1cm Everyone grab your horses and swords and meet in a big field.
@@devinthierault *snaps his fingers voraciously like a good Gabor*
@@devinthieraultand khazars gypsy and central Asia 😅
The cumans actually were covered in fur and fethers and had large teeth and fangs
....or so i've been told by brian, olena and vashek
Well, yeah, thats the truth. This video is fake news.
Basically velociraptors and Tyrannosaurini.
You forgot to mention the part where they mirdered my family. Ma, Pa, Deutch, Bianca, Hans, Olaf, Petyr, Wilhelm, the Bailiff. They are monsters.
Sorry for the insensitivity.
saying the man who took the kobyla name
Deutsche had it coming tho
Oh, Henry has come to see us!
You should be honored with the association of Cumania
Niketas Choniates, a Byzantine historian, describes fighting style of the Cumans;
"They [The Cumans] fought in their habitual manner, learnt from their fathers. They would attack, shoot their arrows and begin to fight with spears. Before long they would turn their attack into flight and induce their enemy to pursue them. Then they would show their faces instead of their backs, like birds cutting through the air, and would fight face to face with their assailants and struggle even more bravely. This they would do several times, and when they gained the upper hand over the Romans [Byzantines], they would stop turning back again. Then they would draw their swords, release an appalling roar, and fall upon the Romans quicker than a thought. They would seize and massacre those who fought bravely and those who behaved cowardly alike".
[Vásáry, István (2005). Cumans and Tatars Oriental Military in the Pre-Ottoman Balkans 1185-1365. Cambridge University Press]
@wratch ☕️☕️☕️
Niketas Choniates wrote that in the 12th century, about Cuman battle tactics of that century or before. The Cumans in this story of Kingdom Come Deliverance are from 1403, two hundred years later. At this time the Cumans and the other migrators from the steppes were almost all Christianized and citizens or at least subjects of their respective communities, principalities, voivodships or kingdoms. By this time, the 1400s, due to European influences and battle necessities, the Cuman cavalry was mostly heavy cavalry and the warriors wilded war hammers and axes.
That's fun, many cumans(kipchak turk) joined to byzantine empire to fight against oghuz turks lol
This was incredibly useful as a resource. The game doesnt really give much information about the cumans. After this video, I feel like I know everything I need to about the Cumans.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Currently playing through KCD but I'm glad that they don't go into detail from an immersion point. Why would a lowly peasant like Henry know about them? And why would highborn/knights tell Henry of such matters? It keeps them as the boogeymen in Bohemia! But I agree, a great video to fill in the details!
Did you read the books available in game? Quite a lot of info about cumans there, from what I remember.
Cubans are similar to Tatars, Turkish, Kazakh, Chuvash and other Turkic groups
There are acctually books about them in the game. Same about wensceslas and... even more dumber things like one about how everyone is fhe bad guy etc.
“Blond” cumans is a late myth based on incorrect interpretation of their ethnic name.
They called themselves Sari-kipchaq (yellow kipchaqs) and so their Slavic neighbours called them “Polovtsy” (yellows) and some dumb historians attributed to the colour of their hair.
In nomadic steppe cultures, colours often denote either cardinal direction (north, south, centre etc) or colours of their banners. No peoples call themselves by the colour of their hair, otherwise the Irish would call themselves “reds”.
While some of them could indeed be blond due to gene flow from Slavs, majority would have dark hair and black eyes. Their appearance would be closer to modern Bashkirs & Kazakhs, who are their direct descendants
That's a common miscommunication about Irish having red hair.
Scots have the most red hair by population. BUT there are more redheads in America because it has a bigger population. I'm a Scot and I have red hair in my bloodline, also it's not uncommon to see lots of redheads on a daily basis.
I wish there was a dlc where you play as a cuman soldier. Well, lets hope they do it in a sequel!
I'm very proud of my Cuman-Kipchak heritage but I can't believe my ancestors could kill Henry's parents 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
Lol that was pretty normal back in Europe, They had the most wars in history by continent.
You're Kazakh? Or Tatar?
