Alans
The Alans were an ancient and medieval Iranic nomadic pastoral people who migrated to what is today the North Caucasus; some continued on to Europe and later North Africa. They are generally regarded as part of the Sarmatians, and possibly related to the Massagetae. Modern historians have connected the Alans with the Central Asian Yancai of Chinese sources and with the Aorsi of Roman sources. Having migrated westwards and becoming dominant among the Sarmatians on the Pontic–Caspian steppe, the Alans are mentioned by Roman sources in the. At that time they had settled in the region north of the Black Sea and frequently raided the Parthian Empire and the South Caucasus provinces of the Roman Empire. Between the Goths broke their hold on the Pontic Steppe, thereby assimilating a significant population of associated Alans.
After the Hunnic defeat of the Goths on the Pontic Steppe around, many of the Alans along with various Germanic tribes migrated westwards. They crossed the Rhine in 406 CE along with the Vandals and Suebi, settling in Orléans and Valence. Around 409 CE they joined the Vandals and Suebi in crossing the Pyrenees into the Iberian Peninsula, settling in Lusitania and Hispania Carthaginensis. The Iberian Alans, soundly defeated by the Visigoths in 418 CE, subsequently surrendered their autonomy to the Hasdingi Vandals. In 428CE, the Vandals and Alans crossed the Strait of Gibraltar into North Africa, where they founded a kingdom which lasted until its conquest by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I in 534 CE.
Eventually in the 9th century those Alans who remained under Hunnic rule established the kingdom of Alania, a regional power in the Northern Caucasus. It survived until the Mongol invasions of the 13th century. Various scholars consider these Alans to be the ancestors of the modern Ossetians.
The Alans spoke an Eastern Iranian language which derived from Scytho-Sarmatian; in turn, the language evolved into the modern Ossetian language. The name Alan represents an Eastern Iranian dialectal form of the Old Iranian term Aryan, and so is cognate with the name of the country Īrān.
Name
The Alans were documented by foreign observers from the 1st century onward under similar names: ; '; 阿蘭聊 ' in the 2nd century, 阿蘭 ' in the 3rd century, later Alanguo ; Parthian and Middle Persian Alānān ; Arabic Alān ; Syriac Alānayē; Classical Armenian Alank; Georgian Alaneti ; Hebrew Alan. Rarer Latin spellings include Alauni or Halani. The name was also preserved in the modern Ossetian language as Allon.The ethnonym Alān is a dialectal variant of the Old Iranian *Aryāna, itself derived from the root arya-, meaning 'Aryan', the common self-designation of Indo-Iranian peoples. It probably came in use in the early history of the Alans for the purpose of uniting a heterogeneous group of tribes through the invocation of a common, ancestral 'Aryan' origin. Like the name of Iran, the adjective *aryāna is related to Airyanəm Waēǰō, the mythical homeland of the early Iranians mentioned in the Avesta.
Some other ethnonyms also bear the name of the Alans: the Rhoxolāni, an offshoot of the Alans whose name may be linked to religious practices, and the Alanorsoi, perhaps a conglomerate of Alans and Aorsi. The personal names Alan and Alain may have been introduced by Alan settlers to Western Europe during the first millennium.
The Alans were also known over the course of their history by another group of related names including the variations Asi, As, and Os. It is this name at the root of the modern Ossetian''.
The Alans and warfare
The Alans were famed for their elite and highly mobile cavalry, a fighting style they inherited from their Sarmatian relatives. The Alans' influence on mounted warfare was widespread, with their tactics and equipment impacting the Roman and Germanic armies, among others.Alani boys learned to ride at a young age, and Roman writer Ammianus Marcellinus remarked that walking was considered offensive for an Alanic man. A hallmark Alanic tactic, the feigned retreat was designed to draw enemy infantry into a vulnerable position. Alani horsemen would pretend to flee before suddenly wheeling around to attack the enemy's exposed flank.
As mercenaries for the Romans and other powers, the Alans demonstrated a sophisticated understanding of combined-arms tactics. Their missile-equipped cavalry would harry the enemy, pinning them in place before the shock cavalry delivered a devastating charge.
Alani cavalry was highly mobile and was used for rapid skirmishing and opportunistic attacks against enemy flanks. The mobility of their cavalry and the psychological terror they inspired in less disciplined infantry were major advantages.
The Alans were recruited into the Mongol forces and known as the Asud, with one unit called "Right Alan Guard" that was combined with "recently surrendered" soldiers.
