Abulgazi Bayadur-Khan On The Change Of Poles - Alternative View

Abulgazi Bayadur-Khan On The Change Of Poles - Alternative View
Abulgazi Bayadur-Khan On The Change Of Poles - Alternative View

Video: Abulgazi Bayadur-Khan On The Change Of Poles - Alternative View

Video: Abulgazi Bayadur-Khan On The Change Of Poles - Alternative View
Video: Abu al Ghazi Bahadur 2024, September
Anonim

Soon after accession to the throne, Mangu-Khan sent his brother Galaka with a great army to conquer the land of Iran, and identify one person from the generation of the Uiratts by the name of Argun-Aka as the governor of Khorassan, who died 10 years later, remaining the ruler.

Galaku himself went deep into Iran, and there he chopped up all the people who were called Mulagayida with their head named Caliph-Imotasim. And he did not put down his weapons until he conquered all the lands of Iran.

Here one should pay attention to the expression "Lay down the weapon", which modern researchers interpret in a peculiar way, believing that the inscription on one of the maps from the "Gorographic drawing book of Siberia" by S. U. Remezov, where at the mouth of the Amur there is an inscription stating that Alexander the Great reached this place, where “… he hid his gun and left the bells”, literally means: - I hid the guns (guns) in a cache. And for many years in a row, the banks have been surveyed with the help of metal detectors.

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Meanwhile, everything can be much simpler: “hid the guns” can be identical to the expression “put down the weapon”. And the meaning of the expression is as follows: - "Ceased hostilities", or "ended the war." Like the American Indians, who at the conclusion of the peace said: - "I buried the ax of war in the ground."

As for the role of Mangu-Khan himself in history, the author, like modern historians, "modestly" is silent about the Khan's merits to Russia. Contrary to popular myths about the "Mongol-Tatar" yoke, Mangu was friends with the Russian princes and provided all kinds of assistance. He visited both Novgorod and Pskov, and even undertook a campaign against the Livonian knights in Narva, after which Livonia regularly paid tribute to Novgorod and Pskov for many years. The Nikon Chronicle reports the following about this event:

Then Mangu died, and Kaplai Khan gave all the Iranian lands into the possession of his brother Galak, who died in the city of Sham, having ruled there for nine years. After him ruled his son Abka, who ruled Iran for 19 years.

After the death of Abka-Khan, his brother Akhmat received possession. This Prince accepted the Mohammedan Law, but was killed by his nephew Arghun, the son of Abka Khan, before he could extend the Mohammedan Law to all subjects.

Promotional video:

Here the chronicler, for some reason, did not point out the fact that, in fact, it was during the reign of Akhmat that Moscow Tartary began to dominate. The moment of the shift of the center from Kara-Kurum to Astrakhan is quite difficult to trace, but the time when Moscow became the main political and economic center of Great Tartary seems quite certain. This is the time of the reign of Ivan III.

It was he who became the Great Khan not formally, but de facto. And the time of his reign "accidentally" coincided with a turning point in the entire world history. It was the year 7000 from the creation of the world, which is significant for Columbus's "discovery" of the New World and the introduction of a new chronology system "from the incarnation of God the Word", i.e. Julian calendar. At this moment, one of the most significant disasters occurred, which changed the face of Asia beyond recognition, when a gigantic water and mudflow from the Arctic Ocean completely washed away the entire Great Tartary east of the Ural ridge, to Mongolia itself.

This event marked the beginning of a new structure of the world, for which the whole history was completely rewritten. It is no coincidence that by the decree of Peter the Great, all old books on the territory of the Russian Empire were confiscated and destroyed. I believe that there is every reason to suspect that the original of this manuscript contained detailed descriptions of that disaster. That is why at the beginning of the eighteenth century, Swedish officers hunted for her throughout Siberia. Found in Tyumen. They translated from Arabic into Russian (the Swedish language did not yet exist at that time), and took the original and the translation home to Sweden.

