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References
"the Avars separated Kuber from his own people and appointed as governor of a region near Byzantine frontier, likely today's Srem" (In Search of the Lost Tribe: The Origins and Making of the Croation Nation, Osman Karatay, Ayse Demiral, 2003, page 147.)
"We are further told the Avar Khakan set over the new nation thus created a chief named Kuber, who apparently had his capital at Sirmium." (The Journal of the Anthropological institute, Royal anthropological institute, 1882, page 227.)
"At about the same time, another Proto-Bulgar leader, Kuber, who had been with the Avars in Pannonia, broke away from them and went south with a number of his compatriots and settled in Macedonia, in the region known as Pelagonia" (Bulgarian Folk Customs, Mercia MacDermott, Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 1998, page 21.)
"These people came together to form the basically Greek tribe of the Sermesians, over whom the Avar Khagan placed a chieftain, of whom our source states that he was called Kouver" (Macedonia, 4000 years of Greek history and civilization, M. V. Sakellariou, Ekdotikè Athenon, 1992, page 255.)
"The proto-Bulgarian Khan Kuber settled in modern central FYROM in the Prilep field with permission from the Byzantine authorities in Salonica in 680 AD" (Contested Ethnic Identity: The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto, 1900-1996, Chris Kostov, Peter Lang, 2010, page 49.)
"His brother, Kan Kuber, created a "second Bulgaria" in the Balkans (also around 680) by rising against the Avars and retreating into the region of the town of Bitola in present-day Macedonia" (World Changer: Atanasoff and the Computer, Tammara Burton, Tangra TanNakRa, 2006, page 19.)
"But Kuver, though he was a vassal of the Avar Khagan" (Papers, Том 13, Dumbarton Oaks, Johnson Reprint Corp., 1967, page 17.)
http://www.historyonmaps.com/ColourSamples/cbig/Avarok.jpg
http://budapestcity.org/02-tortenet/03-okor/avarok1.jpg
http://www.timediver.de/img/geschichte/Albanien/vrap/mh_Khan_Kuber_Vrap.jpg
Dragan Brujić, Vodič kroz svet Vizantije, Beograd, 2004.
The Times History of Europe, Times Books, London, 2002.
Prof. dr Radmilo Petrović, Vojvodina - petnaest milenijuma kulturne istorije, Beograd, 2003. English Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents
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current 20:57, 20 June 2013 1,052 × 868 (60 KB) WikiEditor2004 {{Information |Description ={{en|1=Syrmia, area governed by Kuber (Kuver), leader of the Bulgars and the Sermesians in the 7th century (in 670-680).}} |Source ={{own}} |Author =PANONIAN |Date =2013 |Permis...
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