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Northern Yuan

The Northern Yuan (Chinese: 北元; pinyin: Běi Yuán) was a dynastic regime ruled by the Mongol Borjigin clan based in the Mongolian Plateau. It existed as a rump state after the collapse of the Yuan dynasty in 1368 and lasted until its conquest by the Jurchen-led Later Jin dynasty in 1635. The Northern Yuan dynasty began with the retreat of the Yuan imperial court led by Toghon Temür (Emperor Huizong of Yuan) to the Mongolian steppe. This period featured factional struggles and the often only nominal role of the Great Khan.

Northern Yuan
北元
ᠳᠠᠢ
ᠦᠨ

Dayan
大元
("Great Yuan")

ᠳᠥᠴᠢᠨ
ᠳᠥᠷᠪᠡᠨ
ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯ
ᠤᠯᠤᠰ

döčin dörben mongγol ulus[1]
("Forty-four Mongol State")
1368–1635
The Northern Yuan in the 15th century
Capital
  1. Shangdu (1368–1369)
  2. Yingchang (1369–1370)
  3. Karakorum (1371–1388)
Common languagesMongolian, Chinese, Jurchen[2]
Religion
Tengrism, Buddhism, Islam
GovernmentMonarchy
Khagan 
• 1368–1370
Ukhaghatu Khan Toghon Temür (first)
• 1370–1378
Biligtü Khan Ayushiridara
• 1378–1388
Uskhal Khan Tögüs Temür
• 1454-1455
Esen Taishi (only non-Borjigin)
• 1478-1517/1543
Dayan Khan (longest ruling)
• 1557-1592
Tümen Zasagt Khan
• 1603-1634
Ligdan Khan
• 1634-1635
Ejei Khan (last)
Legislature
Historical eraLate middle ages
• Fall of Dadu to Ming forces
September 1368
1388
• Dayan Khan reunites the Mongol nation
1483–1510
• Death of Ligdan Khan
1634
• Ejei Khan submits to the Later Jin
1635
Currencybarter, Dirham
Today part of

Dayan Khan and Mandukhai Khatun reunited most Mongol tribes in the late 15th century.[4] However, the former's distribution of his empire among his sons and relatives as fiefs caused the decentralization of the imperial rule.[5] Despite this decentralization, a remarkable concord continued within the Dayan Khanid aristocracy, and intra-Chinggisid civil war remained unknown until the reign of Ligdan Khan (1604–1634),[6] who saw much of his power weakened in his quarrels with the Mongol tribes and was defeated by the Later Jin dynasty. The last sixty years of this period featured the intensive penetration of Tibetan Buddhism into Mongol society.

Name edit

The regime that existed between 1368 and 1635 is known by various names, including the Northern Yuan (dynasty).[7] The dynastic name of "Great Yuan'" (Chinese: 大元; pinyin: Dà Yuán) was officially used between 1368 and 1388, as was the preceding Yuan dynasty. Following the death of Uskhal Khan Tögüs Temür, the "Great Yuan" dynastic name along with other Han-style imperial titles were abandoned by his successor Jorightu Khan Yesüder; hence, the name "Northern Yuan" is sometimes limited in its usage to referencing only the period between 1368 and 1388.[8] The historiographical term "Northern Yuan" in the English language is derived from the corresponding term "北元" (Běi Yuán) in the Chinese language, in which the prefix "Northern" is used to distinguish between the Yuan dynasty established in 1271 and the regime that existed after 1368. The historiographical name "Northern Yuan" first appeared in the Korean historical text Goryeosa written in Classical Chinese.[9] Some scholars believe that the reign of Dayan Khan whose regnal name "Dayan" came from the Chinese term "大元" (Dà Yuán; lit. "Great Yuan").[10] Contrary to this, other views hold that the title "Dayan" is derived from the Mongolian word means "origin" or "whole".[11] Furthermore, there is evidence to suggest that Taisun Khan, Esen Taishi, Manduul Khan, and Ligdan Khan had also used the "Great Yuan" dynastic name and Han-style imperial titles during their rule.[10][12]

In English, the term "Northern Yuan (dynasty)" is generally used to cover the entire period from 1368 to 1635 for historiographical purpose. Apart from "Great Yuan" (before 1388 and during the rule of Esen Taishi[13]), the Mongols called their regime "Ikh Mongol Uls", meaning the "Great Mongol State". It is also referred to as "Post-Imperial Mongolia", the " Mongol(ian) Khaganate" or the "Mongol(ian) Khanate"[14] in some modern sources,[15] Although most of these English terms can also refer to the Mongol Empire or the Yuan dynasty in the 13th and the 14th centuries.

In chronicles written in the Mongolian language, this period is also known as "The Forty and the Four" (Döchin Dörben), meaning forty tümen of Eastern Mongols (Eastern Mongolia) and four tümen of Western Mongols.[note 1] Mongolian historiography also uses the term "Period of political disunion", "Period of small khagans", "Mongolia's period of political disruption" and "Mongolia's 14th–17th century", etc.[16][17] The Chinese Ming Dynasty called them “Tatar” (Chinese: 鞑靼; pinyin: Dádá) and “Wala” (Oirats, Chinese: 瓦剌; pinyin: Wǎlà) after the Mongols were divided into eastern and western parts.[18]

History edit

Origin edit

The Northern Yuan dynasty was the remnant of the Yuan dynasty (1271–1368) founded by Kublai Khan. After eliminating the Song dynasty in 1279, the Yuan dynasty ruled all of China proper for about a century. Even prior to the Yuan dynasty, the Mongols had ruled Northern China for more than 40 years, since the time they conquered the Jurchen-led Jin dynasty in 1234.

Yuan rule in China proper began to collapse in 1344 when the Yellow River flooded and changed course, causing widespread droughts, flooding, and making the Grand Canal impassable.[19] In 1351, the Red Turban Rebellion erupted in the Huai River valley, which saw the rise of Zhu Yuanzhang, a Han peasant, who eventually established the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) in southern China. In 1368, a Ming army advanced on the Yuan capital Khanbaliq or Dadu (present-day Beijing).[20]

Retreat to Mongolian Steppe (1368–1388) edit

 
Ming dynasty and the Northern Yuan in the early 15th century. The Mongols lost some lands in China proper after the Ming defeated Tögüs Temür in 1388.

Toghon Temür (r. 1333–1370), the last ruler of the Yuan, fled north to Shangdu (located in present-day Inner Mongolia) from Dadu upon the approach of Ming forces. He tried to regain Dadu but failed and died in Yingchang (located in present-day Inner Mongolia) two years later (1370). Yingchang was seized by the Ming shortly after his death.[20]

The Mongols retreated to Karakorum in the Mongol heartland after the fall of Yingchang in 1370, where they maintained the official dynastic title "Great Yuan", known retroactively as the "Northern Yuan". The Ming army pursued the Yuan remnants into the Mongolian steppe in 1372 but was defeated by Biligtü Khan Ayushiridara (r. 1370–1378) and his general Köke Temür (d. 1375). In 1375, Naghachu, a Mongol official of Biligtu Khan in Liaoyang province invaded Liaodong with the aim of restoring Mongol power in China proper. Although he continued to hold southern Manchuria, Naghachu eventually surrendered to the Ming dynasty in 1387–88.[21] The Yuan loyalists under the Kublaid prince Basalawarmi (the Prince of Liang) in Yunnan and Guizhou were also defeated and killed by the Ming earlier in 1381–82.[22]

In 1380, the Ming invaded Northern Yuan and sacked Karakorum, although they were eventually forced to withdraw. Around 70,000 Mongol captives were taken. In 1387, the Ming defeated the Uriankhai Mongols, and in the following year they achieved decisive victory around the Buir Lake against Uskhal Khan Tögüs Temür.[23] The defeat of Uskhal Khan effectively shattered Yuan power in the steppes and allowed the Western Oirat Mongols to rise and become kingmaker of the Northern Yuan realm.[24]

The Genghisid (Major descendants of Kublai[25]) rulers of the Northern Yuan also buttressed their claim on China,[26][27] and held tenaciously to the title of Emperor (or Great Khan) of the Great Yuan (Dai Yuwan Khaan, or 大元可汗)[28] to resist the Ming who had by this time become the real ruler in China proper. According to the traditional Chinese political orthodoxy, there could be only one legitimate dynasty whose rulers were blessed by Heaven to rule as Emperor of China (see Mandate of Heaven), so the Ming also denied the Yuan remnants' legitimacy as emperors of China, although the Ming did consider the previous Yuan which it had succeeded to be a legitimate dynasty.

