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Gegeen Khan

Gegeen Khan (Mongolian: Гэгээн хаан; Mongol script: ᠭᠡᠭᠡᠨ ᠬᠠᠭᠠᠨ; Shidebal Gegegen qaγan; Chinese: 格堅汗; born Shidibala (ᠰᠢᠳᠡᠪᠠᠯᠠ; 碩德八剌), also known by the temple name Yingzong (Emperor Yingzong of Yuan, Chinese: 元英宗, February 22, 1302 – September 4, 1323), was an emperor of the Yuan dynasty of China. Apart from Emperor of China, he is regarded as the ninth Great Khan of the Mongol Empire, although it was only nominal due to the division of the empire. His born name “Shidi-bala” (शुद्ध पाल्) in Sanskrit means "purity protection" and regnal name means "enlightened/bright khan" in the Mongolian language.

Emperor Yingzong of Yuan
元英宗
Gegeen Khan
格堅汗
ᠭᠡᠭᠡᠨ ᠬᠠᠭᠠᠨ
9th Khagan of the Mongol Empire
(Nominal due to the empire's division)
Emperor of China
(5th Emperor of the Yuan Dynasty)
5th Emperor of the Yuan dynasty
ReignApril 19, 1320 – September 4, 1323
CoronationApril 19, 1320
PredecessorAyurbarwada Buyantu Khan
SuccessorYesün Temür
BornFebruary 22, 1302
DiedSeptember 4, 1323(1323-09-04) (aged 21)
Nanpo, Yuan China
Empress Empress Sugabal of Ikires clan. (m.?- 1323)
Names
Mongolian:ᠰᠢᠳᠡᠪᠠᠯᠠ
Chinese: 碩德八剌
Shidebala
Full name
Era dates
Zhizhi (至治) 1321–1323
Regnal name
Emperor Jitian Tidao Jingwen Renwu Dazhao Xiao (繼天體道敬文仁武大昭孝皇帝);
Gegeen Khan (ᠭᠡᠭᠡᠨ ᠬᠠᠭᠠᠨ; 格堅汗)
Posthumous name
Emperor Ruisheng Wenxiao (睿聖文孝皇帝)
Temple name
Yingzong (英宗)
HouseBorjigin
DynastyYuan
FatherAyurbarwada Buyantu Khan
MotherRadnashiri of the Khunggirat

Early in his short reign, the Khunggirat faction played a key role in the Yuan court. When his grandmother Dagi (Targi) and the grand councillor Temuder died in 1322, his opponents seemed to have triumphed. Despite the Emperor's aim to reform the government based on the Confucian principles, Temuder's faction linked up with the Alan guard and assassinated the emperor in 1323. This was the first violent transition struggle in the Mongolian imperial history, which is also known as Coup d'état at Nanpo, that the Non-Borjigins overthrew the Emperor.

Peaceful succession

 
King Gongmin (1330–1374) and Queen Noguk, assisted in the succession of Gegeen Khan.

Shidibala was the eldest son of Ayurbarwada Buyantu Khan (Emperor Renzong) and Radnashiri of the Khunggirad clan. In return for his own crown princeship, Ayurbarwada promised his elder brother Khayishan to appoint Khayishan's son as Crown Prince after his succession.[1] But when Khayishan died, Khayishan's two sons were relegated to borderlands and pro-Khayishan officers were purged.

Shidibala's powerful grandmother Dagi installed Shidibala as Crown Prince in 1316, and then as Khan, since he was mothered by a Khunggirad khatun. He was made the nominal head of both the Secretariat and the Bureau of Military Affairs one year later.[2] At one time, his father Ayurbarwada had even toyed with the idea of abdicating the throne in favor of Shidebala.[3] Dagi's protégé Temuder was made as tutor to the heir apparent, Shidebala, after he failed to increase tax revenue.

Between Ayurbarwada's death in March 1320 and his own death in October 1322, Temüder attained a great power with the full support of Dagi. Immediately after her grandson's succession, Dagi reinstated Temüder as Minister of the Secretariat and took politics into her own hands more openly than during Ayurbarwada's reign.

Puppet regime

Shidebala succeeded his father on April 19, 1320. Empress Targi (Dagi) reappointed Temuder senior grand councillor. While Temuder's persecution of his opponents in the censorate alienated the new Emperor, Temuder remained in power until his death, which came only two years later.[4]

The return to power of Temudar was signalised by fresh excesses, and by the execution of several of those whom he suspected of having been the cause of his late trial. At length the young prince began to feel the leading strings of the Empress Dowager and Temudar rather irksome, and determined to speed on his inauguration.

