Sir-Kıvchak were a Turkic people whose existence is controversial and who were proposed to be precursors to the Kipchaks who settled in East Europe in the 10th century.
After the defeat of the short lived Xueyantuo khanate in 646, Sir people escaped to west. In 679-681 term they supported Turkic revolt against the Tang Empire in China. After the Turkic Empire was restored they took part in the formation of the new empire.[citation needed]
Uyghur Khaganate
Uyghurs, who replaced the Second Turkic Khaganate possibly mentioned the Kïvchak, instead of Sir, as the tribe who accompanied the Turks[5] in their Moyun Chur monument. Thus it seems that the names Sir and Kïvchak were used interchangeably and Kïvchak was the name Sir people assumed after the collapse of the Turkic Empire. Klyashtorny proposed that the new name Kïvchak means "unfortunate" in Old Turkic language, probably referring to the problems they encountered after the collapse of the empire. Kïvchak remnants escaped to west to Kimek territory. The Kipchak people of the later era likely descended from the Kïvchak of the 8th century.[citation needed] However, this early attestation of the ethnonym Kipchak is uncertain as damages on the inscription leave only -čq (𐰲𐰴) (*-čaq or *čiq) readable.[6] S.E.Malov, G.Aidarov and S.Karzhaubai have read this as Türük Qïbčaq, however the group which took part in the Mongolian and Japanese expedition in 1996-1998, did read the relevant passage as türk qaγan čaq älig yïl olurmïš ("I heard that the Turuk qayans sat on the throne exactly for fifty years").[7]
Other views
According to The Cambridge History of Inner Asia, however, the identification of Sir people with the Kipchak is not well established.[8]
References
^Pulleyblank, "Central Asia and Non-Chinese Peoples of Ancient China", p. VII 21-26.
^Takao Moriyasu (1999). Takao Moriyasu; Ayudai Ochir (eds.). Site and Inscription of Sine-Usu. The Society of Central Eurasian Studies, Toyonaka, Osaka University. pp. 177–195.
^Denis Sinor: The Cambridge History of Inner Asia, Cambridge University, 1990, ISBN0 521 24304 1 p.278
1 Central Asian (i.e. Turkmeni, Afghani and Iranian) Turkmens, distinct from Levantine (i.e. Iraqi and Syrian) Turkmen/Turkoman minorities, who mostly adhere to an Ottoman-Turkish heritage and identity.
2 In traditional areas of Turkish settlement (i.e. former Ottoman territories).
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