Oirat domination (1388–1478) edit

 
Location of the Oirats

In 1388, the Mongol throne was taken over by Jorightu Khan Yesüder, a descendant of Arik Böke (Tolui's son), with the support of the Oirats. He abolished the Han-style title of former Yuan dynasty.[29][30][31] In the following year, one of Uskhal Khan's subjects, Gunashiri, a descendant of Chagatai Khan, founded his own small state called Kara Del in Hami.[32]

The following century saw a succession of Genghisid rulers, many of whom were mere figureheads put on the throne by those warlords who happened to be the most powerful. From the end of the 14th century there appear designations such as "period of small kings" (Бага хаадын үе).[33] On one side stood the Western Mongols and on the other the Eastern Mongols. While the Oirats drew their khans from the descendants of Ariq Böke and other princes, Arugtai of the Asud supported the old Yuan khans of Kublaid descent. The House of Ogedei also briefly attempted to reunite the Mongols under their rule.

The Mongols eventually split into three main groups: the Oirats in the west, the Uriankhai in northeast, and the Khorchin between the two. The Uriankhai surrendered to the Ming dynasty in the 1390s. The Ming divided them into the Three Guards: Doyin, Tai'nin and Fuyu.[34]

Mongol relations with the Ming dynasty consisted of sporadic bursts of conflict intermingled with periods of peaceful relations and border trade. The Oirat-backed Örüg Temür Khan (Gulichi) was defeated by Elbeg Khan's son Öljei Temür Khan (Bunyashiri, r. 1408–1412), the protégé of Tamerlane (d. 1405), in 1403. Most of the Mongol noblemen under Arugtai chingsang sided with Öljei Temur. The Yongle Emperor (r. 1402–1424) issued Öljei Temür an ultimatum demanding his acceptance of tributary relations to the Ming dynasty. Öljei Temur refused, resulting in the Ming dynasty conducting several campaigns against the Mongols. In 1409, a Ming army of 100,000 entered Mongolia but suffered a defeat against Öljei Temur and Arugtai at the Battle of Kherlen. In the following year, the Yongle Emperor personally led an expedition into Mongolia and defeated the Mongols. After the death of Öljei Temur, the Oirats under their leader Bahamu (Mahmud) (d. 1417) enthroned an Ariq Bökid Delbeg Khan in 1412. Originally the Ming had supported the Oirats in their power struggle with the eastern Mongols, but as the Oirats gained supremacy over them, the Ming withdrew their support.

By 1422 Arugtai turned hostile again as the Ming did not grant him the trading privileges he wanted,[35] and Yongle campaigned against him in 1422 and 1423. Bahamu's successor Toghan pushed Arugtai east of the Greater Khingan range in 1433. The Oirats killed him in the west of Baotou the next year. Arugtai's ally Adai Khan (r. 1425–1438) made a last stand in Ejene before he was murdered too.[36]

Toghan died in the very year of his victory over Adai. His son Esen Taishi (r. 1438–1454) brought the Oirats to the height of their power. Under his puppet khans, he drove back Moghulistan and crushed the Uriankhai Three Guards, Kara Del and the Jurchens. In 1449 he defeated a 500,000 strong Ming army and captured the Zhengtong Emperor in what came to be known as the Tumu Crisis.[37] However, after this astounding victory, Esen failed to take the Ming capital of Beijing. In the following year a peace was concluded between the two sides and the captive emperor was allowed to return home. After executing the rebellious Tayisung Khan (r. 1433–1453) and his brother Agbarjin in 1453, Esen took the title of not just khan, but also Yuan Emperor.[38] This caused widespread dissent among the Genghisids, and in 1455, a series of revolts resulted in Esen's death. His death started the decline of the Oirats, who would not recover until their rise as the Dzungar Khanate in the 17th century.[39]

From Esen's death to 1481 different warlords of the Kharchin, the Belguteids and Ordos Mongols fought over succession and had their Genghisid khans enthroned. The Mongolian chroniclers call some of them the Uyghurs and they might have had some ties with the Hami oasis.[40] During his reign, Manduulun Khan (1475–1478) effectively won over most of the Mongol warlords before he died in 1478.

Restoration (1479–1600) edit

Second reunification edit

Manduulun's young khatun Mandukhai proclaimed a seven-year-old boy named Batumongke of Genghisid descent as khan. Mandukhai made persistent efforts to bring the various Mongol tribes under control. The new khan took the title Dayan meaning "the whole"[41][42] or “Great Yuan” (大元; "Da Yuan").[43] Mandukhai and Dayan Khan defeated the Oirats and the taishis who ruled the Yellow River Mongols. However, one of them killed Dayan Khan's son and revolted when Dayan Khan appointed his son, Ulusbold, as jinong (crown prince) over them. Dayan Khan finally defeated the southwestern Mongols in 1510 with the assistance of his allies, Unebolad wang and the Four Oirats.[44] Making another of his sons jinong, he abolished old-Yuan court titles of taishi, chingsang, pingchan and chiyuan.

From 1495 onward, Dayan exerted pressure on the Ming dynasty, which closed border-trade and killed his envoys. Dayan invaded Ming territory and subjugated the Uriankhai Three Guards, who had previously submitted to the Ming. As a result, the Tümed Mongols ruled in the Ordos region and they gradually extended their domain into northeastern Qinghai.[45] In 1517, Dayan even threatened Beijing itself. Mongol armies raided the Ming dynasty not only in the north but also in the hitherto quiet west. The Ming dynasty lost Kara Del as a protectorate to the Turpan Khanate at the same time. Dayan kept defeating the Ming in battle right up until his death in 1543.[46] At the apogee of Dayan's reign, the Northern Yuan stretched from the Siberian tundra and Lake Baikal in the north, across the Gobi, to the edge of the Yellow River and south of it into the Ordos. The lands extended from the forests of Manchuria in the East past the Altai Mountains and out onto the steppes of Central Asia.[47]

Dayan Khan's reorganization of the Mongols into six Eastern Mongol tümens (literally "ten thousand") and four Oirats tümens had far-reaching effects on the development of Mongol society.

The six Eastern Mongol tümens were granted to his 11 sons while the four Oirat tümens were ruled by taishi nobles. His youngest son Gersenji Khongtaiji of the Jalayir became the ruler of the Khalkha Mongols, the largest of the six tümens. The tümens functioned both as military units and as tribal administrative bodies who hoped to receive taijis, descended from Dayan Khan. Northern Khalkha people and Uriyankhan were attached to the South Khalkha of eastern Inner Mongolia and Doyin Uriyangkhan of the Three Guards, respectively. After the rebellion of the northern Uriankhai people, they were conquered in 1538 and mostly annexed by the northern Khalkha. However, his decision to divide the six tumens to his sons, or taijis, and local tabunangs-sons in the law of the taijis created a decentralized system of Borjigin rule that secured domestic peace and outward expansion for a century. Despite this decentralization, there was a remarkable concord within the new Mongol order created by Dayan Khan.

Last reunification edit

 
Tent of Altan kan and Sannangji.
 
Realm of Altan Khan in 1571
 
Temple at Erdene Zuu monastery established by Abtai Khan in the Khalkha heartland in the 16th century.