And most likely, when translated into French, all references to the flood were removed from the chronicle, and at the same time all other information was corrected in the key necessary for the new masters of the world. We will never be able to verify the truth of this assumption, but the available facts speak for themselves. All more or less truthful information about history that we have today begins after 1492. What happened before is unknown to any of the mere mortals.

It was after this year that Constantinople was seized by the Turks, and the construction of the “New Jerusalem”, the “Third Rome” - the Moscow Kremlin began in Russia. At this moment, the "Jewish bride" Zoya Palaeologus is placed under the Russian tsar, and the unicorn, the symbol of Moscow Tartary, is replaced by the Masonic two-headed eagle. Russia begins to orient itself to the West and destroy everything that could remind of its past, when it was part of the greatest and most powerful state that existed in the entire history of mankind. Let us call this process detartarization, by analogy with the processes that have been copied like a blueprint by our present neighboring republics. Desovetization is the same thing that Peter I and Catherine II did in their time. But we will come back to this later, but for now we will continue to get acquainted with the "Pedigree …"

Argun Khan ruled for seven years before he died. Then his brother Kachiet ruled, killing Baida, who was the son of Taragai. But after only eight months, his son Hasan killed Khan and stole the scepter.

Hasan-Khan was the first of the Taulay generation who perceived the Mohammedan Law and extended it to all subjects. And in order to prevent the packs (again, again) from falling into idolatry, he ordered all idols to be burned, and all the temples too. He died in the summer of 701 (1302), from birth only 30 years old.

The successor in the Iranian land was his greater son Ilseitu Ruled with great glory for 13 years, after which he died. Next, his son Abusait received the crown. But then he was only 12 years old, and until he came of age, he was ruled by a nobleman named Amir-Chupani, head of the Suldus generation. And when Abusait Khan took over, he received great fame, through much courage, expanding the borders of the Iranian lands.

When Abusait Khan died, reigning for 19 years, then from the generation of Suldus, in which all the fathers and sons were called Chupani, gave the scepter to Arpa Khan, who was a descendant of Artobug, the third son of Taulay. During his reign, there was someone who was the head of the Uirats generation, named Aly, who, having great power in the city of Bagdat, made Khan Musa, a descendant of Taragai Khan. Musa Khan attacked Arpa Khan, took away the scepter, took his life, and subjugated all his lands.

At that time, Sheikh Ghajani Buskur was in the land of Rum. He was notified of the affairs of Musa-Khan, and also announced the Khan of Mohammed, the grandson of Tumur. Having received the dignity, Mohammed Khan gathered a great army and went to the borders of the land of Iran. Musa Khan, having been notified of the campaign of Mohammed Khan, went out to meet him towards the city of Tabris. There was a great battle in which Musa Khan's army was completely defeated, and he himself fled to the Uirat.

Sheikh Aly, notified of Musa's misfortune, went to Bastan, where he perpetrated Tagai-Timur as Khan, the heir to Chudzhirar, brother of Chinggis Khan. Already the three of them copulated, and went to Mohammed-Khan, but Sheikh Ghajani-Jalagir came out to meet them, and completely destroyed Yagarmurut in the place. Musa Khan lost his life, and Tagai Timur and Sheikh Aly fled to the land of Khorasan.

Another Sheikh Ghajani - Khoja, who commanded near the borders with Rum, notified of the unhappy success (success, it turns out, can be different!) Musa, gathered a great army and marched against Mohammed. There were several important battles, before the great battle near the city of Naksivan, in which Sheikh Gajani-Khoja was lucky. Mohammed Khan was killed during the battle, and Sheikh Ghajani Jalagir fled to the city of the Sultan.

Sheikh Ghajani-Khoja handed the rule of Tabris to a woman named Satibik, and he himself constantly drove off the enemies. Sheikh Gajani-Jalagir, seeing that he was losing, set out to ask for mercy and surrender voluntarily to the winner. Then he returned to Tabris, where Satibik returned the keys to the city, and Sheikh Gadzhani-Khoja, in gratitude for her faithful service, gave her off as a husband for a noble nobleman Suleiman, the son of Mohammed.

