Background The Khanate of Kokand was ruled by the Shahrukhid dynasty, who belonged to the Ming tribe of
Uzbeks. During this period, the term "
Uzbek" did not have the same meaning as today. It specifically referred to the descendants of the several hundred thousand
Turkic people led by
Muhammad Shaybani at the start of the 16th century, who moved from the
Qipchaq steppe to
Central Asia. During the early 18th-century, the authority of the
Khanate of Bukhara over the
Fergana Valley was weakening. Meanwhile, the authority of the
Sufi Khojas was increasing, and invasions were carried out by nomadic
Kyrgyz,
Kazakhs, and
Oirats (including their
Kalmyk subgroup). Throughout the 18th century, the rulers of the Kokand Khanate used the title of
biy, a local version of the Turkic title
beg.
Early period (1709–1799) In 1709, the leader of the Ming tribe,
Shahrukh Biy (), established the Koktonliq Ata fortress near
Kokand, becoming its ruler and thus starting the Khanate of Kokand. In the 1720s and 1730s, the Fergana Valley was largely unaffected by the violent nomadic invasions of the Samarkand and
Bukhara oases, and many refugees from the destroyed adjacent regions moved to Kokand. Shahrukh Biy's eldest son and successor
Abd al-Rahim Biy briefly occupied
Khujand,
Urateppe, and the remnants of
Samarkand during this period of instability. He also made an alliance with the Uzbek Keneges tribe, who ruled
Shahrisabz. He did this by marrying Oychuchuk Oyim, the daughter of Ibrahim Biy Keneges. The Khanate of Kokand was still in its formative stages during this period, and local political powers in the valley frequently caused it to become unstable even though it had gained some success in warfare. Samarkand was lost after six months, although Kokand was able to retain Khojand for the most part. For the following 140 years, Urateppe would be the focal point of almost constant fighting between Kokand and the
Emirate of Bukhara. In 1734, Abd al-Rahim was murdered in Khojand, after a period of suffering from severe mental disorder and refusing to step down from power. He was succeeded by his brother Abd al-Karim Biy (), who married his widow Oychuchuk Oyim, even while she was carrying Abd al-Rahim's daughter. In 1740, Abd al-Karim Biy had the Kokand fortress constructed at the ruins of the old fortress Eski Orda. The place became the new capital, and swiftly expanded into a sizable city. During this period, the population of the Fergana Valley grew, and urbanization increased significantly. There were four different groups of people who came to Kokand; the Samarkandi,
Kashgari, Chankati, and Kuhistani. Although the Iranian ruler
Nader Shah () made military expeditions across the
Amu Darya during this period (in 1737 and 1740), Kokand was not directly attacked. Nevertheless, the occupation of surrounding regions by Iranian forces affected Kokand's future. In 1745, the
Dzungar Khanate invaded the Fergana Valley, laying siege to Kokand. The Yuz Uzbeks of Urateppe, probably wanting to prevent the Dzungars from attacking them, helped Kokand end the siege against the Jungars. Abd al-Karim Biy was eventually forced to make peace with the Dzungars, persuading them to leave the Fergana Valley by giving them many riches and handing over his eldest son, Baba Biy, as a hostage. After Abd al-Karim Biy's death in 1751, his other son
Irdana Biy () succeeded him. He was ousted from power in 1752, when the Jungars forced Baba Biy on the Kokand throne. The Kokandis, considering him a Jungar puppet, executed him in the town of
Besh Ariq the following year and reinstated Irdana Biy. Among his various accomplishments, Irdana Biy stands out for entering into relations with the
Qing emperor
Qianlong () after the latter had extended his authority westward into
Altishahr, thus becoming the new neighbor of Kokand. A Qing colonial presence in the Fergana Valley appears to have been suggested by Qing records when referring to its official relationship with Kokand. However, more recent evaluations have shown that their relationship was highly unclear. Irdana Biy's reign was generally successful. Despite losing severely to the Yuz Uzbeks, he also conquered several
vilayats and temporarily took control of
Tashkent in 1765 before Ablay Khan retook it. By the time he died from ilness in 1769, he had five daughters but no son to succeed him, and he was thus succeeded by his cousin Sulayman Biy, a grandson of Shahrukh Biy. However, he was considered suited to rule, which lead to his murder three months after. He was succeeded by Abd al-Karim Biy's grandson
Narbuta Biy (), whose succession was supported by the Uzbek nobility.