@@itzikashemtov6045 Haha I'm just joking about that, I'm not ashamed of any part of my heritage
@@УильямДефо-э2е My Cuman heritage comes from my father. And my father's side has both Tatars and Kumyks. Kumyks live in Dagestan in Northern Caucasia. So no Kazakh, Tatar and Kumyk.
@@Egumen1 I'm Kazakh, but in general we all Turkic)))
Seriously, Turkic clans and tribes are a bit underrated in Pax Mongolia era. They really mixed things up with their migrations and mercenary work. By the way, I can really understand what the writing at 4:15 says, as a Turk. It's clear as day, Lord's prayer.
The suffixes and certain sounds are different than modern Turkish but if you are familiar with Anatolian Turkmen dominated rural areas' dialects, you'll not have a problem whatsoever
почти казакша гой
My major complaint with kcd is that they didn't do more with the cumans. Nomadic steppe raiders are such an interesting foil to the setting and people of the game. It could have been a lot more interesting. They aren't even really relevant after the beginning of the game and they don't even ride horses in combat after the skalitz invasion
@@Stephen-uz8dm It's because the written documentation is scarce and most of it are written by their adversaries I suppose.
And a lot of concepts for settled warfare, is just ain't there for nomads.
I was once watching a video about steppe warfare, and the ''expert'' was insisting that a bunch of nomads can't be good at ''holding positions''
Which sounds a reasonable argument, right? But why would a steppe horse archer army even want to hold a position? They usually give ground and flee under charge instead of facing it head on
Are there lots of Turkic/Turkish Christians today? If so, what regions do they live in?
@@luongo7886 Gagauz in moldova and bashkirs in russia
I'm Bulgarian and my family tree /300 years old/ can be traced to the village Cumans near the Turnovo/capital of second bulgarian kingdom/.now there are only 2 inhabitants in that village.I came here to find out , who possibly my ancestors were :) .great video
Stop telling stories, you idiot! The descendants of the Cumans are Kazakhs and Crimean Tatars, but since there are fewer Crimean Tatars and they do not have statehood, today there is only Kazakhstan, the Kazakhs have a tribe of Kipchaks, of which we have almost 2 million and they are the most direct descendants of the Cumans. Now tell me, do you have a Kipchak tribe and what is its size?
Cumans 🇰🇿
send me your location so i can send you back to Sigismund
When you are a Kıpçak (Cuman) Turk and you suddenly become the baddies in your favorite game :(
But at least they are interesting baddies. And really only subjectively bad from the Bohemian point of view. From the Hungarian point of view, the cumans are effective mercenaries.
Dont blame the scorpion for stinging you. Blame the one who put it in your boot.
Well, at least Henry admits they appear far more civilized, than their own bandits
Same ı feel sorry when ı kill , loot then takeing my own ancestors ears to Sir Robard.
Their armour look so cool and prob provide superb protection for their way of fighting
Love them or hate them, they played a role in stopping the Mongols
Cumans managed to stop mongols, yet they were short against one Skalitz blacksmiths son
@@ExtremeMan10 lol
@@Anonymous-ek2rh I agree with you but you stated it as if it was easy
@@Anonymous-ek2rh again my point was that these people weren't predestined to win
They had to work hard and make use of smart tactics to achieve what they did. Your making it sound as if it was an auto win and I know you know this is a stupid idea. The Delhi did win but they tried multiple times to attack mongol land outside of India and it always failed which means Delhi doesn't always win. The mameluks still lost a battle to the mongols so it's not this magic video game hard counter and tamerlane basically was a mongol but both the dehli and tamerlane were fighting a fractured pathetic version of what the mongol empire was. Only the mameluks really fought a united mongol empire so their victory stands far above the others
@@ExtremeMan10 does that mean this son of a Skalitz blacksmith is stronger than the horde? if only he was born earlier.
The blomde hair and blue eyes combo caught me off guard. I was not expecting that. This video is the most awesome.
Glad you liked it!! I also found that detail to be interesting.