After Dayan Khan's death, the Mongols began falling apart again under the two succeeding khans. By 1540 new regional circles of taijis and local tabunangs (imperial sons-in-law) of the taijis emerged in all the former Dayan Khan's domains. The khagan and the jinong had titular authority over the three right wing tumens. Darayisung Gödeng Khan (r. 1547–1557) had to grant titles of khans to his cousins Altan, ruling the Tumed, and Bayaskhul, ruling the Kharchin.[49]

Under Tümen Jasagtu Khan (r. 1558–92), the realm was unified again with the aid of Altan Khan, Abtai Sain Khan, and Khutughtai Sechen Khongtaiji of Ordos. Jasagtu defeated the Uriankhai and Daghur Mongols and subjugated the Jurchens to the east. Abtai and Sechen brought many of the Oirat tribes under their domination. Altan conquered large parts of Qinghai and left one of his sons in charge there. Jasagtu also tried to unify the Mongols under a new code of law, written in the old Mongol script derived from the Uyghur script.[50] A series of smallpox epidemics and lack of trade forced the Mongols to repeatedly plunder the districts of China. In 1571 the Ming opened trade with the three Right Wing Tumens.[51]

By the end of the 16th century, the Uriankhai Three Guards had lost their existence as a distinct group. Their Fuyu was absorbed by the Khorchin after they had moved to the Nonni River. Two other, Doyin and Tai'nin, were absorbed by the Five Khalkhas.[52]

Conversion to Buddhism edit

Although Yuan emperors had previously adopted Buddhism, most Mongols ignored it and remained shamanist in their belief. From 1575, a large-scale conversion to Tibetan Buddhism in the Right Wing Tumens occurred. Jasagtu appointed a Tibetan Buddhist chaplain of the Karmapa order and agreed that Buddhism would henceforth become the state religion of Mongolia. In 1577, Altan and Sechen received the 3rd Dalai Lama, which started the conversion of Tumed and Ordos Mongols to Buddhism. Soon after the Oirats also adopted Buddhism. Numerous Tibetan lamas entered Mongolia to proselytize.[53]

Fall (1600–1635) edit

 
The White House of Tsogt Taij (White Castle) was built in 1601.

By the reign of Ligdan Khan (r. 1604–1634), the Eastern Mongol tumens had ceased to function as a unified entity. Ligdan only controlled the Chahar tumen and the Khalkha and Oirat Mongols no longer obeyed his authority. Ligdan built a new capital in Chahar land known as Chaghan Baishin (White House) and promoted the building of Buddhist monasteries, translation of Tibetan literature, and trade with the Ming dynasty.[54]

In 1616, the Jurchens rose to the forefront of East Asian powers under the reign of Nurhaci. Although sharing many similar characteristics with the Mongols, the Jurchens were not nomads, but tribal people who had adopted Chinese agricultural practices. Nurhaci had ambitions to conquer the Ming dynasty and sought allies in the Khorchin Mongols, subjects of Ligdan. The princes of Khorchin, Jarud, and southern Khalkha Mongols made a formal alliance with the Jurchens from 1612 to 1624.[55]

 
Major Mongol and Jurchen rulers prior to the Jurchen unification
 
Chahar-Jurchen War, 1619–1634

In response, Ligdan waged war on the Mongol allies of the Jurchens in 1625. The Jurchen-Mongol army defeated Ligdan and forced him back. In the following year, Uuba Noyan of the Khorchin had his younger brother marry one of Nurhaci's daughters, cementing the alliance. Many of the Jurchens married Mongols. Ligdan appointed his own officials over the tumens and formed an elite military band to coerce opposition. In 1628, Ligdan defeated the Khorchins and Jurchen auxiliary at Zhaocheng but fled a large Jurchen punitive expedition. Only Tsogt Taiji (1581–1637) supported the Great Khan whilst other nobles of Khalkha remained neutral and inactive. In 1632, Hong Taiji of the Jurchens and his Mongol allies defeated the Chahars and captured Ligdan's family. Ligdan lost any authority he had over the non-Chahar tumens. Ligdan died on his way to Qinghai to punish the Gelug order in 1634. His son, Ejei Khan, surrendered to the Qing dynasty and was said to give the Imperial Seal of the Mongols to Qing emperor Hong Taiji the next year (February 1635), ending the Kublaid descent ruled Northern Yuan.[56]

After Ligdan Khan's death in 1634, the Mongols formed four Khanates, from west to east:

  • The Altan Khan of Khalkhas in the far west, founded by Sholoi Ubashi, great-grandson of Geresandza.
  • The Dzasagtu Khans, a khanate founded by Laikhor-khan, a cousin of the Altan Khan.
  • The Tushetu Khans at Ulaanbaatar founded by Abatai, another grandson. This was the senior branch.
  • The Sechen Khans at the eastern end of modern Mongolia, were founded by Sholoi, a great-grandson.

Aftermath edit

Outer Mongolia edit

 
The various regimes on the Mongolian Plateau after the proclamation of Qing dynasty

In 1636, all of Inner Mongolia had already been conquered by the Manchus, and the successors of the Mongol Empire were also under Manchu authority.[57] The son of Ligdan Khan, Ejei, died under mysterious circumstances. His rank was given to his brother Abunai, who refused to attend court with the Manchus. Abunai's rank was then passed on to his son, Burni, who rebelled against the Manchus in 1675, but the uprising was defeated and Burni died in battle.[58][59] The Qing emperors then placed the Chahar Mongols under their direct rule.

In Outer Mongolia the Khalkhas still against Manchu rule, Tüsheet Khan Gombodorj retained his independence and suzerainty over the Sechen and Jasagtu khans. However another independent entity known as Altan Khan of the Khalkha emerged in Jasagtu territory. With the loss of Inner Mongolia and the Imperial Mongol Seal, the Mongols had to search for a new source of authority. As a result, in 1639, Gombodorj's son became the first Jebtsundamba Khutuktu, the spiritual head of the Gelug Buddhists in Mongolia. Gombodorj did his best to maintain peaceful relations with the rising Manchus by sending tribute. He also stopped providing horses to the Ming dynasty. Diplomacy failed after the Manchus defeated the Ming in 1644 and seized Beijing. In 1646, a Mongol noyan rebelled against the Qing but was crushed under overwhelming odds. In 1647, Gombodorj met the Qing in battle with 50,000 cavalry and neither side were able to obtain a decisive victory. Although both sides suffered heavy losses, the Mongol army constituted a larger part of their overall forces than the Qing, signalling that the Mongols no longer had the numbers to directly confront the Qing in battle.[60]

In the mid-17th century, Gombodorj died and was succeeded by his young and inexperienced son Chikhundorj. In 1655, the Qing began interfering in Tusheet affairs by appointing their own lamas in Tusheet territory. Thus Outer Mongolia also gradually fell under Qing control.[61]

Dzungar Khanate edit

 
Dzungar–Qing Wars, 1687–1757

Meanwhile, to the west, about 1600–1620 the Oirats united under Kharkhul. In 1635, the Oirats under Kharkhul's son Erdeni Batur formed the Dzungar Khanate. This unification was partly driven by their wars with the Altan Khans.[60] When the Jasagtu Khan Shira lost part of his subjects to the Tüsheet Khan Chikhundorj, Galdan Boshugtu Khan of the Dzungars moved his orda near the Altai Mountains to prepare an attack. Chikhundorj attacked the right wing of the Khalkhas and killed Shira in 1687. In 1688, Galdan dispatched troops under his younger brother Dorji-jav against Chikhundorj but they were eventually defeated and Dorji-jav was killed in battle. Chikhundorj then murdered Degdeehei Mergen Ahai of the Jasagtu Khan who was on the way to Galdan. To avenge the death of his brother, Galdan established friendly relations with the Russians who were already at war with Chikhundorj over territories near Lake Baikal. Armed with Russian firearms, Galdan led 30,000 Dzungar troops into Outer Mongolia in 1688 and defeated Chikhundorj in three days. The Siberian Cossacks, meanwhile, attacked and defeated a Khalkha army of 10,000 near Lake Baikal. After two bloody battles with the Dzungars near Erdene Zuu Monastery and Tomor, Chikhundorji and his brother Jebtsundamba Khutuktu Zanabazar fled across the Gobi Desert to the Qing dynasty and submitted to the Kangxi Emperor.[62]