Some time later, Sheikh Gajani-Jalagir managed to find a way to escape, and arrived in Bogdat, and made Jagan-Timur, a descendant of Galaku-Khan, Khan there. He gathered an army and decided to try his luck once again in the war with Sheikh Gadzhani-Khoja. But being defeated again, he returned to Bogdat, where he overthrew Dzhagan-Timur, accusing him of defeat, and he himself took the scepter. At that time he became a stern and terrible noble in the rule of the lands of Bogdatsky.

Meanwhile, he had one arapka in his wives, who was friendly with a certain Yakup-Step. And when Sheikh Ghajani-Jalagir ordered to take him into custody for some other matter, this wife was afraid that the Sheikh had found out about their friendship, and cut her husband's throat when he was asleep, having drunk wine.

Sheikh Gadzhan-Khoja took all the Bogdatsk possessions for himself, and became a great ruler, but at the same time he did not take the title of khan. After his death, his brother Malik-Ashraf was the successor, and made Khan of one of the descendants of Galaku-Khan Nau-Shirvan, but after repenting, overthrew him, and became Khan himself. However, he led a dishonorable life, and his subjects went to Janibek-Khan, who ruled in Dasht-Kipchak with a complaint.

Janibek-Khan went to Malik-Ashraf in war, and defeated him, taking rule over all his lands. It happened in the summer of 756 (1356).

Further, the author (and most likely a translator), violating the chronology, returned to the description of events that took place long before the victory of Janibek Khan over the army of Malik Ashraf.

It may well be that this is not at all connected with the forgetfulness of the old khan, but is a consequence of the forgery of the chronicle, when the translators removed a significant part of the text containing information about the true reasons for the death of Great Tartary, and then roughly "glued together" the rest of the narrative. But the "editing" turned out to be very clumsy.

Chinggis Khan was on a campaign when Borta-Kuchin, Chuchi-Khan's mother, was pregnant with him. Then the Marcatts came, attacked their homes, ravaged them, and took Borta-Kuchin with them. But since she was the daughter-in-law of Aunek-Khan Karaite, a former friend of Jessugi-Bayadur-Khan, the father of Chinggis-Khanov, that very hour she was granted freedom, and protection to be escorted to her husband.

On the way she gave birth to a son, and there was nothing to put him on. Then she made a thick dough out of flour, which she put on a stone, and wrapped the baby in it.

When she arrived at her husband, Genghis Khan came in great joy, and exclaimed: “Glory to God! You have already returned from Chuchi! (Chuchi, from Moghull, means a guest). From that time on, everyone began to call him Chuchi. And when he died, during the life of his father, in the land of Dashte-Kipchak, where he ruled, Batu became Khan. (Here the translator makes a note that the people who now call themselves the Zaporozhye, Donskoy, and Yaitskiy Cossacks descend from those very Kipchaks. Shah and mate to modern historians, ethnographers, and, first of all, nationalists.)

Belgatai, sent by Genghis Khan, placed him on the fatherly throne. As soon as the celebrations and feasts ended, the news of the death of Genghis Khan in the capital city of Karakorum arrived. At once Belgaty and Batu set off for Kara-Kurum, having handed the reign for the time of absence to their younger brother Togai-Timur.

When Batu Sagin Khan arrived in the capital, he mourned the death of his father for a long time. After that there was a meeting of all the princes, chief officers and noble nobles, to elect an heir. After the accession to the Moghull throne of Ugadai Khan, five princes set off on a campaign to Katay, the result of which Uguadai Khan was satisfied with the Velma, and noted the intelligence and bravery of Batu Sagin Khan. Some time after the return of Batu from the Katai campaign, Ugadai-Khan entrusted him with a great army for the campaign against Cherkassy, Russ, Bashkir and Volgars.

He gave him his son Kayuk, the son of Taulai - Mangu, and the son of Chagatai - Bedar. When Batu-Sagin-Khan with a great army arrived in Dashte-Kichak, his brother, who ruled in his absence, met him, and the princes with him, with all kinds of splendor, and tasty treats, which everyone was treated to for three days. Then Batu-Sagin-Khan declared a feast on his behalf, which lasted forty days. And at the end of the fun, we went on a hike. That campaign had such a success that the whole world knows about.

