Yarkent Khanate Explained

Native Name:یارکند سعیدیه خانلیغی
يەركەن سەئىدىيە خانلىقى
葉爾羌汗國
Conventional Long Name:Yarkent Khanate
Common Name:Yarkent Khanate
Status:Empire
Government Type:Monarchy
Capital:Yarkent
Religion:Sunni Islam
Common Languages:Chagatai language
Leader1:Sultan Said Khan
Year Leader1:1514–1533 (first)
Leader2:Sultan Muhammad Mumin Khan
Year Leader2:1695–1705 (last)
Title Leader:Khan
Year Start:1514
Year End:1705
P1:Moghulistan
S1:Dzungar Khanate
Image Map Size:300px
Image Map2:Yarkent Khanate.jpg
Image Map2 Size:300
Today:China
Kyrgyzstan

The Yarkent Khanate, also known as the Yarkand Khanate[1] and the Kashghar Khanate, was a Sunni Muslim Turkic state ruled by the Mongol descendants of Chagatai Khan. It was founded by Sultan Said Khan in 1514 as a western offshoot of Moghulistan, itself an eastern offshoot of the Chagatai Khanate. It was eventually conquered by the Dzungar Khanate in 1705.

Capital

Yarkent served as the capital of the Yarkent Khanate, which was also known as the Yarkent State (Mamlakati Yarkand), from the establishment of the Khanate (1514 AD) to its fall (1705 AD). The previous Dughlat state of Mirza Abu Bakr Dughlat (1465–1514) of Kashgaria also used Yarkent as the capital of state.

History

Background

The Khanate was predominantly Uyghur/Turki; some of its most populated cities were Hotan, Yarkent, Kashgar, Yangihissar, Aksu, Uchturpan, Kucha, Karashar, Turpan and Kumul. It enjoyed continued dominance in the region for about 200 years until it was conquered by the Dzungar Khan, Tsewang Rabtan in 1705.

In the first half of the 14th century the Chagatai Khanate had collapsed; on the western part of the collapsed Chagatai Khanate, the Empire of Timur emerged in 1370, and became the dominant power in the region until its conquest in 1508 by the Shaybanids. Its eastern part became Moghulistan, which was created by Tughluk Timur Khan in 1347 with the capital centered in Almalik, around the Ili River Valley. It comprised all the settled lands of Eastern Kashgaria, as well as regions of Turpan and Kumul which were known at the time as Uyghurstan, according to Balkh and Indian sources of the 16th and 17th centuries. The reigning dynasty of the Yarkent Khanate originated from this state, which existed for more than a century.

In 1509 the Dughlats, vassal rulers of the Tarim basin, rebelled against the Moghulistan and broke away. Five years later Sultan Said Khan, a brother of the Khan of Eastern Moghulistan or Turpan Khanate, conquered the Dughlats but established his own Yarkent khanate instead.

This put an end to the dominance in the cities of Kashgaria of the Dughlat emirs, who had controlled them since 1220, when most of Kashgaria had been granted to the Dughlat by Chagatai Khan himself. The conquest of the Dughlats allowed the Yarkent state to become the foremost power in the region.

Reign of Sultan Said Khan

The reign of Sultan Said Khan was heavily influenced by the khojas.[2] Said Khan also had a close relationship with Babur, his cousin and founder of the Mughal Empire across the Himalayas and Karakoram Range from the Yarkent Khanate.[3]

Said Khan's reign included a campaign in Bolor in 1527–1528,[4] [5] a raid into Badakhshan in 1529, and looting expeditions into Ladakh and Kashmir in 1532.[6] Sultan Said Khan purportedly died in 1533 at Daulat Beg Oldi of a high-altitude pulmonary edema while returning to Yarkent from an expedition into Ladakh and Kashmir.[6] [7] [8] [9]

Later Khans

Sultan Said Khan was succeeded by Abdurashid Khan (1533–1565), who began his reign by executing a member of the Dughlat family. Abdurrashid Khan also fought for control of (western) Moghulistan against the Kirghiz and the Kazakhs, but (western) Moghulistan was ultimately lost; thereafter the Moghuls were largely restricted to possession of the Tarim Basin.[10]

Meanwhile, the Yarkent Khanate was conquered by the Buddhist Dzungar Khanate in the Dzungar conquest of Altishahr from 1678 to 1705.

List of rulers

Culture

The collection of Uyghur Twelve Muqam

See main article: Muqam.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. News: Battered but Resilient After China's Crackdown . . Chris . Buckley . Steven Lee . Myers . 18 January 2020 . 13 August 2020.
  2. Grousset, p. 500
  3. Bano . Majida . 2002 . Mughal relations with the Kashghar Khanate . Proceedings of the Indian History Congress . 63 . 1116–1119 . 44158181 .
  4. Book: Holdich, Sir Thomas Hungerford . Tibet: The Mysterious . Thomas Holdich . 1906 . 61 . Frederick A. Stokes.
  5. Book: Gates of Peristan: History, Religion and Society in the Hindu Kush . Alberto M. . Cacopardo . Augusto S. . Cacopardo . 2001 . . 9788863231496 . 47 . Mirza Haidar who led in 934/1527-28 an Islamic incursion into "Balur", describing it as "an infidel country (Kafiristan)" inhabited by "mountaineers" without any "religion or a creed" (Mirza Haidar 1895: 384), located "between Badakhshan and Kashmir" (ibid.: 136)..
  6. Book: Baumer, Christoph . History of Central Asia, The: 4-volume set . 2018 . Bloomsbury Publishing . 978-1838608675 .
  7. Book: Albert von Le Coq. Buried Treasures of Chinese Turkestan: An Account of the Activities and Adventures of the Second and Third German Turfan Expeditions. 14 December 2018. Taylor & Francis. 978-0-429-87141-2. 292. Daulat Bak Oldi (the royal prince died here), close to the Karakorum pass, is so called because the Sultan Said Khan of Kashgar, on his return from a successful campaign against West Tibet, died here from mountain sickness (Plate 50).
  8. "When his Khan decided to return home because of ill health, leaving Mirza Haidar to destroy "the idol temple of Ursang (i.e. Lhasa)", he "set out from Maryul in Tibet, for Yarkand". He "crossed the pass of Sakri", which must be that above Sakti (not the Kardung pass as Elias and Ross suggest), descended to Nubra and died at a camping place named Daulat Beg Uldi which is two-and-a-half hours below the Karakoram Pass."

  9. Book: Bhattacharji , Romesh . Ladakh – Changing, yet Unchanged. 7 June 2012. Rupa Publications Pvt Ltd. 978-8129117618. Some 400 years earlier, in ad 1527, a Yarkandi invader, Sultan Saiad Khan Ghazi (also known as Daulat Beg) of Yarkand, briefly conquered Kashmir after fighting a battle along this pass. He died in 1531 at Daulat Beg Oldi (meaning, where Daulat Beg died) at the foot of the Karakoram pass, after he was returning from an unsuccessful attempt to invade Tibet. .
  10. Grousset, pp. 499–500