Well there are a lot of blue eyed Turkic people specifically Turkish people. Its not rare for Turkish people to have blue eyes or green eyes
@@jonjonboi3701 Those contemporary blond/blue eyed 'specifically Turkish people' are the result of the Ottoman empire occupying Slavic lands in which there are and were many blue-eyed people. I agree with him that in the early middle ages it would be highly improbable to find to find an Asiatic people fresh from the steppes and beyond the Urals with blond hair and blue eyes.
@@jimdawes4551 Blue eyes and blonde hair are not exclusive european features.
You're forgetting that before the mongol and turkic expansion much of central Asia was inhabited by indo european peoples and this includes steppe people such as the Scythians and Khazars (who were majority ginger) the Huns, Magyars all the way to the Cumans one of the last Indo european steppe people.
The mongol invasions drove many indo european people from central Asia and into Europe.
I don't know much about the Cumans. All I know is they have a great spice that's sure to bring zest to any meal!
Thats true. An excellent addition to any meal.
I'm cumin to that conclusion as well 🤔
As a Balkan Turk I really enjoyed this one. It sometimes surprises people when they learn there are caucassian (white) looking Turks. But we existed ever since Attila first stepped foot into the Balkans and some say even before that. Since Turks originate from Siberia (according to some sources) we look more caucassian than other Asian people. Not to mention how we mixed with the local Slav, Thracian, East Germanic population. This was really well detailed, great job man.
its because europeans are very ignorant when it comes to this. they think they are special and no one outside of europe can have blue eyes or blonde hair.
half of my family has blue eyes and blonde hair and we literally came from the east and have no mixing with westerners.
@@Valkyrawyou're assuming. Many westerners understand people in the east can have blonde hair. Don't generalize
You are white because the entire Ottoman army was kidnaped european children
@@youdontseeanoldmanhavinatw4904 The thing is most of people assume Anatolian Turks as different. Even though they have alot of asian ancestry infact some look very asian
@@youdontseeanoldmanhavinatw4904It only comes from mixing
As a Kazan tatar who live in Russia, i would like to say hungarians and some nationalities who places in Russia have similar languages and same words. Most similar is Khanty-Mansy (because of one languages group), then coming chuvash and tatars with how i heard, we have some similar words with one meaning.
And i want to say my text can have grammar mistakes, because of english lessons on Russians school is not so good then they can be, and this reason why i prefer teaching by myself.
So please, be patience when you read my text.
That is very interesting, but makes sense. Many peoples of the Steppe would settle in much of what is now Russia, so Russian is likely a derivative of at least some of them.
@@ParryThis yeah. Like USA with their american and native American, we have rossiyane (citizens of Russia) and russians (slavics)
@@ParryThis no. Russian is slavic, not derivate of steppe peoples
@@arsonviburnums8453 mansplain much? Russians are Slavic in language and culture but it's not just one ethnicity
Dude thank you for this video, as a person who’s interested in European history it is very informative and interesting to watch, do more history videos about events,people and nationalities which figured in kingdoms come delivarence) thank you
Glad you enjoyed it! I have some other videos in this series already that you would likely be interested in. th-cam.com/play/PLDsADVyAXB4FlheY4ugI4bHZUx6jDBJD9.html
In Hungary: Kun (Cuman), Kunos (Cuman like)
Is a common family name. I know many Kun in my work place.
Village and town names like
Kiskunfélegyháza, Kiskunhalas, Kunsziget, Kunszentmárton, Kunszentmiklós, Kunmadaras, Kunhegyes etc.
@wratch i never said im a Cuman descendant.
My family is from "Upper Hungary" 😂😂😂, so i think im mostly a slav...
I just said how many Cuman towns and family names in hungary...
@wratch Read again before replying or even better learn to read. He is not saying any of that.
@wratch King Ladislaus the Cuman of Hungary, who was raised by the Cumans, identified as one, wore their clothes and had a Cuman hairstyle, said that the Cumans, Hungarians and the Huns are the same people, and that the Cumans practiced the original religion of the Hungarians. He might've been wrong regarding some of that, but it shows the us the views the Cumans would've had on the Hungarians.
Cool fact. Also keep in mind that the surname Kun, was usually given to a person who left a Cuman community or region associated with them, the people who lived in those areas didn't all receive those surnames. So there's probably a lot more people with Cuman origin.
