哈萨克汗国

Joo-Yup Lee
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引用次数: 0

摘要

哈萨克汗国是成吉思汗的一个游牧国家,统治着奇普恰克草原东部(Dasht-i Qipchāq),这是一个草原地带,大致相当于今天的哈萨克斯坦,在后蒙古时期是蒙古帝国最重要的继承国之一,也是成吉思汗的最后一个统治王朝。哈萨克汗国从约齐的乌卢斯分离出来,其民族(乌卢斯)在15世纪的中亚被称为乌兹别克人。哈萨克汗国是由Jānībeg可汗和Girāy可汗领导的乌兹别克人建立的,这两位约奇德王子在15世纪50年代的某个时候脱离了约奇德东部奇普恰克草原的统治者阿布·艾尔·可汗。16世纪,与克里米亚汗国、北元、什叶派乌兹别克汗国等其他成吉思汗国一样,哈萨克汗国在前蒙古帝国的领土上成为地区性帝国,也变成了游牧帝国。在Qāsim可汗(约1512-1521年)和他的继任者Ḥaqq Naẓar可汗(约1538-1581年)和Tawakkul可汗(约1582-1598年)统治期间,哈萨克汗国向西扩展到Yayïq(乌拉尔)河,向东扩展到天山。在18世纪之交,由于准噶尔的猛攻,哈萨克汗国进入了一个急剧衰落的时期。结果,哈萨克的可汗和苏丹成了俄罗斯帝国和满清名义上的附庸。19世纪初,哈萨克汗国被俄罗斯帝国吞并,结束了长达6个世纪的成吉思汗统治。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Kazakh Khanate
The Kazakh Khanate was a Chinggisid nomadic state that ruled the eastern Qipchaq Steppe (Dasht-i Qipchāq), a steppe zone that roughly corresponds to modern-day Kazakhstan, during the post-Mongol period as one of the most important successor states of the Mongol Empire and the last reigning dynasty of the Chinggisids. The Kazakh Khanate branched off from the Ulus of Jochi, whose people (ulus) were called Uzbeks in 15th-century Central Asia. The Kazakh Khanate was founded by the Uzbeks led by Jānībeg Khan and Girāy Khan, two Jochid princes who sometime in the 1450s had broken away from Abū al-Khair Khan, the Jochid ruler of the eastern Qipchaq Steppe. In the 16th century, like other Chinggisid states such as the Crimean Khanate, the Northern Yuan, and the Shibanid Uzbek Khanate that emerged as regional empires in the territories of the former Mongol Empire, the Kazakh Khanate was transformed into a nomadic empire. During the reigns of Qāsim Khan (r. c. 1512–1521) and his successors Ḥaqq Naẓar Khan (r. c. 1538–1581) and Tawakkul Khan (r. c. 1582–1598), the Kazakh Khanate expanded westward to reach the Yayïq (Ural) River and eastward the Tienshan Mountains. The Kazakh Khanate entered a period of sharp decline at the turn of the 18th century due to the Zunghar Oirat onslaught. As a result, the Kazakh khans and sultans became nominal vassals of the Russian Empire and the Manchu Qing Dynasty. The Kazakh Khanate was annexed by the Russian Empire in the early 19th century, which brought to an end the six-centuries-long reign of the Chinggisids.
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