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Ersari

Ersari
Ärsary
Tribe
Ersari.jpg
Ethnicity Turkmen
Location Central Asia
Population 2.1 million
Branches Four

Ersari (Turkmen: Ärsary, where Er - brave man, master; sari - light, bright, yellow) - one of the major tribes of Turkmen people of Central Asia, and one of the five major tribes of the country of Turkmenistan. They live mainly in Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan. Their number is approximately 2.1 million people overall (1 million in Turkmenistan, 900 thousand in Afghanistan, and 200 thousand in Pakistan, Turkey, Iran, Great Britain, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Russia and other countries).

Ersari has four sub-tribal divisions. They are: Gara, Bekeul, Gunesh and Uludepe.

Ersari are direct descendents of the Oghuz Turks. The Seljuk Turks, that conquered Iran and Turkey were also being considered Ersari.

Ersari appear to have been major component of the Sayin Khan Turkmen tribal confederacy whose Yurt, (nomadic territory) in the late 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th and 17th centuries, stretched from the Balkhan mountains to the Mangishlaq peninsula and north to the Emba river. The label Sayin Khani, given to these Turkmen by the other peoples around, referred to their emergence from the breakup of the Golden Horde, (founded by Genghis Khan's grandson Batu, known as the Sayin Khan), in order to differentiate their origins from tribes that came from the territories of Hulegu (Iran) or Chaghatay (Trans-Oxanian Central Asia). The Sayin Khani Turkmen appear to have been an organized confederation of tribes said to be divided, in typical Turco-Mongol fashion, into two parts, the Ichki (inner) and Tashki (outer), Oguz. Abu al-Ghazi Bahadur, the Uzbek Khan of Khiva in the 17th century, in his book Shajare-i Tarakime ("The Genealogical Tree of the Turkmen", 1659) does not indicate whether the term Tashki refers to an organizational, military or purely geographical meaning. Sometime in the 17th century, in part to the drying up of the western Uzboy channel of the Amu Darya, the Ersari and its major subtribes moved east to the banks of the main course of the Amudarya. One sub-tribe, the Ali-Eli also moved eastwards, but remained near Kaka region, which is now in Ahal Province of Turkmenistan.


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