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Tiele people


The Tiele (Chinese: 鐵勒; pinyin: Tiělè, Mongolian *Tegreg "[People of the] Carts"[2]), also transliterated as Dili (Chinese: 狄歷), Chile (Chinese: 敕勒), Zhile (Chinese: 直勒), Tele (Chinese: 特勒), also named Gaoche or Gaoju (Chinese: 高車, "High Carts"),[3][4][5] were a tribal confederation of Turkic ethnic origins[6] living to the north of China proper and in Central Asia, emerging after the disintegration of the confederacy of the Xiongnu.[7] Chinese sources associate them with the earlier Dingling (Chinese: 丁零).[8][9][10]

Tiele (*Tegreg?)
Regions with significant populations
Northern China, Altai Mountains, Xinjiang (Dzungaria) and the Pontic–Caspian steppe (by 6th century)[1]
Languages
Turkic
Religion
Tengrism, Shamanism, Buddhism
Related ethnic groups
Dingling, Xiongnu, and later Turkic peoples

Chile and Gaoche

The name "Chile" and "Gaoche" first appear in Chinese records during the campaigns of Former Yan and Dai in 357 and 363 respectively. However, the protagonists were also addressed as "Dingling" in the records of the Southern Dynasties.[11] The name Gaoche ("high cart") was a nickname given by the Chinese.[12][13]

Book of Jin, compiled by Fang Xuanling et al., listed Chile as the fifth of 19 Southern Xiongnu tribes (種).[14][15] By the time of the Rouran domination, the Gaoche comprised six tribes[16] and twelve clans (姓).[17][18][19]

The Gaoche are probably remnants of the ancient Red Di. Initially they had been called Dili. Northerners take them as Chile. Chinese take them as Gaoche Dingling. Their language, in brief, and Xiongnu [language] are the same yet occasionally there are small differences. Or one may say that they [Gaoche] are the junior relatives[20] of the Xiongnu in former times.

The Gaoche migrate in search of grass and water. They dress in skins and eat meat. Their cattle and sheep are just like those of the Rouran, but the wheel of their carts are high and have very many spokes.

— Weishu, 103

The predecessors of Huihe were Xiongnu. Because, customarily, they ride high-wheeled carts. They were also called Gaoche during the Yuan Wei times, or also called Chile, mistakenly rendered as Tiele.

— Xin Tangshu, 232

One group known as the Eastern Gaoche (东部高车) probably dwelled from the Onon River to Lake Baikal (巳尼陂). However, their relationship with the rest of the Gaoche and its tribal components is unclear.[21]

Mythological origin

The Book of Wei preserved the Gaoche's origin myth.

The Gaoju (Gaoche) Turks and contemporary Asian polities circa 500.

According to legends, the Xiongnu Chanyu had two daughters, both extremely beautiful. The people of the country all thought them to be spirits. The Chanyu said: "How could I find husbands for my daughters! I am going to give them to Heaven." Thereupon, at a desolate place in the north part of the country, he erected a high platform and placed his two daughters on the top, saying: "Oh Heaven, please come and receive them yourself!" After three years, their mother wanted to bring them back but the Chanyu said: "You may not, their time is not up yet." After another year, there was an old wolf who guarded the platform day and night, howling. It dug a hole underneath the platform and would not leave for a long time. The younger daughter said: "Our father put us here, wanting to give us to Heaven. Now this wolf came here, it is probably a heavenly being, sent by Heaven." She was about to descend and approach the wolf but her elder sister said in horror: "This is a beast! Do not bring disgrace to our parents." The younger sister did not listen to her, she descended and became the wolf's wife and gave birth to children. Later on, they multiplied and formed a state. This is why their people like to sing long-songs with a drawn-out voice, similar to the howling of wolves.

— Weishu, 103;[22] translated by Inaba Minoru.[23]

Rouran Domination

In 391 the Rouran chief, Heduohan (曷多汗) was killed by the Tuoba Northern Wei. Heduohan's brother Shelun raided several tribal dependencies of the Tuoba in retaliation, but reportedly suffered a serious defeat in 399, and was forced to flee westward. Here Shelun defeated the Hulu (斛律) tribe and subjugated them. With the aid of a Hulu named Chiluohou (叱洛侯), Shelun conquered most of the Gaoche tribes and proclaimed himself Kaghan of the Rouran on March 11, 402. Many Gaoche, such as Chiluohou, were promoted to establish better control.[24][25]

During the reign of Shelun and his successor Datan, the Rouran pushed as far as the Issyk Kul, where they defeated the Wusun and drove them to the south. In the east they raided the Northern Wei before they were defeated on June 16, 429.[26][27] Afterwards, as many as 1.5 million Gaoche were said to have been captured and settled to areas adjacent to the capital Pingcheng in the south.

After this settlement they were called the Western Chile (西部敕勒), including a section of the Ordos Desert south of the Yellow River known as the Hexi Chile (河西敕勒), the Eastern Chile (东部敕勒), between Wuzhou (武周) and the capital suburbs, and the Northern Chile (北部敕勒), to the north and around the borders.

The greater part of the latter two possibly fled back to the steppe and were not heard of after 524 and 445 respectively. The Western Chile (mainly the Hulu and Tiele related to Fufuluo's Qifuli (泣伏利) clan) being caused by a horse race, by which south and north were eventually assimilated.[28]

With the loss of numerous subjects and vital resources, the Rouran went into a temporary decline. However, in 460 they launched new campaigns in the west, destroying the remnant of Northern Liang. During a campaign against Khotan in 470, the king wrote in his supplicatory letter to the Toba Emperor that all of the statelets in the west had submitted to the Rouran. In 472, Yucheng attacked Northern Wei across the western border. By the time of his death in 485, Yucheng had restored the Kaghanate to a status even more powerful than the times of Datan.

During these wars, a southwestern Gaoche tribal group known as the Fufuluo united twelve clans and rebelled, but were defeated by the Rouran. They escaped and established a state northwest of Gaochang in 487. From then on, little is known about the rest of the Gaoche until the Göktürks.

Fufuluo

The Fufuluo (副伏罗) were a Gaoche tribe of twelve clans, dwelling close to the Gaochang kingdom (likely by the Tuin River of the Govi-Altai range. Early on a Fufuluo clan known as the Yizhan (which had lived there since the mid 2nd century) allied with the Touba.[29] In 481, the Fufuluo began to interfere with the Gaochang and deposed one of their kings. The Fufuluo were then subjugated by the Rouran Khaganate.[30]

After the death of the Rouran ruler Yucheng in 485 CE, his belligerent son Dulun fought more wars against the Touba Northern Wei.[30]

After a disagreement, A-Fuzhiluo betrayed him, and in 487, together with his younger cousin Qiongqi (穷奇), they managed their clans of over 100,000 yurts to escape from the pursuing armies, led by Dulun and his uncle Nagai by defeating them.

After they settled, he founded a statelet (also known as the A-Fuzhiluo kingdom) under the title of Ulu Beglik (候娄匐勒, based on an interpretation of Shiratori Kurakichi and Pulleyblank). Like the later Qibi and Xueyantuo in 605, the Fufuluo divided their rule between north and south at Dzungaria.[13][31]

The Fufuluo allied with the Northern Wei in 490 and fought against the Rouran until 541 when they were dispersed by them.[32]

Shortly after the death of Dulun in 492, several important cities on the eastern route were taken by Fufuluo, separating the Rouran from the west. With the elimination of Rouran influence, the Hephthalites, kindred steppe nomads, for the first time extended their domain as far as Karashahr, where Qiongqi was killed and his son Mietu (弥俄突) was taken hostage[citation needed].

After 507, the Hephthalites uninterruptedly sent eighteen embassies with gifts (朝献/朝贡) to the Chinese courts (twelve to Northern Wei, three to Liang Dynasty, two to Western Wei and one to Northern Zhou), as opposed to only one in 456.[33] Like Peroz I and his son Kavadh I earlier in the west, the Hephthalites helped Mietu. He returned to his realm and Biliyan (跋利延), the successor of A-Fuzhiluo, was overthrown by his tribesmen, while shortly paying tribute to the Touba. In 508, Yujiulü Futu attacked the Fufuluo and gained a victory, but was killed by Mietu on his course back. Later in 516, l, son of Futu, defeated Mietu, and in reprisal had him towed to death by a horse. The Fufuluo went for several years into exile under the refuge of the Hephthalites. In 520, Chounu was repulsed by his younger brother Yifu (伊匐) who restored the realm. After his defeat, Chounu returned to the east, where he was killed in a coup in which the ruling clan of Yujiulu (郁久闾) was split into two factions. In 521, the Fufuluo penetrated into the Rouran territory, but were finally repulsed by 524. Thereafter, the Fufuluo suffered a series of defeats from Anagui before being annihilated in 541. During the final decade, they helped the Eastern Wei to fight the Western Wei in a civil war. After defeat, the nobility surrendered to them.[34]

Rulers of Gaoche

Family names and given name Durations of reigns
Family name and given name
阿伏至羅 Āfúzhìluó 487–503
跋利延 Bálìyán 503–505
彌俄突 Mí'étú 505–516
伊匐 Yīfú 516–524
越居 Yuèjū 524–536
比造 Bǐzào 536–540
去賓 Qùbīn 540–541

Tiele

 
Lineage of the Tiele

Emergence of the Tiele

The term Tiele appeared in Chinese literature from the 6th Century to 8th Century, and most scholars agree that Tiele is simply different Chinese characters used to describe the same Turkic word as Chile, although some scholars disagree on what the specific original Turkic word may be: Tölöš ~ Töliš, Türk, or Tegreg ~ Tägräg.[35] The name "Tiele" was first interpreted as "Tölis" by Édouard Chavannes and Vilhelm Thomsen, but this was pointed out as inaccurate in 1937 by Cen Zhongmian, as Tölis applied to the Turkic title of official (突利失 Tulishi) in the east that also came to be attached to the Xueyantuo qaghan.[36] Some scholars (Haneda, Onogawa, Geng, etc.) proposed that Tiele, Dili, Dingling, Chile, Tele, & Tujue all transliterated underlying Türk; however, Golden proposed that Dili, Dingling, Chile, Tele, & Tiele transliterated Tegrek while Tujue transliterated Türküt, plural of Türk.[37] The appelation Türük (Old Turkic: 𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰰) ~ Türk (OT: 𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰚) (whence Middle Chinese 突厥 *dwət-kuɑt > *tɦut-kyat > standard Chinese: Tūjué) was initially reserved exclusively for the Göktürks by Chinese, Tibetans, and even the Turkic-speaking Uyghurs. In contrast, medieval Muslim writers, including Turkic speakers like Ottoman historian Mustafa Âlî and explorer Evliya Çelebi as well as Timurid scientist Ulugh Beg, often viewed Inner Asian tribes, "as forming a single entity regardless of their linguistic affiliation" commonly used Turk as a generic name for Inner Asians (whether Turkic- or Mongolic-speaking). Only in modern era do modern historians use Turks to refer to all peoples speaking Turkic languages, differentiated from non-Turkic speakers.[38]

In 546 the remainder of the Fufuluo, now called Tiele, rebelled and were defeated by Bumin Khan at Dzungaria. Around 250,000 of them were then incorporated into his army. In 552, Bumin Khan sent his army and defeated Anagui just north of the Chinese border. Two years before his death, he eliminated the remnants of the Rouran to the north and subjugated the Tiele.[39][40]

According to Suishu, the Tiele consisted of over 40 tribes divided into seven locations:

The ancestors of the Tiele were the descend[a]nts of the Xiongnu. There were many clans among the Tiele, who were compactly distributed along the valley from the east of the Western Sea.

