Think, in this batter'd Caravanserai
Whose Doorways are alternate Night and Day,
How Sultán after Sultán with his Pomp
Abode his Hour or two, and went his way.—Omar Khayyám.
THE story of the conquests of Chingiz Khan, and the partition of nearly the whole of Northern Asia among his descendants, has been so often told, that no useful purpose would be served by recounting it again in this Introduction. Only those phases need be briefly sketched, which form the basis of Mirza Haidar's history, or which help to elucidate the course of events immediately preceding it. Though the Tarikh-i-Rashidi embraces many wide regions and deals with many tribes and nations, its chief scenes are laid within the appanage of Chingiz's second son Chaghatai, and it is, before all things, a history of part of the Chaghatai branch of the Mongol dynasty. This is the branch, moreover, which hitherto has remained the most obscure of all those of the family of Chingiz Khan. The other divisions of the empire founded by the great conqueror, have all found abundant historians, not only in China and Mongolia, but among the Musulman writers of Western Asia and among Europeans. The great works of Deguignes, D'Ohsson, and Howorth, though designed to tell the story of all the Chingizi branches, have failed, as yet, to complete that of the house of Chaghatai. The two older authors frankly avow the want of materials, as their reason for leaving this section of their field almost untouched, while Sir H. Howorth, though he is understood to have completed his researches in it, has been prevented by other circumstances, from giving to the world his much desired volume on the Chaghatais.
Perhaps the nearest approaches to histories of the Chaghatais
are to be found, (1) in an excellent paper entitled The Chagha-
In assigning his dominions to his four sons, Chingiz Khan appears to have followed an ancient Mongol custom. The sons of a chief usually ruled, as their father's deputies, over certain nations or clans, and at his death each received, as an appanage, the section of the population which had been under his care. Thus the distribution was rather tribal than territorial, and the tribes, which were in most cases nomadic, sometimes shifted their abode, or were driven, by enemies, to migrate from one district to another. These movements, as a fact, do not seem to have occurred very frequently, nor to have altered the position of the main body of the people to any great extent. It will be more convenient, therefore, and far more intelligible, to state the distribution of Chingiz's dominions, as far as possible, in territorial terms.
Juji, or Tushi, the eldest son of Chingiz, died some months before his father, and therefore, never became supreme Khákán* in the regions he governed; but they descended intact to his own son and successor, Batu, as an appanage direct from Chingiz. The centre of this dominion may be taken to be the plains of Kipchak, but it comprised all the country lying north of the lower course of the Sir Daria (the Sihun or Jaxartes) and of the Aral and Caspian seas—“wherever the hoofs of Mongol horses had tramped”; it included also the valleys of the Volga and the Don, and some wide-spread regions on the north shore of the Black Sea; while towards the north it extended beyond the Upper Yaik (or Ural River) into Western Siberia. On its southern and south-eastern confines, this appanage of the Juji line marched with that of Chingiz's second son, Chaghatai, whose central kingdom, Mávará-un-Nahr, or Transoxiana, was situated chiefly between the rivers Sir and Amu (the Jihun or Oxus), but included, in its extension towards the north-east, the hill ranges and steppes lying beyond the right bank of the Sir, east of the Kipchák plains, and west of lakes Issigh-Kul and Ala-Nor. Towards the east, the Chaghatai domain took in the greater part of the region now known as Chinese (or Eastern) Turkistan, Farghána (or Khokand) and Badakhshán; while towards the south it embraced Kunduz, Balkh, and, at the outset, Khorasán—a country which, at that time, spread eastward to beyond Herat and Ghazni, and southward to Mekrán. This was, perhaps, the most extensive appanage of all, and within its limits were to be found the greatest variety of races and tribes, and the greatest diversity of modes of life. It comprised, on the one hand, some of the richest agricultural districts, peopled by settled inhabitants, far advanced in Asiatic civilisation, and some of the most flourishing cities in Asia; while, on the other hand, some of the rudest hill tribes, or Hazáras as they were called then, had their homes in the southern highlands, and large tracts of barren steppe-land were occupied by almost equally primitive nomads, who drove their flocks from hill to valley and valley to hill, in search of pasture, according to season.
Eastward, again, of this “middle dominion,” as it was often termed, came that of Oktai (or Ogodai), the third son of Chingiz Khan. His allotment was the country of the original Mongols with that of the tribes immediately around it, while he was also heir to his father's capital, Karakorum, and to the supreme authority over the Mongol people. On its western confines his dominion bordered, at first, on that of Chaghatai, in the country since known as Jungar or Zungaria* —a region that, for want of more exact boundaries, may be roughly described as lying north of the Tian-Shan, from about Urumtsi on the east, to the river Chu on the west, and having for its middle line the upper course of the Ili river. This region became the subject of much contention among the descendants of Oktai and Chaghatai, in the latter half of the thirteenth century, and as the house of the former declined, the greater part of it, if not the whole, appears to have gradually merged into the territories of the Chaghatai Khans; while the clans that inhabited it, were dispersed among the tribes of Transoxiana and Kipchak, and their chiefs lived in obscurity under the Khans, or conquerors, for the time being.
