Xionites

Asia in 400 AD, showing the Xionites ("Chionites") and their neighbors. Zionites|Xiongnu}}

Xionites, Chionites, or Chionitae (Middle Persian: ''Xiyōn'' or ''Hiyōn''; Avestan: ''X́iiaona-''; Sogdian ''xwn''; Pahlavi ''Xyōn'') were a nomadic people in the Central Asian regions of Transoxiana and Bactria.

The Xionites appear to be synonymous with the Huna peoples of the South Asian regions of classical/medieval India, and possibly also the Huns of European late antiquity, who were in turn connected onomastically to the Xiongnu in Chinese history.

They were first described by the Roman historian, Ammianus Marcellinus, who was in Bactria during 356–357 CE; he described the ''Chionitæ'' as living with the Kushans. Ammianus indicates that the Xionites had previously lived in Transoxiana and, after entering Bactria, became vassals of the Kushans, were influenced culturally by them and had adopted the Bactrian language. They had attacked the Sassanid Empire, but later (led by a chief named Grumbates), served as mercenaries in the Persian Sassanian army.

Within the Xionites, there seem to have been two main subgroups, which were known in the Iranian languages by names such as ''Karmir Xyon'' and ''Spet Xyon''. The prefixes ''karmir'' ("red") and ''speta'' ("white") likely refer to Central Asian traditions in which particular colours symbolised the cardinal points. The ''Karmir Xyon'' were known in European sources as the ''Kermichiones'' or "Red Huns", and some scholars have identified them with the Kidarites and/or Alchon. The ''Spet Xyon'' or "White Huns" appear to have been the known in South Asia by the cognate name ''Sveta-huna'', and are often identified, controversially, with the Hephtalites. Provided by Wikipedia
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