“The Oirats-Ogeleds... crossed the Mankan River”: the ethnoreligious situation at the Oirats in the middle of XV - the beginning of XVI centuries

The article examines the problem, which so far had not been studied by the historical science - the fate of the Elet Oirats, who, according the Oirat and Kalmyk sources, suddenly had departured “to the west”. The author suggests, that the Elets’ exodus did take place in the past, the reasons probabl...

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Main Author: B U Kitinov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) 2017-12-01
Series:RUDN Journal of World History
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.rudn.ru/world-history/article/viewFile/18033/15536
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spelling doaj-55dd5abddfd0435fb3d5c871d66ea0fe2021-05-25T18:01:10ZengPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)RUDN Journal of World History2312-81272312-833X2017-12-019437038210.22363/2312-8127-2017-9-4-370-38216211“The Oirats-Ogeleds... crossed the Mankan River”: the ethnoreligious situation at the Oirats in the middle of XV - the beginning of XVI centuriesB U Kitinov0Peoples’ Friendship University of RussiaThe article examines the problem, which so far had not been studied by the historical science - the fate of the Elet Oirats, who, according the Oirat and Kalmyk sources, suddenly had departured “to the west”. The author suggests, that the Elets’ exodus did take place in the past, the reasons probably lied in the ethnic and religious history of this people. The Choros clan, which headed the Elets, was of Turkic origin, and had had the close relationship with the Muslim rulers of Moghulistan, and there was a certain role of Islam among some clan’s members. At the time of the descendants of the famous Oirat ruler Esen Taisha (who actively supported Buddhism), there had happened the religious disputes between Amasanjee (the youngest son of Esen, an adherent of Buddhism) and his sons - Ibrahim and Ilyas (Esen’s grandsons, Muslims). The author hypothesizes that, being the leaders of the Elets, the brothers took a significant part of this Oirat people to Moghulistan, where they, most likely, almost all were exterminated by Alachi-khan (Ahmad-khan). Those events led to the significant transformative processes both among the Oirats themselves and in the fate of the Choros - a new confederation was created by the Oirats, where Buddhism was perceived not only as a religion but also as an ideology of society, and the remaining descendants of Esen, who left among the Oirats, had formed the new peoples: Derbets and Jungars. The very name “Choros” almost completely disappeared from the chronicles.http://journals.rudn.ru/world-history/article/viewFile/18033/15536eletogeledchorosoirattibetan buddhismislam
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author B U Kitinov
spellingShingle B U Kitinov
“The Oirats-Ogeleds... crossed the Mankan River”: the ethnoreligious situation at the Oirats in the middle of XV - the beginning of XVI centuries
RUDN Journal of World History
elet
ogeled
choros
oirat
tibetan buddhism
islam
author_facet B U Kitinov
author_sort B U Kitinov
title “The Oirats-Ogeleds... crossed the Mankan River”: the ethnoreligious situation at the Oirats in the middle of XV - the beginning of XVI centuries
title_short “The Oirats-Ogeleds... crossed the Mankan River”: the ethnoreligious situation at the Oirats in the middle of XV - the beginning of XVI centuries
title_full “The Oirats-Ogeleds... crossed the Mankan River”: the ethnoreligious situation at the Oirats in the middle of XV - the beginning of XVI centuries
title_fullStr “The Oirats-Ogeleds... crossed the Mankan River”: the ethnoreligious situation at the Oirats in the middle of XV - the beginning of XVI centuries
title_full_unstemmed “The Oirats-Ogeleds... crossed the Mankan River”: the ethnoreligious situation at the Oirats in the middle of XV - the beginning of XVI centuries
title_sort “the oirats-ogeleds... crossed the mankan river”: the ethnoreligious situation at the oirats in the middle of xv - the beginning of xvi centuries
publisher Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)
series RUDN Journal of World History
issn 2312-8127
2312-833X
publishDate 2017-12-01
description The article examines the problem, which so far had not been studied by the historical science - the fate of the Elet Oirats, who, according the Oirat and Kalmyk sources, suddenly had departured “to the west”. The author suggests, that the Elets’ exodus did take place in the past, the reasons probably lied in the ethnic and religious history of this people. The Choros clan, which headed the Elets, was of Turkic origin, and had had the close relationship with the Muslim rulers of Moghulistan, and there was a certain role of Islam among some clan’s members. At the time of the descendants of the famous Oirat ruler Esen Taisha (who actively supported Buddhism), there had happened the religious disputes between Amasanjee (the youngest son of Esen, an adherent of Buddhism) and his sons - Ibrahim and Ilyas (Esen’s grandsons, Muslims). The author hypothesizes that, being the leaders of the Elets, the brothers took a significant part of this Oirat people to Moghulistan, where they, most likely, almost all were exterminated by Alachi-khan (Ahmad-khan). Those events led to the significant transformative processes both among the Oirats themselves and in the fate of the Choros - a new confederation was created by the Oirats, where Buddhism was perceived not only as a religion but also as an ideology of society, and the remaining descendants of Esen, who left among the Oirats, had formed the new peoples: Derbets and Jungars. The very name “Choros” almost completely disappeared from the chronicles.
topic elet
ogeled
choros
oirat
tibetan buddhism
islam
url http://journals.rudn.ru/world-history/article/viewFile/18033/15536
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