Chaghatai himself appears to have been a just and energetic
governor, though perhaps rough and uncouth, and addicted to
the vice, common among the Mongols, of hard drinking. At
any rate, he was animated by the soldier-like spirit of his
father, and succeeded in keeping order among as heterogeneous
a population, as a kingdom was ever composed of. In 1232, for
instance, when sedition showed itself at Bokhara, he acted with
promptitude, if with severity, and saved his country from a far-
Chaghatai's own capital was at Almáligh, in the valley of the
Upper Ili, near the site of the present Kulja, and consequently
in the extreme east of his dominion. His reason for fixing it in
that remote position, instead of at Bokhara or Samarkand, was
probably one of necessity. His Mongol tribesmen and followers
—the mainstay of his power—were passionately fond of the life
of the steppes: the only existence worthy of men and conquerors,
was that passed in the felt tents of their ancestors,
among the flocks and herds that they tended in time of peace,
and led with them on their distant campaigns. The dwellers
in houses and towns were, in their eyes, a degenerate and
effeminate race;—the tillers of the soil, slaves who toiled like
cattle, in order that their betters might pass their time in
luxury. They would serve no Khan who did not pass a life
worthy of free-born men and “gentlemen rovers”; and Cha-
Chaghatai died in 1241, after a reign of about fourteen years,
and within the same year the death of Oktai occurred at Kara-
Little is known of the way in which Chaghatai disposed of his kingdom at his death, and there appears to be no mention, anywhere, of his having followed the ancestral custom of his house in distributing it among his descendants. He is recorded to have left a numerous family, but to have been succeeded by a grandson, and a minor, named Kara Hulaku, while his widow, Ebuskun, assumed the regency. This statement, however, seems to apply to Turkistan, Transoxiana, and the adjacent regions: at all events not to Kashghar, Yarkand, Khotan, Aksu, and the southern slopes of the Tian Shan mountains—or, in other words, to the province south of the line of the Tian Shan, which is called, in our times, Eastern Turkistan. As regards this province, Mirza Haidar tells us that it was given by Chaghatai, presumably at his death, to the clan or house of Dughlát, whose members were reckoned to be of the purest Mongol descent, and one of the noblest divisions of that people. We shall hear more of this clan and the province they ruled, farther on; but the important point to notice here, with reference to subsequent events, is that the Dughláts were made hereditary chiefs, or Amirs, of the various districts of Eastern Turkistan, as far back as the time of Chaghatai, for it is chiefly on this incident that hinges the permanent division of the Chaghatai realm into two branches, at a later date.
Ebuskun's sway was a short one, for as early as 1247 Almáligh was attacked by Kuyuk, the son and successor of Oktai, and she was deprived of her power. For a time, disorder prevailed throughout the Khanate; but Kuyuk seems to have had sufficient power to set up one Yasu (or Isu) Mangu, who, being himself a worthless debauchee, governed the country through the agency of a Musulman Wazir, called Khwája Bahá-ud-Din. Kuyuk died within three years of his accession, and was followed, as supreme Khakán, by Mangu, who, in 1252, restored Kara Hulaku and Ebuskun to their former dignities. Bahá-ud-Din and Yasu Mangu were now, in their turn, removed, the former being put to death at once. Kara Hulaku died within a few months of his restoration, and after his death we hear no more of Ebuskun. Hulaku's throne passed over to his own widow—one Orgánah Khatun—whose first act was to execute Yasu Mangu, under some compact, which appears to have been made for his riddance, between her predecessor and the Khakán Mangu.
