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March 8, 2014 |
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The Kara-Khitan Khanate (1124 or 1125-1218) was established by Yel? Dashi (耶律大石) who led around 100,000 Khitan remnants after escaping Jurchen conquest of their native country, the Khitan dynasty. This regime survived until the arrival of Genghis Khan's Mongolian cavalries and was referred to in China|Chinese sources as Kara-Kitai, Kara-Khitai, Kara-Khitay, Kara-Khitan, Western Liao, Xi Liao or similar variants. The Kitai or Khitai suffixes were quoted from Russia|Russian sources. Its capital, Balasagun (in today's Kyrgyzstan) flourished to a cultural and economic centre. The Islamized Qarluk princely clan, the Balasaghunlu Ashinalar (the Karakhanids) gravitated toward the Persian Islamic cultural zone after their political autonomy and suzereignty over Central Asia was secured during the 9-10th century. As they became increasingly Persianized (to the point of adopting "Afrasiab", a Shahnameh mythical figure as the ancestor of their lineage), they settled in the more Indo-Iranian sedentary centers such as Qashgari, and became detached from the nomadic traditions of fellow Qarluqs, many of whom retained the Nestorian-Mahayana-Manichaean religious mixture of the former Uyghur Khanate. When the Khitays came, along with Nestorian Naiman recruits, they solicited support among Qarluks from Semirechye to the Irtysh region. Though largely Mahayana and Confucian in organizing principles, the nucleus of Khitay elites were wise to adopt elements of Nestorian identity, as reflected in the Christian names of the Kara-Khitay Gur-Khans. The Khitay conquest of Central Asia, can thus be seen as internecine struggle within the Qarluk nomadic tribe, only played out as dynastic conflict between the conquering Khitay elites and the defending Kara-Khanid princes, resulting in the subjugation of the latter by the former, and in the subjugation of the Muslim Qarluks by their Nestorian kins and the Nestorian Naimans. <table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"> <caption>Sovereigns of Kara-Khitan Khanate 1124 or 1125-1221</caption> <tr> <th style="background:#efefef;">Temple Names ( Miao Hao 廟號 mi?oh?o)</th> <th style="background:#efefef;">Posthumous Names ( Shi Hao 諡號 sh?h?o)</th> <th style="background:#efefef;">Born Names</th> <th style="background:#efefef;">Convention</th> <th style="background:#efefef;">Period of Reigns</th> <th style="background:#efefef;">Era Names (Nian Hao 年號 ni?nh?o) and their according range of years</th> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="6" align="center">Convention: check each sovereign</td> </tr> <tr> <td>Dezong (德宗 D?zōng)</td> <td>Tianyouwuliedi (天祐武烈帝 Tiāny?uwǔli?d?)</td> <td>Yel? Dashi (耶律大石 Yēlǜ D?sh? or 耶律達實 Yēlǜ D?sh?) <sup>1</sup></td> <td>use born name</td> <td>1124-1144</td> <td>Yanqing (延慶 Y?nq?ng) 1124 or 1125-1134<br> Kangguo (康國 Kānggu?) 1134-1144<br> </td> </tr> <tr> <td>Did not exist</td> <td>Empress Gantianhou of Western Liao|Gantianhou (感天后 Gǎntiānh?u)</td> <td>Tabuyan|塔不煙 Tǎb?yān</td> <td>"Xi Liao" + posthumous name</td> <td>1144-1150</td> <td>Xianqing (咸清 Xi?nqīng) 1144-1150<br> </td> </tr> <tr> <td>Emperor Renzong of Western Liao (仁宗 R?nzōng)</td> <td>Too tedious thus not used when referring to this sovereign</td> <td>Yel? Yilie|耶律夷列 Yēlǜ Y?li? </td> <td>"Xi Liao" + temple name</td> <td>1150-1164</td> <td>Shaoxing (紹興 Sh?oxīng) 1150-1164<br> </td> </tr> <tr> <td>Did not exist</td> <td>Empress Chengtianhou of Western Liao|Chengtianhou (承天后 Ch?ngtiānh?u)</td> <td>Yel? Pusuwan|耶律普速完 Yēlǜ Pǔs?w?n</td> <td>"Xi Liao" + posthumous name</td> <td>1164-1178</td> <td>Chongfu (崇福 Ch?ngf?) 1164-1178<br> </td> </tr> <tr> <td>Did not exist</td> <td>Mozhu (末主 M?zhǔ) or Modi (末帝 M?d?)</td> <td> Yel? Zhilugu|耶律直魯古 Yēlǜ Zh?lǔgǔ </td> <td>use born name</td> <td>1178-1211</td> <td>Tianxi (天禧 Tiānxǐ) 1178-1211<br> </td> </tr> <tr> <td>Did not exist</td> <td>Did not exist</td> <td>Kuchlug (Chinese language|Ch. 屈出律 Qūchūlǜ)</td> <td>use born name</td> <td>1211-1218</td> <td>Did not exist</td> </td> </tr> <tr style="background:#efefef;"> <td colspan="6"><small>1 "Dashi" might be the Chinese title "Taishi", meaning "vizier"; Or it could mean "Stone" in Turkish, as the Chinese transliteration suggests </small></td> </tr> </table> ---- See also: Kara-Khanid Khanate Category:History of China Category:Ancient peoples of China Category:Mongol peoples de:Kara Kitai ja:西遼 zh-cn:西辽 This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Kara-Khitan Khanate".
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