Tamga
A tamga or tamgha (Old Turkic: 𐱃𐰢𐰍𐰀, Turkish: damga, Ottoman Turkish: طمغا, Azerbaijani: damğa; "stamp, seal") is an abstract seal or stamp used by Eurasian nomadic peoples and by cultures influenced by them. The tamga was normally the emblem of a particular tribe, clan or family. They were common among the Eurasian nomads throughout Classical Antiquity and the Middle Ages (including Iranians (Alans, Sarmatians, Scythians), Mongols and Turkic peoples.
- For the prehistoric organism, see Tamga (genus)
Similar "tamga-like" symbols were sometimes adopted by sedentary peoples adjacent to the Pontic-Caspian steppe both in Eastern Europe and Central Asia.[1][2][3][4] Archaeologists prize tamgas as a first-rate source for the study of present and extinct cultures.
Medieval tamgas
Mongol Empire
Since the ancients nations, including the Mongols nations, developed into relative groups, origins, and ethnic groups, the symbol and the belief of a clan have emerged, and a custom to distinguish its origins and relatives has been established. Consequently, when labor distributions within clans began to develop and people started to manage an economy, various tamgas, drawings, notes, and earmarks have been used as an identification sign for labor instruments and utilities as well as in domestication of animals. Every time the clan branched off because of internal clashes, the number of derivative tamghas gradually developed into personal, family, lineage, khans, and state tamghas. The new tamghas were created through by new markings on the original tamgha to conserve the tradition. In the Mongol Empire, a tamgha was a seal placed on taxed items and, by extension, a tax on commerce (see Eastern Europe below).[5]
"Tamga," or "tamag," literally means a stamp or seal in Mongolian. Tamgas are also stamped using hot irons on domesticated animals such as horses in present-day Mongolia and others to identify that the livestock belongs to a certain family while they graze during the day on their own. In that regard, each family has their own tamga markings for easier identification. Tamga marking is then not very elaborate and is just a curved iron differentiating from other families' tamgas. The President of Mongolia also passes the tamag "state seal" during the transition to a new president. In the presidential case, the tamag or seal is a little more elaborate and is contained in a wooden box.
Turkic peoples
The Turks who remained pastoral nomad kings in eastern Anatolia and Iran, however, continued to use their clan tamgas and in fact, they became high-strung nationalistic imagery. The Ak Koyunlu and Kara Koyunlu, like many other royal dynasties in Eurasia, put their tamga on their flags and stamped their coinage with it.
For the Turks who never left their homeland of Turkestan in the first place, it has remained what it originally was: a cattle brand and clan identifier.
Among modern Turkic peoples, the tamga is a design identifying property or cattle belonging to a specific Turkic clan, usually as a cattle brand or stamp.
When Turkish clans took over more urban or rural areas, tamgas dropped out of use as pastoral ways of life became forgotten. That is most evident in the Turkish clans that took over western and eastern Anatolia after the Battle of Manzikert. The Turks who took over western Anatolia founded the Sultanate of Rûm and became Roman-style aristocrats. Most of them adopted the then-Muslim symbol of the Seal of Solomon after the Sultanate disintegrated into a mass of feuding ghazi states (see Isfendiyarids, Karamanids). Only the Ottoman ghazi state (later to become the Ottoman Empire) kept its tamga, which was so highly stylized that the bow was stylized down eventually to a crescent moon.
Tamgas of the 21 Oghuz tribes (as Charuklug had none) according to Mahmud al-Kashgari in Dīwānu l-Luġat al-Turk:[6]
- Kınık
- Kayı
- Iwa (Yiwa)
- Salur
- Afshar
- Bugduz
- Bayat
- Yazigir
- Karaboluk
- Аlkaboluk
- Uregir (Yüregir)
- Tutirka
- Döger
- Chepni
- Charuklug
Eastern Europe
In Russia, the term tamga (тамга) survived in state institution of border customs, with associated cluster of terms: tamozhnya (таможня, customs), tamozhennik (таможенник, customs officer), rastamozhit' (растаможить, pay customs duties), derived from the use of tamga as a certificate of state.
- Tamga of the Bosporan king Tiberius Julius Eupator, crowned by two winged victories. The relief dates to the second century CE.
- Example for Rurikid Trident
Islamic empires
In the late medieval Turco-Mongol states, the term tamga was used for any kind of official stamp or seal. This usage persisted in the early modern Islamic Empires (Ottoman Empire, Mughal Empire), and in some of their modern successor states.
In the Urdu language (which absorbed Turkic vocabulary), Tamgha is used as medal. Tamgha-i-Jurat is the fourth highest Military medal of Pakistan. It is admissible to all ranks for gallantry and distinguished services in combat. Tamgha-i-Imtiaz or Tamgha-e-Imtiaz (Urdu: تمغہ امتیاز), which translates as "medal of excellence", is fourth highest honour given by the Government of Pakistan to both the military and civilians. Tamgha-i-Khidmat or Tamgha-e-Khidmat (Urdu: تمغۂ خدمت), which translates as "medal of services", is seventh highest honour given by the Government of Pakistan to both the military and civilians. It is admissible to non-commissioned officers and other ranks for long meritorious or distinguished services of a non-operational nature.
In Egypt, the term damgha (Arabic: دمغة) or tamgha (تمغة) is still used in two contexts. One is a tax or fee when dealing with the government. It is normally in the form of stamps that have to be purchased and affixed to government forms, such as a driver license or a registration deed for a contract. The term is derived from the Ottoman damga resmi. Another is a stamp put on every piece of jewelry made from gold or silver to indicate it is genuine, and not made of baser metals.
See also
Notes
- Neubecker, Ottfried (2002). Heraldik (in German). Orbis. ISBN 3-572-01344-5.
- Brook, Kevin Alan (2006). The Jews of Khazaria (2nd ed.). Rowman and Littlefield. p. 154. ISBN 0-7425-4981-X.
- Franklin, Simon; Shepard, Jonathan (1996). The Emergence of Rus 750–1200. London: Longman. pp. 120–121.
- Pritsak, Omeljan (1998). The Origins of the Old Rus' Weights and Monetary Systems. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute. pp. 78–79. ISBN 0-582-49090-1.
- Christian, David (1999). A History of Russia, Mongolia and Central Asia. Blackwell. p. 415.
- Mahmûd, Kâşgarlı. Divânü Lugâti't-Türk. Kabalcı Yayınevi. p. 354.
References
- Yatsenko, S. A. (2001). Знаки-тамги ираноязычных народов древности и раннего средневековья [Tamga-signs of Iranic-speaking peoples of antiquity and the early medieval period]. Moscow: Восточная литература. ISBN 5-02-018212-5.
- Paksoy, H. B. (June 2004). "Identity Markers: Uran, Tamga, Dastan". Transoxiana. 8.
- Fetisov, A. (2007). Translated by Galkova, I. "The "Rurikid sign" from the B3 church at Basarabi-Murfatlar" (PDF). Studia Patzinaka. 4 (1): 29–44.
- "Online Ottoman Turkish Dictionary".