Then he returned safely to Dasht-Kipchak, where he died soon, in the capital city, Shoya, in the land called Kokorda.

Modern historians, for some reason, believe that Kokorda is some kind of mythical Blue Horde - Kok Horde, and they just cannot find the area on the map where it could be located. However, the translator does not even have questions about the exact location of the great stone city of Shoi. Back in the 19th century, its ruins were located at the confluence of the Urislava River into the Volga. The city was destroyed by the troops of Tamerlane, and was never rebuilt afterwards.

The problem now is only in identifying the modern name of one of the Volga tributaries with the one that in the past bore the sonorous name of Urislav. According to unconfirmed reports, in the recent past, at the confluence of the Akhtuba River with the Volga, some ruins were dismantled for use as building materials. This is right on the opposite bank of Volgograd, which in the past was called Stalingrad, earlier Tsaritsyn, and even earlier was called Tsaritsa. And this is precisely what the clue may be. The fact is that, traditionally, cities were named after the tributaries of the rivers. For example, a fortress was built at the confluence of the Pleskava River and the Velikaya River, and it was called Pleskava (now Pskov).

Following this logic, it can be argued that the Tsaritsa river gave the name to the city. But since Volgograd is located on the opposite bank, and there were some ruins at the confluence of the Akhtuba and Volga, it can also be assumed that earlier the Tsarina was on the left bank of the Volga at the confluence of the river of the same name into the Volga - Ra. Then, it could be the ruins of that very stone city of Khan Batu - Shoy, on the Urislav River - Tsaritsa.

And it is quite possible that the city of Shuya, in the Ivanovo region, could have been an introduced toponym. This often happens when immigrants, building a city in a new place, call it after the place where they came from. And Shuya, may well have been originally called Shoya. But certainly not the one where the capital of Kokorda was.

Upon the death of Batu-Sagin-Khan, his brother Burga entered the throne of the Dashte-Kipchatsky lands. He arranged a great feast on this occasion, and richly bestowed upon all noble nobles and officers. He sent great gifts to Kaplai-Khan, so that he would bless him on the throne. And he ruled wisely, covering himself with glory. And his neighbors were afraid and respected.

At one time he went to the court of Kaplai Khan, and on the way he met the Bukharian merchants. After conversations with them, he desired to immediately accept the Law of Mohammedan, and bring all subjects to it. However, he died, did not have time to implement his plan. He reigned for 25 years, and his brother Mengu-Timur was his heir.

Sei Khan, having accepted the crown, gave into the eternal possession of Bayadur Khan a certain generation from among his subjects, called Ak-Orda (Modern scholars cannot indicate the location of the White Horde, meanwhile, there are many indirect evidence that the White Horde was on the place of present Lithuania and Belarus, including the modern city of Lipetsk. It was the White Horde that became the basis of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania), and Oran-Timur, the son of Togai-Timur, gave the cities of Kafu and Krim. (Kafu - Feodosia, which according to the orthodox history is considered a Genoese colony, right up to 1475, after which it seemed to belong to the Ottoman Empire. And the city of Krim is modern Simferopol).

Then he went to war on the Volgar (The translator clarifies that Volgaria is a province east of the Volga to the Oryol mountains (Ural), and from Samara to the Kama), and returned having made many glorious victories there. However, he soon set out again, this time in the Iranian lands. His friend Abka-Khan ruled there, with whom they exchanged gifts every year.

This friendship continued until the death of Abka Khan. The heir was Akhmat, the son of Galaku-Khan. Perceived the Mohammedan Law, and sat on the throne of the Iranian lands. But Argun, the son of Abk, killed him and took possession of the crown. Having been notified of that, Mengu-Timur-Khan sent two generals called Tashay and Turkatay, with 80,000 troops.