Expansion (1799–1842) Soon after the death of Narbuta Biy, his son
Alim () assumed power. While his brother had been Narbuta's chosen successor, Alim's mother being Ming helped him gain more support. From the start of his reign, Alim faced significant resistance to his rule. He married his sister to an influential figure in the country and appointed to
hakim of
Isfara, replacing an unsupportive emir who held the post. When the emir refused to leave, Alim led a military campaign against him. Soon after, he began to execute close family members, the emirs and khojas who supported them, former administrators, and religious leaders, with others fleeing the country. Partially in response to the purges, the hakim of
Chust, Buzurg Khoja, launched a revolt against Alim. While the revolt was initially put down, Buzurg Khoja fled to
Tashkent and allied with its hakim, Yunus Khoja, who dispatched a large army to Kokand. By allying with the Tajik military commander Rajab, Alim destroyed Tashkent's army, ending the revolt. After the battle, Alim presented a new
daftar to administrators, symbolically ending the purges. While the purges had ended, Alim remained a harsh ruler, mandating an exam before one could become a
sufi, and banning several non-Islamic traditional religious practices. Early into his reign, Alim expanded irrigation in the Fergana Valley by
dredging the
Yangi Ariq ("New Canal") and establishing new branches, which expanded and improved coverage to tens of thousands of
hectares. Alim also began to mint
silver coinage, centralizing the economy. While the domestic economy improved, Alim's aggressive attitude towards the Qing Empire caused official trade to suffer. Andijani merchants still predominated in Xinxiang, but it took until an official apology in 1809 before the Qing reestablished relations and allowed envoys to travel to the capital. Alim also launched reforms to modernize the army, imposing new taxes to do so. In addition to the old army of
irregular troops, Alim established a new personally loyal
standing army, significantly composed of undervalued
Pamiri soldiers. Alim was both ruthless and efficient. He created an army of Ghalcha highlanders, and conquered the western half of the Fergana Valley, including
Khujand and
Tashkent. He was assassinated by his brother
Umar in 1811. Umar's son,
Mohammed Ali (Madali Khan), ascended to the throne in 1822 at the age of 12. During his reign, the Khanate of Kokand reached its greatest territorial extent. 's rule The Kokand Khanate also housed the
Khojas of Kashgar like
Jahangir Khoja. In 1841, the British officer Captain
Arthur Conolly failed to persuade the various khanates to put aside their differences, in an attempt to counter the growing penetration of the
Russian Empire into the area. In November 1841, Captain Conolly left Kokand for
Bukhara in an ill-fated attempt to rescue fellow officer Colonel
Charles Stoddart, and both were executed on 24 June 1842 by the order of Emir
Nasrullah Khan of Bukhara.
Decline and downfall (1842–1876) , the last Shahrukhid ruler of the Kokand Khanate. Photograph taken between 1865–1872 Following this,
Madali Khan, who had received Conolly in Kokand, and who had also sought an alliance with Russia, lost the trust of Nasrullah. The Emir, encouraged by the conspiratorial efforts of several influential figures in Kokand (including the commander in chief of its army), invaded the Khanate in 1842. Shortly thereafter he executed Madali Khan, his brother, and Omar Khan's widow, the famed poet
Nodira. Madali Khan's cousin,
Shir Ali, was installed as the Khan of Kokand in June 1842. Over the next two decades, the khanate was weakened by a bitter civil war, which was further exacerbated by Bukharan and Russian incursions. During this period, the Kyrgyz tribes also broke away, forming the
Kara-Kyrgyz Khanate under the leadership of
Ormon Khan. Shir Ali's son, Khudayar Khan, ruled from 1844 to 1858, from 1862 to 1863, and from 1865 to 1875. In the meantime, Russia was continuing its advance; on 29 June 1865 Tashkent was taken by the Russian troops of General
Chernyayev; the loss of Khujand followed in 1867. Shortly before the fall of Tashkent, Kokand’s best-known son,
Yakub Beg, former lord of Tashkent, was sent by the then Khan of Kokand,
Alimqul, to
Kashgar, where the
Hui Muslims were in
revolt against the Chinese. When Alimqul was killed in 1865 during the battle with Russia for Tashkent, many Kokandian soldiers fled to join Yaqub Beg, helping him establish his dominion (known as
Yettishar) throughout the
Tarim Basin, which lasted until 1877, when
Qing reconquered the region. The now powerless
Khudayar Khan spent his energies improving his lavish palace. Western visitors were impressed by the city of 80,000 people, which contained some 600
mosques and 15
madrasahs. Insurrections against Russian rule and Khudayar’s oppressive taxes forced him into exile in 1875. He was succeeded by his son,
Nasruddin Khan, whose anti-Russian stance provoked the annexation of Kokand by generals
Konstantin von Kaufman and
Mikhail Skobelev. The Khanate of Kokand was declared abolished, and incorporated into the
Fergana Oblast of
Russian Turkestan. == Society and culture ==