Tzanaria
Tzanaria (alternative spellings: Tsanaria, Canaria, Sanaria, Sanaryia) was a historic district in the early medieval
Caucasus, chiefly laying in what is now the northwestern corner of
Georgia's
Mtskheta-Mtianeti region.
In the narrow sense of the term, Tzanaria (
Georgian: წანარ"თი,
Tzanareti; aka Tzanar Gorge, წანარ"თის ხ"ვი,
Tzanaretis Khevi, reduced later simply to
Khevi, i.e. gorge) was applied by the medieval Georgian annals to the area around the
Darial Pass, inhabited by the Tzanars. This warlike tribe is already known as Sanars to
Ptolemy. According to the
8th century Arab historian
Masudi, the Tzanars, though
Christians, claimed their origin from Nizar b. Maad b. Murad, and then from a branch of the Ukail family. Although this claim is completely rejected by modern scholars, the origins of the Tzanars are still uncertain. The tribe is sometimes claimed to be an offshoot of
Sarmatians.
Vladimir Minorsky believes, however, that they were the
Nakh-speakers. Whatever their origin, the Tzanars seem to have adopted, over the centuries, many features of Georgian culture, including language and
religion, being subsequently completely commingled with the
Georgian people to form one of its ethnographic groups
Mokheves, who were known until recently as
Tsans (or
Tsons) to the neighboring
Ossetes.
The Tzanars gained prominence during the time when
Arabs dominated over the most of the
Caucasus. They staged a powerful uprising against the invaders in the
770s and, according to
Ya'qubi, requested help from the
Byzantines,
Khazars and the
as-Saqāliba. The rebellious tribe soon became a dominant force in the historical
Kakheti region and played a crucial role, circa
787, in the formation of the principality of Kakheti ruled by a prince with the curious title of
chorepiscopus. For all practical purposes, the contemporary Arab sources used the word Sanãryia to designate the principality in general. However, the Tzanars seem to have been significantly weakened by the early
9th century, enabling their rival clan of the
Gardabanians to install their chief Vache as a chorepiscopus of Kakheti in the
830s. By the end of the 10th century, Tzanaria fell under the
kingdom of the Hers whose king
John Senekerim adopted the title of
King of the Tzanars.
For the later history see
Khevi.
*
History of Georgia*Rapp S.H. Jr., Studies in Medieval Georgian Historiography: Early Texts and Eurasian Contexts, Peeters Bvba (September 25, 2003), ISBN 9042913185, pp 398-9
*Minorsky V. F., History of Shirvan and Derbent in the 9th-11th centuries. Moscow, 1963, pp 210-211 (Russian)
*Lordkipanidze M. D., Political Unification of Feudal Georgia, 1963, p 140 (Georgian)
*Berdzenishvili N. A., Issues in the History of Georgia, vol. 9, Tbilisi, 1983, p 60 (Georgian)