- This article deals with the historical region of Tartary. For the Russian federal subject formerly known as Tataria, see Tatarstan. For the village of Tartaria in Romania which gained fame after discovery of Tartaria tablets, see Tartaria, Romania.
Tartary or Great Tartary (Latin: Tartaria or Tataria Magna) was a name used by Europeans from the Middle Ages until the twentieth century to designate a great tract of northern and central Asia stretching from the Caspian Sea and the Ural Mountains to the Pacific Ocean inhabited by Turkic and Mongol peoples of the Mongol Empire who were generically referred to as "Tartars", i.e. Tatars. It incorporated the current areas of Siberia, Turkestan (including East Turkestan), Greater Mongolia, Manchuria, and sometimes Tibet.
Geography and history
Tartary was often divided into sections with prefixes denoting the name of the ruling power or the geographical location. Thus, western Siberia was
Muscovite or
Russian Tartary, eastern Turkestan (later
Chinese Xinjiang) and Mongolia were
Chinese or
Cathay Tartary, western Turkestan (later
Russian Turkestan) was known as
Independent Tatary, and Manchuria was
East Tartary.
As the Russian Empire expanded eastward and more of Tartary became known to Europeans and East Asians, the term fell into disuse.
European areas north of the Black Sea inhabited by Turkic peoples were known as Little Tartary.
Tartary in fiction
In the novel
A Family Chronicle by
Vladimir Nabokov,
Tartary is the name of a large country on the fictional planet of
Antiterra.
Russia is Tartary's approximate geographic counterpart on Terra, Antiterra's twin world apparently identical to "our" Earth, but doubly fictional in the context of the novel.
According to the Metropolitan Opera's summary of Puccini's final opera, Turandot, the vanquished king of Tartary's son, Prince Cala'f, is smitten with Turandot's beauty and determines to win her love.
See also
References and further reading
- Stephen Kotkin. "Defining Territories and Empires: from Mongol Ulus to Russian Siberia 1200-1800". SRC Winter Symposium: Socio-Cultural Dimensions of the Changes in the Slavic-Eurasian World. January 30 - February 1, 1997. Available at: http://src-h.slav.hokudai.ac.jp/sympo/Proceed97/Kotkin1.html
External links
Central Asia | China | Geography of Russia
Tartaria | Tartarije