Argun-Khan, having found out about that, sent to meet his best officer by the name of Amir Tagarat, and followed by himself. In a place called Karabakh, both armies fought, and the army of Mengu-Timur-Khan was beaten. Khan was so saddened by this news that he soon died of it.

After his death, the son of Batu-Sagin-Khan Tuda-Mangu ascended the throne of the Kipchatsk lands, and so burdened his subjects with an exorbitant tribute that Tokhtagu, the son of Mengu-Timur-Khan, was forced to show injustice. And he was so poorly received by Khan that he had to leave for the neighboring lands. But some time later, Tokhtagu returned with a strong army, defeated Tuda-Mangu-Khan, and took away the scepter. He himself became Khan Kipchatsky, ruled for six years, was loved by his subjects, and covered himself with glory, annexing many cities and lands. Buried in the city of Shagarisaraichik.

Upon his death, the son of Usbek-Khan became his successor. And although he was only 13 years old, he ruled with great wisdom and constancy. Introduced the Mohammedan Law in all provinces. Usbek-Khan was so loved by all peoples that they took his name upon themselves for eternity, and were nicknamed Usbeks.

His heir, Janibek-Khan, also zealously monitored the observance of the Mohammedan Law by all his subjects, in all the lands of the Kipchats, and received for this the glory of a pious ruler. During his reign, Malik-Eshref, son of Timur-Tash, kidnapped the throne of Adirbeitsan and neighboring provinces. He led an unlucky life, and was such a tyrant that many of his subjects fled to Janibek Khan.

Among them was one of the teachers of the Law of Mohammedan, called Mogosudin, who publicly interpreted the Law in the Mesheds. He told Khan about what if not to stop the unrighteous life. Which is being led by Malik-Eshref, then looking at him and his subjects, and then the subjects of Janibek, will adopt vicious habits, and thus endanger the well-being of all lands. (This is the importance assigned in the past, the role of morality and ethics. They were considered the basis of the security of the state) Hearing this, Janibek-Khan ordered to gather an army, and set out on Malik-Eshref.

He came, chopped down the enemy, killed Malik-Sharif, and annexed his possessions to the Kipchatsky lands. He distributed the provinces to his officers, and the wealth of the predator in gold, silver, stones and other expensive things fit in a wagon train of 400 camels. The throne of Malik-Sharif went to the son of Janibek-Khan Berdibek. He himself returned to his lands with rich booty, but immediately fell ill, and fearing that he would not have time to hand over the throne to his son, he sent a messenger to Adirbeitsan so that Berdibek would immediately go to his father. But realizing that because of the distance, the son will not have time to return to his death. He ordered the nobles to put Berdibek on the throne as soon as he arrived.

Janibek Khan ruled gloriously for seven years. Buried in the city of Shagrisaraichik. It happened in the summer of 758 (1348).

Here the translator unambiguously indicates the location of the town of Shagrisaraichik:

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Berdibek's son mourned his father for three days, after which he declared himself Khan, and immediately embarked on an extreme tyranny, and so gave himself up to a completely bestial life. He was very afraid that one of his relatives would overthrow him for his unworthiness, and ordered to kill them all. However, a depraved life took his life in the summer of 762 (1361). On it, the offspring of Mengu-Timur-Khan was suppressed, and the Kipchatsky scepter was passed on to other descendants of Chuchi-Khan.

After the death of Berdibek-Khan, Russ-Khan, the son of Obdakul-Oglan, the son of Khojai, the son of Avas-Timur, the son of Togai-Timur, the son of Chuchi-Khan, the son of Chinggis-Khan, stole the scepter of the Kipchak land, and ruled for several years very quietly. Finally Toktamish, son of Tokola-Khoja-Oglan, son of Saritsai, son of Avas-Timur, son of Tokai-Timur, son of Chuchi-Khan, decided to drive Russ from the throne.

He went against him with an army, but suffered misfortune in the battle, and was forced to flee to the land of Ma-Urinner, to his relatives. There he took a great army, and marched against Russ-Khan. This time he was beaten by his army, and Russ himself was killed. So in the summer of 777 (1376) Toktamish-Khan became the owner of the Kipchatsky lands.

