Cumans

The Cumans (Turkish and Azeri: Kuman, plural: Kumanlar; Hungarian: Kunok; Greek: Κο[υ]μάνοι, Ko[u]mánoi; Kazakh: Қыпшақтар, Qıpşaqtar, قىپشاقتار; Uzbek: Qipchoqlar, Қипчоқлар; Chuvash: Кăпчаксем, Kăpçaksem; Tatar: Команнар/Кыпчаклар, Qomannar/Qıpçaqlar; Bashkir: Ҡыпсаҡтар/ҡомандар, Qıpsaqtar/qomandar; Latin: Pallidi, Comani, Cuni, Romanian: Cumani, Polish: Połowcy, Plauci (Kumanowie), Russian: Половцы, Polovtsy; Ukrainian: Половці, Polovtsi; Belarusian: По́лаўцы/кыпчакі/куманы, Poławcy/kypčaki/kumany; Bulgarian and Macedonian: Кумани, Kumani; Czech: Plavci; Georgian: ყივჩაყი, ყიფჩაღი, Qivçaqi, Qipçaḡi; German: Falones, Phalagi, Valvi, Valewen, Valani) were a Turkic nomadic people comprising the western branch of the Cuman-Kipchak confederation. After the Mongol invasion (1237), many sought

Cumans

The Cumans (Turkish and Azeri: Kuman, plural: Kumanlar; Hungarian: Kunok; Greek: Κο[υ]μάνοι, Ko[u]mánoi; Kazakh: Қыпшақтар, Qıpşaqtar, قىپشاقتار; Uzbek: Qipchoqlar, Қипчоқлар; Chuvash: Кăпчаксем, Kăpçaksem; Tatar: Команнар/Кыпчаклар, Qomannar/Qıpçaqlar; Bashkir: Ҡыпсаҡтар/ҡомандар, Qıpsaqtar/qomandar; Latin: Pallidi, Comani, Cuni, Romanian: Cumani, Polish: Połowcy, Plauci (Kumanowie), Russian: Половцы, Polovtsy; Ukrainian: Половці, Polovtsi; Belarusian: По́лаўцы/кыпчакі/куманы, Poławcy/kypčaki/kumany; Bulgarian and Macedonian: Кумани, Kumani; Czech: Plavci; Georgian: ყივჩაყი, ყიფჩაღი, Qivçaqi, Qipçaḡi; German: Falones, Phalagi, Valvi, Valewen, Valani) were a Turkic nomadic people comprising the western branch of the Cuman-Kipchak confederation. After the Mongol invasion (1237), many sought