Taibugids

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The Taibugids were probably a native clan in the Sibir Khanate . Century.

history

A legendary Khan On founded the Sibir Khanate . The submission of the Khanty and Mansi is attributed to him and was slain by a certain Bek Genghi.

His son Tajbugha became the namesake of the clan, which fought with the Scheibanids for rule in the khanate for a long time .

After the Taibugids under Mamuk (also Mahmet ) had defeated the Scheibanids under Ibaq around 1495, they moved the capital of the Khanate from Chingi -Tura to Kaschlyk (also Isker or Sibir). Mamuk also interfered in 1496 in the throne dispute in the Kazan Khanate .

The Taibugide Yadigar (also Ediger ) paid tribute to the tsarist empire from around 1557 . In 1563 he was defeated by Scheibanide Kütschüm Khan after a conflict lasting several years.

In the final phase of the conquest of the Siberian Khanate by the Russians from 1581, Said Akhmat, Kütschüm's Taibugid opponent, returned to the Khanate in 1583 and again gathered a number of supporters around him.

Representative

  • On (legendary)
  • Tajbugha, son of On
  • Hoja (son of Tajbugha)
  • Mar (son of Hojas, killed by the Scheibandid Ibaq)
    • Obder (son of Mar)
  • Mamuk and Yabolak (sons of Obder) around 1500
  • Qasim and Aguis (sons of Yabolak)
  • Yadigar and Bekbulat (sons of Qasim?) Approx. 1530–1563
    • Seidaq (or Said Akhmat, son of Bekbulat), heir to the throne around 1584/8

Individual evidence

  1. Howorth, History of the Mongols , p. 1062 describes him as a legend, which cannot be dismissed out of hand due to the similarity of the name with the Keraitenfürsten Toghril or Ong-Khan († 1203) ( defeated by Genghis Khan) . Sarkisyanz, Die orientalischen Völker Russlands , p. 286, also considers it legendary, but dates it to around 1450.