When Toktamish-Khan saw some signs of a secret attempt on the life of his relatives on his throne, he went with a great army to the land of Ma-Urenner, took the city of Samarkant, and chopped everyone to pieces. He retreated to his regions, but Amir-Timur-Khan, having been notified of the fall of Samarkant, pursued him with such haste that he caught up with Atella on the banks of the river (Itil (Volga-Ra), Atella, or Atilla, means "Stone River". the name still exists today, this is a tributary of the Kama Ak-Idel. This hydronym is often associated with the name of the legendary leader of the Huns - Attila, who, according to the latest data, was one of the first Slavic Princes who founded garrisons west of the Danube, and to whom the Roman Empire paid tribute).

Seeing that the battle could not be avoided, Toktamish-Khan accepted it in an inconvenient place for himself, fought very skillfully and fearlessly, could not defeat Amir-Timur-Khan, and suffered misfortune. Returning to the land of Ma-Urenner, Amir-Timur-Khan decided to gather all who can hold weapons in their hands and lead back to conquer the Kipchatsk lands, until the army of Toktamish-Khan gathered strength, but his sages dissuaded from this, exhorting, so as not to destroy all the people.

Prince Kaverchik, son of Russ-Khan, stole Toktamish-Khan's scepter after his death, despite the fact that he had eight sons:

- Jalaludin, - Jabar-Birdi, - Kayuk, - Karim-Birdi, - Iskander, - Abyusait, - Khoja, - Kadir-Birdi.

Since that time, the Kipchatsky lands were owned only by the Russ, and in the summer of 961 (1554) all the Kipchatsky and Volgarsky lands submitted to Moscow Tartary (meaning the capture of Kazan and Astrakhan by Ivan the Terrible), and it was no longer heard of the descendants of the Khadzhi-Garai-Khanovs, however All Crimean Khans were from this generation.

Chuchi-Khan, while his father was still alive, gathered an army and provisions from all lands for a campaign against the Russ, Cherkas, Bashkirs and Volgars, but death did not allow him. Then Genghis Khan sent Batu-Sagin-Khnna, the son of Chuchi-Khanov, instead of him. And when the death of Chinggis-Khanov prevented this, Guess-Khan, returning from Katay, set out to carry out this enterprise. He sent Batu-Sagin-Khan with a great army to the city of Moscow, where the Russians, together with the Germans, dug in with retrenchment.

For your information: - Retranchement - a fortification, an internal defensive fence, located behind any main defensive position, allowing shelling of the space behind it and forcing the enemy, who seized the main position, to conduct a further attack. This is a fortress auxiliary internal building in the form of a rampart with a moat in front, which made it possible to continue the defense after the enemy had occupied the main rampart, and to shell the interior of the latter. The term was clearly used by the translator, and at the time when the described events took place, such structures were called: - Abshnit

And who the author calls Germans is a big question. Most likely Baltic Slavs from Prussia

For three months they tried in vain to drive the enemy out of the retrenchment until they split up. On the one hand, Batu-Sagin-Khan, on the other, his brother Sheibani. They dismounted and fought in a cruel battle. The Russians lost 70,000 killed from their best army.

After this great victory, Batu-Sagin-Khan further entered the Russian lands, where he took possession of many cities, after which he returned with great glory and wealth, and his Horde received the name Ichen. Wishing to thank him for the loyalty and great courage of his brother Sheibani, he gave him 15,000 surnames, and also gave him all the conquered cities of the allies of the Russ: - Naimanns, dwarfs, Kuris and Uighurs, but on the condition that he himself live in those lands that lay between the provinces of his state and the lands of the Horde-Ichenov. In the summer, he was supposed to be near the Aral mountains and the Yaidzhika river, and in the winter near the Karakum, Arakum and the Sirra and Sares rivers, because these places were strongly moved by noon.