  1. In the North of the Tola [Duluo 獨洛] river, there were Boqut (Pugu, 僕骨, MC buk-kuot), Toŋra (Tongluo, 同羅, MC duŋ-lɑ), Uyγur (Weihe, 韋紇, MC ɦʷɨi- ɦet),[41] Bayirqu (Bayegu, 拔也古, MC bʷɑt-jja-kuo) and Fuluo (覆羅, MC phək-lɑ), whose leaders were all called Irkin (Sijin, 俟斤, MC ɖʐɨ-kɨn) by themselves. And there were other clans such as Mengchen (蒙陳, MC muŋ-ɖin), Turuhe (吐如紇, MC thuo-ɲjɷ-ɦet), Siqit (Sijie, 斯結, MC sie-ket), Qun (Hun, 渾, MC ɦuon) and Huxue (斛薛, MC ɦuk-siɛt). These clans had a powerful army of almost 20,000 men.
  2. In the west of Hami (Yiwu) [伊吾], North of Karashahr (Yanqi), and close to Aqtagh (Bai [White] Mountain), there were Qibi (契弊, CE khet-biɛi), Boluozhi (薄落職, CE bɑk-lɑk-tɕɨk), Yidie (乙咥, CE ʔˠit-tet), Supo (蘇婆, CE suo-bʷɑ), Nahe (那曷, CE nɑ-ɦɑt), Wuhuan (烏讙, CE ʔuo-hʷjɐn),[42] Hegu (紇骨, CE ɦet-kuot),[43] Yedie (也咥, CE jja-tet), Yunihuan (於尼讙, CE ʔuo-ɳi-hʷjɐn)[44] and so on. These clans had powerful army of almost 20 thousands men.
  3. In the Southwest of Altai Mountain (Jin Mountain), there were Xueyantuo (薛延陀, CE siɛt-jiɛn-dɑ), Dieleer (咥勒兒, CE tet-lək-ɲie), Shipan (十槃, CE ʥip-bʷan), Daqi (達契, CE thɑt-khet) and so on, which have army of more than 10,000 men.
  4. In the north of Samarkand, close to Ade river, there were Hedie (訶咥, CE hɑ-tet), Hejie (曷嶻, CE ɦɑt-dzɑt),[45] Bohu (撥忽, CE pʷɑt-huot), Bigan (比干, CE pi-kɑn),[46] Juhai (具海, CE gju-həi), Hebixi (曷比悉, CE ɦɑt-pi-sit), Hecuosu (何嵯蘇, CE ɦɑ-ʣɑ-suo), Bayewei (拔也未, CE bʷɑt-jja-mʷɨi), Keda (渴達, CE khɑt-thɑt)[47] and so on, which have an army of more than 30,000 men.
  5. In the east and west of Deyihai (得嶷海), there were Sulujie (蘇路羯, CE suoluo-kjɐt), Sansuoyan (三索咽, CE sɑm-sɑk-ʔet), Miecu (蔑促, CE met-tshjuok), Longhu (隆忽, CE ljuŋ-huot) and so on, more than 8,000 men.
  6. In the east of Fulin (拂菻), there were Enqu (恩屈, CE ʔən-kjut), Alan (阿蘭,CE ʔɑ-lɑn),[48] Beirujiuli (北褥九離, CE pək-nuok-kɨu-lei), Fuwenhun (伏嗢昬, CE bɨu-ʔʷˠɛt-huon) and so on, almost 20,000 men.
  7. In the South of Northern Sea, there were Dubo (都波, CE tuo-pʷɑ) and so forth.

Although there were so many different names of the clans, they were all called Tiele as a whole. There was no ruler among them, and they belonged to the Eastern and Western Türks separately. They lived in unsettled places, and moved along with the water and grass. They were good at shooting on horseback, and were fierce and cruel, especially greedy. They live on plundering. The clans close to the west do several kinds of cultivating, and breed more cattle and sheep than horses. Since the establishing of the Türk state, the Tiele help the Türks by participating in battles everywhere, and subdue all the groups in the North.

[...]

Their customs were mostly like those of the Türks. The differences were that the husband should stay in his wife’s family, and could not go home until the birth of his children. Also the dead were to be buried.

In the third year of Daye (607), Tiele sent an envoy and tribute to the court, and never stopped contact from that year.

— Suishu, 84[49][50][51]

The original manuscript contains no punctuation, so different scholars read and reconstruct the ethonyms differently.

The Tiele were a large tribal group, however it is unlikely they would have been under a unified leadership. References of the tribes in the remote areas west of the Pamir Mountains were sparse and mentioned only in passing, some tribes like the Alans were probably erroneously added. By the end of the 6th century nothing more was known about them. Those tribes in the eastern areas (north of China and near Lake Baikal), such as the Guligan (骨利干), Duolange (多览葛) Xijie (奚结) and Baixi (白霫) were being rewarded afterward, though a few like the Fuluo (覆罗), Mengchen (蒙陈) and Turuhe (吐如纥) disappeared.[52] Fuluo (覆羅)[53] were possibly linked to the 伏利(具) Fuli(-ju) in Book of Sui,[54] the 匐利(羽) Fuli(-yu) in Tanghuiyao[55] and the Bökli-Çöligil (𐰋𐰇𐰚𐰲𐰃:𐰲𐰇𐰠𐰏𐰠) on Kul Tigin inscription.[56]

According to some researchers (Onogawa, 1940; Duan, 1988; Lung, 2011; Davis, 2008; Tang, 2009; etc.), the Göktürks' leading Ashina clan were descended from the Tiele tribe by ancestral lineage.[57][58][59][60][61] Like the Göktürks, the Tiele were probably one of many nomadic Turkic peoples on the steppe.[62][50][63] However, Lee & Kuang (2017) state that Chinese histories did not describe the Ashina-led Göktürks as descending from the Dingling or belonging to the Tiele confederation.[64]

The Tiele were ruled by the Göktürks during the mid 6th century and early 7th century. Many of their tribal chiefs were expelled and some were killed during this period.[65] When Göktürks' power peaked, at least 15 Tiele tribes were named:

Tiele are originally Xiongnu's splinter stocks. As Tujue are strong and prosperous, all Tiele districts (郡) are divided and scattered, the masses gradually dwindled and weakened. Until the beginning of Wude [era], there have been Xueyantuo, Qibi, Huihe, Dubo, Guligan, Duolange, Pugu, Bayegu, Tongluo, Hun, Sijie, Huxue, Xijie, Adie, Baixi, etc. scattered north of the [Gobi] desert.

— Jiu Tangshu, 199, lower

Tiele allied themselves in a rebellion against the Göktürks during the turmoil between 599 and 603. This might have already started as early as in 582, when rumor was spread about a revolt in the north when a raiding campaign led Ishbara Qaghan away from the capital. Among the rivals of Ishbara in the west was Tardu, son of Istämi. He allied with Apa Khan, a qaghan at the northern Dzungaria and Khovd River, and declared himself independent.

In 587 Baga Khan, heir of Ishbara, captured Apa with the help of the Chinese but died the next year on a campaign in the west. Later on, Dulan took over his reign and in 599 he, together with Tardu, launched a civil war against his son Qimin, who sided with the Chinese. However, he was unsuccessful and was assassinated during his battles with the Chinese. His partner Tardu took over and launched a revolt against the Qaghanate. In 603 he was revolted against by the Tiele tribes, provoked by the Chinese, and fled to the Tuyuhun.[66][67] Earlier, when Apa was captured, Nili took over from him, but he died after the defeat of Tardu in the east. His son Heshana Khan succeeded him in the Western Qaghanate, levying heavy taxes on the Tiele. To prevent a revolt he gathered several hundreds of chiefs and murdered them. In 605 an alliance among the Tiele under the Qibi (契苾) and Xueyantuo (薛延陀) tribes was formed to overthrow him. They captured most of the Dzungaria and defeated his occupying army, taking several important cities, including Kumul, Karashahr and Gaochang, pushing Heshana Khan further west to the lower Ili River by 607.

After victory, the Qibi chief Geleng (哥楞) was proclaimed as the qaghan by the tribes and the Xueyantuo chief Yiedie Khan as subordinate qaghan. At the same year Geleng allied with the Chinese to defeat the Tuyuhun to resolve a conflict at Dunhuang.

