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In 1652 after the death of his father [[Salqam-Jangir Khan|Jahangir Khan]], the son of [[Esim Khan|Esim Khan]], the ruler of [[Jungars]] Erdeni Batyr had strengthened the military pressure on [[Kazakh Khanate]]. Eventually he died in 1670. Kaldan Boshakty replaced him (1670–1699, in some sources 1670–1697), who was later succeeded by Seban Rabtan (1699–1729). All through these invasions, a weak Kazakh ruler named Bahadur Khan had taken the throne. He was quickly deposed, allowing Tauke Muhammad to take the Kazakh throne.
In 1652 after the death of his father [[Salqam-Jangir Khan|Jahangir Khan]], the son of [[Esim Khan|Esim Khan]], the ruler of [[Jungars]] Erdeni Batyr had strengthened the military pressure on [[Kazakh Khanate]]. Eventually he died in 1670. Kaldan Boshakty replaced him (1670–1699, in some sources 1670–1697), who was later succeeded by Seban Rabtan (1699–1729). All through these invasions, a weak Kazakh ruler named Bahadur Khan had taken the throne. He was quickly deposed, allowing Tauke Muhammad to take the Kazakh throne.


The hardest time for the Kazakhs started from 1698. When the Kazakhs divided their khanate into Juzes, maintaining unity became a complicated task. Tauke Muhammad, who remained the khan of all three Juzes, managed to keep the unity of Kazakhs, earning him the honorific title "''Shah-i-Turan''" ([[Persian language|Persian]] for "King of [[Turkestan|Turan]]").
The hardest time for the Kazakhs started from 1698. When the Kazakhs divided their khanate into Juzes, maintaining unity became a complicated task. Tauke Muhammad, who remained the khan of all three Juzes, managed to keep the unity of Kazakhs, earning him the honorific title "''Shah-i-Turan''" ([[Persian language|Persian]] for "King of [[Turkestan|Turan]]") like his father before him.


In 1692 Tauke Muhammad connected with [[Peter I of Russia]]. Eventually, the Russian Empire lowered the trade taxes (also known as ''bazh'' tax).
In 1692 Tauke Muhammad connected with [[Peter I of Russia]]. Eventually, the Russian Empire lowered the trade taxes (also known as ''bazh'' tax).

Revision as of 08:57, 6 December 2021

Tauke Khan
Khan
Khanzada
Shah-i-Turan
Khan of the Kazakh Khanate
Reign1680-1715/1718
Coronation1680
PredecessorBahadur Khan
SuccessorKaip Khan
Born1625
Kazakh Khanate
Died1715/1718
Turkistan, Kazakh Khanate
Burial
IssueBolat Khan
Sameke Khan
Names
Abū'l-Fath Tauke Mūhammad bin Salqām-Jahangīr Khan
HouseHouse of Borjigin
DynastyTore
House of Urus Khan
FatherJahangir Khan
MotherBanu Khanum
ReligionSunni Islam

Abū'l-Fath Tauke Mūhammad bin Salqām-Jahangīr Khan, commonly known as Tauke Khan, (Kazakh: Táýke Han) (1635 – 1715, r. 1680 – 1715)[1] was a Kazakh khan of the Kazakh Khanate. In 1652 after the death of his father Jahangir Khan, the son of Esim Khan, the ruler of Jungars Erdeni Batyr had strengthened the military pressure on Kazakh Khanate. Eventually he died in 1670. Kaldan Boshakty replaced him (1670–1699, in some sources 1670–1697), who was later succeeded by Seban Rabtan (1699–1729). All through these invasions, a weak Kazakh ruler named Bahadur Khan had taken the throne. He was quickly deposed, allowing Tauke Muhammad to take the Kazakh throne.

The hardest time for the Kazakhs started from 1698. When the Kazakhs divided their khanate into Juzes, maintaining unity became a complicated task. Tauke Muhammad, who remained the khan of all three Juzes, managed to keep the unity of Kazakhs, earning him the honorific title "Shah-i-Turan" (Persian for "King of Turan") like his father before him.

In 1692 Tauke Muhammad connected with Peter I of Russia. Eventually, the Russian Empire lowered the trade taxes (also known as bazh tax). In 1710 by uniting 3 juzes in the place Kuntobe (near the city of Tashkent), Tauke Muhammad fought Jungars in the place named Augyr and gained a victory.

With Tauke Khan's death in 1715,[2] the three "jüzes" of the Kazakh Khanate — the Great jüz, the Middle jüz and the Little jüz — were no longer able to pursue a unified political policy. Abu'l Khair Khan of the Little jüz was nominally the senior khan of the entire Kazakh Khanate, but in practice each jüz was ruled independently by its own khan.[3]

Tauke Khan is also known for refining the Kazakh code of laws, and reissuing it under the title "Жеті Жарғі" (transliterated, "Jeti Jarg'i" —"Seven Charters").

Preceded by
Batyr Khan
Khan of the Kazakhs
1680–1718
Succeeded by

See also

References

  1. ^ Erofeeva, 79.
  2. ^ Erofeeva, 80–81.
  3. ^ Viatkin, 154.
  • Erofeeva, I. V. (2014). Epistoliarnoe nasledie kazakhskoi praviashchei elity, 1675–1821 godov. Almaty: Abdi co.
  • Viatkin, M. P. (1947). Batyr Srym. Moscow: Akademiia Nauk SSSR.
  • Kazakh Khanate is described in historical texts such as the Tarikh-i-Rashidi (1541–1545) by Muhammad Haidar Dughlat, and Zhamigi-at-Tavarikh (1598–1599) by Kadyrgali Kosynuli Zhalayir.
  • Test materials for History of Kazakhstan