@wratch I recognise that Crimean Tatars are descended party from Cumans, but there definitely is Cuman heritage in Hungary. Hungarians are in fact white Europeans and always have been but Cuman and other shared heritage with Turks exist. I don't see what your problem is with that. Also, the Huns definitely had partial Scythian ancestry and admixtures which is also true for the Hungarians, it's evident in the language.
"...they suffered in close combat, especially with heavily armored knights or men at arms..."
Yep, that tracks. 😂
Cumans arrived in Europe in the 10 century. They frequently crossed the Byzantine borders. On some occations they aslo became their allies against other tribes.
Correct, as a tribal people, certain groups would hire out as mercenaries and would fight for whoever paid them, against whoever they wished.
Cumans arrived in europe in the 1060s 😀
I can't stop thinking about Kahante
4:13 I can read and understand this writings as an Anatolian Turkmen. This surprised me!
As a Cuman-Kipchak girl am so proud of my history 💖 Thank you for the video!
in game they show us as rapists...
@@Gun_Metal_Grey Well who didn't back in the day...
@@Gun_Metal_Grey I mean, no offence, but mediaval warfare and raiding wasn't exactly nice lol. European troops weren't much better often
Which country are you from, Hungary or Turkey/Ukraine?
@@daarzim1863 From Georgia. Because we only speak Cuman Turkic, we migrated to the border of Turkiye.
I still play this game none stop..
very underrated channel. You gained a sub
Welcome aboard! I am glad you enjoy my content.
This is what I needed to feel closer to Henry
Really helps you get in his headspace.
Nice video, I enjoyed it very much!
Glad you enjoyed it!
I am a descendant of the great Cumans 🇰🇿
Sadly i am not, but my mom is 🇰🇿
well a few things to add. in Hungary even novadays there are 2 counties which has got the name Kun/Cuman in it were privileged territories for a few centuries.
Kumandin people of Siberia (another Turkic people) are probably descendants of eastern Cumans. Most of Cuman descents living in Hungary (as Catholic). Some are in Egypt (as Sunni Muslim) from Mamluk era and Moldovia (as Orthodox Gagauz). I also think that Cumans did not speak a single language. They spoke various Turkic languages. Eastern was Kipchak-Kyrgyz or a Siberian Turkic language and western was Cuman-Kipchak language.
It is likely that the languages adopted by these peoples would be regional, just given how many of them there are/were that are spread out across so much land.
@@ParryThis you are right
cuman-qypchaq tribes are living now in many turkic countries, Kazakhstan, Tatarstan, Uzbekistan etc. Also there are for example lithuanian Tatars, this ethnicity also is made of many tribes and one of them as i know is Qypchaq.
@@ParryThis Only few of Cumans are in Hungary. There are 2 cities in Hungary that Cumans live in, Cumans are Turkic (both language and genetic). Cumans in Hungary forgot Turkish, because when they became christian (from Tengrism which s known as one God belief), they also married with Hungarians so language could not continue in next generations, but there s a historical praying in Cuman Turkish in Hungary i it s very understandable with Turkish. Mahmud Kashgari who wrote first Turkish dictionary in 1072 named Diwan Lugat Türk, knew all Turkic dialects. He told about Turkic tribes with their name meaning and where they live in. He says Cumans are a Turkish tribe. He explains Kuman (cuman) word in Turkish (as he tells all Turkish words in his dictionary. And he knew Turkic tribes with their tamga (symbols ). They used these symbols (put on animals) to differ their animals from other tribes not to mix.also on swords etc, and also on grave stones,
@@PimsleurTurkishLessons "turkish" only refers to the Turks of Turkey and surrounding regions. Cumans are Kipchak turkic not Oghuz.
Informative, well done
Glad you liked it
Thanks for informing me that these are indeed the KCD bad guys.
I am Cuman from Kazakhstan. We call ourselves Kipchak
im a Cuman from turkey proud to be Turkic!
That is awesome.
Im Kaman... wondering if this is my family ? Im in USA ...
Same for the Khanateee!