In 611, Shekui, a qaghan from Tashkent and grandson of Tardu, attacked Chuluo and forced him to escape to China. The return of Shekui marked the end of the rebellion, although exactly when the rebels were put down is uncertain. One Chinese account indicated that the Gaochang kingdom still remained under their vassal until the year 612. They were most likely subdued after this year as Shekui restored order in the Western Qaghanate.[68]

Failure to put down these uprisings led to a fatal division within the Gökturks ruling Ashina clan. Under the leadership of Zhenzhu Khan in 628, grandson of Yishibo, the Xueyantuo made their crossing over the Altai, and quickly founded a confederation with the rest of the Tiele at the east.[69]

The Xueyantuo founded a short-lived Qaghanate over the steppe under Zhenzhu Khan, his son Duomi Khan and nephew Yitewushi Khan, the last of which eventually surrendered to the Chinese.

Chinese subjugation

Shortly after 646, the Uyghur and the rest of the twelve Tiele chiefs (and subsequently the far-away Guligan and Dubo) arrived at the Chinese court. They were bestowed either with the title of commander-in-chief (都督 dudu) or prefect (刺史 cishi) under the loose control (羁縻 jimi) of the northern protectorate or "pacificed north" (安北府), whose seat and name changed at certain times.[70]

The Uyghur were prominent among the Tiele tribes next to the Xueyantuo. Their name first appeared in 390 as Yuanhe (袁纥). Under the leadership of Pusa (菩萨), son of chief Tejian (特健), the Uyghur co-operated with the Xueyantuo to make a stand against the Eastern Qaghanate. Soon after his death, his successor Tumidu (吐迷度) formed a new alliance with the Chinese and turned against his former ally. Thereafter, Tumidu was granted a Chinese title like the rest of the Tiele chiefs, and carried the title of qaghan among the other tribes, who now annually donated furs to the Chinese to fulfill their tax obligations.[71]

In 648, Tumidu was murdered by his nephew Wuhe (乌纥) and another tribesman named Juluobo (俱罗勃). Both were sons-in-law of the Chebi Khan, the ruler of the Eastern Qaghanate at the northern Altai, who now held hegemony over the surrounding tribes, including the Qarluq. This alerted the Chinese, and Wuhe was assassinated by a ruse upon receiving his uncle's position from the Chinese deputy in the north. Later Juluobo was detained by the Chinese. On November 17, Porun (婆闰) was granted his fathers title.[72]

Since their submission, the Tiele (mainly the Uyghur) had participated in several campaigns under Chinese leadership. Under the command of Ashina Sheer (阿史那社尔), Yuan Lichen (元礼臣), Gao Kan (高侃), Liang Jianfang (梁建方), Cheng Zhijie (程知节), Su Ding Fang and Xiao Siya (萧嗣业) this resulted in the capture of Chebi Khan in 650 and the end of the Western Qaghanate in 657, except for a last campaign at Goguryeo which probably killed Porun.[73][74]

During those campaigns, visits would be paid to restrain the tribes. In 658 such a visit was repelled, a revolt broke out in 660 starting with the Sijie (思结), Bayegu (拔野古), Pugu (仆骨) and Tongluo (同罗), and it was joined by the other 5 tribes later. The reason for this revolt is unclear, perhaps due to the Chinese repression of the surrounding tribes during the campaigns.[75] Two years later the revolts were suppressed by the Chinese at the upper Selenge River around Khangai. The battle was short, and a massacre was said to be committed by the two leading commanders. According to one exaggerated account from Tang Huiyao around 900,000 surrendered tribesmen were slaughtered, though it is certain that a large number of them were captured.[76] After the event, a message was sent to the north to appease the restless Tiele.

In 669 similar unsuccessful revolts had been made by the Xueyantuo, but the details of these are vague.[77] The last revolt was mentioned in 686, led by the Pugu and Tongluo to join with the Ashina clan, who had formed the Second Turkic Khaganate under Ilterish Qaghan in 682. They were immediately suppressed by an army dispatched from Juyan. A number of them were moved to that region along with the seat of the protectorate under the jurisdiction of Ganzhou. Earlier during the rebellion contacts between the northern protectorate and the Chinese capital were cut off, and the only way to pass was through the area of Suzhou.[78]

Rise of the Uyghur Khaganate

After the disintegration of the Eastern Qaghanate in 630, many Göktürk nobles were resettled either at the Chinese border or in the capital. Some went on to participate in frontier campaigns for the Chinese.[79][80]

In 679 a major rebellion was led by three Göktürk nobles[citation needed]. Among them, Ashina Nishufu (阿史那泥熟匐), a direct descendant of Illig, was chosen as their qaghan. They were quickly subdued by the Chinese and their leader was betrayed and killed by his own troops. The rest of the Göktürks managed to escape and allied themselves with Ashina Funian (阿史那伏念) for a new rebellion. Funian declared himself qaghan in 681, but his revolt did not succeed and more than fifty participants were executed on November 16 at the Chinese capital.[81][82] The remaining rebellious Göktürks formed the Second Turkic Eastern Qaghanate under Ilteris Sad and his 5,000 supporters. They were mostly active in the southern region bordering China at mount Čoγay (总材山). Over the decade they held countless raids across the Chinese border.[83]

Exactly when or how the Tiele came under their subjection is unclear. However, during this period, a number of pro-Chinese Tiele groups who had earlier cooperated with the Chinese against them, such as Uyghur, Qibi, Sijie and Hun (浑), escaped into the Hexi Corridor and eventually resettled to Liangzhou.

According to the Tonyukuk and Kültigin Orkhon script, the Göktürks made five out of forty-seven attacks on the Tiele who were led by Ilteris. Among them, four seem to have been mere raids while the last attack could be seen as their re-subjection on the northern steppe. The estimated date for the Tiele submission to the Göktürks would be around 687, probably without much resistance.[84]

The establishment of a second Göktürk capital at the foot of the sacred mountain Ötüken (於都斤山) brought unrest to the Tiele tribes. After the Uyghur chief was killed, they were recruited for their annual raiding campaigns over the Chinese border after 694.[85] These raids were halted in 708, as the Chinese constructed fortifications along the Ordos. Raids continued elsewhere as Qapagan turned his attention to the west and the Turgesh and Qarluq tribes between 708 and 715. By this time, some of the Tiele had escaped into China and were settled in Lingzhou and elsewhere, while others like the Bayegu had revolted in 707. These revolts continued until 716 and Qapagan, on his way back from suppressing revolts by the Uyghur, Tongluo, Baixi, Bayegu and Pugu, was ambushed and killed by a Bayegu tribesman named Xiezhilue (颉质略) on July 22. In conclusion, not all tribes were involved in the revolts. Two of the northernmost tribal allies, the Guligan and Dubo (都播) did not participate in any of the revolts.[86][87]

Soon, Bilge Khan took over the reign and together with Tonyukuk, began to appease the subjected Tiele. Tonyukuk was born in China and was considered a wise statesman in both Turkic and Chinese accounts. Meanwhile, a friendly relationship was built with the Chinese. Till the end of the Second Eastern Qaghanate only one raid in 720 was made on the Chinese border. Bilge Khan started to call for a return of the former members of the Tiele tribes who had settled in China. He had risen in status among the tribal chiefs, especially the Uyghur within the Qaghanate.[88]

During this period, many Tiele had betrayed the local Chinese authorities and fled to the north, in particular the five communities around Liang, Ling, Xia, Feng, and Bingzhou, while minor insurgencies had occurred throughout the process.[89] Among the returning Tiele tribes was the Uyghur, specifically the Yaoluoge, who had escaped into China until 727. The Yaoluoge consisted one of nine[90] clans of Uyghur, and had dominated probably for six[91] generations since the fall of Xueyantuo.

After Bilge Khan was poisoned, there were factional struggles within the ruling clan. Within a few years, an alliance was established between the Basmyl (拔悉蜜), Uyghur and Qarluq. They overthrew the Göktürks and killed the qaghan. Most of the heirs were killed subsequently. At the same time the Basmyl chief, who was approved as qaghan, was overthrown by the allies.

In 745 the exiled qaghan of the Göktürks was killed by a Uyghur chief named Qutlugh Boyla, son of Hushu (护输). He founded the new Uyghur Qaghanate under the title of Qutlugh Bilge Köl Qaghan. The name "Tiele", and the "nine allies (of Tiele)" (九姓) or Toquz Oguz (based on the interpretation of scholar Cen Zhongmian in the late 1950s) is not mentioned afterwards, and was probably replaced by the name Huihu (Uyghur) in historic records. From then on the Uyghur consisted of seven[92] former Tiele tribes and two[93][94] new tribes, while eight[95] former Tiele tribal names had now disappeared.[96]

