Sergius, son of Barnucius, was a ruler (patrician) of Lazica on the eastern Black Sea, in what is now western Georgia, who, c. 696/697, revolted from the Byzantine hegemony and acknowledged the suzerainty of the Arabs. Sergius' defection during the Arab–Byzantine wars is reported by Theophilus of Edessa and Agapius of Hierapolis.[1]
Genealogy
editA name of Sergius' father, Barnucius, is another rendering of the same name as Lebarnicius, a patrician of Lazica c. 662, known from the Hypomnesticum of Theodore Spudaeus and Theodosius of Gangra. The names of Nebarnukios and of his son Sergios also appear on seals found in the western Caucasus.[2] Professor Cyril Toumanoff considered Lebarnicius as the same person as Barnucius and, thus, father of Sergius, while Pavle Ingoroqva attempted to identify Barnucius with the Baruk of the medieval Georgian chronicle, Divan of the Abkhazian Kings.[3] This view has gained some currency in modern Georgian scholarship (M. Sanadze and T. Beradze),[4] but it is not shared by the likes as Toumanoff[3] and Gloveli.[5] Toumanoff, further, considered both Barnucius and Sergius dynasts of local provenance and possible descendants of the kings of Lazica.[3]
References
edit- ^ Hoyland, Robert G. (2011). Theophilus of Edessa's Chronicle and the Circulation of Historical Knowledge in Late Antiquity and Early Islam. Liverpool University Press. pp. 191–192. ISBN 978-1846316975.
- ^ Winkelmann, Friedhelm; Lilie, Ralph-Johannes, eds. (2002). "Lebarnikios 4336". Prosopographie der mittelbyzantinischen Zeit, Abt. 1: 641–867. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 116–117. ISBN 3110174561.
- ^ a b c Toumanoff, Cyril (1963). Studies in Christian Caucasian history. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press. pp. 255–256, fn. 355.
- ^ Alasania, Giuli (2007). "On the Personality of the Creator of the Abkhaz Kingdom" (PDF). Bulletin of the Georgian National Academy of Sciences. 175 (3): 157–158.
- ^ Gloveli, Shalva (2009). ""მეფეთა დივანი" როგორც საისტორიო წყარო" ["Mepeta Divani" as a Historical Source] (PDF). Studies in History and Ethnology (in Georgian and English). XI: 74–75. ISSN 1512-2727.