The successors of Sviatoslav I of Kiev …

Years: 1030 - 1030

The successors of Sviatoslav I of Kiev had succeeded in crushing Khazar power by 1010.

Although the Khazars continue to be mentioned in historical documents as late as the twelfth century, by 1030 their political role in the lands north of the Black Sea has greatly diminished.

(Despite the relatively high level of Khazar civilization and the wealth of data about the Khazars that is preserved in Eastern Roman and Arab sources, not a single line of the Khazar language has survived.

References to the Judaized Turkic Khazars become much more sparse after the fall of Khazaria.

Their ultimate fate as a people remains a mystery, although some clues point to their continuance among various Jewish, Muslim and Christian communities.

Some have speculated that the Mountain Jews of the eastern Caucasus are descended in part from the Khazars.

Various Turkic groups living in the North Caucasus today may be descended from Khazars who adopted Islam.

Abba Eban, Israel's foreign minister from 1966 to 1974, argued in his 1968 book My People that it is likely that “...Khazar progeny reached the various Slavic lands where they helped to build the great Jewish centers of Eastern Europe.”

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