Orgánah is described as possessing much beauty, wisdom,
and influence, and as long as Mangu lived she was allowed to
reign in peace. But he died in 1259, when a war of succession
to the supreme Khakánate broke out between his brothers
Irtukbuka and Kublai. In this strife, the Chaghatai princess
appears to have taken no part, but she suffered nevertheless,
for in 1261 she was driven from Almáligh by Algu (a great-
But a rival was beginning to show himself in the person of
Kaidu, a grandson of Oktai. This prince was plotting, in
western Kipchák, for the assistance of his uncle Batu, in
asserting his claim to the province of Turkistan—the northwestern
division of the Chaghatai Khanate—and probably also
for the region then becoming known as Moghulistan, which lay
immediately to the eastward of Turkistan, and comprised the
Zungar country, already alluded to. At the death of Algu,
Kublai nominated Mubárak Shah, a son of Algu and Orgánah,
to the Chaghatai succession, but immediately afterwards is
said to have appointed, as his vice-regent, another great-
Borák now proceeded to indemnify himself by invading
Khorasán, but his campaigns resulted in nothing but defeat,
and eventually he retired to Bokhara, where he died, or was
perhaps poisoned, in 1270. “His reign,” says Mr. Oliver, “had
extended only to some four years, but they were years of misery
and destruction to some of the fairest lands and most prosperous
cities on the Zaráfshán. His death delivered them from at
least one cowardly tyrant and persecutor, though they still
continued to suffer from the fratricidal wars that constantly
raged between the rival chiefs of the lines of Oktai and Chag-
“Borák's death left Kaidu sole master of the western portion of the Khanate. The dispossessed Mubárak Shah and other chiefs took the oath of allegiance to him, thus rendering him a still more dangerous rival of Kublai. In 1270 (668 H.), much to the indignation of the sons of Borák, he nominated Nikpai, a grandson of Chaghatai, chief of the tribe, but in less than two years Nikpai seems to have revolted, been killed, and succeeded by Tuka Timur, another scion of the house (circa 1271, or 670 H.), who, in less than two years more, was ousted by Davá, the son of Borák (circa 1273, or 672 H.). Davá had made up his quarrel with Kaidu, his claims having been constantly urged by the latter's son Chapár. His reign was the longest ever enjoyed by a descendant of Chaghatai, and the Khanate might have hoped for some peace from an alliance between the rival houses, but unfortunately a third firebrand appeared on the scene. Abáká, the Il-Khán of Persia, who had always acknowledged Kublai as the rightful Khakán in opposition to Kaidu, and who had never forgiven Borák's invasion of Khorasán, was only watching his opportunity, and his Wazir, Shams-ud-Din Juvaini,*
had only to draw his attention to a favourable omen, to start him for Bokhara, which he entered about 1274 (672 H.), plundering, burning, and murdering right and left.”*
Davá reigned for some thirty-two years and was almost constantly at war. He possessed himself of Ghazni, and from that stronghold, as a base, made several expeditions into India, ravaging the Punjab and Sind, and sacking at different times between 1296 and 1301 Peshawar, Multan, Lahore, and Delhi. In the meantime, Kaidu had involved himself in wars of long duration with the Khakán Kublai, and as these took place shortly before the time of Marco Polo's travels through Central Asia and China, detailed accounts of some of them have been handed down to us in his narrative. These wars extended, from first to last, over a period of some thirty years, and were not even concluded in 1294, when Kublai died and was succeeded as Khakán by his grandson Uljaitu.* The credit indeed of finally overthrowing Kaidu is due rather to this prince, and moreover it was not Kaidu alone whom he subdued, but Davá also, for this last, on his return from a campaign in India in 1301, seems to have allied himself with Kaidu and to have assisted in the wars against the Khakán. Kaidu's death followed quickly on his final reverse, and must have occurred in 1302, about. His son Chapár, backed by the influence of Davá, obtained the recognition of his succession to the Khanate of the eastern division of the country, and both having sent envoys to Uljaitu bearing professions of submission, a period of peace should, it might appear, have been established. But this was not the case. Within a year of Kaidu's death, Davá and Chapár fell out, and the latter was defeated in a battle fought between Samarkand and Khojand. This engagement was followed by several others, victory falling sometimes to one side and sometimes to the other, until at length the Khakán Uljaitu routed Chapár and obliged him to submit to Davá.
The death of Davá occurred in 1306, and he was succeeded by his son Kuyuk, who lived only two years, and was in his turn followed by a descendant of Chaghatai named Taliku. This prince is said to have adopted the Musulman religion, and in consequence to have been put to death by his own officers, who raised in his place, one Kabak, a son of Davá. Kabak was installed in 1309, and was at once attacked by Chapár, in alliance with several members of the house of Oktai. The allies were beaten in a number of fights, and eventually fled for refuge to the territory of the Khakán (now Kuluk,* a nephew of Uljaitu), while their dominions were appropriated by the house of Chaghatai, the clans who inhabited them becoming in part its subjects and in part those of the Kipcháks. “With Chapár,” says Mr. Oliver, “the house of Oktai disappears, though representatives came to the front for a brief period again in the persons of Ali and of Dánishmanjah, while Timur (Tamerlane), after displacing the family of Chaghatai, selected his puppet khans from the Oktai stock.”* Within a year of his installation, Kabak made way for an elder brother, who ascended the throne of the Chaghatai under the name of Isán Bugha, though his historical identity (in connection with this name at least) is somewhat uncertain. He provoked the Khakán into war, and was beaten almost at the outset of his rule; afterwards he invaded Khorasán with a like result, and was finally forced to fly from the country, before the combined forces of one of his brothers and of the seventh Il-Khán, or King of Persia. This occurred in 1321, when Kabak seems to have resumed the throne which he had abdicated twelve years previously.