By 1690, Galdan had control of Outer Mongolia as far as the edge of Manchuria, before turning his attention east towards Beijing. This expansion of the Dzungar state was viewed with worry by the Qing, which led the Kangxi Emperor (Enh-Amgalan khaan-in Mongolian) to block Galdan. Late in the summer of 1690, Galdan crossed the Kherlen River with a force of 20,000 and engaged a Qing army at Battle of Ulan Butung 350 kilometers north of Beijing near the western headwaters of the Liao River. Galdan was forced to retreat and escaped total destruction because the Qing army did not have the supplies or ability to pursue him. In 1696, the Kangxi Emperor led 100,000 troops into Mongolia. Galdan fled from the Kherlen only to be caught by another Qing army attacking from the west. He was defeated in the ensuing Battle of Jao Modo near the upper Tuul River. Galdan's wife, Anu, was killed and the Qing army captured 20,000 cattle and 40,000 sheep. Galdan fled with a small handful of followers. In 1697 he died in the Altai Mountains near Khovd on 4 April. Back in Dzungaria, his nephew Tsewang Rabtan, who had revolted in 1689, was already in control as of 1691.[62] Outer Mongolia was thus incorporated into the Qing Empire, and the Khalkha leaders returned to Outer Mongolia as Qing vassals. A Qing garrison was installed at Ulaanbaatar. The Qing forces occupied Hami but did not advance into Dzungaria. The Dzungars later expanded into Tibet and Kazakhstan, but they too were conquered by the Qing dynasty in 1755, and all resistance was crushed by 1758.[63]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In the 17th century the memory of the Yuan had faded among the Mongols, although editors of chronicles described in the 18th century mentioned clearly that Kublai was the founder of the Yuan dynasty.[11]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "ᠳᠥᠴᠢᠨ ᠳᠥᠷᠪᠡᠨ ᠬᠣᠶ᠋ᠠᠷ ᠤᠨ ᠮᠣᠩᠭ᠋ ᠣᠯ ᠤᠯᠤᠰ ᠤᠨ ᠦᠶ ᠡ ᠶᠢ" (PDF). Mongoltoli.
  2. ^ E. P. Bakaeva; K. V. Orlova (2003). "Монгольские этнонимы:вопросы происхождения и этнического состава Монгольских народов" [Mongolian ethnonyms: questions of the origin and ethnic composition of the Mongolian peoples] (PDF). Kalmyk Scientific Center. Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  3. ^ William Elliott Butler. The Mongolian legal system, p. 3.
  4. ^ Jack Weatherford-The Secret History of the Mongol Queens
  5. ^ René Grousset-The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia, p. 508
  6. ^ C.P.Atwood – Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire, see: Batumöngke Dayan Qaghan
  7. ^ Jae-un Kang, Suzanne Lee, Sook Pyo Lee, "The Land of Scholars: Two Thousand Years of Korean Confucianism"
  8. ^ Luc Kwanten, "Imperial Nomads: A History of Central Asia, 500–1500"
  9. ^ Jeong In-ji (1972). (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 2022-02-22. 北元遼陽省平章劉益、王右丞等欲歸附大明,慮遷居民,以遼陽本我地,若我國請命,可免遷徙,遣使來告。
  10. ^ a b Okada, Hidehiro (1994). "Dayan Khan as a Yuan Emperor: The Political Legitimacy in 15th Century Mongolia". Bulletin de l'École Française d'Extrême-Orient. 81: 52–53. doi:10.3406/befeo.1994.2245.
  11. ^ a b Morikawa, Tetsuo (2008-03-20). "大元の記憶 Memory of the Dai Yuan ulus (the Great Yuan dynasty)" (PDF). 比較社会文化: 九州大学大学院比較社会文化学府紀要 (in Japanese). Graduate School of Social and Cultural Studies, Kyushu University. 14: 6–7. doi:10.15017/9498.
  12. ^ David M. Robinson (2019). In the Shadow of the Mongol Empire: Ming China and Eurasia. Cambridge University Press. p. 51. ISBN 978-1108482448.
  13. ^ Henry, Serruys (1956). "Notes on a Few Mongolian Rulers of the 15th Century". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 76 (2): 82–90. doi:10.2307/595075. JSTOR 595075. sent by Esen-tayisi with a document wherein he called himself Great Qayan T'ien-sheng of the. Great Yuan.s The document was dated the first.
  14. ^ (Бага хаадын үеийн Монгол улс; Ж.Бор – Монгол хийгээд Евразийн дипломат шашстир, II боть)
  15. ^ Reuven Amitai-Preiss, Reuven Amitai, David Morgan-The Mongol empire and its legacy, p. 275.
  16. ^ [Political disruption in Ancient Mongolia]. Mongolcom. 3 August 2016. Archived from the original on 12 August 2019. Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  17. ^ Л.Жамарсн (2003). [Mongolian History Volume 3] (PDF). Монгол улсын түүх. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  18. ^ 陈得芝 贾敬颜. "鞑靼 Tatar". Encyclopedia of China. 明朝人把退据蒙古高原的北元政权及其治下的蒙古族称为鞑靼。
  19. ^ Twitchett 1994, p. 574.
  20. ^ a b Twitchett 1998, p. 120.
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Sources edit

  • Adle, Chahryar (2003), History of Civilizations of Central Asia, vol. 5
  • Twitchett, Denis C. (1979), The Cambridge History of China, vol. 3: Sui and T'ang China, 589–906, Cambridge University Press
  • Twitchett, Denis (1994), "The Liao", The Cambridge History of China, vol. 6: Alien Regime and Border States, 907–1368, Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, pp. 43–153, ISBN 0521243319
  • Twitchett, Denis (1998), The Cambridge History of China, vol. 7: The Ming Dynasty, 1368–1644, Part I, Cambridge University Press
  • Twitchett, Denis (1998b), The Cambridge History of China, vol. 8: The Ming Dynasty, 1368–1644, Part 2, Cambridge University Press

