Mengu-Timur

{{Short description|Khan of the Golden Horde from 1266 to 1280}}

{{similar names|Mongke Temur (disambiguation)}}

{{Infobox royalty

| name = Möngke Temür
{{MongolUnicode|ᠮᠥᠩᠬᠡᠲᠡᠮᠦᠷ}}

| title = Khan

| image = Golden Horde. Möngke (Mengu) Timur. AH 665-679 AD 1267-1280 Bulghar mint. Dated AH 672 or 3 (AD 1273-1275).jpg

| caption = Coinage of Möngke (Mengu) Timur. Bulghar mint. Dated AH 672 or 3 (AD 1273-1275)

| succession = Khan of the Golden Horde
Western Half (Blue Horde)

| reign1 = 1266–1280

| predecessor1 = Berke

| successor1 = Tode Mongke

| coronation =

| full name =

| spouse = Oljai Khatun
Sultan Khatun
Qutuqui Khatun

| issue = Toqta
Toghrilcha
Alqui
Thocomerius

| royal house = Borjigin

| dynasty = Golden Horde

| father = Toqoqan Khan

| mother = Köchu Khatun

| birth_date =

| birth_place =

| death_date = 1280

| death_place = Sarai

| date of burial =

| place of burial =

| signature_type = Tamga

| signature = Tamga Mengu-Timur.svg

| religion = Shamanist

}}

Mengu-Timur ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|m|ɛ|ŋ|ɡ|uː|_|ˈ|t|ɪ|m|ər}} {{respell|MEN-goo TIM-ər}}) or Möngke Temür ({{langx|mn|ᠮᠥᠩᠬᠡᠲᠡᠮᠦᠷ, Мөнхтөмөр}}; died 1280) was a son of Toqoqan Khan{{cite book |authorlink=David Morgan (historian) |first=David |last=Morgan |title=The Mongols |page=224 }} (himself the son of Batu) and Köchu Khatun of Oirat,{{cite book |author=Rashid al-Din |title=Universal History |volume=II |page=102 }} the daughter of Toralchi Küregen and granddaughter of Qutuqa Beki. Mengu-Timur was a khan of the Golden Horde, a division of the Mongol Empire in 1266–1280.

His name literally means "Eternal Iron" in the Mongolian language.

Early reign and foreign policy

During his reign, the Mongols together with their subjects, several Turkic tribes and the Russian princes, undertook military campaigns against Byzantium (c. 1269–1271), Lithuania (1275), and the Alans in the Caucasus (1277). The very first yarlyk (a license or written commandant of Mongol and Chinggisid rulers) found by historians was written on behalf of Mengu-Timur and contained information on the release of the Russian Church from paying tribute to the Golden Horde, even though he was a shamanist. During the reign of Mengu-Timur, the Genoese traders purchased Caffa from the Mongols. But those Italian merchants paid taxes to the Mongol khans and sometimes to Nogai.{{cn|date=May 2025}}

Both the German crusaders and the Lithuanians threatened the safety of Russian lands. In 1268, he sent his forces to Novgorod to assist his Russian vassals to conquer Danish Estonia, but after the Battle of Wesenberg was forced to withdraw. In 1274 Smolensk, one of the last of the Russian principalities, became subject to Mengu-Timur khan of the Golden Horde. The Khan also dispatched his army along with several Russian princes to Lithuania by the request of the king Lev of Galicia-Volhynia in 1275.{{cn|date=May 2025}}

In 1277, he ended the long siege of the Alani city Dyadkov with the assistance of his Russian vassals and crushed the rebellion of the Volga Bulgars in Kazan. And he allowed German traders to travel freely through his domain.{{cn|date=May 2025}}

In 1280, he launched his campaign against Poland which ended in his defeat. He died soon after this unsuccessful campaign.{{cite book |title=New History of Yuan |volume=106 }}