It was about this time that a permanent division occurred in
the realm of Chaghatai, the two parts being known by the general
names of Mávará-un-Nahr (or Transoxiana) and Moghulistan
(or Jatah), though there were other provinces attached to each
section. The story of the Khans of the former branch, roughly
sketched above need not be followed further, as the history of
Mirza Haidar, which chiefly concerns us, belongs to the other or
eastern division, and is told by him, a descendant of its princes,
in full. It is only necessary to remark with regard to Mávará-
We have seen already, how near the empire of Chaghatai came
to being divided during the wars of Kaidu. This Prince was,
as far as can be gleaned, one of the ablest of the Oktai line, and
an active and determined soldier. During his struggles for
supremacy, he held a large tract of country carved chiefly out
of the Chaghatai appanage, though taken partly from that of
Oktai. It is not clear what were the limits of the territory he
held thus temporarily, and indeed it is probable that no actual
limits were ever acknowledged. In all likelihood his power
extended chiefly over certain tribes who were nomads, or
dwellers in tents, and thus in the habit of moving their abodes
when expedient; such movements, too, may have been more
frequent than usual about Kaidu's period, for the tribesmen
must have been constantly entangled in the prevailing wars,
and subject therefore, to the changes of fortune of those with or
against whom they had to serve. His dominion, consequently,
would have been more tribal than territorial in its extent. At
any rate it would seem that during Kaidu's last days—the
period when he was allied with Borák—his power reached from
the Tálás River and Lake Bálkásh on the west, to Kara-Khoja
(between Turfán and Hami) on the east, and that it thus
included nearly the whole length of the Tian Shan mountains,
together with the Zungar country on the north, and Kashghar,
Yarkand, Aksu, etc., on the south of them. Although this wide
tract never fell permanently to him or his race, his temporary
hold over it seems to have assisted in marking it out as a self-
Thus, at the beginning of the fourteenth century, when the Khans of Chaghatai were rapidly declining in power, and could scarcely maintain themselves in their central kingdom of Mávará-un-Nahr, this eastern division, or Moghulistan, appears scarcely to have felt their sway. The hereditary Dughlát Amirs who, as we have seen, had been set up by Chaghatai, governed in detail, with more or less power, in the different cities and districts of the region south of the Tian Shan (or Eastern Turkistan), and left scarcely a trace behind them in any history but that of one of their own clan—Mirza Haidar. They acted in the name of the Chaghatai Khan of the time, and though nominally hereditary, they seem in practice to have held office very much at the pleasure of the tribesmen whose affairs they administered; while the popularity of each one probably depended more on the degree of independence he was able to secure for the small section that regarded him as its chief, than on his hereditary rights. Still in the early days, the power of some of them must have been considerable, and it seems to have risen in degree, as that of the Chaghatai Khans declined. They fought among themselves as a matter of course, and the people suffered, no doubt, from the consequent disorder. It would be quite natural therefore that Isán Bugha, a Moghul by descent, when forced to retire from Mávará-un-Nahr, should turn his steps towards Moghulistan, and its companion province south of the mountains.
Just at this point the histories of the period are discordant. As remarked above, the identity of Isán Bugha is to some extent uncertain. He is known to have been a son of Davá Khan, and is believed to have had some brothers. Abul Gházi Khan, the historian King of Khwárizm of the seventeenth century, speaks of him as “Il Khwája, surnamed Isán Bugha.” On the other hand, Khwándamir makes Isán Bugha continue to reign over the western branch of the Chaghatai until his death, and alludes to one Imil Khwája (apparently another son of Davá) as having established himself in Moghulistan.* It is possible that Imil, or Il, may denote one and the same person;*
but however this may be, if the usually accurate Abul Gházi be followed, we learn that: “As there remained no longer in Kashghar, Yarkand, Alah-Tágh or Uighuristan, any prince descended from Chaghatai Khan, whose authority was acknowledged, the Moghul Amirs held a council, at which it was decided to summon Isán Bugha from Bokhara; and they proclaimed him Khan of Kashghar, Yarkand, Alah-Tágh, and of Moghulistan.”* This would make it appear that Isán Bugha was still reigning in Mávará-un-Nahr when summoned by the Dughlát Amirs; but the point is doubtful, for we have just been told that he had fled to Moghulistan. In any case, the dates of the two events agree, for the disappearance of Isán Bugha from Mávará-un-Nahr is recorded by one author to have taken place in 721 H. (1321 A.D.), and this is just the year when he is said, by the other, to have been summoned to Kashghar and made Khan of Moghulistan, with (it may be assumed) its dependencies.
