The formation of “Mongol Turks” and their identity The
Mongol Empire, created by
Genghis Khan and his successors in the 13th century, had a profound influence on the
Turkic peoples. Before the conquest of the settled societies of outer
Eurasia including
China,
Kievan Rus’,
Iran, and
the Middle East. The Mongol Empire unified all the
Eurasian steppes by successively incorporating the nomadic groups of Inner Eurasia into its structure. Initially, the Mongols proper-tribes related to Genghis Khan such as the
Barlas,
Qongirat,
Manghud,
Dughlat, and Ushin (the Nirun Mongols) united with Mongolic-speaking peoples (Kereits,
Jalairs,
Oirats,
Tatars), as well as with Turkic-speaking groups (
Naimans,
Onguts, and the
Uyghurs), who inhabited the
Mongolian Plateau and adjacent regions. This multilingual union formed a new Mongol ulus, established at the kurultai of 1206 following Genghis Khan’s unification of the steppe. Although in modern literature it is referred to as the “Mongol Empire,” in its nature the state of Genghis Khan was a “Turko-Mongol” or “Inner Eurasian” empire. In
The Secret History of the Mongols, a 13th-century monument of Mongolian historiography, the new Mongol ulus is called the “people of the felt tents.” In the work
Jami' al-tawarikh by
Rashid al-Din universal history compiled under the Ilkhanids of Iran—this population is classified as consisting of two new and one original Mongol components. The emerging Mongol ulus subsequently incorporated other peoples as well Turkic (
Kangly,
Kipchaks) and Mongolic (
Kara-Khitai) groups living in the
Kipchak steppe and by the mid-13th century it split into four major Chinggisid uluses:
Yuan dynasty of the Mongols,
Ilkhanate,
Ulus of Jochi (Golden Horde), and
Ulus of Chagatai. Thus, the Mongol (Chinggisid) uluses of the 13th century arose from the fusion of the Mongols proper with various Mongolic and Turkic-speaking groups of the steppes of Mongolia and the Desht-i Kipchak. After the death of the fourth khan
Möngke in 1259, the Mongol Empire effectively split into four separate states, which existed until the mid-14th century. Two sedentary Chinggisid states the
Yuan Empire and
Ilkhanate ceased to exist in the second half of the 14th century. The Mongols of China returned to the Mongolian steppes in 1368 following the overthrow of the Yuan dynasty by the
Ming Empire in the 1360s, while the Ilkhanid Mongols were assimilated by the Turkmen tribes of Iran and Anatolia, and later by the
Timurid Empire in the late 14th to early 15th centuries. At the same time, the
Golden Horde and the
Chagatai Khanate, as well as their successor states, continued to rule vast territories of the Kipchak Steppe and Central Asia, preserving a Mongol identity for approximately four more centuries until their conquest by the Russian Empire.
Golden Horde and Chagatai Khanate From the mid-14th century, the population of the
Golden Horde and the
Chagatai Ulus began to adopt Islam and use
Turkic languages (of the
Kipchak or
Karluk groups) as a
lingua franca. By the 15th century, these Muslim Turkic-speaking communities gradually developed into distinct ethnopolitical identities —
Chaghatays,
Moghuls,
Uzbeks,
Kazakhs, and
Tatars. In academic literature, these peoples are often referred to as “Turks” or “Turkicized Mongols,” although in many respects they remained close to the Mongols of the 13th century. Like other Chinggisid uluses of the 13th century, they were ruled by leaders descended from
Genghis Khan or from the Mongol tribal aristocracy. The
Uzbeks,
Kazakhs, and
Tatars were led by descendants of
Jochi, the eldest son of Genghis Khan; the
Moghuls were ruled by descendants of
Chagatai, his second son; while the Chaghatays of the
Timurid states and the
Mughals of India were governed by descendants of
Timur, a representative of the Mongol Barlas tribe. Their tribal composition was also similar: it included tribes of Mongol origin (Barlas, Barin, Dughlat, Manghit, Qongirat, Ushin, and others), tribes of non-Mongol but Mongolic- or Turkic-speaking origin (Jalair, Kereit, Tatar, Naiman, Ongut, Uyghur, and others), groups of Kipchak origin (Kipchaks, Kangly), as well as new tribal formations that emerged within the Mongol (Chinggisid) states (Shirin and Ming). The Chaghatays, Moghuls, Shaybanid Uzbeks, Kazakhs, and Tatars identified themselves as belonging to or descending from the Mongol ulus. None of these peoples traced their origins to pre-Mongol Turkic states or peoples such as the
Qarakhanids,
Kipchaks, or
Seljuks (Turkmens). Contemporaries (including the Ottomans and the Russians) also regarded them as descendants of the Mongols. In particular, the 16th-century Ottoman historian Seyfi Çelebi, in his work on the history of the peoples of Inner Eurasia, divided the descendants of Genghis Khan of his time into the following groups: the Tatars of Crimea, the Uzbeks of Bukhara, the Kazakhs of the steppe, the Moghuls of Kashgaria, and the Qalmaqs (the Northern Yuan Mongols) beyond Kashgar. ==Antecedents==