Cozar People
Alba Bulgarica also known as Vojvodina and Syrmia or Sirmium, or Sarmatia or Savromat, Sabir, Alan, ˀln (אלן), Elicanum and Utigur Bulgaria or the Bogomils or Messiani were a Messianic Noahide commumity which existed in the 8th to 12th century in greater Banat under the rule of Galad, Sabriel, Salan, Gelu, Morut, Ajtony and Csanad. The community was succeeded by the Szekely Sabbatarians in the East and the Bosnian Church in the West and the Moravian Church in the North. The Sarmatian inhabitants were allied to the Romanians and to the Kalismani and thus were sometimes identified with the latter as the Cozar people of Crisana, Galycivka and Cuzrioara.
The state began when Csaba's son Edumen of Moravia established a peace treaty with Kurt's Aquila Szekley remnant of Aladarius' 3000 Utigur Bulgars Huns by inviting Galad of Vidin to power in the Greater area of Banat around 740CE. Galad's son Sabriel (often misidentified with Bulan) converted to Noahide Judaism under the influence of thousands of Paulician Alevis brought into his lands by the Byzantines.
Gradually these Kuber Bulgarians lost influence in the First Bylgarian Empire which had become very Slavonic and so the Utigur Szekelys ruled their own practically independent Bogomil state in Banat until the Bulgarian Church sided with the Byzantines against them. Their state surrendered to the Khazar Khan Joseph in the 920s and survived the Rus defeat of Khazaria until the 12th century when it was succeeded by the Bans of Bosnia and later by Counts of the Szekelys and thr Hussites.