Khanate
Khanate or Khaganate is a political entity ruled by a Khan or Khagan. In modern Turkish, the word used is kağanlık or hanlık. In Mongolian the word khanlig is used, as in "Khereidiin khanlig" meaning the Khanate of the Keraites. This political entity is typical for people from the Eurasian Steppe and it can be equivalent to tribal chiefdom, principality, kingdom or even empire.
Mongol khanates (or khaganates)
After Genghis Khan established appanages for his family in the Mongol Empire during his rule (1206-1227),[1] his sons, daughters,[2] and grandsons inherited separate sections of the empire. The Mongol Empire and Mongolian khanates emerging from those appanages[3] are listed below. Furthermore, the proto-Mongols also established some khanates (or khaganates) such as the Rouran Khaganate.
- Khamag Mongol Khanate
- Keraite Khanate
- Mergid Khanate
- Naiman Khanate
- Tatar Khanate
- Qara Khitai
- Mongol Empire
- Northern Yuan dynasty based in Mongolia.
- Moghulistan
- Kara Del Khanate
The Oirats established the following khanates in the 17th century:
- Khoshut Khanate
- Kalmyk Khanate, established c.1630 by the Torghut branch of the Mongolian Oirats, settled along the lower Volga River (in modern Russia and Kazakhstan), 1630-1771
- Dzungar Khanate, formed in 1634, covering Xinjiang region of China, Kyrgyzstan, eastern Kazakhstan and western Mongolia; 2 December 1717 - 1720 also styled Protector of Tibet; 1755 tributary to the Manchu Qing dynasty, 1756 annexed and dissolved in 1758.
Turkic khanates
- Göktürk Khaganate
- Western Turkic Khaganate
- Eastern Turkic Khaganate
- Uyghur Khaganate
- Kyrgyz Khaganate
- Kara-Khanid Khanate
- Khazar Khaganate
- Turgesh Khaganate
- Kipchak Khanate
- Cumania
- Pechenegs
Central Asian Turkic khanates
- Kazakh khanate
- Senior Juz
- Middle Juz
- Junior Juz
- Khanate of Kazan (Mongol term khan became active since Genghizide dynasty was settled in Kazan Duchy in 1430s; imperial Russian added to its titles the former Kazan khanate with the royal style tsar.
- Sibirean Khanate (giving its name to Siberia as the first significant conquest during Russia's great eastern expansion across the Ural range)
- Astrakhan Khanate
- Crimean Khanate
- the Qasim Khanate (hence modern Kasimov), named after its founder, a vassal of Moscovia/Russia
- the nomadic state founded in 1801 as the Inner Horde (also called Buqei Horde, under Russian suzerainty) between Volga and Yaik (Ural) rivers by 5,000 families of Kazakhs from Younger Kazakh Zhuz tribe under a Sultan was restyled by the same in 1812 as Khanate of the Inner Horde; in 1845 the post of Khan was abolished);
- Nogai Khanate
- the khanate of Tuva near Outer Mongolia.
- Besh Tau El
- Khanate of Kashgaria founded in 1514 as part of Djagataide Khanate;
17th century divided into several minor khanates without importance, real power going to the so-called Khwaja, Arabic Islamic religious leaders; title changed to Amir Khan in 1873, annexed by China in 1877.
- Kumul Khanate- vassal state to Qing dynasty and Republic of China, abolished in 1930.
- Kimek Khanate
- Khanate of Bukhara
- Khanate of Kokand
- Xueyantuo
- Karluk Khanate
- White Horde
- Oghuz Khanate
- West Turkic Khaganate
18th to early 19th century Khanates of the Caucasus in the Qajar Empire
- Baku Khanate
- Ganja Khanate
- Quba Khanate
- Derbent Khanate
- Shaki Khanate
- Erivan Khanate
- Karabakh Khanate
- Javad Khanate
- Lankaran Khanate
- Shirvan Khanate
- Nakhchivan Khanate
Khanates of the Iranian Azerbaijan
- Urmia Khanate
- Khoy Khanate
- Zanjan Khanate
- Maku Khanate
- Karadagh khanate
- Tabriz Khanate
- Maragheh Khanate
- Ardabil Khanate
- Sarab Khanate
- Marand Khanate
- Khalkhal Khanate
Other khanates
See also
References
- ↑ Peter Jackson 2000, p.
- ↑ Jack Weatherford - The Secret History of the Mongol Queens: How the Daughters of Genghis Khan Rescued His Empire, Crown Publishing Group, 2011
- ↑ Thomas T. Allsen, "Sharing Out the Empire: Apportioned Lands under the Mongols", in Nomads in the Sedentary World, ed. Anatoly M. Khuzanov and André Wink (Richmond, Surrey: Curzon Press, 2001): 172–190