Muqali

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Muqali
Native name
Мухулай
Other name(s)Mukhali
Mukhulai
Born1170
Died1223 (aged 52–53)
AllegianceMongol Empire
Years of servicePre-1206 – 1223
Battles/warsMongol conquest of the Jin dynasty
Muqali
Traditional Chinese木華黎
Simplified Chinese木华黎

Muqali (Mongolian: Мухулай; 1170–1223), also spelt Mukhali and Mukhulai, was a Mongol general ("bo'ol", "one who is bound" in service) who became a trusted and esteemed commander under Genghis Khan. The son of Gü'ün U'a, a Jalair leader who had sworn fealty to the Mongols, he became known by his epithet "Muqali", "one who dulls", earned through his committed and able service to the Great Khan and the Mongol Empire.[1]

During the invasion of Jin China, Muqali acted as Genghis Khan's second-in-command, was promoted to Viceroy of China,[1] and was entrusted with a great degree of autonomy once Genghis Khan departed to conquer Central Asia. Unlike many Mongol leaders who were willing to massacre to gain any advantage, Muqali usually attempted to convert foes into friends by more conciliatory means.[2]

By the time of Ogedei's reign (1229-1241), he was viewed as the best of the extraordinarily talented pool of Mongol generals.[3] Given his undefeated record despite very limited resources, he might be regarded as one of the greatest military commanders in history. He was "unquestionably one of the leading Mongol personalities and a supreme leader."[4] His wisdom in dealing with local matters has been emphasized.[4]

Life[]

Muqali, third son of Gü'ün U'a, was born into the 'White' clan of the Jalair tribe, who had been the hereditary serfs of the Borjigin Mongols. Originally associated with the Jurkin branch of the Borjigin, Muqali's father and uncles pledged allegiance to Temujin (Genghis Khan's original name) when he defeated the in 1197. Gü'ün U'a offered his son Muqali to Temujin as a personal slave (emčü bo'ol).[5] Several servants of Genghis Khan would be later appointed to prominent positions in his army, such as Jelme, who was promised as a slave to Genghis as an infant, and later rose to the position of captain of a Mingghan. During his time spent as Genghis Khan's servant, he and Genghis Khan presumably became very close.[1] This intimacy would result in him becoming one of Genghis' closest advisors.[1]

During the coronation of Genghis Khan in 1206, the latter recalled Muqali's support, and he was rewarded with the command of the third tumen and control over the eastern mingghans.[1] He played a prominent role in the following campaign against Jin,[1] including in the 1211 Battle of Yehuling, the decisive battle in the first stage of the Mongol conquest of the Jurchen-led Jin dynasty in northern China.

After Genghis Khan decided to go to war with the Khwarazmian Empire, he left Muqali in control of Northern China as viceroy, and gave him the title of gui ong or kuo-wang,[6] a title not given to any other in Genghis Khan's army,[1][6][7] and the title of taishi, a Chinese title also used by the Mongols.[8] Despite Genghis Khan having most of the main Mongol forces taken away and sent to the West, Muqali was able to subdue most of northern China with his small force of around 20,000 Mongols,[8] although some historians give figures of between 40,000 and 70,000[9] men to account for his foreign auxiliaries.

In 1217, Muqali attacked modern-day Hebei Province, northern Shandong Province, and northern Shaanxi Province,[9] controlled by the Jin dynasty. This was an important agricultural area, which Muqali had largely subdued by 1219. In 1220, Muqali turned his attention to the rest of Shandong Province, conquering part of it;[10] four towns were captured, but the hard-pressed Jin forces managed to hold on elsewhere in the province. After suffering a number of devastating defeats by Muqali in the field, the Jin learned that they could only hope to resist him by holding their cities and outlasting Muqali's staying power.[citation needed]

Muqali's last campaign was in the 1220s. He crossed the Ordos in mid-1221, spending the rest of the year conquering major cities in northern and central Shensi.[11] He crossed the Yellow River into Shensi, first conquering, in November 1221, the strategic Chia-chou.[4] Then, in the following months, he conquered the major Jin strongholds in northern and western Shensi.[4] Crossing again the Yellow river on ice[9] from the operational area near the Lo River in the Spring of 1222,[4] he recaptured many towns in Shansi, including Hsi-chou and Tai-chou.[4] He then left Mönggü Buqa (Bukha)[11][4] in charge in Shensi and Kansu,[11] and moved with the main army to Yü-chou, from thence to Chi-chou, conquering all the Jin strongholds in the valley of the Fen River. He then took the strategic Ho-chung in the end of 1222,[4] conquering the major cities along the river.[11] However, the cities of Ching-chao and Feng-hsiang resisted.[4] As he was consolidating his position on both sides of the Yellow River, he became seriously ill and died in the Spring on 1223, at 53 years of age.[4] On his deathbed, Muqali declared with pride that he had never been defeated.[12]