From the beginning of his reign, Shidebala showed a political independence and resolution beyond his years. In a masterly move to counter the influence of the grand empress dowager and Temüder, Shidebala appointed the 21-year-old Baiju, a Jalayir and grandson of Antong, who had illustrious family background and good Confucian education, as the grand councillor of the left in the summer of 1320, which gave Shidabala several political advantages. Temuder was on the high-road to the attainment of supreme power when Baiju.[5] However, Baiju, the commander of the kheshig, who was descended from Muqali, the renowned general of Genghis Khan, and was a man of high character, gained great influence over the Emperor, and displaced that of Temuder.

Shidibala, the young emperor, however, did not sit with folded hands. The throne soon became the focus of loyalty for the Confucian scholar-officials in their struggle against the powerful Temüder. Shidibala was prepared for such a role, for he had been as well educated in Chinese as his father had been. Deeply affected by Confucianism as well as by Buddhism, Shidebala could cite Tang poems from memory and also was a creditable calligrapher.

Besides Confucianism, Shidibala was also devoted to Buddhism. In 1321 Shidbala built a Buddhist temple in honor of 'Phags-pa Lama on the mountains west of Dadu,[6] and when the censors reproached him he had several of them put to death; among them a very distinguished officer, named Soyaoelhatimichi, whose ancestors had been faithful dependents of the Mongol Imperial house. On the other hand, Islam suffered particularly severe discrimination during his reign.[7] It is said that the Emperor destroyed a temple built by the Muslims, at Shangdu, and prohibited them from buying slaves from the Mongols and selling them again to the Chinese.

The growing influence of Baiju greatly disgusted Temuder. Baiju went to Liau tung to put up a monument to his ancestors. Temudar thought this a favourable opportunity of regaining his influence at the Yuan court, and presented himself at the palace, but was refused admittance, and died shortly after that. The Empress, Dagi (Targi), died about the same time in 1322–23.[8]

Self-assertion

In 1322, the deaths of Dagi and Temüder enabled him to seize full power. He was able to dismantle the Khunggirad faction from the Shidibala-led new administration. The severe suppression of the powerful faction including the deprivation of Temüder's titles and estates, the execution of his son drove it into the corner. On the other hand, he appointed Baiju as the grand councillor of the right. As the sole grand councillor throughout the rest of Shidebala's reign, Baiju became a powerful ally of Shidebala. They eliminated many offices subordinate to the personal establishments of the empress dowager and the empress.[9] The increasing influence of Neo-Confucianism saw greater limits placed on Mongol women who were allowed to move about more freely in public.[10]

Soon after becoming his own master and with the help of Baiju, Shidibala began to reform the government based on the Confucian principles, continued his father Ayurbarwada's policies for active promoting Chinese cultures. He and Baiju recruited for the government a great number of Chinese scholar-officials, many of whom had resigned when Temüder was in power. Heading of this list, Zhang Gui, a veteran administrator, was reappointed manager of governmental affairs and became Baiju's chief partner in carrying out reforms. Apart from the three elderly scholars appointed as councilors to the Secretariat, seven famous scholars were appointed to the Hanlin Academy. It was approximately at this same time that the Da Yuan Tong Zhi (大元通制, "the comprehensive institutions of the Great Yuan"), a huge collection of codes and regulations of the Yuan Dynasty began by his father, was revised in order to rationalize the administration and facilitate the dispensation of justice.

Furthermore, to relieve the labour burdens of small landowners, Shidebala's administration stipulated that landowners set aside a certain proportion of the lands registered under their ownership from which revenues could be collected to cover corvée expenses.[11]

Death

Regardless of the merits of Shidebala's reign, it came to a tragic end on September 4, 1323, known as the "Coup d'état at Nanpo".[12] A plot was formed among Temuder's supporters, who were afraid of vengeance overtaking them. It was headed by Temüder's adopted son Tegshi. Besides the high-ranking officials, five princes were involved: Altan Bukha, the younger brother of the former prince of An-si, Ananda, who was executed by Ayurbarwada's faction; and Bolad, a grandson of Ariq Böke; Yerutömör, a son of Ananda; Kulud Bukha; and Ulus Bukha, a descendant of Möngke Khan.[13]

When Shidebala stayed at Nanpo on his way from the summer palace Shangdu to the capital Dadu of the Yuan Dynasty, Shidibala and Bayiju were assassinated by Tegshi, who attacked Shidibala's Ordo with Asud guards and other soldiers under him. Tegshi asked Yesün Temür to succeed the throne, but Yesün Temür purged Tegshi's faction before he entered Dadu because he feared to become a puppet of it.