References

  1. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", map. 4, 6, 13, 16, 17 (no page.no).
  2. ^ Ḡozz at Encyclopædia Iranica
  3. ^ Drompp, Michael Robert (2005). Tang China and the Collapse of the Uighur Empire: A Documentary History. BRILL. p. 41, n. 7. ISBN 90-04-14129-4.
  4. ^ Pulleyblank, Edwin G. (1991). "The "High Carts": An amalgamation of Mongolic and Turkic Speaking People before the Türks". Asia Major. Third series. Academia Sinica. 3 (1): 21–22.
  5. ^ Millward, James A. (2007). Eurasian Crossroads: A History of Xinjiang. Hurst. p. 42, note 2. ISBN 978-1-84904-067-9.
  6. ^ Mackerras, Colin (1972). The Uighur empire : according to the T'ang dynastic histories : a study in Sino-Uighur relations, 744-840 (2nd edition revised and expanded. ed.). Canberra: Australian national university press. p. 1. ISBN 978-0708104576.
  7. ^ Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi. Peter de Ridder Press. 1983. p. 111.
  8. ^ Xin Tangshu vol. 217a "回紇,其先匈奴也,俗多乘高輪車,元魏時亦號高車部,或曰敕勒,訛為鐵勒。" tr: "Uyghurs. Because, customarily, they ride high-wheeled carts. In Yuan Wei time, they were also called Gaoju (i.e. High-Cart) tribe. Or called Chile, or mistakenly as Tiele."
  9. ^ Weishu Vol 103 Gaoju "高車,蓋古赤狄之餘種也,[...] 諸夏以為高車丁零。" tr. "Gaoju, probably the remnant stock of the ancient Red Di. [...] The various Xia (i.e. Chinese) considered them Gaoju Dingling (i.e. Dingling with High Cart)"
  10. ^ Cheng, Fangyi. "The Research on the Identification between the Tiele (鐵勒) and the Oğuric tribes" in Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi ed. Th. T. Allsen, P. B. Golden, R. K. Kovalev, A. P. Martinez. 19 (2012). Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden. p. 87
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  12. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 11–12.
  13. ^ a b Pulleyblank, "Central Asia and Non-Chinese Peoples of Ancient China", p. VII 21–26.
  14. ^ Jinshu vol. 97 section "Xiongnu"
  15. ^ 1. Tuge (屠各) 2. Xianzhi (鮮支) 3. Koutou (寇頭) 4. Wutan (烏譚) 5. Chile (赤勒) 6. Hanzhi (捍蛭) 7. Heilang (黑狼) 8. Chisha (赤沙) 9. Yugang (鬱鞞) 10. Weisuo (萎莎) 11. Tutong (禿童) 12. Bomie (勃蔑) 13. Qiangqu (羌渠), 14. Helai (賀賴) 15. Zhongqin (鐘跂) 16. Dalou (大樓), 17. Yongqu (雍屈) 18. Zhenshu (真樹) 19. Lijie (力羯)
  16. ^ 1. Di (狄) 2. Yuanhe (袁纥) 3. Hulu (斛律) 4. Jiepi (解批) 5. Hugu (护骨) 6. Yiqijin (异奇斤).
  17. ^ 1. Qifuli (泣伏利) 2. Tulu (吐卢) 3. Yizhan (乙旃) 4. Dalian (大连) 5. Kuhe (窟贺) 6. Dabogan (达薄干) 7. A-Lun (阿仑) 8. Moyun (莫允) 9. Qifen (俟分) 10. Fufuluo (副伏罗) 11. Qige (乞袁) 12. Youshupei (右叔沛).
  18. ^ Suribadalaha,"New Studies of the Origins of the Mongols", p. 34–35.
  19. ^ Li, "A Research on Migration of Northwestern Minorities Between pre-Qin to Sui and Tang", p. 113.
  20. ^ shēng literally means "sister's son" or "son-in-law"
  21. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 185–186.
  22. ^ Original text: "俗云匈奴單于生二女,姿容甚美,國人皆以為神。單于曰:「吾有此女,安可配人,將以與天。」乃於國北無人之地,築高臺,置二女其上,曰:「請天自迎之。」經三年,其母欲迎之,單于曰:「不可,未徹之間耳。」復一年,乃有一老狼晝夜守臺嘷呼,因穿臺下為空穴,經時不去。其小女曰:「吾父處我於此,欲以與天,而今狼來,或是神物,天使之然。」將下就之。其姊大驚曰:「此是畜生,無乃辱父母也!」妹不從,下為狼妻而產子,後遂滋繁成國,故其人好引聲長歌,又似狼嘷。"
  23. ^ Balogh, Dániel (ed.) (2020). Hunnic Peoples in Central and South Asia: Sources for their Origin and History. Barkhuis. p. 111
  24. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 208–211.
  25. ^ Bo Yang, "Zizhi Tongjian", p. 7,105 (Vol.27).
  26. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 213–214, 228.
  27. ^ Bo Yang, "Zizhi Tongjian", p. 7,671 (Vol.30).
  28. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 272–273, 315–320.
  29. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 186.
  30. ^ a b Balogh, Dániel (12 March 2020). Hunnic Peoples in Central and South Asia: Sources for their Origin and History. Barkhuis. pp. 74–77. ISBN 978-94-93194-01-4.
  31. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 38, 217–219, 366–367.
  32. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 216, 226, 229–230, 252.
  33. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 235–239.
  34. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 242–254.
  35. ^ Cheng Fangyi. "The Research on the Identification Between Tiele (鐵勒) and the Oghuric Tribes". Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi: 81–114.
  36. ^ Cheng, Fangyi. "The Research on the Identification Between Tiele and the Oghuric Tribes": 83–84. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  37. ^ Cheng (2012), p. 84–87
  38. ^ Lee, Joo-Yup (2016). "The Historical Meaning of the Term Turk and the Nature of the Turkic Identity of the Chinggisid and Timurid Elites in Post-Mongol Central Asia". Central Asiatic Journal. 59 (1–2): 101–32. doi:10.13173/centasiaj.59.1-2.0101.
  39. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 325–326.
  40. ^ Bo Yang, "Zizhi Tongjian", p. 9,958-9,959 (Vol.38).
  41. ^ Chronological names: Yuanhe (袁纥), Wuhu (乌护), Wuhe (乌纥), Weihe (韦纥), Huihe (回纥), Huihu (回鹘).
  42. ^ 烏護 Wuhu in Beishi Vol. 99
  43. ^ Chronological names: Gekun (鬲昆), Jiankun (坚昆), Jiegu (结骨), Qigu (契骨), Hegu (纥骨), Hugu (护骨), Hejiesi (纥扢斯), Xiajiasi (黠戛斯).
  44. ^ 烏尼護 Wunihu in Beishi, Vol. 99
  45. ^ Hejie 曷截 in Beishi, Vol. 99
  46. ^ Biqian 比千 in Beishi, vol. 99
  47. ^ 謁達 Yeda in Beishi Vol. 99
  48. ^ Non-Turkic, Iranian-speaking people; according to Lee & Kuang (2017) "A Comparative Analysis of Chinese Historical Sources and Y-DNA Studies with Regard to the Early and Medieval Turkic Peoples", Inner Asia 19. p. 201 of 197–239
  49. ^ Suishu
  50. ^ a b Suribadalaha, "New Studies of the Origins of the Mongols", p. 46–47.
  51. ^ Cheng, Fangyi. "The Research on the Identification between the Tiele (鐵勒) and the Oğuric tribes" in Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi ed. Th. T. Allsen, P. B. Golden, R. K. Kovalev, A. P. Martinez. 19 (2012). Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden. p. 104–108
  52. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 47–49, 330–339.
  53. ^ Tongdian vol. 199 Tiele
  54. ^ Suishu Vol. 51
  55. ^ Tang Huiyao vol. 72
  56. ^ Zuev, Yu.A. (1960) "Horse Tamgas from Vassal Princedoms" (Translation of Chinese composition "Tanghuiyao" of 8-10th centuries), Kazakh SSR Academy of Sciences, Alma-Ata. p. 110-111 (in Russian)
  57. ^ Tang, Li ( University of Salzburg, Austria ). "A Brief Description of the Early and Medieval Türks" in Turkic Christians in Central Asia and China (5th - 14th Centuries), Studies in Turkic philology. Minzu University Press. p. VII.
  58. ^ Rachel Lung, Interpreters in Early Imperial China, John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2011, p.48
  59. ^ Duan: Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele. 1988, pp. 39–41
  60. ^ Davis (2008:39) translates Ouyang Xiu's statement "當是時,西突厥有鐵勒,延陀、阿史那之類為最大" into "Among the Tie'le tribes of Western Tujue, at the time, the Yantuo and Ashina were the largest subgroups".
  61. ^ Ouyang, Xiu (3 March 2004). "Annals IV: Basic Annal of Tang". Historical Records of the Five Dynasties. Translated by Davis, Richard L. p. 39. ISBN 9780231502283.
  62. ^ Suishu, Vol. 84
  63. ^ Cheng, Fangyi. "The Research on the Identification Between Tiele and the Oghuric Tribes". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  64. ^ Lee & Kuang (2017) "A Comparative Analysis of Chinese Historical Sources and Y-DNA Studies with Regard to the Early and Medieval Turkic Peoples", Inner Asia 19. p. 201 of 197-239
  65. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 346–347.
  66. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 344, 349–352.
  67. ^ Bo Yang, "Zizhi Tongjian", p. 10,680 (Vol.41) 10,795, 10,805, 10,857 (Vol.42).
  68. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 352–356.
  69. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 360.
  70. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 445–449.
  71. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 186, 451, 453–457.
  72. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 457–458.
  73. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 459–470, 493.
  74. ^ Bo Yang, "Zizhi Tongjian", p. 11,972 (Vol.47).
  75. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 472–475.
  76. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 477–478.
  77. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 479–481.
  78. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 482–488.
  79. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 413.
  80. ^ Bo Yang, "Zizhi Tongjian", p. 11,660 (Vol.46).
  81. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 481, 483.
  82. ^ Bo Yang, "Zizhi Tongjian", p. 12,265, 12,273, 12,284, 12,292 (Vol.48).
  83. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 483, 495.
  84. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 484, 501–505, 523.
  85. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 434, 505–509.
  86. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 509–511, 515.
  87. ^ Bo Yang, "Zizhi Tongjian", p. 12,852 (Vol.50).
  88. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 517–520.
  89. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 532–539.
  90. ^ 1. Huduoge (胡咄葛) 2. Guluowu (啒罗勿) 3. Mogexiqi (貊歌息讫) 4. A-Wudi (阿勿嘀) 5. Gesa (葛萨) 6. Huwasu (斛嗢素) 7. Yaoluoge (药罗葛) 8. Xiyawu (奚牙勿) 9. Yaowuge (药勿葛).
  91. ^ Chief names, Tumidu (吐迷度)-Porun (婆闰)-Bisudu (比粟毒)-Dujiezhi (独解支)-Fudipu (伏帝匍)-Chengzong (承宗).
  92. ^ 1. Huihe (回纥) 2. Pugu (仆骨) 3. Hun (浑) 4. Bayegu (拔野古) 5. Tongluo (同罗) 6. Sijie (思结) 7. Qibi (契苾).
  93. ^ 1. A-Busi (阿布思, related to Sijie) 2. Gulunwugu[si] (骨倫屋骨[思]).
  94. ^ Theobald, U. "Huihe 回紇, Huihu 回鶻, Weiwur 維吾爾, Uyghurs" in ChinaKnowledge.de - An Encyclopaedia on Chinese History, Literature and Art
  95. ^ 1. Xueyantuo (薛延陀) 2. Guligan (骨利干) 3. Dubo (都播) 4. Duolange (多览葛) 5. Xijie (奚结) 6. Baixi (白霫) 7. A-Die (阿跌) 8. Huxue (斛薛).
  96. ^ Duan, "Dingling, Gaoju and Tiele", p. 53, 542–547.