Stop telling stories, you idiot! The descendants of the Cumans are Kazakhs and Crimean Tatars, but since there are fewer Crimean Tatars and they do not have statehood, today there is only Kazakhstan, the Kazakhs have a tribe of Kipchaks, of which we have almost 2 million and they are the most direct descendants of the Cumans. Now tell me, do you have a Kipchak tribe and what is its size?
@@красавчик-ю5з North east Turkey and Black sea coasts of Turkey full of kipchaks , Kazakhs and Turks coming from the same roots ffs
Hungarians called the Cumans Kun and there are two county in Hungary bears the name today. Kiskunság és Nagykunság and many city names contain Kun, like Kiskunhalas(Small cuman fishery)
Nice content. I would like to add, in fact, the most famous victory of the Cuman-Kipchaks was against the Mongols in the battle of ayn-jalut in 1260.
tiny ass battle against only 20,000 mongol border guards not even against a full mongol army.
@@teovu5557 "only 20,000 mongols" lol, It's funny that you underestimate the importance of the Battle of Ayn-Jalut while historians do not discuss it.
Even in the Battle of Stirling Bridge, for which an epic movie was made with a huge budget, 5000 people fought against 10000 people. The Mongols were the superpower of their time and 20000 of them was "only" in your opinion.
In 1060-1200 Ukraine wasn't a nation nor a kingdom. It just wasn't a concept then
It was just wild fields
Ukranian culture partially stems from the western rus princypality of Hyalich-Wolhynia
This guy learned history from Putin. The Kievan Rus is considered both Ukrainian and Russian
@@tylerclayton6081 We need to go back to Yaroslav the wise, let me be brief....
@@tylerclayton6081 I didn't, fck Putin. It's not about where Ukraine stems from, it's even about the word itself that wasn't invented 800 years ago. Unfortunately, presenting false history is common nowadays and it is needed to remind about facts. It's like considering tribal US indians as first USA pioneers. Or saying that China is culturally equal to Taiwan while the original chinese culture persisted in Taiwan, not in communist, continental China. Some countries are just younger than others, no need to feel pain about it
Hey great job! Love the music! Long live AofE II!!
Glad you like it! Thanks.
Great video, would love a two hour one lol.
I'll keep that in mind next time.
Thanks for this. Very interesting
Glad you enjoyed it!
There are still descendants of cumans in west Kazakhstan primarily known as Junior Juz.
The famous Beybarys mamluk also was from Junior Juz tribe.
My family line also starts from Junior Juz and the name of my great grand father is Qul Tuma (which translates as "someone who is not to be a slave" and direct translation is dont be a slave).
My full family line goes like:
1. Bay uly(oglu)
2. Sherkesh
3. Qosym
4. Shora(Sura)
5. Jaqsy Bori
6. Qul Tuma
7. Kenzhe Qul
8. Zerik
9. Amaldyq
10. Samen
11. QoyBas
12. Jumabay
13. Aldekey
14. Tanashbek
15. Iliyas
16. Me
In central, north, west Kazakhstan
@@QasqaZholкеремет
Seeing their warmasks and their design in general made me want an RPG set in Ancient Iran so bad
Turkish Cumanians had far more in common with Eastern Europe, than literally the world apart, Persians
@@fshoaps Eastern Europe? You mean the ones descended from ancient IRANIC tribes like the Scythians and Sarmatians?
Ancient Iran conquered by Mesopotamians and Eastern Scythians were assimilated by Huns and made the Turks, Western Scythians assimilated by Slavs.
@@yaqubebased1961 so he is right even considering from ancient times Iran and Cumans has nothing to do with except the part with mixing with Eastern Scythians mostly Sakas who had similar culture to Huns not Iran.
@@yaqubebased1961 also Eastern Europe is mostly Slavic they are not descended mainly from Scythians.
We made it guys, finally someone is talking about us! 🤣🤣 😁
The settlement of Cuman Turks in Anatolia by the Byzantine Empire greatly helped the Seljuk Turks who later entered Anatolia to Turkify Anatolia.
The Manavs are nowdays the Descends of the Cumans kipchaks in Turkey (proud of my Cuman and Kayi Türkmen Ancestry)
Spicy video 😉
A little.