External links edit

  •   Media related to Northern Yuan dynasty at Wikimedia Commons

northern, yuan, chinese, 北元, pinyin, běi, yuán, dynastic, regime, ruled, mongol, borjigin, clan, based, mongolian, plateau, existed, rump, state, after, collapse, yuan, dynasty, 1368, lasted, until, conquest, jurchen, later, dynasty, 1635, dynasty, began, with. The Northern Yuan Chinese 北元 pinyin Bei Yuan was a dynastic regime ruled by the Mongol Borjigin clan based in the Mongolian Plateau It existed as a rump state after the collapse of the Yuan dynasty in 1368 and lasted until its conquest by the Jurchen led Later Jin dynasty in 1635 The Northern Yuan dynasty began with the retreat of the Yuan imperial court led by Toghon Temur Emperor Huizong of Yuan to the Mongolian steppe This period featured factional struggles and the often only nominal role of the Great Khan Northern Yuan 北元ᠳᠠᠢᠦᠨ Dayan大元 Great Yuan ᠳᠥᠴᠢᠨᠳᠥᠷᠪᠡᠨᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯᠤᠯᠤᠰ docin dorben monggol ulus 1 Forty four Mongol State 1368 1635The Northern Yuan in the 15th centuryCapitalShangdu 1368 1369 Yingchang 1369 1370 Karakorum 1371 1388 Common languagesMongolian Chinese Jurchen 2 ReligionTengrism Buddhism IslamGovernmentMonarchyKhagan 1368 1370Ukhaghatu Khan Toghon Temur first 1370 1378Biligtu Khan Ayushiridara 1378 1388Uskhal Khan Togus Temur 1454 1455Esen Taishi only non Borjigin 1478 1517 1543Dayan Khan longest ruling 1557 1592Tumen Zasagt Khan 1603 1634Ligdan Khan 1634 1635Ejei Khan last LegislatureYassa Customary rules 3 Historical eraLate middle ages Fall of Dadu to Ming forcesSeptember 1368 Death of Uskhal Khan Togus Temur1388 Dayan Khan reunites the Mongol nation1483 1510 Death of Ligdan Khan1634 Ejei Khan submits to the Later Jin1635Currencybarter DirhamPreceded by Succeeded byYuan dynasty Four OiratLater JinKara DelKhalkasMongolia under Qing ruleToday part ofChina Mongolia RussiaDayan Khan and Mandukhai Khatun reunited most Mongol tribes in the late 15th century 4 However the former s distribution of his empire among his sons and relatives as fiefs caused the decentralization of the imperial rule 5 Despite this decentralization a remarkable concord continued within the Dayan Khanid aristocracy and intra Chinggisid civil war remained unknown until the reign of Ligdan Khan 1604 1634 6 who saw much of his power weakened in his quarrels with the Mongol tribes and was defeated by the Later Jin dynasty The last sixty years of this period featured the intensive penetration of Tibetan Buddhism into Mongol society Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Origin 2 2 Retreat to Mongolian Steppe 1368 1388 2 3 Oirat domination 1388 1478 2 4 Restoration 1479 1600 2 4 1 Second reunification 2 4 2 Last reunification 2 4 3 Conversion to Buddhism 2 5 Fall 1600 1635 3 Aftermath 3 1 Outer Mongolia 3 2 Dzungar Khanate 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 External linksName editThe regime that existed between 1368 and 1635 is known by various names including the Northern Yuan dynasty 7 The dynastic name of Great Yuan Chinese 大元 pinyin Da Yuan was officially used between 1368 and 1388 as was the preceding Yuan dynasty Following the death of Uskhal Khan Togus Temur the Great Yuan dynastic name along with other Han style imperial titles were abandoned by his successor Jorightu Khan Yesuder hence the name Northern Yuan is sometimes limited in its usage to referencing only the period between 1368 and 1388 8 The historiographical term Northern Yuan in the English language is derived from the corresponding term 北元 Bei Yuan in the Chinese language in which the prefix Northern is used to distinguish between the Yuan dynasty established in 1271 and the regime that existed after 1368 The historiographical name Northern Yuan first appeared in the Korean historical text Goryeosa written in Classical Chinese 9 Some scholars believe that the reign of Dayan Khan whose regnal name Dayan came from the Chinese term 大元 Da Yuan lit Great Yuan 10 Contrary to this other views hold that the title Dayan is derived from the Mongolian word means origin or whole 11 Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that Taisun Khan Esen Taishi Manduul Khan and Ligdan Khan had also used the Great Yuan dynastic name and Han style imperial titles during their rule 10 12 In English the term Northern Yuan dynasty is generally used to cover the entire period from 1368 to 1635 for historiographical purpose Apart from Great Yuan before 1388 and during the rule of Esen Taishi 13 the Mongols called their regime Ikh Mongol Uls meaning the Great Mongol State It is also referred to as Post Imperial Mongolia the Mongol ian Khaganate or the Mongol ian Khanate 14 in some modern sources 15 Although most of these English terms can also refer to the Mongol Empire or the Yuan dynasty in the 13th and the 14th centuries In chronicles written in the Mongolian language this period is also known as The Forty and the Four Dochin Dorben meaning forty tumen of Eastern Mongols Eastern Mongolia and four tumen of Western Mongols note 1 Mongolian historiography also uses the term Period of political disunion Period of small khagans Mongolia s period of political disruption and Mongolia s 14th 17th century etc 16 17 The Chinese Ming Dynasty called them Tatar Chinese 鞑靼 pinyin Dada and Wala Oirats Chinese 瓦剌 pinyin Wǎla after the Mongols were divided into eastern and western parts 18 History editSee also Timeline of the Northern Yuan Origin edit The Northern Yuan dynasty was the remnant of the Yuan dynasty 1271 1368 founded by Kublai Khan After eliminating the Song dynasty in 1279 the Yuan dynasty ruled all of China proper for about a century Even prior to the Yuan dynasty the Mongols had ruled Northern China for more than 40 years since the time they conquered the Jurchen led Jin dynasty in 1234 Yuan rule in China proper began to collapse in 1344 when the Yellow River flooded and changed course causing widespread droughts flooding and making the Grand Canal impassable 19 In 1351 the Red Turban Rebellion erupted in the Huai River valley which saw the rise of Zhu Yuanzhang a Han peasant who eventually established the Ming dynasty 1368 1644 in southern China In 1368 a Ming army advanced on the Yuan capital Khanbaliq or Dadu present day Beijing 20 Retreat to Mongolian Steppe 1368 1388 edit nbsp Ming dynasty and the Northern Yuan in the early 15th century The Mongols lost some lands in China proper after the Ming defeated Togus Temur in 1388 Toghon Temur r 1333 1370 the last ruler of the Yuan fled north to Shangdu located in present day Inner Mongolia from Dadu upon the approach of Ming forces He tried to regain Dadu but failed and died in Yingchang located in present day Inner Mongolia two years later 1370 Yingchang was seized by the Ming shortly after his death 20 The Mongols retreated to Karakorum in the Mongol heartland after the fall of Yingchang in 1370 where they maintained the official dynastic title Great Yuan known retroactively as the Northern Yuan The Ming army pursued the Yuan remnants into the Mongolian steppe in 1372 but was defeated by Biligtu Khan Ayushiridara r 1370 1378 and his general Koke Temur d 1375 In 1375 Naghachu a Mongol official of Biligtu Khan in Liaoyang province invaded Liaodong with the aim of restoring Mongol power in China proper Although he continued to hold southern Manchuria Naghachu eventually surrendered to the Ming dynasty in 1387 88 21 The Yuan loyalists under the Kublaid prince Basalawarmi the Prince of Liang in Yunnan and Guizhou were also defeated and killed by the Ming earlier in 1381 82 22 In 1380 the Ming invaded Northern Yuan and sacked Karakorum although they were eventually forced to withdraw Around 70 000 Mongol captives were taken In 1387 the Ming defeated the Uriankhai Mongols and in the following year they achieved decisive victory around the Buir Lake against Uskhal Khan Togus Temur 23 The defeat of Uskhal Khan effectively shattered Yuan power in the steppes and allowed the Western Oirat Mongols to rise and become kingmaker of the Northern Yuan realm 24 The Genghisid Major descendants of Kublai 25 rulers of the Northern Yuan also buttressed their claim on China 26 27 and held tenaciously to the title of Emperor or Great Khan of the Great Yuan Dai Yuwan Khaan or 大元可汗 28 to resist the Ming