The
Kengeres, mentioned in the
Orkhon inscriptions, were possibly known in the Islamic world and in the west as
Kangar, a collective name for three
Pecheneg tribes (of eight).
Byzantine emperor
Constantine Porphyrogenitus stated that
Kangar signified nobleness and bravery. Ukrainian historian
Omeljan Pritsak suggested that
Kangar originated from
Tocharian A *
kânk "stone" and
Kengeres combined
Kenger with the Iranian ethnonym
As, supposedly from *
ârs < *
âvrs < *
Aoruša (Greek:
Αορσοι). However, Golden objected that *
Aoruša would have yielded
Ors/
Urs and Pritsak's opinion on the Kengeres-Kangars' ethnonym and mixed Tocharian-Iranian origin remained "highly hypothetical". Other Orientalists,
Marquart,
Toltsov,
Klyashtorny, attempted to connect the
Kangar and
Kengeres to the
Qanglı, the eastern grouping of the
Cuman-Kipchak confederation as well as the Indo-European
Kangju in Chinese sources. Akhinžanov proposed that the
Kipchaks simply assumed the name
Qanglı (literally "wagon") after taking over the
Kang region.
András Róna-Tas (1996, 1999) proposes that the Pechenegs associated with their word
kongor meaning "brown" (referring to their horses'
coat color) with the ethnic name Kangar, which had been in existence in the Caucasus region as early as the 6th century CE before the Turkic peoples emerged; though he considers it a "case of an ethnic name established by means of a
popular etymology". Nevertheless, all of these connections, if any, remain unclear. == Independence ==