Very interesting
Glad you think so!
Just look at the traditional customs, listen the language of Kazakhs, you can have a modern day Kipchak! 🇰🇿👍
@wratch-gd2jqyou mean Huns?
modern kazakhstan is divided into three "juz" and the middle Juz has Kipchak tribes.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%BCz#Senior_zhuz
3:37 the Golden Horde WHAT??!
Kahante i guees
Bro has a history channel and mispronounced one of the most important empires of all time
The only good Cuman, is the Cuman who just donated his gear to me posthumously
I know you didn’t meant in bad way, but abkhazia was part of georgian kingdom, so there was no need to add it. I am saying it because today there is propaganda that says abkhazia was different from georgia, but it not it was ruled and settled by georgian, but thanks for this video. wish u the best
Fun tidbit: You can also see a city in Macedonia that is named after the Cumans who settled in the region. See the map at 5:09, beyond the borders of south of Serbia is the city named 'Kumanovo'
I had been afraid that in Hardcore version cuman raiders would actually have horses in their camp and ambushed from saddle. Would be a bit harder game :D
love this vid will soon be as big as game theory
Man, did you completely mispronounce "Khanate"???
I would love to see them do a Crusade. Show us the other side of things. They were the culmination of sentiments from those that had experiences like Henry, and they went on to treat those they invaded just as poorly.
I feel sad not understanding so much, dunno why, due to my English skills or my intelligence 😭, so many names and I'm lost. I think it's more about English skills. Anyways thank u so much, I Really love this game and would love to know so much about history because that, so hopefully one day I will perfectly understand all this but really thank u for all this effort 🙏❤
music is too loud
I love when you hit a cuman on the head and they fold over it's hilarious 😂
No, he wasn’t prince Kuthen. The warlord who Bela IV met was Khotyan Khan.
Kuthen was murdered in Hungary, Khotyan Khan would lead most of the Cuman people after his death, if i am not mistaken.
No, it's just a different transcription of the same name. We don't know who was exactly the ruler of the Cumans in Hungary after Kutjens death, most probably Seyhan/Zeyhan
“Related to the pecheneg”
*shows us the pkp machine gun*
You forgot to mention they can make an additional town center in the feudal age
3:14 , the Pechenegs are another type of Turkic People but also the name of a gun as shown but the gun got his name from the tribe. Anyway, the Pechenegs went to Bulgaria, Romania and Hungary before the Cumans because they were pushed by the Cumans.
3:38 Did you just pronounce "Khanate" as "kahante"?
So what? You can't pronounce Worcestershire.
@@The_Alpha_E if you know how to pronounce "Genghis Khan" and "khan", you can figure out how "khanate" would sound like.
Those face masks are on point though
Still today you can find people in Hungary that knows they are Kumans and some knew Turkish a generation ago.
Hungary even had radio broadcasting in Turkish some time ago!
Kumanova in macedonia is from them!
No, the Cuman language in Hungary died out in 1770.
The history of the cumans is simple. WHat would the mongols be like in the 12th century if they were white and didn't have Genghis khan, Tusbodai or Jebe?
Mind you a heap of cumans/Kipchaks joined with the mongols.
Those who didn't had to flee as refugees to Hungary. In hungary they could have saved King Bela and Hungary form the mongols, only the stupid hungarian nobles killed the Cumans leader in a lynching, so the cuman refugees raided a bit then refused to help the Hungarians. Later on though they did, and they were really the only chance Hugnary had against the the sub-khanates, as they had similar skills to the mongols, and many had spent decades fighting them. The cumans also represented the best opportunity for the kings of hungary who were very weakened after the mongol raids.
In medieval times, the king was really just the CEO. The head of the board. With each other high noble being a board member. Every board member including the CEO has 1 equal vote, but the CEO has the most influence. Also may of these high nobles had their own claim to be CEO. As king you really were just first amongst equals.