who had by this time become the real ruler in China proper According to the traditional Chinese political orthodoxy there could be only one legitimate dynasty whose rulers were blessed by Heaven to rule as Emperor of China see Mandate of Heaven so the Ming also denied the Yuan remnants legitimacy as emperors of China although the Ming did consider the previous Yuan which it had succeeded to be a legitimate dynasty Oirat domination 1388 1478 edit See also Four Oirat nbsp Location of the OiratsIn 1388 the Mongol throne was taken over by Jorightu Khan Yesuder a descendant of Arik Boke Tolui s son with the support of the Oirats He abolished the Han style title of former Yuan dynasty 29 30 31 In the following year one of Uskhal Khan s subjects Gunashiri a descendant of Chagatai Khan founded his own small state called Kara Del in Hami 32 The following century saw a succession of Genghisid rulers many of whom were mere figureheads put on the throne by those warlords who happened to be the most powerful From the end of the 14th century there appear designations such as period of small kings Baga haadyn үe 33 On one side stood the Western Mongols and on the other the Eastern Mongols While the Oirats drew their khans from the descendants of Ariq Boke and other princes Arugtai of the Asud supported the old Yuan khans of Kublaid descent The House of Ogedei also briefly attempted to reunite the Mongols under their rule The Mongols eventually split into three main groups the Oirats in the west the Uriankhai in northeast and the Khorchin between the two The Uriankhai surrendered to the Ming dynasty in the 1390s The Ming divided them into the Three Guards Doyin Tai nin and Fuyu 34 Mongol relations with the Ming dynasty consisted of sporadic bursts of conflict intermingled with periods of peaceful relations and border trade The Oirat backed Orug Temur Khan Gulichi was defeated by Elbeg Khan s son Oljei Temur Khan Bunyashiri r 1408 1412 the protege of Tamerlane d 1405 in 1403 Most of the Mongol noblemen under Arugtai chingsang sided with Oljei Temur The Yongle Emperor r 1402 1424 issued Oljei Temur an ultimatum demanding his acceptance of tributary relations to the Ming dynasty Oljei Temur refused resulting in the Ming dynasty conducting several campaigns against the Mongols In 1409 a Ming army of 100 000 entered Mongolia but suffered a defeat against Oljei Temur and Arugtai at the Battle of Kherlen In the following year the Yongle Emperor personally led an expedition into Mongolia and defeated the Mongols After the death of Oljei Temur the Oirats under their leader Bahamu Mahmud d 1417 enthroned an Ariq Bokid Delbeg Khan in 1412 Originally the Ming had supported the Oirats in their power struggle with the eastern Mongols but as the Oirats gained supremacy over them the Ming withdrew their support By 1422 Arugtai turned hostile again as the Ming did not grant him the trading privileges he wanted 35 and Yongle campaigned against him in 1422 and 1423 Bahamu s successor Toghan pushed Arugtai east of the Greater Khingan range in 1433 The Oirats killed him in the west of Baotou the next year Arugtai s ally Adai Khan r 1425 1438 made a last stand in Ejene before he was murdered too 36 Toghan died in the very year of his victory over Adai His son Esen Taishi r 1438 1454 brought the Oirats to the height of their power Under his puppet khans he drove back Moghulistan and crushed the Uriankhai Three Guards Kara Del and the Jurchens In 1449 he defeated a 500 000 strong Ming army and captured the Zhengtong Emperor in what came to be known as the Tumu Crisis 37 However after this astounding victory Esen failed to take the Ming capital of Beijing In the following year a peace was concluded between the two sides and the captive emperor was allowed to return home After executing the rebellious Tayisung Khan r 1433 1453 and his brother Agbarjin in 1453 Esen took the title of not just khan but also Yuan Emperor 38 This caused widespread dissent among the Genghisids and in 1455 a series of revolts resulted in Esen s death His death started the decline of the Oirats who would not recover until their rise as the Dzungar Khanate in the 17th century 39 From Esen s death to 1481 different warlords of the Kharchin the Belguteids and Ordos Mongols fought over succession and had their Genghisid khans enthroned The Mongolian chroniclers call some of them the Uyghurs and they might have had some ties with the Hami oasis 40 During his reign Manduulun Khan 1475 1478 effectively won over most of the Mongol warlords before he died in 1478 Restoration 1479 1600 edit Second reunification edit nbsp nbsp 1500MOGHULISTANPHAGMODRUPASCHAM PASIBIR KHANATECRIMEANKHANATELITHUANIAGRAND DUCHYKHAZANKHANATEASTRA KHANMUSCOVYNOGAISKAZAKH KHANATEMINGDYNASTYFOUROIRATSNORTHERN YUANWHITE SHEEPTURKSVIJAYA NAGARASHAYBA NIDSTIMURIDEMPIREDELHISULTANATETungusAVALANXANGOTTOMANEMPIREMAMLUKSULTANATEJO SEONMALACCA class notpageimage The Northern Yuan and main polities in Asia c 1500 Manduulun s young khatun Mandukhai proclaimed a seven year old boy named Batumongke of Genghisid descent as khan Mandukhai made persistent efforts to bring the various Mongol tribes under control The new khan took the title Dayan meaning the whole 41 42 or Great Yuan 大元 Da Yuan 43 Mandukhai and Dayan Khan defeated the Oirats and the taishis who ruled the Yellow River Mongols However one of them killed Dayan Khan s son and revolted when Dayan Khan appointed his son Ulusbold as jinong crown prince over them Dayan Khan finally defeated the southwestern Mongols in 1510 with the assistance of his allies Unebolad wang and the Four Oirats 44 Making another of his sons jinong he abolished old Yuan court titles of taishi chingsang pingchan and chiyuan From 1495 onward Dayan exerted pressure on the Ming dynasty which closed border trade and killed his envoys Dayan invaded Ming territory and subjugated the Uriankhai Three Guards who had previously submitted to the Ming As a result the Tumed Mongols ruled in the Ordos region and they gradually extended their domain into northeastern Qinghai 45 In 1517 Dayan even threatened Beijing itself Mongol armies raided the Ming dynasty not only in the north but also in the hitherto quiet west The Ming dynasty lost Kara Del as a protectorate to the Turpan Khanate at the same time Dayan kept defeating the Ming in battle right up until his death in 1543 46 At the apogee of Dayan s reign the Northern Yuan stretched from the Siberian tundra and Lake Baikal in the north across the Gobi to the edge of the Yellow River and south of it into the Ordos The lands extended from the forests of Manchuria in the East past the Altai Mountains and out onto the steppes of Central Asia 47 Dayan Khan s reorganization of the Mongols into six Eastern Mongol tumens literally ten thousand and four Oirats tumens had far reaching effects on the development of Mongol society Left Wing Khalkha tumen Northern 7 otog Jalaid Besud Eljigin Gorlos Khokhuid Khukhuid Khataghin and later added Uriankhai Southern 5 otog Baarin Jaruud Bayagud Ujeed Uchirad and Hongirad Chahar tumen Abaga Abaganar Aokhan Daurs Durved Hishigten Muumyangan Naiman Onnigud Huuchid Sunud Uzemchin and Urad 48 Uriankhai tumen This tumen was later dissolved Right Wing Ordos tumen Tumed tumen Yunsheebuu Yongshiyebu tumen including Asud and Kharchin Four tumen Oirats Choros Olots Durvud Khoid Baatud Torghut Khoshut Ur Or Mongol Barga Mongols and Buryats The Barga and Buryats later became subject of Khalkha The six Eastern Mongol tumens were granted to his 11 sons while the four Oirat tumens were ruled by taishi nobles His youngest son Gersenji Khongtaiji of the Jalayir became the ruler of the Khalkha Mongols the largest of the six tumens The tumens functioned both as military units and as tribal administrative bodies who hoped to receive taijis descended from Dayan Khan Northern Khalkha people and Uriyankhan were attached to the South Khalkha of eastern Inner Mongolia and Doyin Uriyangkhan of the Three Guards respectively After the rebellion of the northern Uriankhai people they were conquered in 1538 and mostly annexed by the northern Khalkha However his decision to divide the six tumens to his sons or taijis and local tabunangs sons in the law of the taijis created a decentralized system of Borjigin rule that secured