Cyrtians

The Cyrtians or Kyrtians (Ancient Greek: Κύρτιοι, romanizedKýrtioi, Latin: Cyrtii) were an ancient tribe in historic Iran near the Zagros Mountains.[1] Based on their name, it has been suggested that they may be ancestors of the Kurds[2][3] or the source of the ethnonym Kurd.[4]

According to Rüdiger Schmitt, they were a tribe dwelling mainly in the mountains of Atropatenian Media (Northern Zagros Mountains) together with the Cadusii, Amardi (or "Mardi"), Tapyri, and others (Strabo 11.13.3). Strabo characterized the Cyrtians living in Persia as migrants and predatory brigands.[2]

In the Hellenistic period, they seem to have been in demand as slingers, because they fought as such for the Median satrap Molon in his revolt against King Antiochus III in 220 BC.[2]

Friedrich Carl Andreas was the first scholar to propose a connection between the names Cyrtian and Kurd. He placed the ethnic territory of the Cyrtians in the area of the Armenian province of Korchayk, the name of which he derived from the hypothetical form *korti-ayk‘, with the first element developing from *kurti to *korti- to *korč-.[1]

  1. ^ a b Asatrian 2009, p. 26.
  2. ^ a b c Schmitt 1993, p. 515.
  3. ^ Brentjes 2006.
  4. ^ Asatrian 2009, pp. 26–28: "In other words, it is unlikely that the Kyritians [sic] of Classic sources were somatic ancestors of the contemporary Kurds".

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