The cumans weren't hungarian. They had no claims. SO the king gave them big swathes of land the mongols had "depopulated". But the contract was that the cumans were the kings personal fiefs. You fought only for the king. This essentially turned the cumans into the praetorian guard or the nazi's SS. A personal army. However by 1403 the cumans 100% did not dress like they do in the game. They were very earupoean/Hungarian by then, but retained their warrior culture and only some nomadic culture.
Cumans are Kazakhs
@@красавчик-ю5з no they are not idiot. Cumans are kipchak
You have a way with words but you are mistaken about royalty. Nobles didn't have an equal claim to be CEO. Most of Hungarian kings weren't Hungarian 😉 Think of it, if 'blue blood' foreigner marries into 'blue blood' ruling family, their offsprings have a claim to be rulers because they aren't foreigners anymore. Sometimes blue blood isn't even necessary. Meritocracy can work too.
Kumyks from the North Caucasus. Cuman language Kipchak with Oguz dialect as well as Kumyk language.
Feels weird slaying your ancestors throughout the game.
half-Tatar, half Yoruk here. And I say "well, kinda..."
Then why play a game about a Catholic Czech knight?
No wonder you're gonna slay your ancestors.
They were mercenaries of the King Milutin of Serbia. Cumans settled in a town that still holds their name, Kumanovo (now North Macedonia). Kumanovo literally means Cuman's (town or place).
5:09 you can even see that town on a map that is shown, its a south of Serbia, right next to Skoplje.
They were also elite soldiers of byzantine empire
They tried to violate Theresa.
Greeting from Hungary / A Cuman / :D
Lost Turkic Tribes in Europe CUMANS II (titled video in youtube) other part of video is
Lost Turkic Tribes in Europe CUMANS I
Cumans sure had a spicy history.
They are the ones who invented cumin. So to recognize this historic contribution, they were named cumans.
in hunagry there is a lot city and village what contain a "kun" like kiskunfélegyháza this is where they live even today.
The mongolian invasion of Hungary had unparallaled destruction. 1/3 of the country's population was completely annihilated. A good resource is the first-hand account of the Priest Rogerius in his Carmen miserabile; he describes the mongol invasion in vivid detail. When running from the mongols, he often went weeks without meeting a single other person, the only sign of humanity were burning villages, the howling of wolves and the mongol horde.
Did he just say kahantae?????
yes, yes, he did. how dare he...
Bro no offense but at points it literally just sounded like you're just reading different wikipedia articles in the most convoluted manner possible..
Press F to pay respects to Ma and Pa
So basically eastern European vikings right? That's hella cool haha
If you were to ask me what my favorite empire in history was, I’d have to say the Golden Horde KAHANTÉ
Nice to see my ancestors getting the attention they deserve. Sadly turkic people in history has a lot of affect in the world we know today but just because they accomplished so much on their own, people today hate turks in general a lot
Also, as a culture with a mostly spoken tradition, much of their own history as it would be told by them is lost.
There are still people with the ethnic name Cuman in Turkey? I thought only the Altai republic still had "Cuman" named people.
@@teovu5557 we call them kipchaks
@@metethenationalist2778 kypchaks and cumans are two different tribes from the same empire/confederation.
Modern day cumans are the turkic kumandy and kumandins of the altai republic.....they literally still use the name cumans. Lol
@@teovu5557 mıst people call them kipchaks even yho its wrong
“Golden Horde Kahante” didn’t you mean Khanate?
5:41 Kaaaaahn!!!!!!
I made my family tree years ago and then psihogenealogy. I'm romanian, but my origins are not so romanian( dacian and roman mixt). In the area where my great great grandparents lived( Valahia or Muntenia) are so many places or people with the name Coman, Comana, Cotmeana. In our history books are just mentioned, but no one says about them, about their strong influence in South Europe and Balkans.
Awesome
The Cumans actually evolved their fighting style to what the Mongols did to them and they learned, adapt and overcame their enemies the same way the Mongols did. Some even argued that the Mongols were actually mixed Chinese with Turko-Caucasian people that had stayed on the steppes. That's besides the point tho.