domestic peace and outward expansion for a century Despite this decentralization there was a remarkable concord within the new Mongol order created by Dayan Khan Last reunification edit nbsp Tent of Altan kan and Sannangji nbsp Realm of Altan Khan in 1571 nbsp Temple at Erdene Zuu monastery established by Abtai Khan in the Khalkha heartland in the 16th century After Dayan Khan s death the Mongols began falling apart again under the two succeeding khans By 1540 new regional circles of taijis and local tabunangs imperial sons in law of the taijis emerged in all the former Dayan Khan s domains The khagan and the jinong had titular authority over the three right wing tumens Darayisung Godeng Khan r 1547 1557 had to grant titles of khans to his cousins Altan ruling the Tumed and Bayaskhul ruling the Kharchin 49 Under Tumen Jasagtu Khan r 1558 92 the realm was unified again with the aid of Altan Khan Abtai Sain Khan and Khutughtai Sechen Khongtaiji of Ordos Jasagtu defeated the Uriankhai and Daghur Mongols and subjugated the Jurchens to the east Abtai and Sechen brought many of the Oirat tribes under their domination Altan conquered large parts of Qinghai and left one of his sons in charge there Jasagtu also tried to unify the Mongols under a new code of law written in the old Mongol script derived from the Uyghur script 50 A series of smallpox epidemics and lack of trade forced the Mongols to repeatedly plunder the districts of China In 1571 the Ming opened trade with the three Right Wing Tumens 51 By the end of the 16th century the Uriankhai Three Guards had lost their existence as a distinct group Their Fuyu was absorbed by the Khorchin after they had moved to the Nonni River Two other Doyin and Tai nin were absorbed by the Five Khalkhas 52 Conversion to Buddhism edit Although Yuan emperors had previously adopted Buddhism most Mongols ignored it and remained shamanist in their belief From 1575 a large scale conversion to Tibetan Buddhism in the Right Wing Tumens occurred Jasagtu appointed a Tibetan Buddhist chaplain of the Karmapa order and agreed that Buddhism would henceforth become the state religion of Mongolia In 1577 Altan and Sechen received the 3rd Dalai Lama which started the conversion of Tumed and Ordos Mongols to Buddhism Soon after the Oirats also adopted Buddhism Numerous Tibetan lamas entered Mongolia to proselytize 53 Fall 1600 1635 edit nbsp The White House of Tsogt Taij White Castle was built in 1601 By the reign of Ligdan Khan r 1604 1634 the Eastern Mongol tumens had ceased to function as a unified entity Ligdan only controlled the Chahar tumen and the Khalkha and Oirat Mongols no longer obeyed his authority Ligdan built a new capital in Chahar land known as Chaghan Baishin White House and promoted the building of Buddhist monasteries translation of Tibetan literature and trade with the Ming dynasty 54 In 1616 the Jurchens rose to the forefront of East Asian powers under the reign of Nurhaci Although sharing many similar characteristics with the Mongols the Jurchens were not nomads but tribal people who had adopted Chinese agricultural practices Nurhaci had ambitions to conquer the Ming dynasty and sought allies in the Khorchin Mongols subjects of Ligdan The princes of Khorchin Jarud and southern Khalkha Mongols made a formal alliance with the Jurchens from 1612 to 1624 55 nbsp Major Mongol and Jurchen rulers prior to the Jurchen unification nbsp Chahar Jurchen War 1619 1634In response Ligdan waged war on the Mongol allies of the Jurchens in 1625 The Jurchen Mongol army defeated Ligdan and forced him back In the following year Uuba Noyan of the Khorchin had his younger brother marry one of Nurhaci s daughters cementing the alliance Many of the Jurchens married Mongols Ligdan appointed his own officials over the tumens and formed an elite military band to coerce opposition In 1628 Ligdan defeated the Khorchins and Jurchen auxiliary at Zhaocheng but fled a large Jurchen punitive expedition Only Tsogt Taiji 1581 1637 supported the Great Khan whilst other nobles of Khalkha remained neutral and inactive In 1632 Hong Taiji of the Jurchens and his Mongol allies defeated the Chahars and captured Ligdan s family Ligdan lost any authority he had over the non Chahar tumens Ligdan died on his way to Qinghai to punish the Gelug order in 1634 His son Ejei Khan surrendered to the Qing dynasty and was said to give the Imperial Seal of the Mongols to Qing emperor Hong Taiji the next year February 1635 ending the Kublaid descent ruled Northern Yuan 56 After Ligdan Khan s death in 1634 the Mongols formed four Khanates from west to east The Altan Khan of Khalkhas in the far west founded by Sholoi Ubashi great grandson of Geresandza The Dzasagtu Khans a khanate founded by Laikhor khan a cousin of the Altan Khan The Tushetu Khans at Ulaanbaatar founded by Abatai another grandson This was the senior branch The Sechen Khans at the eastern end of modern Mongolia were founded by Sholoi a great grandson Aftermath editSee also Dzungar Qing War Outer Mongolia edit nbsp The various regimes on the Mongolian Plateau after the proclamation of Qing dynastyIn 1636 all of Inner Mongolia had already been conquered by the Manchus and the successors of the Mongol Empire were also under Manchu authority 57 The son of Ligdan Khan Ejei died under mysterious circumstances His rank was given to his brother Abunai who refused to attend court with the Manchus Abunai s rank was then passed on to his son Burni who rebelled against the Manchus in 1675 but the uprising was defeated and Burni died in battle 58 59 The Qing emperors then placed the Chahar Mongols under their direct rule In Outer Mongolia the Khalkhas still against Manchu rule Tusheet Khan Gombodorj retained his independence and suzerainty over the Sechen and Jasagtu khans However another independent entity known as Altan Khan of the Khalkha emerged in Jasagtu territory With the loss of Inner Mongolia and the Imperial Mongol Seal the Mongols had to search for a new source of authority As a result in 1639 Gombodorj s son became the first Jebtsundamba Khutuktu the spiritual head of the Gelug Buddhists in Mongolia Gombodorj did his best to maintain peaceful relations with the rising Manchus by sending tribute He also stopped providing horses to the Ming dynasty Diplomacy failed after the Manchus defeated the Ming in 1644 and seized Beijing In 1646 a Mongol noyan rebelled against the Qing but was crushed under overwhelming odds In 1647 Gombodorj met the Qing in battle with 50 000 cavalry and neither side were able to obtain a decisive victory Although both sides suffered heavy losses the Mongol army constituted a larger part of their overall forces than the Qing signalling that the Mongols no longer had the numbers to directly confront the Qing in battle 60 In the mid 17th century Gombodorj died and was succeeded by his young and inexperienced son Chikhundorj In 1655 the Qing began interfering in Tusheet affairs by appointing their own lamas in Tusheet territory Thus Outer Mongolia also gradually fell under Qing control 61 Dzungar Khanate edit nbsp Dzungar Qing Wars 1687 1757Meanwhile to the west about 1600 1620 the Oirats united under Kharkhul In 1635 the Oirats under Kharkhul s son Erdeni Batur formed the Dzungar Khanate This unification was partly driven by their wars with the Altan Khans 60 When the Jasagtu Khan Shira lost part of his subjects to the Tusheet Khan Chikhundorj Galdan Boshugtu Khan of the Dzungars moved his orda near the Altai Mountains to prepare an attack Chikhundorj attacked the right wing of the Khalkhas and killed Shira in 1687 In 1688 Galdan dispatched troops under his younger brother Dorji jav against Chikhundorj but they were eventually defeated and Dorji jav was killed in battle Chikhundorj then murdered Degdeehei Mergen Ahai of the Jasagtu Khan who was on the way to Galdan To avenge the death of his brother Galdan established friendly relations with the Russians who were already at war with Chikhundorj over territories near Lake Baikal Armed with Russian firearms Galdan led 30 000 Dzungar troops into Outer Mongolia in 1688 and defeated Chikhundorj in three days The Siberian Cossacks meanwhile attacked and defeated a Khalkha army of 10 000 near Lake Baikal After two bloody battles with the Dzungars near Erdene Zuu Monastery and Tomor