Thus, although the chronology and even some of the events of the times are uncertain, the final division of the Chaghatai Khanate appears to have taken place in or about the year 1321, and it resulted in two separate lines of Khans being established which were never afterwards united. The western branch was, a little later, superseded by Timur, whose descendants, through Baber, gave the ruling house to India, which has gone, for three centuries, by the name of “Moghul”; though, as we shall see from Mirza Haidar's narrative, it was, in its early days, known—and perhaps more correctly—as the “Chaghatai.” The history of the eastern branch—that of the true “Moghuls” of Central Asia—we may now leave to be told, in detail, by our author; but as this line was several times broken, or subdivided, and as the subject is a complicated one, it may aid the reader to give (immediately below), in the form of an epitomised statement, a general view of the succession of the Moghul Khans from the time of Isán Bugha onwards. It is extracted almost entirely from Erskine's History of India,* and was compiled by him from the Tarikh-i-Rashidi; but it contains some emendations from the Chinese history of the Ming dynasty, as translated by Dr. Bretschneider, for the period immediately succeeding the reign of Khizir Khwája, and a few other alterations besides.
It is about this period that Mirza Haidar's chronicle is at its
weakest; and it is also a period where some of the best of the
Musulman authors fail us. The Rauzat us Safá of Mir Khwánd
and the Zafar-Náma of Sharaf-ud-Din, both differ from the
Tarikh-i-Rashidi, and the Ming history is at variance with all
three. Thus between Khizir Khwája and Vais Khan, the
Rauzat us Safá and the Zafar-Náma show two reigning Khans
of Moghulistan, and the Tarikh-i-Rashidi also gives accounts
of two only, though the names in the last-mentioned work are
not the same as in the other two histories.*
But the Tarikh-i-
Shama-i-Jahán,
Nakhsh-i-Jahán,
Muhammad,
Shir Muhammad,
and the author states them in this order; so that the three which correspond with the names of those given in the Chinese histories, do not fall in the same succession. Again none of the Musulman authors supply the date of succession for any of the intermediate Khans whom they mention. The Chinese annals show three Khans for the period between Khizir Khwája and Vais, and furnish the year of succession for each of them, besides giving dates of other contemporary occurrences, which indicate that a particular Khan was reigning at a particular time. The annals chiefly refer to tributary missions and appeals for assistance addressed to the Chinese Emperor, but it is precisely such occurrences as these that the Chinese chroniclers record with care and exactness. Their dynastic histories are believed to be not always trustworthy, but they are, at any rate, compilations, more or less methodical, from State documents and are not based merely on tradition, as are most of the Musulman histories. As mere records of events and dates, therefore, the Chinese accounts are likely to be the best guides; and I should be inclined to substitute their data, regarding this period, for those of Mirza Haidar. I have, however, shown both in amending Mr. Erskine's epitome, as will be seen (at p. 46). A full extract from Dr. Bretschneider's translation of the Chinese history is also appended immediately below.
The three lists just spoken of, stand as follows:—
(A.)—The Rauzat us Safá1 and the Zafar-Náma.2 | |
(1.) Khizir Khwája | died 1399 |
(2.) Muhammad Khán | No date |
(3.) Nakhsh-i-Jahán | No date |
(4.) Vais Khán | No date |
(B.)—The Chinese Annals of the Ming dynasty.3 | |
(1.) Khizir Khwája | died 1399 |
(2.) Shama-i-Jahán | died 1408 |
(3.) Muhammad Khán | died 1416 |
(4.) Nakhsh-i-Jahán | died 1418 |
(5.) Vais Khán | died 1428 |
(C.)—The Tarikh-i-Rashidi. | |
(1.) Khizir Khwája | died 1420 |
(2.) Shama-i-Jahán | No date |
(3.) Nakhsh-i-Jahán | No date |
(4.) Muhammad Khán | No date |
(5.) Shir Muhammad | No date |
(6.) Vais Khán | died 1428-9 |
Of the two dates furnished by the Tarikh-i-Rashidi, the one
indicating the year of Khizir Khwája's death is certainly incorrect,
for there is evidence to show, in addition to the concurrence
of the authorities named above, that this Khan did
not reign up to the year 1420. The portion of the Matla'
Asaadin, of Abdur Razzák, translated by Quatremère,*
though
it contains no list of these Khans, makes mention of ambassadors
having been sent to Shah Rukh, of Mávará-un-Nahr, in
819 H. (1416), by Nakhsh-i-Jahán, who is described as a son of
Shama-i-Jahán of Moghulistan; thereby implying, it would
seem, that Nakhsh-i-Jahán was reigning in that year in Moghul-
As I have placed in juxtaposition above, the lists of reigning Khans, according to the various authorities, it may be useful also to show how they vary in their statements regarding the sons of Khizir Khwája, some of whom reigned, though some did not.
