240:
115:. With this, Otrok tearfully decided to give up the security and fame he had won in "a foreign land", and returned to the steppe where he fathered
103:
relates that after the death of
Vladimir Monomakh (1125), an envoy, the bard named Ör, arrived from Otrok's brother Sırchan, who lived near the
53:
82:
s daughter who received the name
Gurandukht (her original Turkic name is unknown). Otrok's Kipchaks helped David against the
216:
191:
163:
63:
in 1109, fled to
Georgia with some 40,000 followers, received baptism and entered the service of the Georgian king
235:
72:
45:. He was a member of the Sharukanids, one the ruling houses of the Kipchak tribal confederation known to the
119:, eventually one of the most famous foes of the princes of Kiev (not to be confused with the 14th-century
183:
68:
208:
94:
90:
in 1121. Otrok's 40,000 Cumans helped make
Georgia the most powerful kingdom in the region.
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8:
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107:, urging him to return. Ör's urges and songs were without effect until he produced some
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42:
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87:
120:
46:
112:
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38:
229:
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57:
33:
24:
126:
155:
28:
52:
Otrok, known in
Georgia as Atraka, son of Sharagan (i.e.,
150:Anatoly Michailovich Khazanov, André Wink (2001),
227:
205:Nomadic Empires: From Mongolia to the Danube
86:and contributed to the Georgian victory at
241:12th-century people from Georgia (country)
146:
144:
142:
180:The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia
174:
172:
139:
228:
169:
37:) who was involved in the wars with
56:), after the victories of the Rus'
13:
14:
252:
23:) was an early twelfth-century
197:
1:
152:Nomads in the Sedentary World
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41:, and later served under the
7:
10:
257:
184:Cambridge University Press
111:, the grass of his native
69:Georgian-Kipchak alliance
203:Gerard Chaliand (2003),
73:David's earlier marriage
209:Transaction Publishers
236:12th-century Kipchaks
178:Denis Sinor (1990),
61:Vladimir II Monomakh
71:was facilitated by
49:as "Wild Cumans".
43:Kingdom of Georgia
93:A passage in the
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220:
201:
195:
176:
167:
148:
81:
256:
255:
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250:
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246:
245:
226:
225:
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223:
202:
198:
182:, pp. 181,280.
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79:
67:(c. 1118). The
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11:
5:
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100:Hypatian Codex
9:
6:
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2:
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217:0-7658-0062-4
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26:
22:
18:
204:
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154:, pp. 46-8.
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108:
98:
92:
84:Seljuk Turks
76:
58:Grand Prince
51:
32:
20:
16:
15:
95:East Slavic
39:Kievan Rus'
31:chieftain (
230:Categories
133:References
97:chronicle
207:, p. 52.
156:Routledge
121:Chagatai
65:David IV
54:Sharukan
127:Könchek
117:Könchek
109:yawshan
88:Didgori
75:to the
29:Kipchak
215:
190:
162:
113:steppe
19:(also
80:'
25:Cuman
21:Atrak
17:Otrok
213:ISBN
188:ISBN
160:ISBN
124:khan
77:khan
47:Rus'
34:khan
129:).
105:Don
232::
211:,
186:,
171:^
158:,
141:^
219:.
194:.
166:.
27:-
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