Manduul Khan
Manduul Khan | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Khagan of the Mongols | |||||
Reign | 1475–1478 | ||||
Coronation | 1475 | ||||
Predecessor | Molon Khan | ||||
Successor | Dayan Khan | ||||
Born | 1438 | ||||
Died | 1478 (aged 39–40) | ||||
| |||||
House | Borjigin | ||||
Dynasty | Northern Yuan |
Manduul (also spelled Manduuluu, Manduyul or Manduyulun; Mongolian: Мандуул; Chinese: 滿都魯), was a khagan of the Northern Yuan dynasty, reigning from 1475 to 1478. He was the younger half-brother of Taisun Khan.
Early life[]
After the death of his nephew Molon Khan, the position remain vacant for nearly a decade as warring Mongol clans fought each other for dominance. Manduul Khan was married to , daughter of the Turfan-based warlord , sometime between 1463 and 1465.[1] The two disliked each other, and their marriage produced no children.[1] In 1464, he also married Mandukhai, who was only sixteen years old at the time.[1] It was not until 1475 that Manduul Khan was finally crowned as the new khan. Manduul is the earliest Mongol chief known to have actually headed the Chakhar myriarchy.[2]
Reign[]
During his short rule, Manduul Khan successfully strengthened the power of khan and reduced the power of nobles, and paved the way for his adopted son and great-grandnephew Dayan Khan (Batu Möngke) who succeeded him as Manduul Khan had no direct male heirs, and most sources report that he had no children at all.[3]
In Fiction[]
Manduul's later life is also fictionalized in books one and two of the historical fiction Fractured Empire Saga, by Starr Z. Davies, published 2021-2022,[4] a four-book series: Daughter of the Yellow Dragon, Lords of the Black Banner, Mother of the Blue Wolf, Empress of the Jade Realm.
He is also a character who appears in the historical novel "Manduchai" written by German Author Tanja Kinkel in 2014.
See also[]
- List of khans of the Northern Yuan dynasty
References[]
- ^ a b c Weatherford, Jack (2010). The secret history of the Mongol queens : how the daughters of Genghis Khan rescued his empire (1st ed.). New York: Crown Publishers. pp. 155–156. ISBN 9780307407153. OCLC 354817523.
- ^ Uradyn Erden Bulag-Nationalism and hybridity in Mongolia, p. 73.
- ^ Weatherford 2010, p. 159.
- ^ Fractured Empire Saga, by Starr Z. Davies, published 2021-2022
- 1438 births
- 1478 deaths
- Mongol khans
- Northern Yuan rulers
- 15th-century Mongol rulers
- 15th-century Chinese monarchs