Thus the Rauzat us Safá has—
(1.) Shama-i-Jahán,
(2.) Shir Ali,
(3.) Shah Jahán Oghlán.
The Zafar-Náma gives:—
(1.) Shama-i-Jahán,
(2.) Muhammad Oghlán,
(3.) Shir Ali,
(4.) Shah Jahán,
while the Tarikh-i-Rashidi mentions:—
(1.) Muhammad Khan,
(2.) Shama-i-Jahán,
(3.) Nakhsh-i-Jahán,
(3.) | } | “and others.” |
(3.) |
The passage taken from Dr. Bretschneider's version of the Ming history runs thus:* —
“After Yung-lo acceded to the throne he sent an envoy with a letter and presents to the King of Bie-shi-ba-li.* But at that time Hei-di-rh-ho-djo had died,* and had been succeeded by his son Sha-mi-cha-gan. The latter sent in the next year an embassy to the emperor, offering as tribute a block of rude jade and fine horses. The envoy was well treated and rewarded. At that time it had happened that An-ko Tie-mu-rh, Prince of Hami, had been poisoned by Gui-li-chi, Khan of the Mongols, and Sha-mi-cha-gan made war on the latter. The emperor was thankful, and sent an envoy with presents to him, exhorting the King to be on good terms with To-to, the Prince of Hami.
“In 1406 Sha-mi-cha-gan sent tribute, and the emperor
accordingly despatched Liu Tie-mu-rh, a high officer, with
presents to Bie-shi-ba-li. In the year 1407 Sha-mi-cha-gan
presented three times tribute. His envoys had been ordered to
solicit the assistance of Chinese troops for reconquering Sa-ma-
“When this embassy returned, they were accompanied by An, who carried gold embroidered silk stuffs for the King. At that time an envoy of the Wa-la (Oirats) complained that Ma-ha-ma was arming for making war on the Wa-la. The emperor sent to warn him. In 1413 Ma-ha-ma sent one of his generals with tribute to China. He reached Kan Su. Orders had been given to the civil and military authorities to receive him honourably.
“In the next year (1414) people returning from the Si-yu brought the intelligence that Ma-ha-ma's brother and another had both died in a short interval. The emperor sent again An to Bie-shi-ba-li, with a letter of condolence. When Ma-ha-ma died he left no son. His nephew, Na-hei-shi-dji-han, succeeded him, and in the spring of 1416 despatched an envoy to inform the emperor of his uncle's death. The emperor sent the eunuch Li Ta to offer a sacrifice in memory of the late King and confer the title of wang (King) on his successor. In 1417 Na-hei-shi-dji-han sent an embassy to inform the emperor that he was about to marry a princess from Sa-ma-rh-han,* and solicited in exchange for horses, a bride's trousseau. Then 500 pieces of variegated and 500 of plain white silk stuff were bestowed on the King of Bie-shi-ba-li as wedding presents.
“In 1418 an envoy, by name Su-ko, arrived from Bie-shi-bali, reporting that his sovereign (Na-hei-shi-dji-han) had been slain by his cousin, Wai-sz, who then had declared himself King. At the same time Wai-sz with his people had transferred their abode to the west, changing the former name of the empire (Bie-shi-ba-li) into I-li-ba-li. The emperor said that it was not his custom to meddle with the internal affairs of foreign countries. He bestowed upon Su-ko the rank of tu tu ts'ien shi, and at the same time sent the eunuch Yang Chung with a mission to Wai-sz, conferring on the King, as presents, an arrow, a sword, a suit of armour, and silk stuffs. The chieftain Hu-dai-da* and more than seventy other people of I-li-ba-li all received presents. Subsequently Wai-sz sent frequently tribute to the Chinese court,* as did also his mother, So-lu-tan Ha-tun (Sultan Khatun).
“In 1428 Wai-sz died, and was succeeded by his son, Ye-sien bu-hua,* who also sent repeatedly tribute to China. Tribute was also offered by Bu-sai-in, the son-in-law of the late King.
“Ye-sien bu-hua died in 1445, and was succeeded by Ye-mi-li-
“In 1457 a Chinese envoy was sent to I-li-ba-li with presents
for the King, and in 1456 again.*
It was then settled that I-li-
Isán Bugha Khán seems to have been called into Moghulistan about A.H. 721 (1321), and to have reigned till 730 (1330).
An Interregnum.
Tughluk Timur Khán, son of Isán Bugha, born about 730, began to reign 748 (1347), died 764 (1363).
