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The Eurasian steppe has yielded many fearsome conquerors and empires, yet few stories unfold with as much velocity and upheaval as that of the Cuman–Kipchak confederation. Rising in the shadows left by the Xiongnu, Avars, Göktürks, and Khazars, it surged westward from the Altai to the Danube at fast speed. Its warriors—relentless masters of the horse and bow—halted the advance of rivals like the Kievan Rus’, toppled entire steppe cultures like the Pecheneg, and sparked alliances that could either safeguard or threaten realms such as Kievan Rus’, Byzantium, and Hungary. When Khan Köten arrived on Hungarian soil seeking refuge, King Béla IV saw an asset in the fierce cavalry forces at his doorstep—only for paranoia to fracture that alliance on the eve of the Mongol onslaught. Elsewhere, the Kipchaks rode beneath Georgian kings like David IV “the Builder” and Queen Tamar, balancing precarious truces and bold offensives. Every move seemed certain, every victory fleeting. Yet no steppe force could remain untouched by the Mongols, whose disciplined columns overwhelmed the Cuman–Kipchak hosts in battles such as Kalka River and Mohi. The slaughter of Köten sparked the departure of Cuman clans, leaving Hungary vulnerable to Batu Khan’s tide; other Kipchaks found themselves subsumed under the Golden Horde, weaving new threads of identity in a Mongol-Turkic tapestry. Though the confederation’s unity dissolved, its legacy reached every corner of medieval Europe and beyond: the Codex Cumanicus preserved the language once feared on the field, Tengrism mingled with Islam and Christianity, and royal courts from the Volga to the Carpathians bore the bloodlines of Cuman princesses and khans. In this first episode of Season 5 of Khan’s Den, I delve into the formation of the Cuman–Kipchak state from the Kimek Khaganate, clarifying the relationship between Cumans and Kipchaks. Then, we trace their presence in Hungary, Byzantium, Georgia, and the Rus’ principalities, and portray figures like Khan Köten whose alliances and conflicts defined medieval power dynamics. Major battles such as Kalka River and Mohi capture the fury of steppe warfare, while the Codex Cumanicus illuminates the linguistic heritage linking these nomads to modern Turkic languages. Our narrative closes with their subjugation under the Golden Horde, subsequent dispersal, and ultimate cultural imprint on Eastern Europe—revealing a rich history of migration, religion, diplomacy, and enduring legacy. The Cuman-Kipchak Confederation indeed was the culmination of 700 years of Turkic peresence on the European continent – long after the Huns of Attila and before the arrival of the Ottoman Empire. Support me on Patreon: Patreon.com/khansden Check out my music: https://khansden.bandcamp.com/follow_me Buy my Göktürk book: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DS633L34 Visit my site: https://khansden.net Sources: Medieval and Primary Sources • Moghon Shine Usu Inscription (8th century) • Göktürk Orkhon Inscriptions (8th century) • Hudud al-Alam (late 10th century) • Gardizi (mid-11th century) • The Primary Chronicle (early 12th century) • John Skylitzes, Synopsis of Histories (late 11th–early 12th century) • Anna Komnena, The Alexiad (late 11th–early 12th century) • Gesta Hungarorum (Anonymous, early 13th century) • Simon of Kéza, Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorum (late 13th century) • Ibn al-Athir, al-Kamil fi al-Tarikh (13th century) • al-Idrisi (12th century) • Kartlis Tskhovreba (Georgian Chronicles, various dates) • Kirakos Gandzaketsi (13th century) • Hungarian Royal Charters & Papal Bulls (13th century) Modern Scholarship Anatoly Khazanov (1984). Nomads and the Outside World. Cambridge University Press. Jean-Paul Roux (1984). La religion des Turcs et des Mongols. Payot. Peter B. Golden (1992). An Introduction to the History of the Turkic Peoples. Harrassowitz. Marcel Erdal (1991). Old Turkic Word Formation. Otto Harrassowitz. C. E. Bosworth (2016). The Turks in the Early Islamic World. Routledge. Gerald Mak and Roman K. Kovalev (2016). “Kimek Khaganate,” in: The Encyclopedia of Empire, Vol. II, edited by John M. MacKenzie, Nigel Dalziel, Nicholas Doumanis, and Michael W. Charney. Wiley-Blackwell. Gyula Kristó and László Szegfű. Various studies on medieval Hungary. István Zimonyi. Works on medieval nomadic peoples and Cuman–Hungarian. Sergey Klyashtorny. Articles on Central Asian epigraphy and inscriptions. КЫПЧАКСКИЕ ЯЗЫКИ: КУМАНСКИЙ И АРМЯНО-КЫПЧАКСКИЙ. Александр ГАРКАВЕЦ. Кыпчакские языки: куманский и армяно-кыпчакский.– Алма-Ата: Издательство "Наука" АН КазССР, 1987.– 223 стр. Chapters: 00:00 Arrival of the Kipchaks 03:00 Altaic Origins 10:56 Invasion of Europe 23:22 Caucasian Affairs 30:13 Turkic Vocab, Christian Prayers: Codex Cumanicus 38:22 Religion: Tengrism, Christianity and Islam 45:22 Mongol Invasions 54:19 Khan Köten: The Kipchak's Last Hope 58:50 Hungarian Cumans, Golden Kipchaks 01:07:40 Cuman Assimilation, Kipchak Endurance 01:14:10 Conclusion