Shidibala's reign was short; his direct rule lasted only for a year after Dagi's death. But he was glorified in Chinese records since he and his father, aided by their sinicized Mongolian ministers and Chinese scholar-officials, had made vigorous efforts to transform further the Yuan along traditional Confucian lines. From that point of view, Shidibala's assassination was sometimes explained as the struggle between the pro-Confucian faction and the opposite steppe elite faction, for Yesün Temür Khan had ruled Mongolia before succession and his policies appeared relatively unfavorable for Chinese officials.

His marriage to Sugabala, produced no children to succeed him.

See also

References

  1. ^ Yuan shi, 31. p. 639.
  2. ^ Herbert Franke, Denis Twitchett, John King Fairbank The Cambridge History of China: Alien regimes and border states, 907–1368, p. 527.
  3. ^ Wei su-Wei tai-pu wen hsu chi, Yuan jen wen chi chen peng tsung khan. pp. 17b–18a.
  4. ^ C. P. Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire, p. 532.
  5. ^ Demetrius Charles de Kavanagh Boulger The History of China, p. 383.
  6. ^ Mongolia Society Occasional Papers, p. 58.
  7. ^ Denis Twitchett, Herbert Franke, John K. Fairbank, in The Cambridge History of China: Volume 6, Alien Regimes and Border States (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), p530-532.
  8. ^ Yuan Chen, Hsing-hai Chʻien, Luther Carrington Goodrich Western and central Asians in China under the Mongols, p. 113.
  9. ^ Yuan shi, 26. pp.625
  10. ^ Peggy Martin AP World History, p. 133.
  11. ^ Huang Chin-Chin-hua Huang hsien sheng wen chi, p. 9b.
  12. ^ Henry Hoyle Howorth, Ernest George Ravenstein History of the Mongols: From the 9th to the 19th Century, p. 382.
  13. ^ Yuan shi, 114. p. 2876.
Gegeen Khan
Born: 1302 Died: 1323
Regnal titles
Preceded by Great Khan of the Mongol Empire
(Nominal due to the empire's division)

1320–1323
Succeeded by
Emperor of the Yuan dynasty
1320–1323
Emperor of China
1320–1323

