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The historical map of Chagatai Khanate during the Yuan Dynasty in China

发布时间 :2026-01-12 02:35:07 UTC      
类别 : Yuan Dynasty Historical Maps

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Map Introduction

I. Establishment Background and Early Development (1225–1260)

The Chagatai Khanate was formally established in 1225 by Chagatai, the second son of Genghis Khan, as one of the four major khanates of the Mongol Empire. According to Genghis Khan's appanage system, Chagatai received the former territories of the Western Liao (covering modern western Xinjiang to the Amu Darya basin in Central Asia) as his fiefdom, with his initial headquarters located at Almalik (northeast of modern Huocheng, Xinjiang). Lasting for 461 years (1222–1683), it was the longest-surviving of the four principal khanates. In its early period, the khanate served as the western princely domain of the Mongol Empire, and its succession was tightly controlled by the Great Khan. For instance, after Chagatai's death in 1241, the Great Khan Ögedei forcibly designated Yesü Möngke, Chagatai's fifth son, as his successor, demonstrating the centralized imperial authority.

II. Territorial Expansion and Political-Economic Features

  • Territorial Extent: At its peak, its territory stretched east to Turpan and Lop Nur, west to the Amu Darya, north to the Tarbagatai Mountains, and south beyond the Hindu Kush, encompassing areas from the Altai to Transoxiana (between the Syr Darya and Amu Darya rivers). After annexing the Ögedei Khanate in the early 14th century, it further controlled the northern and southern foothills of the Tianshan Mountains. Major cities included:

    • Almalik: The early political center.
    • Samarkand: A significant later metropolis.
    • Quyas: An important military stronghold.
  • Political System: Initially, it followed the traditional Mongol appanage system, with the khanate's resources obligated to support imperial wars. Following the 1269 Meeting of Talas, the Chagataids allied with the Ögedeids and Jochids against Kublai Khan, gradually gaining greater autonomy. Economically based on agriculture with prosperous Silk Road trade, conflicts arose as the Mongol nobility maintained their nomadic traditions amidst the sedentary farming culture.

III. Evolving Relations with the Yuan Dynasty

  • Subordination Period (1225–1260): Served as the western bulwark of the Mongol Empire, fully obedient to the Great Khan's court.
  • Confrontation Period (1260–1323): Kaidu, in alliance with other northwestern princes, rebelled against the Yuan, triggering a war lasting four decades. A reconciliation was reached with Emperor Chengzong of Yuan in 1303.
  • Vassalage Period (1323–1368): Kebek Khan submitted to the Yuan, offering tribute. The Yuan court conferred a golden seal inscribed "Khan of Chagatai," establishing a loose suzerain-vassal relationship.

IV. Cultural and Religious Transformation

  • Religious Policy: Initially adhered to the Yassa, with Buddhism, Islam, and Christianity coexisting. After the 14th century, Tughlugh Timur Khan forcibly converted 160,000 Mongols to Islam, accelerating Turkification.
  • Cultural Conflict: Profound contradictions emerged between Mongol nomadic traditions and Central Asian sedentary civilization. Kebek Khan's agricultural reforms faced resistance from the nobility, eventually leading to the khanate's division into eastern and western halves.

V. Decline and Dissolution (14th–15th Centuries)

  • Trigger for Division: After the death of Wais Khan in 1429, succession struggles between his sons Yunus and Esen Buqa II allowed the Dughlat tribe to seize power.
  • Final Dissolution: By the mid-15th century, the Eastern Chagatai Khanate was annexed by the Timurid Empire, while its western branches evolved into various Kazakh tribes.

Historical Evaluation

The evolution of the Chagatai Khanate illustrates:

  • The inherent divisiveness of the Mongol Empire's appanage system.
  • The challenges of integrating nomadic and agrarian civilizations.
  • The economic dependency of polities along the Silk Road.
  • The profound impact of Islamization on the historical trajectory of Central Asia.