History
Timeline
ImageSize = width:780 height:200
PlotArea = left:72 right:8 bottom:20 top:2
AlignBars = justify
Define $wide = width:35
Colors =
id:sovereign value:rgb legend:Sovereign
id:subject value:rgb legend:Subject
id:semi value:rgb legend:Semi-independent
id:grid value:rgb
id:smallgrid value:rgb
DateFormat = yyyy
Period = from:20 till:2020
TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal
ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:100 start:100 gridcolor:grid
ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:20 start:20 gridcolor:smallgrid
Bardata =
bar:Africa text:"Africa"
bar:Gaul text:Gaul
bar:Danube text:Danube
bar:Ciscaucasus text:Ciscaucasus
bar:Caucasus text:Caucasus
Plotdata =
bar:Ciscaucasus from:start till:375 color:sovereign $wide
bar:Ciscaucasus at:20 text:"Ancient Alan kingdoms"
bar:Ciscaucasus at:375 text:Huns
bar:Ciscaucasus from:375 till:455 color:subject $wide
bar:Danube from:start till:175 color:sovereign $wide
bar:Danube at:30 text:"Roxolani & Iazyges"
bar:Danube from:380 till:480 color:subject $wide
bar:Danube at:385 text:"Alans settled in Pannonia"
bar:Gaul from:406 till:499 color:semi $wide
bar:Gaul at:406 text:"Alan kingdoms at~Orléans and Valence"
bar:Africa from:429 till:534 color:sovereign $wide
bar:Africa at:430 text:"Kingdom of the~Vandals and Alans"
bar:Ciscaucasus from:455 till:1239 color:sovereign $wide
bar:Ciscaucasus from:721 till:965 color:semi $wide
bar:Ciscaucasus at:750 text:"Khazars"
Bar:Ciscaucasus at:1000 text:"Medieval Alania"
bar:Ciscaucasus from:1239 till:1440 color:subject $wide
bar:Ciscaucasus at:1245 text:Mongols
bar:Ciscaucasus from:1440 till:1774 color:semi $wide
bar:Ciscaucasus from:1774 till:end color:subject $wide
bar:Ciscaucasus at: 1810 text:"North Ossetia~/Alania"
bar:Danube from:1318 till:end color:subject $wide
bar:Danube at:1500 text:"Jassic in Hungary"
bar:Caucasus from:1239 till:1440 color:subject $wide
bar:Caucasus from:1440 till:1804 color:semi $wide
bar:Caucasus at:1500 text:
bar:Ciscaucasus at:1500 text:"Iron~Digor"
bar:Caucasus from:1804 till:1991 color:subject $wide
bar:Caucasus at:1922 text:"South Ossetia"
bar:Caucasus from:1991 till:end color:subject $wide
Origin
The Alans were formed out of the merger of the Massagetae, a Central Asian Iranian nomadic people, with some old tribal groups. Related to the Asii who previously invaded Bactria in the 2nd century BC, the Alans were pushed west by the Kangju people, the latter of whom were living in the Syr Darya basin, from where they expanded their rule from Fergana to the Aral Sea region.Early Alans
The first mentions of names that historians link with the Alani appear at almost the same time in texts from the Mediterranean, Middle East and China.In the 1st century, the Alans migrated westwards from Central Asia, achieving a dominant position among the Sarmatians living between the Don River and the Caspian Sea. The Alans are mentioned in the Vologases inscription which reads that Vologases I, the Parthian king between around45 and 78, in the 11th year of his reign, battled Kuluk, king of the Alani. The 1st century Jewish historian Josephus supplements this inscription. Josephus reports in the Jewish Wars how Alans living near the Sea of Azov crossed the Iron Gates for plunder and defeated the armies of Pacorus, king of Media, and Tiridates, King of Armenia, two brothers of Vologeses I :
The fact that the Alans invaded Parthia through Hyrcania shows that at the time many Alans were still based north-east of the Caspian Sea. By the early 2nd century the Alans were in firm control of the Lower Volga and Kuban. These lands had earlier been occupied by the Aorsi and the Siraces, whom the Alans apparently absorbed, dispersed and/or destroyed, since they were no longer mentioned in contemporaneous accounts. It is likely that the Alans' influence stretched further westwards, encompassing most of the Sarmatian world, which by then possessed a relatively homogenous culture.
In, the Alans made a huge raid into Asia Minor via the Caucasus, ravaging Media and Armenia. They were eventually driven back by Arrian, the governor of Cappadocia, who wrote a detailed report that is a major source for studying Roman military tactics.
From 215 to 250, the Germanic Goths expanded south-eastwards and broke the Alan dominance on the Pontic Steppe. The Alans however seem to have had a significant influence on the culture of the Goths, who became excellent horsemen and adopted the Alanic animal style art.
After the Gothic entry to the steppe, many of the Alans seem to have retreated eastwards towards the Don, where they seem to have established contacts with the Huns. Ammianus writes that the Alans were "somewhat like the Huns, but in their manner of life and their habits they are less savage." Jordanes contrasted them with the Huns, noting that the Alans "were their equals in battle, but unlike them in their civilisation, manners and appearance". In the late 4th century, Vegetius conflates Alans and Huns in his military treatise Hunnorum Alannorumque natio, the "nation of Huns and Alans"and collocates Goths, Huns and Alans, exemplo Gothorum et Alannorum Hunnorumque.
The 4th century Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus noted that the Alans were "formerly called Massagetae," while Dio Cassius wrote that "they are Massagetae." It is likely that the Alans were an amalgamation of various Iranian peoples, including Sarmatians, Massagetae and Sakas. Scholars have connected the Alans to the nomadic state of Yancai mentioned in Chinese sources. The Yancai are first mentioned in connection with late 2nd century BC diplomat Zhang Qian's travels in Chapter 123 of Shiji. The Yancai of Chinese records has again been equated with the Aorsi, a powerful Sarmatian tribe living between the Don River and the Aral Sea, mentioned in Roman records, in particular Strabo.