gegeen, khan, mongolian, Гэгээн, хаан, mongol, script, ᠭᠡᠭᠡᠨ, ᠬᠠᠭᠠᠨ, shidebal, gegegen, qaγan, chinese, 格堅汗, born, shidibala, ᠰᠢᠳᠡᠪᠠᠯᠠ, 碩德八剌, also, known, temple, name, yingzong, emperor, yingzong, yuan, chinese, 元英宗, february, 1302, september, 1323, emperor, . Gegeen Khan Mongolian Gegeen haan Mongol script ᠭᠡᠭᠡᠨ ᠬᠠᠭᠠᠨ Shidebal Gegegen qagan Chinese 格堅汗 born Shidibala ᠰᠢᠳᠡᠪᠠᠯᠠ 碩德八剌 also known by the temple name Yingzong Emperor Yingzong of Yuan Chinese 元英宗 February 22 1302 September 4 1323 was an emperor of the Yuan dynasty of China Apart from Emperor of China he is regarded as the ninth Great Khan of the Mongol Empire although it was only nominal due to the division of the empire His born name Shidi bala श द ध प ल in Sanskrit means purity protection and regnal name means enlightened bright khan in the Mongolian language Emperor Yingzong of Yuan元英宗Gegeen Khan格堅汗ᠭᠡᠭᠡᠨ ᠬᠠᠭᠠᠨ9th Khagan of the Mongol Empire Nominal due to the empire s division Emperor of China 5th Emperor of the Yuan Dynasty 5th Emperor of the Yuan dynastyReignApril 19 1320 September 4 1323CoronationApril 19 1320PredecessorAyurbarwada Buyantu KhanSuccessorYesun TemurBornFebruary 22 1302DiedSeptember 4 1323 1323 09 04 aged 21 Nanpo Yuan ChinaEmpressEmpress Sugabal of Ikires clan m 1323 NamesMongolian ᠰᠢᠳᠡᠪᠠᠯᠠ Chinese 碩德八剌ShidebalaFull nameGiven name ShidebalaEra datesZhizhi 至治 1321 1323Regnal nameEmperor Jitian Tidao Jingwen Renwu Dazhao Xiao 繼天體道敬文仁武大昭孝皇帝 Gegeen Khan ᠭᠡᠭᠡᠨ ᠬᠠᠭᠠᠨ 格堅汗 Posthumous nameEmperor Ruisheng Wenxiao 睿聖文孝皇帝 Temple nameYingzong 英宗 HouseBorjiginDynastyYuanFatherAyurbarwada Buyantu KhanMotherRadnashiri of the KhunggiratEarly in his short reign the Khunggirat faction played a key role in the Yuan court When his grandmother Dagi Targi and the grand councillor Temuder died in 1322 his opponents seemed to have triumphed Despite the Emperor s aim to reform the government based on the Confucian principles Temuder s faction linked up with the Alan guard and assassinated the emperor in 1323 This was the first violent transition struggle in the Mongolian imperial history which is also known as Coup d etat at Nanpo that the Non Borjigins overthrew the Emperor Contents 1 Peaceful succession 2 Puppet regime 3 Self assertion 4 Death 5 See also 6 ReferencesPeaceful succession Edit King Gongmin 1330 1374 and Queen Noguk assisted in the succession of Gegeen Khan Shidibala was the eldest son of Ayurbarwada Buyantu Khan Emperor Renzong and Radnashiri of the Khunggirad clan In return for his own crown princeship Ayurbarwada promised his elder brother Khayishan to appoint Khayishan s son as Crown Prince after his succession 1 But when Khayishan died Khayishan s two sons were relegated to borderlands and pro Khayishan officers were purged Shidibala s powerful grandmother Dagi installed Shidibala as Crown Prince in 1316 and then as Khan since he was mothered by a Khunggirad khatun He was made the nominal head of both the Secretariat and the Bureau of Military Affairs one year later 2 At one time his father Ayurbarwada had even toyed with the idea of abdicating the throne in favor of Shidebala 3 Dagi s protege Temuder was made as tutor to the heir apparent Shidebala after he failed to increase tax revenue Between Ayurbarwada s death in March 1320 and his own death in October 1322 Temuder attained a great power with the full support of Dagi Immediately after her grandson s succession Dagi reinstated Temuder as Minister of the Secretariat and took politics into her own hands more openly than during Ayurbarwada s reign Puppet regime EditShidebala succeeded his father on April 19 1320 Empress Targi Dagi reappointed Temuder senior grand councillor While Temuder s persecution of his opponents in the censorate alienated the new Emperor Temuder remained in power until his death which came only two years later 4 The return to power of Temudar was signalised by fresh excesses and by the execution of several of those whom he suspected of having been the cause of his late trial At length the young prince began to feel the leading strings of the Empress Dowager and Temudar rather irksome and determined to speed on his inauguration From the beginning of his reign Shidebala showed a political independence and resolution beyond his years In a masterly move to counter the influence of the grand empress dowager and Temuder Shidebala appointed the 21 year old Baiju a Jalayir and grandson of Antong who had illustrious family background and good Confucian education as the grand councillor of the left in the summer of 1320 which gave Shidabala several political advantages Temuder was on the high road to the attainment of supreme power when Baiju 5 However Baiju the commander of the kheshig who was descended from Muqali the renowned general of Genghis Khan and was a man of high character gained great influence over the Emperor and displaced that of Temuder Shidibala the young emperor however did not sit with folded hands The throne soon became the focus of loyalty for the Confucian scholar officials in their struggle against the powerful Temuder Shidibala was prepared for such a role for he had been as well educated in Chinese as his father had been Deeply affected by Confucianism as well as by Buddhism Shidebala could cite Tang poems from memory and also was a creditable calligrapher Besides Confucianism Shidibala was also devoted to Buddhism In 1321 Shidbala built a Buddhist temple in honor of Phags pa Lama on the mountains west of Dadu 6 and when the censors reproached him he had several of them put to death among them a very distinguished officer named Soyaoelhatimichi whose ancestors had been faithful dependents of the Mongol Imperial house On the other hand Islam suffered