Chagatai Khanate | ||||||||||||||||||
Цагаадайн Хаант Улс Tsagadaina Khaanat Ulus |
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Nomadic empire Division of the Mongol Empire |
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The Chagatai Khanate (green), c. 1300.
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Capital | Almaliq, Qarshi | |||||||||||||||||
Languages | Chagatai language | |||||||||||||||||
Religion |
Shamanism Buddhism Tengrism Christianity (minority) later Naqshbandi Sunni Islam |
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Government | Semi-elective monarchy, later hereditary monarchy | |||||||||||||||||
Khan | ||||||||||||||||||
• | 1225–1242 | Chagatai Khan | ||||||||||||||||
Legislature | Kurultai | |||||||||||||||||
Historical era | Late Middle Ages | |||||||||||||||||
• | Chagatai Khan inherited part of Mongol Empire | 1225 | ||||||||||||||||
• | Death of Chagatai | 1242 | ||||||||||||||||
• | Chagatai Khanate split into two parts, Western Chagatai Khanate and Moghulistan | 1340s | ||||||||||||||||
• | End of the western empire. | 1370 | ||||||||||||||||
• | End of the eastern empire. | 1680s | ||||||||||||||||
Area | ||||||||||||||||||
• | 1310 or 1350 est. | 3,500,000 km² (1,351,358 sq mi) | ||||||||||||||||
Currency | Coins (dirhams, Kebek, and pūl coins) | |||||||||||||||||
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Today part of |
Kyrgyzstan China Uzbekistan Tajikistan Kazakhstan Afghanistan Pakistan Turkmenistan Mongolia India |
later Naqshbandi Sunni Islam
The Chagatai Khanate (Mongolian: Tsagadaina Khaanat Ulus/Цагаадайн Хаант Улс) was a Mongol and later Turkicized khanate that comprised the lands ruled by Chagatai Khan, second son of Genghis Khan, and his descendants and successors. Initially it was a part of the Mongol Empire, but it became a functionally separate khanate with the fragmentation of the Mongol Empire after 1259. The Chagatai Khanate recognized the nominal supremacy of the Yuan dynasty in 1304, but became split into two parts in the mid-14th century: the Western Chagatai Khanate and the Moghulistan Khanate.
At its height in the late 13th century, the Khanate extended from the Amu Darya south of the Aral Sea to the Altai Mountains in the border of modern-day Mongolia and China.
The khanate lasted in one form or another from 1220s until the late 17th century, although the western half of the khanate was lost to Timur's empire by 1370. The eastern half remained under Chagatai khans, who were, at times, allied or at war with Timur's successors, the Timurid dynasty. Finally, in the 17th century, the remaining Chagatai domains fell under the theocratic regime of Afaq Khoja and his descendants, the Khojas, who ruled Xinjiang under Dzungar and Manchu overlordships consecutively.
Genghis Khan's empire was inherited by his third son, Ögedei Khan, the designated Khagan who personally controlled the lands east of Lake Balkhash as far as Mongolia. Tolui, the youngest, the keeper of the hearth, was accorded the northern Mongolian homeland. Chagatai Khan, the second son, received Transoxiana, between the Amu Darya and Syr Darya rivers (in modern Uzbekistan) and the area around Kashgar. He made his capital at Almaliq near what is now Yining City in northwestern China. Apart from problems of lineage and inheritance, the Mongol Empire was endangered by the great cultural and ethnic divide between the Mongols themselves and their mostly Islamic Iranian and Turkic subjects.