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tiele, people, tiele, chinese, 鐵勒, pinyin, tiělè, mongolian, tegreg, people, carts, also, transliterated, dili, chinese, 狄歷, chile, chinese, 敕勒, zhile, chinese, 直勒, tele, chinese, 特勒, also, named, gaoche, gaoju, chinese, 高車, high, carts, were, tribal, confeder. The Tiele Chinese 鐵勒 pinyin Tiele Mongolian Tegreg People of the Carts 2 also transliterated as Dili Chinese 狄歷 Chile Chinese 敕勒 Zhile Chinese 直勒 Tele Chinese 特勒 also named Gaoche or Gaoju Chinese 高車 High Carts 3 4 5 were a tribal confederation of Turkic ethnic origins 6 living to the north of China proper and in Central Asia emerging after the disintegration of the confederacy of the Xiongnu 7 Chinese sources associate them with the earlier Dingling Chinese 丁零 8 9 10 Tiele Tegreg Regions with significant populationsNorthern China Altai Mountains Xinjiang Dzungaria and the Pontic Caspian steppe by 6th century 1 LanguagesTurkicReligionTengrism Shamanism BuddhismRelated ethnic groupsDingling Xiongnu and later Turkic peoples Contents 1 Chile and Gaoche 1 1 Mythological origin 1 2 Rouran Domination 1 3 Fufuluo 1 4 Rulers of Gaoche 2 Tiele 2 1 Emergence of the Tiele 2 2 Chinese subjugation 2 3 Rise of the Uyghur Khaganate 3 References 3 1 Primary sources 3 2 Secondary sourcesChile and Gaoche EditThe name Chile and Gaoche first appear in Chinese records during the campaigns of Former Yan and Dai in 357 and 363 respectively However the protagonists were also addressed as Dingling in the records of the Southern Dynasties 11 The name Gaoche high cart was a nickname given by the Chinese 12 13 Book of Jin compiled by Fang Xuanling et al listed Chile as the fifth of 19 Southern Xiongnu tribes 種 14 15 By the time of the Rouran domination the Gaoche comprised six tribes 16 and twelve clans 姓 17 18 19 The Gaoche are probably remnants of the ancient Red Di Initially they had been called Dili Northerners take them as Chile Chinese take them as Gaoche Dingling Their language in brief and Xiongnu language are the same yet occasionally there are small differences Or one may say that they Gaoche are the junior relatives 20 of the Xiongnu in former times The Gaoche migrate in search of grass and water They dress in skins and eat meat Their cattle and sheep are just like those of the Rouran but the wheel of their carts are high and have very many spokes Weishu 103 The predecessors of Huihe were Xiongnu Because customarily they ride high wheeled carts They were also called Gaoche during the Yuan Wei times or also called Chile mistakenly rendered as Tiele Xin Tangshu 232 One group known as the Eastern Gaoche 东部高车 probably dwelled from the Onon River to Lake Baikal 巳尼陂 However their relationship with the rest of the Gaoche and its tribal components is unclear 21 Mythological origin Edit The Book of Wei preserved the Gaoche s origin myth SASANIANEMPIRE BYZANTINEEMPIRE NORTHERNWEI LIANG AlchonHuns Nezaks Tocharians GUPTAEMPIREHEPHTHALITEEMPIRE JUAN JUAN KHAGANATE Gaoju Turks The Gaoju Gaoche Turks and contemporary Asian polities circa 500 According to legends the Xiongnu Chanyu had two daughters both extremely beautiful The people of the country all thought them to be spirits The Chanyu said How could I find husbands for my daughters I am going to give them to Heaven Thereupon at a desolate place in the north part of the country he erected a high platform and placed his two daughters on the top saying Oh Heaven please come and receive them yourself After three years their mother wanted to bring them back but the Chanyu said You may not their time is not up yet After another year there was an old wolf who guarded the platform day and night howling It dug a hole underneath the platform and would not leave for a long time The younger daughter said Our father put us here wanting to give us to Heaven Now this wolf came here it is probably a heavenly being sent by Heaven She was about to descend and approach the wolf but her elder sister said in horror This is a beast Do not bring disgrace to our parents The younger sister did not listen to her she descended and became the wolf s wife and gave birth to children Later on they multiplied and formed a state This is why their people like to sing long songs with a drawn out voice similar to the howling of wolves Weishu 103 22 translated by Inaba Minoru 23 Rouran Domination Edit In 391 the Rouran chief Heduohan 曷多汗 was killed by the Tuoba Northern Wei Heduohan s brother Shelun raided several tribal dependencies of the Tuoba in retaliation but reportedly suffered a serious defeat in 399 and was forced to flee westward Here Shelun defeated the Hulu 斛律 tribe and subjugated them With the aid of a Hulu named Chiluohou 叱洛侯 Shelun conquered most of the Gaoche tribes and proclaimed himself Kaghan of the Rouran on March 11 402 Many Gaoche such as Chiluohou were promoted to establish better control 24 25 During the reign of Shelun and his successor Datan the Rouran pushed as far as the Issyk Kul where they defeated the Wusun and drove them to the south In the east they raided the Northern Wei before they were defeated on June 16 429 26 27 Afterwards as many as 1 5 million Gaoche were said to have been captured and settled to areas adjacent to the capital Pingcheng in the south After this settlement they were called the Western Chile 西部敕勒 including a section of the Ordos Desert south of the Yellow River known as the Hexi Chile 河西敕勒 the Eastern Chile 东部敕勒 between Wuzhou 武周 and the capital suburbs and the Northern Chile 北部敕勒 to the north and around the borders The greater part of the latter two possibly fled back to the steppe and were not heard of after 524 and 445 respectively The Western Chile mainly the Hulu and Tiele related to Fufuluo s Qifuli 泣伏利 clan being caused by a horse race by which south and north were eventually assimilated 28 With the loss of numerous subjects and vital resources the Rouran went into a temporary decline However in 460 they launched new campaigns in the west destroying the remnant of Northern Liang During a campaign against Khotan in 470 the king wrote in his supplicatory letter to the Toba Emperor that all of the statelets in the west had submitted to the Rouran In 472 Yucheng attacked Northern Wei across the western border By the time of his death in 485 Yucheng had restored the Kaghanate to a status even more powerful than the times of Datan During these wars a southwestern Gaoche tribal group known as the Fufuluo united twelve clans and rebelled but were defeated by the Rouran They escaped and established a state northwest of Gaochang in 487 From then on little is known about the rest of the Gaoche until the Gokturks Fufuluo Edit The Fufuluo 副伏罗 were a Gaoche tribe of twelve clans dwelling close to the Gaochang kingdom likely by the Tuin River of the Govi Altai range Early on a Fufuluo clan known as the Yizhan which had lived there since the mid 2nd century allied with the Touba 29 In 481 the Fufuluo began to interfere with the Gaochang and deposed one of their kings The Fufuluo were then subjugated by the Rouran Khaganate 30 After the death of the Rouran ruler Yucheng in 485 CE his belligerent son Dulun fought more wars against the Touba Northern Wei 30 After a disagreement A Fuzhiluo betrayed him and in 487 together with his younger cousin Qiongqi 穷奇 they managed their clans of over 100 000 yurts to escape from the pursuing armies led by Dulun and his uncle Nagai by defeating them After they settled he founded a statelet also known as the A Fuzhiluo kingdom under the title of Ulu Beglik 候娄匐勒 based on an interpretation of Shiratori Kurakichi and Pulleyblank Like the later Qibi and Xueyantuo in 605 the Fufuluo divided their rule between north and south at Dzungaria 13 31 The Fufuluo allied with the Northern Wei in 490 and fought against the Rouran until 541 when they were dispersed by them 32 Shortly after the death of Dulun in 492 several important cities on the eastern route were taken by Fufuluo separating the Rouran from the west With the elimination of Rouran influence the Hephthalites kindred steppe nomads for the first time extended their domain as far as Karashahr where Qiongqi was killed and his son Mietu 弥俄突 was taken hostage citation needed After 507 the Hephthalites uninterruptedly sent eighteen embassies with gifts 朝献 朝贡 to the Chinese courts twelve to Northern Wei three to Liang Dynasty two to Western Wei and one to Northern Zhou as opposed to only one in 456 33 Like Peroz I and his son Kavadh I earlier in the west the Hephthalites helped Mietu He returned to his realm and Biliyan 跋利延 the successor of A Fuzhiluo was overthrown by his tribesmen while shortly paying tribute to the Touba In 508 Yujiulu Futu attacked the Fufuluo and gained a victory but was killed by Mietu on his course back Later in 516 l son of Futu defeated Mietu and in reprisal had him towed to death by a horse The Fufuluo went for several years into exile under the refuge of the Hephthalites In 520 Chounu was repulsed by his younger brother Yifu 伊匐 who restored the realm After his defeat Chounu returned to the east where he was killed in a coup in which the ruling clan of Yujiulu 郁久闾 was split into two factions In 521 the Fufuluo penetrated into the Rouran territory but were finally repulsed by 524 Thereafter the Fufuluo suffered a series of defeats from Anagui before being annihilated in 541 During the final decade they helped the Eastern Wei to fight the Western Wei in a civil war After defeat the nobility surrendered to them 34 Rulers of Gaoche Edit Family names and given name Durations of reignsFamily name and given name阿伏至羅 Afuzhiluo 487 503跋利延 Baliyan 503 505彌俄突 Mi etu 505 516伊匐 Yifu 516 524越居 Yueju 524 536比造 Bǐzao 536 540去賓 Qubin 