particularly severe discrimination during his reign 7 It is said that the Emperor destroyed a temple built by the Muslims at Shangdu and prohibited them from buying slaves from the Mongols and selling them again to the Chinese The growing influence of Baiju greatly disgusted Temuder Baiju went to Liau tung to put up a monument to his ancestors Temudar thought this a favourable opportunity of regaining his influence at the Yuan court and presented himself at the palace but was refused admittance and died shortly after that The Empress Dagi Targi died about the same time in 1322 23 8 Self assertion EditIn 1322 the deaths of Dagi and Temuder enabled him to seize full power He was able to dismantle the Khunggirad faction from the Shidibala led new administration The severe suppression of the powerful faction including the deprivation of Temuder s titles and estates the execution of his son drove it into the corner On the other hand he appointed Baiju as the grand councillor of the right As the sole grand councillor throughout the rest of Shidebala s reign Baiju became a powerful ally of Shidebala They eliminated many offices subordinate to the personal establishments of the empress dowager and the empress 9 The increasing influence of Neo Confucianism saw greater limits placed on Mongol women who were allowed to move about more freely in public 10 Soon after becoming his own master and with the help of Baiju Shidibala began to reform the government based on the Confucian principles continued his father Ayurbarwada s policies for active promoting Chinese cultures He and Baiju recruited for the government a great number of Chinese scholar officials many of whom had resigned when Temuder was in power Heading of this list Zhang Gui a veteran administrator was reappointed manager of governmental affairs and became Baiju s chief partner in carrying out reforms Apart from the three elderly scholars appointed as councilors to the Secretariat seven famous scholars were appointed to the Hanlin Academy It was approximately at this same time that the Da Yuan Tong Zhi 大元通制 the comprehensive institutions of the Great Yuan a huge collection of codes and regulations of the Yuan Dynasty began by his father was revised in order to rationalize the administration and facilitate the dispensation of justice Furthermore to relieve the labour burdens of small landowners Shidebala s administration stipulated that landowners set aside a certain proportion of the lands registered under their ownership from which revenues could be collected to cover corvee expenses 11 Death EditRegardless of the merits of Shidebala s reign it came to a tragic end on September 4 1323 known as the Coup d etat at Nanpo 12 A plot was formed among Temuder s supporters who were afraid of vengeance overtaking them It was headed by Temuder s adopted son Tegshi Besides the high ranking officials five princes were involved Altan Bukha the younger brother of the former prince of An si Ananda who was executed by Ayurbarwada s faction and Bolad a grandson of Ariq Boke Yerutomor a son of Ananda Kulud Bukha and Ulus Bukha a descendant of Mongke Khan 13 When Shidebala stayed at Nanpo on his way from the summer palace Shangdu to the capital Dadu of the Yuan Dynasty Shidibala and Bayiju were assassinated by Tegshi who attacked Shidibala s Ordo with Asud guards and other soldiers under him Tegshi asked Yesun Temur to succeed the throne but Yesun Temur purged Tegshi s faction before he entered Dadu because he feared to become a puppet of it Shidibala s reign was short his direct rule lasted only for a year after Dagi s death But he was glorified in Chinese records since he and his father aided by their sinicized Mongolian ministers and Chinese scholar officials had made vigorous efforts to transform further the Yuan along traditional Confucian lines From that point of view Shidibala s assassination was sometimes explained as the struggle between the pro Confucian faction and the opposite steppe elite faction for Yesun Temur Khan had ruled Mongolia before succession and his policies appeared relatively unfavorable for Chinese officials His marriage to Sugabala produced no children to succeed him See also EditList of emperors of the Yuan dynasty List of Mongol rulers List of rulers of ChinaReferences Edit Yuan shi 31 p 639 Herbert Franke Denis Twitchett John King Fairbank The Cambridge History of China Alien regimes and border states 907 1368 p 527 Wei su Wei tai pu wen hsu chi Yuan jen wen chi chen peng tsung khan pp 17b 18a C P Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire p 532 Demetrius Charles de Kavanagh Boulger The History of China p 383 Mongolia Society Occasional Papers p 58 Denis Twitchett Herbert Franke John K Fairbank in The Cambridge History of China Volume 6 Alien Regimes and Border States Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1994 p530 532 Yuan Chen Hsing hai Chʻien Luther Carrington Goodrich Western and central Asians in China under the Mongols p 113 Yuan shi 26 pp 625 Peggy Martin AP World History p 133 Huang Chin Chin hua Huang hsien sheng wen chi p 9b Henry Hoyle Howorth Ernest George Ravenstein History of the Mongols From the 9th to the 19th Century p 382 Yuan shi 114 p 2876 Gegeen KhanHouse of BorjiginBorn 1302 Died 1323Regnal titlesPreceded byAyurbarwada Buyantu Khan Emperor Renzong Great Khan of the Mongol Empire Nominal due to the empire s division 1320 1323 Succeeded byYesun Temur Khan Emperor TaidingEmperor of the Yuan dynasty1320 1323Emperor of China1320 1323 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gegeen Khan amp oldid 1132289960, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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