The Akatziri, Akatzirs or Acatiri (, Άκατζίροι, Akatiroi, Akatziroi; ) were a tribe that lived north of the Black Sea, though the Crimean city of Chersonesus seems to have been under their control in the sixth century. Jordanes ( 551) called them a mighty people, not agriculturalists but cattle-breeders and hunters. Their ethnicity is undetermined: the 5th-century historian Priscus describes them as ethnic (ethnos) Scythians, but they are also referred to as Huns ( Akatiri Hunni). Their name has also been connected to the Agathyrsi. However, according to E. A. Thompson, any conjectured connection between the Agathyrsi and the Akatziri should be rejected outright.
History
Roman emperor
Theodosius II () sent an envoy to the Akatziri trying to detach them from their alliance with the Hunnic ruler
Attila (435–453), an effort made to stir up fighting which also ensued. In 447 or 448 the
Huns successfully campaigned against the Akatziri. In 448 or 449, as Priscus recounts "
Onegesius along with the eldest of Attila's children, had been sent to the Akateri, a Scythian people, whom he was bringing into an alliance with Attila". As the Akatziri tribes and clans were ruled by different leaders, emperor Theodosius II tried with gifts to spread animosity among them, but the gifts were not delivered according to rank,
Karadach (Kouridachos) warned and called Attila against fellow leaders. So Attila did, Kardach stayed with his tribe or clan in own territory, while the rest of the Akatziri became subjected to Attila. Attila's son
Ellac was installed as ruler of the Akatziri. According to Sinor (1990), they were absorbed by the
Saragurs in the 460s..
Akatziri rulers
[[Attilid dynasty/" itemprop="url" title="Wiki: Attila">Attila
Possible descendants
Akatziri were also hypothesized to be a Turkic tribe, their ethnonym connected to Turkic ağaç eri, 'woodman' or *
Aq Qazir "White
Khazars". However, Peter B. Golden remarks that: " Neither of these theses has been firmly grounded in anything beyond phonetic resemblance"; and the other hypothesis that Akatziri were ancestors of the Khazars is not backed up by any solid evidence.
Omeljan Pritsak links
Ak-Katzirs (< Άκατζίροι) to the name Khazar, though he explains that the polity was named Khazar simply because the
Ashina tribe-ruled Western Turks, after losing their territories to Tang Chinese, took over the territory formerly occupied by the Akatziri.
Notes
Sources
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Atwood notes that Jordanes describes how the Crimean city of Chersonesus, "where the avaricious traders bring in the goods of Asia", was under the control of the Akatziri Huns in the sixth century.
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