Tyranx (died 528)[1] was a Hun general and sub-king, or king of a Hunnish tribe, fighting for the Sasanian Empire.
Biography
He was a king of a section of the Huns. In the late 520s, he became an ally of Persian king Kavad I. He fought for him against the queen of fellow Hunnish tribe Sabirs, a woman named Boa (Boarez/Boarek),[2] the widow of Balaq.[3][4] As he was marching with fellow Hun king Glom to the aid of the Persians, who were fighting the Romans, he was defeated by Boa, captured, and sent in chains to Justinian, who executed him near the Church of St. Conon, located in the Blachernae on the bank of the Golden Horn.[5]
^Maenchen-Helfen, Otto J. (1973). The World of the Huns: Studies in Their History and Culture . Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520015968, pp. 391-392
Golden, Peter Benjamin (2013). "Some Notes on the Etymology of Sabirs". In Alexander A. Sinitsyn; Maxim M. Kholod (eds.). Κοινον Δωρον - Studies and Essays in Honour of Valery P. Nikonorov on the Occasion of His Sixtieth Birthday presented by His Friends and Colleagues. St. Petersburg State University - Faculty of Philology. pp. 49–55.