540 541Tiele Edit Lineage of the Tiele Emergence of the Tiele Edit The term Tiele appeared in Chinese literature from the 6th Century to 8th Century and most scholars agree that Tiele is simply different Chinese characters used to describe the same Turkic word as Chile although some scholars disagree on what the specific original Turkic word may be Tolos Tolis Turk or Tegreg Tagrag 35 The name Tiele was first interpreted as Tolis by Edouard Chavannes and Vilhelm Thomsen but this was pointed out as inaccurate in 1937 by Cen Zhongmian as Tolis applied to the Turkic title of official 突利失 Tulishi in the east that also came to be attached to the Xueyantuo qaghan 36 Some scholars Haneda Onogawa Geng etc proposed that Tiele Dili Dingling Chile Tele amp Tujue all transliterated underlying Turk however Golden proposed that Dili Dingling Chile Tele amp Tiele transliterated Tegrek while Tujue transliterated Turkut plural of Turk 37 The appelation Turuk Old Turkic 𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰰 Turk OT 𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰚 whence Middle Chinese 突厥 dwet kuɑt gt tɦut kyat gt standard Chinese Tujue was initially reserved exclusively for the Gokturks by Chinese Tibetans and even the Turkic speaking Uyghurs In contrast medieval Muslim writers including Turkic speakers like Ottoman historian Mustafa Ali and explorer Evliya Celebi as well as Timurid scientist Ulugh Beg often viewed Inner Asian tribes as forming a single entity regardless of their linguistic affiliation commonly used Turk as a generic name for Inner Asians whether Turkic or Mongolic speaking Only in modern era do modern historians use Turks to refer to all peoples speaking Turkic languages differentiated from non Turkic speakers 38 In 546 the remainder of the Fufuluo now called Tiele rebelled and were defeated by Bumin Khan at Dzungaria Around 250 000 of them were then incorporated into his army In 552 Bumin Khan sent his army and defeated Anagui just north of the Chinese border Two years before his death he eliminated the remnants of the Rouran to the north and subjugated the Tiele 39 40 According to Suishu the Tiele consisted of over 40 tribes divided into seven locations The ancestors of the Tiele were the descend a nts of the Xiongnu There were many clans among the Tiele who were compactly distributed along the valley from the east of the Western Sea In the North of the Tola Duluo 獨洛 river there were Boqut Pugu 僕骨 MC buk kuot Toŋra Tongluo 同羅 MC duŋ lɑ Uygur Weihe 韋紇 MC ɦʷɨi ɦet 41 Bayirqu Bayegu 拔也古 MC bʷɑt jja kuo and Fuluo 覆羅 MC phek lɑ whose leaders were all called Irkin Sijin 俟斤 MC ɖʐɨ kɨn by themselves And there were other clans such as Mengchen 蒙陳 MC muŋ ɖin Turuhe 吐如紇 MC thuo ɲjɷ ɦet Siqit Sijie 斯結 MC sie ket Qun Hun 渾 MC ɦuon and Huxue 斛薛 MC ɦuk siɛt These clans had a powerful army of almost 20 000 men In the west of Hami Yiwu 伊吾 North of Karashahr Yanqi and close to Aqtagh Bai White Mountain there were Qibi 契弊 CE khet biɛi Boluozhi 薄落職 CE bɑk lɑk tɕɨk Yidie 乙咥 CE ʔˠit tet Supo 蘇婆 CE suo bʷɑ Nahe 那曷 CE nɑ ɦɑt Wuhuan 烏讙 CE ʔuo hʷjɐn 42 Hegu 紇骨 CE ɦet kuot 43 Yedie 也咥 CE jja tet Yunihuan 於尼讙 CE ʔuo ɳi hʷjɐn 44 and so on These clans had powerful army of almost 20 thousands men In the Southwest of Altai Mountain Jin Mountain there were Xueyantuo 薛延陀 CE siɛt jiɛn dɑ Dieleer 咥勒兒 CE tet lek ɲie Shipan 十槃 CE ʥip bʷan Daqi 達契 CE thɑt khet and so on which have army of more than 10 000 men In the north of Samarkand close to Ade river there were Hedie 訶咥 CE hɑ tet Hejie 曷嶻 CE ɦɑt dzɑt 45 Bohu 撥忽 CE pʷɑt huot Bigan 比干 CE pi kɑn 46 Juhai 具海 CE gju hei Hebixi 曷比悉 CE ɦɑt pi sit Hecuosu 何嵯蘇 CE ɦɑ ʣɑ suo Bayewei 拔也未 CE bʷɑt jja mʷɨi Keda 渴達 CE khɑt thɑt 47 and so on which have an army of more than 30 000 men In the east and west of Deyihai 得嶷海 there were Sulujie 蘇路羯 CE suoluo kjɐt Sansuoyan 三索咽 CE sɑm sɑk ʔet Miecu 蔑促 CE met tshjuok Longhu 隆忽 CE ljuŋ huot and so on more than 8 000 men In the east of Fulin 拂菻 there were Enqu 恩屈 CE ʔen kjut Alan 阿蘭 CE ʔɑ lɑn 48 Beirujiuli 北褥九離 CE pek nuok kɨu lei Fuwenhun 伏嗢昬 CE bɨu ʔʷˠɛt huon and so on almost 20 000 men In the South of Northern Sea there were Dubo 都波 CE tuo pʷɑ and so forth Although there were so many different names of the clans they were all called Tiele as a whole There was no ruler among them and they belonged to the Eastern and Western Turks separately They lived in unsettled places and moved along with the water and grass They were good at shooting on horseback and were fierce and cruel especially greedy They live on plundering The clans close to the west do several kinds of cultivating and breed more cattle and sheep than horses Since the establishing of the Turk state the Tiele help the Turks by participating in battles everywhere and subdue all the groups in the North Their customs were mostly like those of the Turks The differences were that the husband should stay in his wife s family and could not go home until the birth of his children Also the dead were to be buried In the third year of Daye 607 Tiele sent an envoy and tribute to the court and never stopped contact from that year Suishu 84 49 50 51 The original manuscript contains no punctuation so different scholars read and reconstruct the ethonyms differently The Tiele were a large tribal group however it is unlikely they would have been under a unified leadership References of the tribes in the remote areas west of the Pamir Mountains were sparse and mentioned only in passing some tribes like the Alans were probably erroneously added By the end of the 6th century nothing more was known about them Those tribes in the eastern areas north of China and near Lake Baikal such as the Guligan 骨利干 Duolange 多览葛 Xijie 奚结 and Baixi 白霫 were being rewarded afterward though a few like the Fuluo 覆罗 Mengchen 蒙陈 and Turuhe 吐如纥 disappeared 52 Fuluo 覆羅 53 were possibly linked to the 伏利 具 Fuli ju in Book of Sui 54 the 匐利 羽 Fuli yu in Tanghuiyao 55 and the Bokli Coligil 𐰋𐰇𐰚𐰲𐰃 𐰲𐰇𐰠𐰏𐰠 on Kul Tigin inscription 56 According to some researchers Onogawa 1940 Duan 1988 Lung 2011 Davis 2008 Tang 2009 etc the Gokturks leading Ashina clan were descended from the Tiele tribe by ancestral lineage 57 58 59 60 61 Like the Gokturks the Tiele were probably one of many nomadic Turkic peoples on the steppe 62 50 63 However Lee amp Kuang 2017 state that Chinese histories did not describe the Ashina led Gokturks as descending from the Dingling or belonging to the Tiele confederation 64 The Tiele were ruled by the Gokturks during the mid 6th century and early 7th century Many of their tribal chiefs were expelled and some were killed during this period 65 When Gokturks power peaked at least 15 Tiele tribes were named Tiele are originally Xiongnu s splinter stocks As Tujue are strong and prosperous all Tiele districts 郡 are divided and scattered the masses gradually dwindled and weakened Until the beginning of Wude era there have been Xueyantuo Qibi Huihe Dubo Guligan Duolange Pugu Bayegu Tongluo Hun Sijie Huxue Xijie Adie Baixi etc scattered north of the Gobi desert Jiu Tangshu 199 lower Tiele allied themselves in a rebellion against the Gokturks during the turmoil between 599 and 603 This might have already started as early as in 582 when rumor was spread about a revolt in the north when a raiding campaign led Ishbara Qaghan away from the capital Among the rivals of Ishbara in the west was Tardu son of Istami He allied with Apa Khan a qaghan at the northern Dzungaria and Khovd River and declared himself independent In 587 Baga Khan heir of Ishbara captured Apa with the help of the Chinese but died the next year on a campaign in the west Later on Dulan took over his reign and in 599 he together with Tardu launched a civil war against his son Qimin who sided with the Chinese However he was unsuccessful and was assassinated during his battles with the Chinese His partner Tardu took over and launched a revolt against the Qaghanate In 603 he was revolted against by the Tiele tribes provoked by the Chinese and fled to the Tuyuhun 66 67 Earlier when Apa was captured Nili took over from him but he died after the defeat of Tardu in the east His son Heshana Khan succeeded him in the Western Qaghanate levying heavy taxes on the Tiele To prevent a revolt he gathered several hundreds of chiefs and murdered them In 605 an alliance among the Tiele under the Qibi 契苾 and Xueyantuo 薛延陀 tribes was formed to overthrow him They captured most of the Dzungaria and defeated his occupying army taking several important cities including Kumul Karashahr and Gaochang pushing Heshana Khan further west to the lower Ili River by 607 After victory the Qibi chief Geleng 哥楞 was proclaimed as the qaghan by the tribes and the Xueyantuo chief Yiedie Khan as subordinate qaghan At the same year Geleng allied with the Chinese to defeat the Tuyuhun to resolve a conflict at Dunhuang In 611 Shekui a qaghan from Tashkent and grandson of Tardu attacked Chuluo and forced him to escape to China The return of Shekui marked the end of the rebellion although exactly when the rebels were put down is uncertain One Chinese account indicated that the Gaochang kingdom still remained under their vassal until the year 612 They were most likely subdued after this year as Shekui restored order in the Western Qaghanate 68 Failure to put down these uprisings led to a fatal division within the Gokturks ruling Ashina clan Under the leadership of Zhenzhu Khan in 628 grandson of Yishibo the Xueyantuo made their crossing over the Altai and quickly founded a confederation with the rest of the Tiele at the east 69 The Xueyantuo founded a short lived Qaghanate over the steppe under Zhenzhu Khan his son Duomi Khan and nephew Yitewushi Khan the last