Inel Qaghan Explained

Inäl Qaγan
拓西可汗
Reign:716-717
Succession:Qaghan of the Second Turkic Khaganate
Successor:Bilgä Qaγan
Royal House:Ashina
Father:Qapaghan Qaghan
Death Date:716
Predecessor:Qapaghan Qaghan
Birth Name:Ashina Fuju
阿史那匐俱
Regent:Tonyukuk

Inäl Qaγan (:|Inel Qaγan, Chinese: |c=|s=|t=拓西可汗|p=Tuoxīkèhán) was the third khagan of Second Turkic Khaganate.

During Qapγan's reign

He actively participated in his father's campaigns. He became lesser khagan and received from his father 40,000 troops of the western wing, so the Chinese called him Tuoxi Kehan (拓西可汗, literally the expander of the west) in 699.

He took part in battles involving Muslim conquest of Transoxiana between 711 and 712.[1] He was also present in Siege of Beiting, where his brother Toŋa Tegin was killed in 714.

Reign

He was killed by Kul Tigin during struggle for the throne. Some writers[2] say that the law of succession was that power passed from a ruler to his younger brothers before returning to his sons. Thus the order was Ilterish Qaghan, his brother Qapaghan Qaghan, then his sons Bilge Qaghan and Kul Tegin. Inäl, being Qapγan's son, had no right on the throne. Other writers treat the matter as a coup d'état with no mention of the rules of succession. Inel and his supporters was killed by Kul Tigin.[3]

In popular culture

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ahmet., Taşağil. Gök-Türkler. 1995–2004. Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi. Atatürk Kültür, Dil, ve Tarih Yüksek Kurumu (Turkey). 975161113X. Ankara. 33892575.
  2. S.G. Klashtorny in History of Civilizations in Central Asia, vol III, page 339
  3. Liu 2006, p. 330-331