Usurpation of Amir Kámar-ud-Din. It was against him that the expeditions of Timur into Moghulistan were directed —A.H. 768-94 (1367-1392).
{ | Khizir Khwája Khán, son of Tughluk Timur, raised to the throne in 791, before Kámar-ud-Din's death. He reigned till 801 (1399), and was succeeded by his son, |
Shama-i-Jahán, who was succeeded by his brother, | |
Nakhsh-i-Jahán, who was succeeded by his brother, | |
Muhammad Khán, who was succeeded by his son, | |
Shir Muhammad Khán, who was succeeded by his nephew, | |
Sultan Vais Khán, the son of Shir Ali Oghlán, the brother of Shir Muhammad. Sultan Vais was killed 832 (1428-9).4 |
On the death of Vais there was a division among the Moghuls, some adhering to Yunus Khán, the eldest son of Vais, others to Isán Bugha II., the younger son.
Yunus Khan, who was expelled 832 (1429), returned 860 (1456), and regained the western part of Moghulistan. Hostilities were maintained between the eastern and western Moghuls till the death of his grand-nephew, Kabak Sultan, when he reigned without a rival.
In the latter part of his life, the remoter tribes of the steppes, displeased with his fondness for towns, separated from him, and acknowledged his second son, Sultan Ahmad, or Alácha Khán, as their Khán—so that the kingdom was again divided into two during his lifetime. He died 892 H. (1487).
Sultan Mahmud Khan, Yunus'
eldest son, succeeded his father in
Tashkand and as chief of the western
tribes. He was defeated by Shaibáni
Khán in 908 (1502-3), lost Tash-
Isán Bugha II., raised to the throne in 832 H. (1429), and through life supported by the eastern Moghuls, died 866 (1462),* was succeeded by his son
Dust Muhammad Khán, who ruled in the eastern districts (Uighuristán, etc.), died 873 (1468-9).
Kabak Sultan Oghlán, his son, ruled for a time about Turfán, or Uighuristán, where he was murdered.
Sultan Ahmad Khán, second son of Yunus, governed the eastern Moghuls in Aksu and Uighuristán. He was generally known as Alácha Khán—“the slaughtering Khán.” He was bent on making himself absolute ruler of the steppes, destroyed the chiefs, and curtailed the power of many of the tribes. Defeated by Shaibáni Khán in 908 (1502-3), he died of grief in 909 (1503-4).
The death of Sultan Ahmad was followed by many civil wars and much anarchy in Moghulistan. His elder brother, Sultan Mahmud, invaded his dominions from the west. Sultan Ahmad's numerous sons contended with one another. Several sections of the people, and among others the Kirghiz, separated from the main body. The anarchy and civil wars lasted some years. The country was overrun by Abá Bakr (a Dughlát) of Kashghar, by the Kalmáks and the Kazáks. The whole of the tribes of Moghulistan never again united under one head. Two Khanates and the confederation of the Kirghiz-Kazáks seem to have arisen out of the ruins of the Khanate of the Moghuls. Sultan Mansur, the eldest son of Sultan Ahmad, established himself in Aksu, Turfán, etc., and a new Khanate arose in Kashghar and the western provinces.
Sultan Said Khan, third son of Sultan Ahmad, in Rajab 920 (Sept. 1514), or eleven years after his father's death, seized Kashghar, and expelled Abá Bakr Mirza. He died 16 Zilhajah 939 (9 July, 1533); and was succeeded by his son, Abdur Rashid Khan, who died 973 (1565-6); and was succeeded by his son, Abdul Karim.
Mansur Khan, Sultan Ahmad's eldest son, was acknowledged and ruled in Turfán and the eastern provinces—i.e., Uighuristán. He died in 950 (1543-4), having reigned two years along with his father, and forty more by himself; he was succeeded by his son, Sháh Khán.
Meanwhile in the steppes of Moghulistan, the Kirghiz established themselves under Khans of their own, and in process of time, formed a kind of federative union with the Kazák Uzbegs, which has, in some degree, lasted to the present day, and has been called “the three hordes of Kirghiz.”
Amir Tulik, Ulusbegi (or chief of the tribe) of the Moghul Khans, contemporary with Isán Bugha I., succeeded by
Amir Bulaji, his brother; raised Tughluk Timur to the throne; succeeded by his son,
Amir Khudáidád, who is said to have reigned about ninety
years in Kashghar. He succeeded his father, probably soon
after the year 748 H. (1347). In his time Amir Kamar-ud-
Amir Sayyid Ali, grandson of Khudáidád (by his son Amir Sayyid Ahmad). Sayyid Ali reigned about twenty-four years—838 to 861 H. (1435 to 1457)—and was succeeded by his sons,
Sániz Mirza, in Yarkand, who expelled his brother from Kashghar, and reigned seven years. He died 868 H. (1463-4).