And here comes the moment of truth. It is very likely that those who made edits to the original version of the old manuscript, tritely missed one of the evidences that directly points to a global cataclysm that changed the face of Eurasia and the entire course of world history. The counterfeiters forgot to blot out the phrase "… these places have moved strongly towards noon." No one to this day pays any attention to these words, but meanwhile, they mean literally: - "These lands have moved to the North Pole."

What does this mean? I believe that there is only one thing: - Our continent is closer to the Arctic Circle than it was before. More precisely, it was not the continent that moved, but the north pole approached the continent. This is explained by the Pole Change Theory.

If the axis of rotation of the Earth previously had a different tilt, and the North Pole was located in Greenland, and then it moved to its current location, then the phrase becomes clear without any currents. And then the mechanism of the catastrophe that happened becomes clear. Eurasia seemed to "flap its right wing", which literally dived under the ocean waters. However, back to the doc:

One of Sheibani's sons settled far away in the lands of the Russ, and all his descendants remained there. All German Khans are descended from Sheibani-Khan. (This is where the name Swabia comes from! The Swabians are the descendants of the Tatar Sheibani)

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For information: - Schwabs (German Schwaben) - Germans who speak a special Swabian dialect (one of the South German dialects) of the German language.

The historical region in southern Germany, where the majority of the inhabitants speak this dialect, is called Swabia (German Schwabenland).

When Sheibani-Khan died, in the lands that his brother Batu-Sagin-Khan left him, his abundant offspring remained, among whom was Kuchum-Khan, the last of the Sheibani clan, who ruled in the land of Turan. In old age he became completely blind, reigning for 40 years. Then in the summer of 1003 (1595), the Russians stepped into his lands, from which he was forced to flee. From that time, from that time, the Russy took possession of Turan, and Kuchum-Khan died in the land of the Markatts.

When Mengu-Timur-Khan died, his third son Fulat inherited the inheritance. He had sons Daulat Sheikh Olan and Arab Shah, who shared the inheritance. In the summer they lived on the banks of the Yaidzhik, and in the winter Syrah. Daulat-Sheikh-Oglan had one son named Abulgair-Khan, who was terrible to all his neighbors, had 11 sons, of which the largest was Shabadah-Sultan. And he had two sons, of whom the larger one was nicknamed Mohammed, nicknamed Shabakht, and the smaller one, Mohammed-Sultan. He had a son named Obeit-Khan, who reigned in Great Bukharia.

The second son of Abulgair Khan was called Khoja-Mahomet, but the Usbeks called him Khoja Amtintak, because he was very stupid. His son, Chanibek, was also a fool. And the son of Chanibek Iskander Khan was also a fool, like his father and grandfather. However, he was devout, and amused himself only with falconry. His grandson Abdulmomin Khan was the last of this generation of Sheibani Khan.

After two generations of rulers, the prince of great hope Timur-Sheikh-Khan took the scepter, but he lived very little, for the Kalmaks, numbering 2000 people, attacked his lands, ravaged many dwellings, and took a large number of his subjects. Notifying that Timur-Sheikh-Khan with a small number of soldiers overtook the Kalmaks, and with a courage worthy of better happiness, he lost his life along with all his people. He died in the prime of youth, leaving no heirs behind.

So, many of his subjects went to other princes, and the widow, being pregnant, and what no one knew about, stayed with some Uyghurs who also wanted to leave her, but said that they would have stayed if at least some slave remained pregnant from Khan … Then the widow said that she herself was already three months pregnant. And so the Uighurs did not leave her.

Having been notified of this, the Naimanns stayed where they were, waiting for someone to give birth to a widow, a son or a daughter. A son was born, who was given the name Yadigar. The Uighurs sent a messenger to the Naimans, with this statement, who were so happy that they presented the messenger with a black horse, and they themselves returned under the power of the young sovereign. On their return, the Uyghurs gave them a left side. Since then, this has become a custom, when the Naimans converge with the Uighurs, they always take the left side. (Among the Mohammedans, it was considered honorable - a place at the table to the left of the owner of the house) Since then, these generations have been in unshakable loyalty to their sovereign.

Author: kadykchanskiy