Golden Horde and the Mongol Empire

Mengu-Timur was originally nominated by Kublai Khan.{{cite book |title=History of the Mongols from the 9th to the 19th Century: Part 2. The So-Called Tartars of Russia and Central Asia. Division 1 |first=Henry Hoyle |last=Howorth }}{{cite book |first=Otsahi |last=Matsuwo |title=Khubilai kan }}{{full citation needed|date=March 2020}} But he sided with Kaidu who was a rival of the latter. Kublai only stopped him from invading the Ilkhanate with a large force.{{cite book |first=J. J. |last=Saunders |title=The history of Mongol conquests }} The Golden Horde helped Kaidu to put down the force of the Chagatai Khanate. In 1265, Kaidu was defeated by the Chagatai army under Ghiyas-ud-din Baraq. That is why, the Khan of the Jochid Ulus sent 30,000 armed-men headed by his uncle Berkecher to support Kaidu's force. Their victory over the Chagatai army forced Ghiyas-ud-din Baraq to initiate a peace treaty with them. Together they formed an alliance and demarcated the borders of their realms in Talas. Rashid al-Din claims that the meeting took place in the spring of 1269 in Talas, while Wassaf writes that it took place around 1267 to the south of Samarkand. Though He and Kaidu admonished Baraq for invading the Ilkhanate, Mengu-Timur congratulated Ilkhan Abagha upon his stunning victory over the Chagatai army in order to hide his true intention. The two had been probably fighting with each other until the 1270s. But some scholars disaffirm that such battles occurred.{{cite book |first=Reuven |last=Amitai Press |title=Mamluk Ilkhanid war }} By the 1270s, they had signed a peace treaty. In addition to the peace treaty, Abagha allowed Mongke Temur to collect tax income from some of the workshops in his khanate.{{cn|date=May 2025}}

Baybars continued to conduct warm correspondence with the Golden Horde, particularly with Mengu Timur's general Nogai, who unlike Mengu Timur was very cooperative with Baybars. It is theorized that this intimacy was not only due to the religious connection (as Nogai was a Muslim, unlike his Khan), but also because Nogai was not really fond of Mengu-Timur.{{cn|date=May 2025}}

Following the precedent in the Mongol Empire since the reign of Genghis Khan, Mengu-Timur granted tax-exempt status to the Orthodox Christian Church in late 1260s and did not count priests and their lands during the census in 1275.Enerelt Enkhbold, "[https://caj.harrassowitz-library.com/article/CAJ/2024/1-2/13 Religious Services and Rational Choices: Two Cases of Limited Tax Exemption in the Mongol Empire]," Central Asiatic Journal 67, no. 1-2 (2024): 195-219, https://doi.org/10.13173/CAJ.67.1-2.195.

During that time, Kublai dispatched his favorite son, Nomu Khan, against Kaidu to Almaliq. Nomu Khan sent letters to Chingisid nobles to reassert their support. Mongke Temur responded that he would protect Kublai from Kaidu if he assaulted the Yuan. In 1276, Chingisid princes Shiregi and Tokhtemur defected to Kaidu's side and arrested Kublai's son. Then they sent Nomughan and his brother Kökechü to Mengu-Timur and his general to Kaidu. The court of the Golden Horde released Nomughan in 1278Rene Grousset or 10 years later.{{cite book |author=Rashi al-Din |title=Encyclopedia of Mongolia and Mongol Empire }} It seems that Mengu-Timur held him as a pawn in the wars of the Mongol world. He died of a neck injury in 1280.{{cn|date=May 2025}}

Family

{{See also|Family tree of Genghis Khan}}Mengu-Timur married several times:

  1. Öljei Khatun — daughter of Saljidai Küregen of Khongirad and Kelmish Aqa (daughter of Qutuqtu)
  2. * Alqui
  3. * Toqta
  4. Sultan Khatun (from Hüshin tribe)
  5. * Abachi
  6. * Tödeken
  7. Qutuqui Khatun (unknown tribe)
  8. * Börlük

With unknown wives and concubines:

  • Tudan
  • Cholkhan
  • Sarai Buqa
  • Moloqai
  • Ulus Buqa
  • Qadan
  • Qoduqai
  • Künges
  • Toghrilcha
  • Öz Beg khan
  • Jani beg khan/jani Muhammad khan the sin of Oz beg khan(sultan Gayas ud Din)
  • Bardi beg khan,tani beg ( Jani beg)
  • Din Muhammad ,valu muhammah khan,Baki muhammah khan,was the son of jani beg /jani Muhammad khan
  • Iamon Quli khan the son of Din Muhammad.

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

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{{succession box|title=Khan of Blue Horde and Golden Horde|after=Tuda-Mengu|before=Berke|years=1266–1280}}

{{S-end}}

{{Mongol Empire}}

{{Authority control}}

Category:1280 deaths

Category:Khans of the Golden Horde

Category:13th-century monarchs in Europe

Category:Year of birth unknown