Muhammad Haidar Mirza in Kash-
Muhammad Haidar Mirza, on his brother's death, succeeded. He is said to have reigned twenty-four years in all, or eight years with imperfect authority and sixteen years with full authority. In 885 H. (1480) he was expelled by his nephew and stepson, Abá Bakr.
Abá Bakr Mirza, son of Sániz, reigned in all forty-eight years. The years of his reign are probably reckoned from the date of his taking possession of Yarkand, about 873 H. (1468-9). He was finally defeated and expelled by Sultan Said Khan, the third son of Sultan Ahmad Khan (Alácha Khan), who changed the dynasty. See Khans of Moghulistan, above. Abá Bakr was murdered 920 H.
It may perhaps help to make matters clear as regards the
dates, if I append here, a list of the western branch of the
line of Chaghatai Khans (those of Mávará-un-Nahr or Trans-
A.H. | A.D. | ||||||
1. | Chaghatai | Began to reign | 624 | = | 1227 | ||
2. | Kara Huláku | Began to reign | 639 | = | 1242 | ||
3. | Isu Mangu | Began to reign | 645 | = | 1247 | ||
Kara Huláku (restored) | Began to reign | 650 | = | 1252 | |||
4. | Orgánah Khátun | Began to reign | 650 | = | 1252 | ||
5. | Algu | Began to reign | 659 | = | 1261 | ||
6. | Mubárak Shah | Began to reign | 664 | = | 1266 | ||
7. | Barák Khan | Began to reign | 664 | = | 1266 | ||
8. | Nikpai | Began to reign | 668 | = | 1270 | ||
9. | Tuka Timur | Began to reign | 670 | = | 1272 | ||
10. | Davá Khan | Began to reign | c | 672 | = | c | 1274 |
11. | Kunjuk Khan | Began to reign | 706 | = | 1306 | ||
12. | Taliku | Began to reign | 708 | = | 1308 | ||
13. | Kabak Khan | Began to reign | 709 | = | 1309 | ||
14. | Isán Bugha | Began to reign | 709 | = | 1309 | ||
Kabak Khan (restored) | Began to reign | c | 718 | = | 1318 | ||
15. | Ilchikadi | Began to reign | 721 | = | 1321 | ||
16. | Davá Timur | Began to reign | 721 | = | 1321 | ||
17. | Tarmashirin | Began to reign | 722 | = | 1322 | ||
Sanjar? | Began to reign | 730-4? | = | 1330-4? | |||
18. | Jinkishai | Began to reign | 734 | = | 1334 | ||
19. | Buzun | Began to reign | c | 735 | = | c | 1335 |
20. | Isun Timur | Began to reign | c | 739 | = | c | 1339 |
Ali (of Oktai stock) | Began to reign | c | 741 | = | c | 1340 | |
21. | Muhammad | Began to reign | c | 743 | = | c | 1342 |
22. | Kazán | Began to reign | 744 | = | 1343 | ||
Danishmanja (of Oktai stock) | Began to reign | 747 | = | 1346 | |||
23. | Buyan Kuli | Began to reign | 749 | = | 1348 | ||
—760 | —1358 | ||||||
Anarchy and rival chiefs until the supremacy of Timur in 771 A.H. = 1370 A.D. |
>genealogy<
BÁBDÁGHÁN | ||||||||
Urtubu | ||||||||
An un-named Amir | ||||||||
Tulik | Bulaji | Kamar-ud-Din | Shams-ud-Din | Shaikh Daulat | ||||
Khudaidád | ||||||||
Muhammad Shah | Sayyid Ahmad | Others | ||||||
Sayyid Ali | ||||||||
Sániz Mirza | Muhamd. Haidar Mirza | |||||||
Muhamd. Husain | ||||||||
Omar Mirza | Abá Bakr | Sayyid Muhamd. | ||||||
Jahángir | Turángir | Bustángir | Sultán Muhamd. | Others | Muhamd. Haidar (The Author) | Abdulla Mirza | Muhamd. Shah |
>graphic<
NOTE.—The early part of this Table (down to Tughluk Timur) is compiled chiefly from that of Sir H. Howorth, as published in Mr. S. Lane Poole's Muhammadan Dynasties, facing p. 242. The latter part is from the Tarikh-i-Rashidi, as explained in Sect. II. of the Introduction.
The numbers (where not in parentheses) indicate the reigning Khans of the line of Mávara-un-Nahr, as shown in the list at p. 49, Sect. II. of the Introduction.
>graphic<
NOTE.—This Table is almost entirely from Prof. Blochmann's Ain-i-Akbari—but abridged.