of which eventually surrendered to the Chinese Chinese subjugation Edit Shortly after 646 the Uyghur and the rest of the twelve Tiele chiefs and subsequently the far away Guligan and Dubo arrived at the Chinese court They were bestowed either with the title of commander in chief 都督 dudu or prefect 刺史 cishi under the loose control 羁縻 jimi of the northern protectorate or pacificed north 安北府 whose seat and name changed at certain times 70 The Uyghur were prominent among the Tiele tribes next to the Xueyantuo Their name first appeared in 390 as Yuanhe 袁纥 Under the leadership of Pusa 菩萨 son of chief Tejian 特健 the Uyghur co operated with the Xueyantuo to make a stand against the Eastern Qaghanate Soon after his death his successor Tumidu 吐迷度 formed a new alliance with the Chinese and turned against his former ally Thereafter Tumidu was granted a Chinese title like the rest of the Tiele chiefs and carried the title of qaghan among the other tribes who now annually donated furs to the Chinese to fulfill their tax obligations 71 In 648 Tumidu was murdered by his nephew Wuhe 乌纥 and another tribesman named Juluobo 俱罗勃 Both were sons in law of the Chebi Khan the ruler of the Eastern Qaghanate at the northern Altai who now held hegemony over the surrounding tribes including the Qarluq This alerted the Chinese and Wuhe was assassinated by a ruse upon receiving his uncle s position from the Chinese deputy in the north Later Juluobo was detained by the Chinese On November 17 Porun 婆闰 was granted his fathers title 72 Since their submission the Tiele mainly the Uyghur had participated in several campaigns under Chinese leadership Under the command of Ashina Sheer 阿史那社尔 Yuan Lichen 元礼臣 Gao Kan 高侃 Liang Jianfang 梁建方 Cheng Zhijie 程知节 Su Ding Fang and Xiao Siya 萧嗣业 this resulted in the capture of Chebi Khan in 650 and the end of the Western Qaghanate in 657 except for a last campaign at Goguryeo which probably killed Porun 73 74 During those campaigns visits would be paid to restrain the tribes In 658 such a visit was repelled a revolt broke out in 660 starting with the Sijie 思结 Bayegu 拔野古 Pugu 仆骨 and Tongluo 同罗 and it was joined by the other 5 tribes later The reason for this revolt is unclear perhaps due to the Chinese repression of the surrounding tribes during the campaigns 75 Two years later the revolts were suppressed by the Chinese at the upper Selenge River around Khangai The battle was short and a massacre was said to be committed by the two leading commanders According to one exaggerated account from Tang Huiyao around 900 000 surrendered tribesmen were slaughtered though it is certain that a large number of them were captured 76 After the event a message was sent to the north to appease the restless Tiele In 669 similar unsuccessful revolts had been made by the Xueyantuo but the details of these are vague 77 The last revolt was mentioned in 686 led by the Pugu and Tongluo to join with the Ashina clan who had formed the Second Turkic Khaganate under Ilterish Qaghan in 682 They were immediately suppressed by an army dispatched from Juyan A number of them were moved to that region along with the seat of the protectorate under the jurisdiction of Ganzhou Earlier during the rebellion contacts between the northern protectorate and the Chinese capital were cut off and the only way to pass was through the area of Suzhou 78 Rise of the Uyghur Khaganate Edit Main article Uyghur Khaganate After the disintegration of the Eastern Qaghanate in 630 many Gokturk nobles were resettled either at the Chinese border or in the capital Some went on to participate in frontier campaigns for the Chinese 79 80 In 679 a major rebellion was led by three Gokturk nobles citation needed Among them Ashina Nishufu 阿史那泥熟匐 a direct descendant of Illig was chosen as their qaghan They were quickly subdued by the Chinese and their leader was betrayed and killed by his own troops The rest of the Gokturks managed to escape and allied themselves with Ashina Funian 阿史那伏念 for a new rebellion Funian declared himself qaghan in 681 but his revolt did not succeed and more than fifty participants were executed on November 16 at the Chinese capital 81 82 The remaining rebellious Gokturks formed the Second Turkic Eastern Qaghanate under Ilteris Sad and his 5 000 supporters They were mostly active in the southern region bordering China at mount Cogay 总材山 Over the decade they held countless raids across the Chinese border 83 Exactly when or how the Tiele came under their subjection is unclear However during this period a number of pro Chinese Tiele groups who had earlier cooperated with the Chinese against them such as Uyghur Qibi Sijie and Hun 浑 escaped into the Hexi Corridor and eventually resettled to Liangzhou According to the Tonyukuk and Kultigin Orkhon script the Gokturks made five out of forty seven attacks on the Tiele who were led by Ilteris Among them four seem to have been mere raids while the last attack could be seen as their re subjection on the northern steppe The estimated date for the Tiele submission to the Gokturks would be around 687 probably without much resistance 84 The establishment of a second Gokturk capital at the foot of the sacred mountain Otuken 於都斤山 brought unrest to the Tiele tribes After the Uyghur chief was killed they were recruited for their annual raiding campaigns over the Chinese border after 694 85 These raids were halted in 708 as the Chinese constructed fortifications along the Ordos Raids continued elsewhere as Qapagan turned his attention to the west and the Turgesh and Qarluq tribes between 708 and 715 By this time some of the Tiele had escaped into China and were settled in Lingzhou and elsewhere while others like the Bayegu had revolted in 707 These revolts continued until 716 and Qapagan on his way back from suppressing revolts by the Uyghur Tongluo Baixi Bayegu and Pugu was ambushed and killed by a Bayegu tribesman named Xiezhilue 颉质略 on July 22 In conclusion not all tribes were involved in the revolts Two of the northernmost tribal allies the Guligan and Dubo 都播 did not participate in any of the revolts 86 87 Soon Bilge Khan took over the reign and together with Tonyukuk began to appease the subjected Tiele Tonyukuk was born in China and was considered a wise statesman in both Turkic and Chinese accounts Meanwhile a friendly relationship was built with the Chinese Till the end of the Second Eastern Qaghanate only one raid in 720 was made on the Chinese border Bilge Khan started to call for a return of the former members of the Tiele tribes who had settled in China He had risen in status among the tribal chiefs especially the Uyghur within the Qaghanate 88 During this period many Tiele had betrayed the local Chinese authorities and fled to the north in particular the five communities around Liang Ling Xia Feng and Bingzhou while minor insurgencies had occurred throughout the process 89 Among the returning Tiele tribes was the Uyghur specifically the Yaoluoge who had escaped into China until 727 The Yaoluoge consisted one of nine 90 clans of Uyghur and had dominated probably for six 91 generations since the fall of Xueyantuo After Bilge Khan was poisoned there were factional struggles within the ruling clan Within a few years an alliance was established between the Basmyl 拔悉蜜 Uyghur and Qarluq They overthrew the Gokturks and killed the qaghan Most of the heirs were killed subsequently At the same time the Basmyl chief who was approved as qaghan was overthrown by the allies In 745 the exiled qaghan of the Gokturks was killed by a Uyghur chief named Qutlugh Boyla son of Hushu 护输 He founded the new Uyghur Qaghanate under the title of Qutlugh Bilge Kol Qaghan The name Tiele and the nine allies of Tiele 九姓 or Toquz Oguz based on the interpretation of scholar Cen Zhongmian in the late 1950s is not mentioned afterwards and was probably replaced by the name Huihu Uyghur in historic records From then on the Uyghur consisted of seven 92 former Tiele tribes and two 93 94 new tribes while eight 95 former Tiele tribal names had now disappeared 96 References Edit Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele map 4 6 13 16 17 no page no Ḡozz at Encyclopaedia Iranica Drompp Michael Robert 2005 Tang China and the Collapse of the Uighur Empire A Documentary History BRILL p 41 n 7 ISBN 90 04 14129 4 Pulleyblank Edwin G 1991 The High Carts An amalgamation of Mongolic and Turkic Speaking People before the Turks Asia Major Third series Academia Sinica 3 1 21 22 Millward James A 2007 Eurasian Crossroads A History of Xinjiang Hurst p 42 note 2 ISBN 978 1 84904 067 9 Mackerras Colin 1972 The Uighur empire according to the T ang dynastic histories a study in Sino Uighur relations 744 840 2nd edition revised and expanded ed Canberra Australian national university press p 1 ISBN 978 0708104576 Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi Peter de Ridder Press 1983 p 111 Xin Tangshu vol 217a 回紇 其先匈奴也 俗多乘高輪車 元魏時亦號高車部 或曰敕勒 訛為鐵勒 tr Uyghurs Because customarily they ride high wheeled carts In Yuan Wei time they were also called Gaoju i e High Cart tribe Or called Chile or mistakenly as Tiele Weishu Vol 103 Gaoju 高車 蓋古赤狄之餘種也 諸夏以為高車丁零 tr Gaoju probably the remnant stock of the ancient Red Di The various Xia i e Chinese considered them Gaoju Dingling i e Dingling with High Cart Cheng Fangyi The Research on the Identification between the Tiele 鐵勒 and the Oguric tribes in Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi ed Th T Allsen P B Golden R K Kovalev A P Martinez 19 2012 Harrassowitz Verlag Wiesbaden p 87 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 16 18 197 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 11 12 a b Pulleyblank Central Asia and Non Chinese Peoples of