The Cumans and Kipcheks were strong horsemen that often raid China from time to time and when the Mongols went after them, they failed to mount an actual defense and fell to Genghis. However, even with the Cuman-Kipchek Alliance falling, many Cumans that survived took what they learnt and utilized it against the Mongols themselves or against other potential enemies as it works and they saw how a well-armoured Kievan Rus knights gets slaughtered by the Mongol horde on horseback and from there, they learnt.
It was even recorded that the Cumans best strategy was what the Mongols liked to use the most and that's the "feint retreat" where they sent their light cavalry towards enemy lines, pelt them with arrows or skirmishes then retreat to a faux position that already had an ambush in an effort to lure their enemies out to fight them but instead lure them deep into the well placed ambush and got rid of every single one of the now ensnared enemy. That was the Cuman's best move.
Also, the Cumans are warlike but they're not as brutal as people said. In war, brutality always comes into play but the Cumans were in fact as civilized as the next Christian lords of that time but it's just that because they were from "the outside", no one believed them to be civilized but treated them as tyrants and what-not.
Like you said, it wasn't until Bela reinvited the Cumans back to Hungary that did they fully show that despite being a warlike council, they're great at civil stuff, just like the Mongols and the Golden Horde.
No. Cumans didn’t “learn from Mongols”. Steppe peoples had been using the same battle tactics for thousands of years.
@@precursors They did learn from the Mongols.
The sole reason on why early on that the Cumans & Kipchecks lost to what will become the Golden Horde early on was because yes, both culture were cavalry focused forces but the Cumans were using an unorthodox European style where instead of keeping the cavalry as a shock unit backup, they sent their units in frontal charge but adapt to find gaps and encircle the enemy.
That shit won't fly with the Mongols as at that point of time, they were already adept to the fighting style of the Chinese which were almost the same to the Cumans when it came to cavalry warfare and with the Mongols often pulling back after a skirmish only for the Kipcheck-Cuman alliance warriors to step into the killing zone of the Mongols that the Kipchek-Cuman alliance lost hard.
It wasn't until at least a decade later where the Cumans could find a proper home in the Bulgaria, Hungarian and Bohemian region that did they rebuild their own clans and adapted to the fighting, roaming combat style of the Mongols that they turned the tide against the western armies that often tried to get rid of them or the Golden Horde that kept trying to rid them too.
Bro learned history from 💩💩💩💩
@@MrLolx2ublud never heard of steppe
Yes, for foreigners to pronounce the word"Polovsci" In Russian
Nah this ain't right I redownloaded this game after ages and boom recommended this lol
I was so scared of these guys in the game. I ended up around 12 hours in feeling pretty good about myself and had some gear. Then i found a treasure chest in the woods and got jumped by two of these guys who completely kicked my ass.
8:46 anyone know what this is called, the name of the piece?
Hi there. You might have found it by now but if not you can find it in Google by typing "Battle of Mühldorf".
So for clearing some things in comments, the term Turk came after Scyhtians and Huns mixed so Turks were half Europeans from the start that's why old Karakhanid kurgans have around %20 North European genetics and Huns were Huns not Indo Europeans they are more close to Mongols and Magyars,Cumans are Turkic.
Scythians or their ancestors invaded Siberia way before in 8000BC. The first contact between Turkic people and Skythians dates way before than the Huns most likely. Thats why Turkic people were known as mixed-people unlike the Mongols.
They also had their own spice named after them
Golden Horde KAHANTE :DDDD It's Khanate :D
Yeah, i know, i butchered that pronunciation bad. I have since learned the error of my ways.
@@ParryThis Still a noble attempt! I know these words are very difficult for westerners to pronounce!
Great vid bro!
Altın Ordaa kağanlığı
Алтын Орда Қағанаты
Khanate is pronounced more like KAN-EIGHT. Think like Kublai Khan.
K-hantay.... Very inventive
very cool except for the fact that you pronounced khanate as kahantey
They weren't fighting Přemysl Otakar, but his grandson Přemysl Otakar II, and they were just part of Hungarian army.
I really dont want to be *that* guy, but cumans arent mentioned in the title at all and are therefore not titular. Sorry, just had to say something to quell the internal screaming
Later in history the Cuman people mixed with the Shot tribes, forming the formidable Cumshots