Chikhundorji and his brother Jebtsundamba Khutuktu Zanabazar fled across the Gobi Desert to the Qing dynasty and submitted to the Kangxi Emperor 62 By 1690 Galdan had control of Outer Mongolia as far as the edge of Manchuria before turning his attention east towards Beijing This expansion of the Dzungar state was viewed with worry by the Qing which led the Kangxi Emperor Enh Amgalan khaan in Mongolian to block Galdan Late in the summer of 1690 Galdan crossed the Kherlen River with a force of 20 000 and engaged a Qing army at Battle of Ulan Butung 350 kilometers north of Beijing near the western headwaters of the Liao River Galdan was forced to retreat and escaped total destruction because the Qing army did not have the supplies or ability to pursue him In 1696 the Kangxi Emperor led 100 000 troops into Mongolia Galdan fled from the Kherlen only to be caught by another Qing army attacking from the west He was defeated in the ensuing Battle of Jao Modo near the upper Tuul River Galdan s wife Anu was killed and the Qing army captured 20 000 cattle and 40 000 sheep Galdan fled with a small handful of followers In 1697 he died in the Altai Mountains near Khovd on 4 April Back in Dzungaria his nephew Tsewang Rabtan who had revolted in 1689 was already in control as of 1691 62 Outer Mongolia was thus incorporated into the Qing Empire and the Khalkha leaders returned to Outer Mongolia as Qing vassals A Qing garrison was installed at Ulaanbaatar The Qing forces occupied Hami but did not advance into Dzungaria The Dzungars later expanded into Tibet and Kazakhstan but they too were conquered by the Qing dynasty in 1755 and all resistance was crushed by 1758 63 See also edit nbsp China portal nbsp History portalList of khans of the Northern Yuan dynasty List of Mongol states Rump stateNotes edit In the 17th century the memory of the Yuan had faded among the Mongols although editors of chronicles described in the 18th century mentioned clearly that Kublai was the founder of the Yuan dynasty 11 References editCitations edit ᠳᠥᠴᠢᠨ ᠳᠥᠷᠪᠡᠨ ᠬᠣᠶ ᠠᠷ ᠤᠨ ᠮᠣᠩᠭ ᠣᠯ ᠤᠯᠤᠰ ᠤᠨ ᠦᠶ ᠡ ᠶᠢ PDF Mongoltoli E P Bakaeva K V Orlova 2003 Mongolskie etnonimy voprosy proishozhdeniya i etnicheskogo sostava Mongolskih narodov Mongolian ethnonyms questions of the origin and ethnic composition of the Mongolian peoples PDF Kalmyk Scientific Center Retrieved 2 February 2018 William Elliott Butler The Mongolian legal system p 3 Jack Weatherford The Secret History of the Mongol Queens Rene Grousset The Empire of the Steppes A History of Central Asia p 508 C P Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire see Batumongke Dayan Qaghan Jae un Kang Suzanne Lee Sook Pyo Lee The Land of Scholars Two Thousand Years of Korean Confucianism Luc Kwanten Imperial Nomads A History of Central Asia 500 1500 Jeong In ji 1972 高麗史 卷第四十三 世家第四十三 恭愍王六 in Chinese Archived from the original on 2022 02 22 北元遼陽省平章劉益 王右丞等欲歸附大明 慮遷居民 以遼陽本我地 若我國請命 可免遷徙 遣使來告 a b Okada Hidehiro 1994 Dayan Khan as a Yuan Emperor The Political Legitimacy in 15th Century Mongolia Bulletin de l Ecole Francaise d Extreme Orient 81 52 53 doi 10 3406 befeo 1994 2245 a b Morikawa Tetsuo 2008 03 20 大元の記憶 Memory of the Dai Yuan ulus the Great Yuan dynasty PDF 比較社会文化 九州大学大学院比較社会文化学府紀要 in Japanese Graduate School of Social and Cultural Studies Kyushu University 14 6 7 doi 10 15017 9498 David M Robinson 2019 In the Shadow of the Mongol Empire Ming China and Eurasia Cambridge University Press p 51 ISBN 978 1108482448 Henry Serruys 1956 Notes on a Few Mongolian Rulers of the 15th Century Journal of the American Oriental Society 76 2 82 90 doi 10 2307 595075 JSTOR 595075 sent by Esen tayisi with a document wherein he called himself Great Qayan T ien sheng of the Great Yuan s The document was dated the first Baga haadyn үeijn Mongol uls Zh Bor Mongol hijgeed Evrazijn diplomat shashstir II bot Reuven Amitai Preiss Reuven Amitai David Morgan The Mongol empire and its legacy p 275 Uls torijn butralyn үeijn Mongol Political disruption in Ancient Mongolia Mongolcom 3 August 2016 Archived from the original on 12 August 2019 Retrieved 2 February 2018 L Zhamarsn 2003 Mongolyn tүүh 3 r bot Mongolian History Volume 3 PDF Mongol ulsyn tүүh Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 2 February 2018 陈得芝 贾敬颜 鞑靼 Tatar Encyclopedia of China 明朝人把退据蒙古高原的北元政权及其治下的蒙古族称为鞑靼 Twitchett 1994 p 574 a b Twitchett 1998 p 120 Willard J Peterson John King Fairbank Denis Twitchett The Cambridge History of China vol 7 p 158 Raoul Naroll Vern L Bullough Frada Naroll Military deterrence in history a pilot cross historical survey p 97 Michael Prawdin The Mongol Empire its Rise and Legacy p 389 Collier MacMillan Ltd Toronto H H Howorth History of the Mongols part I The Mongols proper and the Kalmuks Dalaj Ch Mongolyn tүүh 1260 1388 gutgaar devter UB 1992 John Man The Great Wall The Extraordinary Story of China s Wonder of the World p 183 The Cambridge History of China Vol 7 p 193 1988 Carney T Fisher Smallpox Sales men and Sectarians Ming Mongol relations in the Jiang jing reign 1552 67 Ming studies 25 井上治 2002 ホトクタイ セチェン ホンタイジの研究 in Japanese 風間書房 中華民國國防部史政局 1989 中國戰史大辭典 戰役之部 in Chinese Taipei Taiwan 黎明文化 p 347 ISBN 9571600032 Archived from the original on 2022 02 22 而元人自脱古斯帖木兒被秋以後 內爭不息 數傳之後 已不知其有國號 帝號 相繼篡立者 皆自稱為 汗 並改國名為 韃靼 由於其兵力已不如初返塞外時之盛 故其為患也輕 Nankai University 1992 南開大學學報 哲學社會科學版 in Chinese Tianjin 南開大學學報編輯室 p 46 Archived from the original on 2022 02 22 卓里克圖汗 也無漢語廟號 此後蒙古歷代諸汗雖然族系不同 但都是只有蒙語尊號或諡號 而不再有漢語廟號 元朝漢語年號至天元而止 卓里克圖汗不立漢語年號 以後的蒙古諸汗也不再建立漢語年號 Ed Reuven Amitai Preiss Reuven Amitai David Morgan The Mongol empire and its legacy p 294 Bat Ochir Bold Mongolian nomadic society p 93 Twitchett 1998 p 222 Rossabi Morris 1998 The Ming and Inner Asia The Cambridge History of China Volume 8 The Ming Dynasty 1398 1644 Part 2 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 230 ISBN 9780521243339 Adle 2003 p 210 D Morgan The Mongols p 178 Ph de Heer The care taker emperor p 99 Adle 2003 p 211 C P Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire p 408 B Davaasүren 2000 Batmonh Dayan haan Ulaanbaatar Mongolia a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link 宝音德力根 Buyandelger 2001 达延汗生卒年 即位年及本名考辨 内蒙古大学学报 33 Memory of the Dai Yuan ulus the Great Yuan dynasty History of Ming W D Shakabpa Tibet A Political History Gerard Chaliand Nomadic empires from Mongolia to the Danube p 102 Jack Weatherford The Secret History of the Mongol Queens Bat Ochir Bold Mongolian nomadic society p 170 Adle 2003 p 212 Adle 2003 p 213 Our great Qing the Mongols Buddhism and the state in late imperial China By Johan Elverskog p 68 Willard J Peterson John King Fairbank Denis C Twitchett The Cambridge history of China The Ch ing empire to 1800 Volume 9 p 16 Adle 2003 p 214 Adle 2003 p 215 Evelyn S Rawski The Last Emperors A Social History of Qing Imperial Institutions p 493 Ann Heirman Stephan Peter Bumbacher The spread of Buddhism p 395 Cosmo Nicola Di 2016 Peterson Willard J ed The Extension of Ch ing rule over Mongolia Sinkiang and Tibet 1636 1800 The Ch ing Dynasty to 1800 The Cambridge History of China Cambridge Cambridge University Press vol 9 pp 111 145 ISBN 978 0 521 24335 3 retrieved 2023 06 13 Adle 2003 p 216 Narangoa Li Robert Cribb 13 May 2014 Historical Atlas of Northeast Asia 1590 2010 Korea Manchuria Mongolia Eastern Siberia Columbia University Press p 51 ISBN 978 0 231 53716 2 a b Adle 2003 p 218 Adle 2003 p 219 a b Adle 2003 p 148 Adle 2003 p 220 Sources edit Adle Chahryar 2003 History of Civilizations of Central Asia vol 5 Twitchett Denis C 1979 The Cambridge History of China vol 3 Sui and T ang China 589 906 Cambridge University Press Twitchett Denis 1994 The Liao The Cambridge History of China vol 6 Alien Regime and Border States 907 1368 Cambridge England Cambridge University Press pp 43 153 ISBN 0521243319 Twitchett Denis 1998 The Cambridge History of China vol 7 The Ming Dynasty 1368 1644 Part I Cambridge University Press Twitchett Denis 1998b The Cambridge History of China vol 8 The Ming Dynasty 1368 1644 Part 2 Cambridge University PressExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Northern Yuan dynasty at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northern Yuan amp oldid 1185696782, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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