Ancient China p VII 21 26 Jinshu vol 97 section Xiongnu 1 Tuge 屠各 2 Xianzhi 鮮支 3 Koutou 寇頭 4 Wutan 烏譚 5 Chile 赤勒 6 Hanzhi 捍蛭 7 Heilang 黑狼 8 Chisha 赤沙 9 Yugang 鬱鞞 10 Weisuo 萎莎 11 Tutong 禿童 12 Bomie 勃蔑 13 Qiangqu 羌渠 14 Helai 賀賴 15 Zhongqin 鐘跂 16 Dalou 大樓 17 Yongqu 雍屈 18 Zhenshu 真樹 19 Lijie 力羯 1 Di 狄 2 Yuanhe 袁纥 3 Hulu 斛律 4 Jiepi 解批 5 Hugu 护骨 6 Yiqijin 异奇斤 1 Qifuli 泣伏利 2 Tulu 吐卢 3 Yizhan 乙旃 4 Dalian 大连 5 Kuhe 窟贺 6 Dabogan 达薄干 7 A Lun 阿仑 8 Moyun 莫允 9 Qifen 俟分 10 Fufuluo 副伏罗 11 Qige 乞袁 12 Youshupei 右叔沛 Suribadalaha New Studies of the Origins of the Mongols p 34 35 Li A Research on Migration of Northwestern Minorities Between pre Qin to Sui and Tang p 113 甥 sheng literally means sister s son or son in law Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 185 186 Original text 俗云匈奴單于生二女 姿容甚美 國人皆以為神 單于曰 吾有此女 安可配人 將以與天 乃於國北無人之地 築高臺 置二女其上 曰 請天自迎之 經三年 其母欲迎之 單于曰 不可 未徹之間耳 復一年 乃有一老狼晝夜守臺嘷呼 因穿臺下為空穴 經時不去 其小女曰 吾父處我於此 欲以與天 而今狼來 或是神物 天使之然 將下就之 其姊大驚曰 此是畜生 無乃辱父母也 妹不從 下為狼妻而產子 後遂滋繁成國 故其人好引聲長歌 又似狼嘷 Balogh Daniel ed 2020 Hunnic Peoples in Central and South Asia Sources for their Origin and History Barkhuis p 111 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 208 211 Bo Yang Zizhi Tongjian p 7 105 Vol 27 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 213 214 228 Bo Yang Zizhi Tongjian p 7 671 Vol 30 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 272 273 315 320 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 186 a b Balogh Daniel 12 March 2020 Hunnic Peoples in Central and South Asia Sources for their Origin and History Barkhuis pp 74 77 ISBN 978 94 93194 01 4 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 38 217 219 366 367 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 216 226 229 230 252 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 235 239 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 242 254 Cheng Fangyi The Research on the Identification Between Tiele 鐵勒 and the Oghuric Tribes Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi 81 114 Cheng Fangyi The Research on the Identification Between Tiele and the Oghuric Tribes 83 84 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Cheng 2012 p 84 87 Lee Joo Yup 2016 The Historical Meaning of the Term Turk and the Nature of the Turkic Identity of the Chinggisid and Timurid Elites in Post Mongol Central Asia Central Asiatic Journal 59 1 2 101 32 doi 10 13173 centasiaj 59 1 2 0101 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 325 326 Bo Yang Zizhi Tongjian p 9 958 9 959 Vol 38 Chronological names Yuanhe 袁纥 Wuhu 乌护 Wuhe 乌纥 Weihe 韦纥 Huihe 回纥 Huihu 回鹘 烏護 Wuhu in Beishi Vol 99 Chronological names Gekun 鬲昆 Jiankun 坚昆 Jiegu 结骨 Qigu 契骨 Hegu 纥骨 Hugu 护骨 Hejiesi 纥扢斯 Xiajiasi 黠戛斯 烏尼護 Wunihu in Beishi Vol 99 Hejie 曷截 in Beishi Vol 99 Biqian 比千 in Beishi vol 99 謁達 Yeda in Beishi Vol 99 Non Turkic Iranian speaking people according to Lee amp Kuang 2017 A Comparative Analysis of Chinese Historical Sources and Y DNA Studies with Regard to the Early and Medieval Turkic Peoples Inner Asia 19 p 201 of 197 239 Suishu a b Suribadalaha New Studies of the Origins of the Mongols p 46 47 Cheng Fangyi The Research on the Identification between the Tiele 鐵勒 and the Oguric tribes in Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi ed Th T Allsen P B Golden R K Kovalev A P Martinez 19 2012 Harrassowitz Verlag Wiesbaden p 104 108 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 47 49 330 339 Tongdian vol 199 Tiele Suishu Vol 51 Tang Huiyao vol 72 Zuev Yu A 1960 Horse Tamgas from Vassal Princedoms Translation of Chinese composition Tanghuiyao of 8 10th centuries Kazakh SSR Academy of Sciences Alma Ata p 110 111 in Russian Tang Li University of Salzburg Austria A Brief Description of the Early and Medieval Turks in Turkic Christians in Central Asia and China 5th 14th Centuries Studies in Turkic philology Minzu University Press p VII Rachel Lung Interpreters in Early Imperial China John Benjamins Publishing Company 2011 p 48 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele 1988 pp 39 41 Davis 2008 39 translates Ouyang Xiu s statement 當是時 西突厥有鐵勒 延陀 阿史那之類為最大 into Among the Tie le tribes of Western Tujue at the time the Yantuo and Ashina were the largest subgroups Ouyang Xiu 3 March 2004 Annals IV Basic Annal of Tang Historical Records of the Five Dynasties Translated by Davis Richard L p 39 ISBN 9780231502283 Suishu Vol 84 Cheng Fangyi The Research on the Identification Between Tiele and the Oghuric Tribes a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Lee amp Kuang 2017 A Comparative Analysis of Chinese Historical Sources and Y DNA Studies with Regard to the Early and Medieval Turkic Peoples Inner Asia 19 p 201 of 197 239 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 346 347 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 344 349 352 Bo Yang Zizhi Tongjian p 10 680 Vol 41 10 795 10 805 10 857 Vol 42 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 352 356 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 360 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 445 449 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 186 451 453 457 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 457 458 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 459 470 493 Bo Yang Zizhi Tongjian p 11 972 Vol 47 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 472 475 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 477 478 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 479 481 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 482 488 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 413 Bo Yang Zizhi Tongjian p 11 660 Vol 46 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 481 483 Bo Yang Zizhi Tongjian p 12 265 12 273 12 284 12 292 Vol 48 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 483 495 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 484 501 505 523 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 434 505 509 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 509 511 515 Bo Yang Zizhi Tongjian p 12 852 Vol 50 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 517 520 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 532 539 1 Huduoge 胡咄葛 2 Guluowu 啒罗勿 3 Mogexiqi 貊歌息讫 4 A Wudi 阿勿嘀 5 Gesa 葛萨 6 Huwasu 斛嗢素 7 Yaoluoge 药罗葛 8 Xiyawu 奚牙勿 9 Yaowuge 药勿葛 Chief names Tumidu 吐迷度 Porun 婆闰 Bisudu 比粟毒 Dujiezhi 独解支 Fudipu 伏帝匍 Chengzong 承宗 1 Huihe 回纥 2 Pugu 仆骨 3 Hun 浑 4 Bayegu 拔野古 5 Tongluo 同罗 6 Sijie 思结 7 Qibi 契苾 1 A Busi 阿布思 related to Sijie 2 Gulunwugu si 骨倫屋骨 思 Theobald U Huihe 回紇 Huihu 回鶻 Weiwur 維吾爾 Uyghurs in ChinaKnowledge de An Encyclopaedia on Chinese History Literature and Art 1 Xueyantuo 薛延陀 2 Guligan 骨利干 3 Dubo 都播 4 Duolange 多览葛 5 Xijie 奚结 6 Baixi 白霫 7 A Die 阿跌 8 Huxue 斛薛 Duan Dingling Gaoju and Tiele p 53 542 547 Primary sources Edit Sima Guang 1985 A Translation in Vernacular Chinese and Annotation of Zizhi Tongjian by Bo Yang Vol 27 Taipei Yuan Liou Publishing Company Ltd ISBN 957 32 0847 4 Sima Guang 1986 A Translation in Vernacular Chinese and Annotation of Zizhi Tongjian by Bo Yang Vol 30 Taipei Yuan Liou Publishing Company Ltd ISBN 957 32 0804 0 Sima Guang 1987 A Translation in Vernacular Chinese and Annotation of Zizhi Tongjian by Bo Yang Vol 38 Taipei Yuan Liou Publishing Company Ltd ISBN 957 32 0808 3 Sima Guang 1987 A Translation in Vernacular Chinese and Annotation of Zizhi Tongjian by Bo Yang Vol 41 Taipei Yuan Liou Publishing Company Ltd ISBN 957 32 0864 4 Sima Guang 1987 A Translation in Vernacular Chinese and Annotation of Zizhi Tongjian by Bo Yang Vol 42 Taipei Yuan Liou Publishing Company Ltd ISBN 957 32 0865 2 Sima Guang 1988 A Translation in Vernacular Chinese and Annotation of Zizhi Tongjian by Bo Yang Vol 46 Taipei Yuan Liou Publishing Company Ltd ISBN 957 32 0870 9 Sima Guang 1988 A Translation in Vernacular Chinese and Annotation of Zizhi Tongjian by Bo Yang Vol 47 Taipei Yuan Liou Publishing Company Ltd ISBN 957 32 0881 4 Sima Guang 1988 A Translation in Vernacular Chinese and Annotation of Zizhi Tongjian by Bo Yang Vol 48 Taipei Yuan Liou Publishing Company Ltd ISBN 957 32 0871 7 Sima Guang 1989 A Translation in Vernacular Chinese and Annotation of Zizhi Tongjian by Bo Yang Vol 50 Taipei Yuan Liou Publishing Company Ltd ISBN 957 32 0810 5 Secondary sources Edit Duan Lianqin 1988 Dingling Gaoju and Tiele Shanghai Shanghai People s Press ISBN 7 208 00110 3 Li Jihe 2003 A Research on Migration of Northwestern Minorities Between pre Qin to Sui and Tang Beijing Nationalities Press ISBN 7 105 05908 7 Lu Simian 1934 1996 A History of Ethnic Groups in China Beijing Oriental Press ISBN 7 5060 0735 5 Pulleyblank Edwin G 2002 Central Asia and Non Chinese Peoples of Ancient China Aldershot Ashgate Publishing ISBN 0 86078 859 8 Trever Camilla 1932 Excavations in Northern Mongolia 1924 1925 Leningrad J Fedorov Printing House OCLC 2566311 Shen Youliang 1998 A Research on Northern Ethnic Groups and Regimes Beijing Central Nationalities University Press ISBN 7 81056 131 6 Suribadalaha 1986 New Studies of the Origins of the Mongols Beijing Nationalities Press OCLC 19390448 Wang Xiaofu 1992 Political Relationship Between the Chinese Tibetan and Arab Beijing Peking University Press ISBN 7 301 01962 9 Xue Zongzheng 1992 A History of Turks Beijing Chinese Social Sciences Press ISBN 7 5004 0432 8 Zhang Bibo and Dong Guoyao 2001 Cultural History of Ancient Northern Ethnic Groups in China Harbin Heilongjiang People s Press ISBN 7 207 03325 7 The Peoples of the West University of Washington from the Weilue by Yu Huan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tiele people amp oldid 1125035042, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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