Samiran For places in Iran, see Samiran, Iran. This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: "Samiran" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Samiran was a Khazar settlement in the Caucasus from roughly the 7th through the 10th centuries CE. vteKhazaria Byzantium Bulgaria Abbasids Arab–Khazar wars Kipchaks Meshchera Pax Khazarica Radhanites Rus' Volga trade route Dnieper trade route Khazar rulers Irbis Busir Bihar Parsbit Zachariah Bulan Obadiah Hezekiah Manasseh I Hanukkah Isaac Zebulun Manasseh II Nisi Aaron I Menahem Benjamin Aaron II Joseph David George Other figures Alp Iluetuer Alp Tarkhan Balgitzin Barjik Bulchan Hazer Tarkhan HLGW John of Gothia Leo IV Papatzys Pesakh Ras Tarkhan Serach Sfengus Sviatoslav Theodora Tzitzak Yitzhak ha-Sangari Places Atil Azaq Balanjar Bar Chersonesus Dagestan Güsliyev Golden Hills Kaffa Kavkaz Kazarki Kerch Kerem Khazaran Khumar Levedia Saltovo-Mayaki Samandar Sambalut Sambat Samiran Samosdelka Saqsin Sarkel Semikarakorsk Fortress Sudak Taman Tamatarkha Tributaries Abkhazians Alans Arsiyah Baranjars Barsils Bashkirs Burtas Chorni Klobuky Crimean Goths Cumans East Slavs Huns Juhuri Kabars Kipchaks Kumyks Kassogs Laz people Lezgins Magyars Mordvins Oghuz Onogurs Pechenegs Sabirs Sarir Uralics Volga Bulgaria Scholars Mikhail Artamonov Vasily Bartold D.M. Dunlop Norman Golb Peter B. Golden Lev Gumilyov Alexander Harkavy Thomas S. Noonan Svetlana Pletnyova Omeljan Pritsak Legacy Khazar Correspondence Khazar language Khazar ancestry claims Ashkenazi Ukrainian Cossacks Crimean Karaites Subbotniks Jewish Cossacks Khazars in fiction Kuzari Kievian Letter Mandgelis Document Red Jews Schechter Letter Category This European history–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.vte