After his death, Genghis Khan gave command to Muqali's son, Bol.[4] Bol had one wife whose name was Qaduqui and seven sons: Tas, Suqunchaq, Batur, Bai Inal, Emegen, Ebügen, Arkis.[4] Tas (also called Čalawun) was Muqali's favorite grandson, and the title of gui ong passed to him.[4] Muqali is considered a superb leader, and one of the "very few men who could exert a real influence on Genghis Khan's decisions."[4] In seven years of campaigning in northern China, he had reduced the Jin dynasty's territories to only Henan Province. By the time of Ogedei's ascension in 1229, the Mongol detachments in China had suffered numerous setbacks, which led to a mini-revival of Jin fortunes until Subutai and Tolui were dispatched with the main Mongol army in 1232.[citation needed]

Appearance and family[]

He was described by Chao Hang as a very tall man with a dark complexion and wavy whiskers.[4] He was "generous and fond of conviviality, and amusing episodes about him have been preserved in the Sung envoy's account."[4] His chief wife's name was Lai-am (Naiman/Buqalun). He had eight other wives, four Mongols and four Jurchen. It seems that his only son was Bol, who had seven sons.[4]

Legacy[]

He received many posthumous honours, since as early as the 1320s.[4] After his death, descendants of Mukhali served the Great Khan of the Mongols, especially those of the Toluid lineage. A few of his descendants, such as Antong and Baiju, later became prominent officials in the Confucian fashion of the Yuan dynasty founded by Genghis Khan's grandson, Kublai Khan.

Members of Muqali's Jalair tribe, as retainers of the Toluid Hulagu, participated in the conquest of Persia, then called Mollai, and later founded the Jalayirid Dynasty which ruled from Baghdad after the collapse of the Hulaguid Ilkhanate.

A statue of Muqali, together with Bo'orchu, flanks the statue of Genghis Khan in Chinggis Square in Ulaanbaatar.

Descendants of Muqali[]

  • (孔溫窟哇/kǒngwēn kūwa)
    • Muqali(木華黎國王/mùhuálí guówáng,موقلىكويانك/mūqalī kūyānk)
      •  [zh; ja](孛魯/bólŭ,بوغول/būghūl)
        •  [zh; ja](塔思/tǎsī)
          • (忽都華/hūdōuhuá)
            • (忽都帖木兒/hūdōu tièmùér)
              • (寶哥/bǎogē)
                • (道童/dàotóng)
        •  [zh; ja](速渾察/sùhúnchá)
          • (忽林池/hūlínchí)
          •  [ja](乃燕/nǎiyàn)
            •  [ja](碩德/shídé)
              • (別理哥帖木爾/biélǐgē tièmùěr)
                • Dorǰibal(朵爾直班/duǒěrzhíbān)
                  • (鐵固思帖木而/tiěgùsī tièmùér)
                  • (篤堅帖木而/dǔjiān tièmùér)
            • (伯顏察兒/bǎiyáncháér)
          •  [ja](相威/xiāngwēi)
            • Alauddin(阿老瓦丁/ālǎowǎdīng)
              • (脫歡/tuōhuān)
          • Sarban(撒蠻/sāmán)
            • Toqto [zh; ja](脫脫/tuōtuō)
              •  [zh; ja](朵兒只/duǒérzhǐ)
                • (朵蠻帖木兒/duǒmán tièmùér)
                • (俺木哥失里/ǎnmùgēshīlǐ)
        •  [ja](覇突魯/bàtūlŭ,بهادر نويان/bahādur nūyān)
          • Antong noyan(安童/āntóng,هنتون نويان/hantūn nūyān)
            •  [ja](兀都帯/wùdōudài)
              •  [zh; ja](拜住/bàizhù)
                • (篤麟鉄穆爾/dǔlín tiěmùěr)
          • (定童/dìngtóng)
          • (霸都虎台/bàdōuhǔtái)
        • (阿礼吉失/ālǐjíshī)
          • (忽速忽爾/hūsùhūěr)
          • (朵羅台/duǒluótái)
          • (乃蠻台/nǎimántái)
            • (野仙溥化/yěxiān pǔhuà)
            • (晃忽而不花/huànghūér bùhuā)
    •  [ja](帶孫/dàisūn,طایسون/ṭāīsūn)
      • Möngke(忙哥/mánggē)
        • (塔塔兒台/tǎtǎértái)

[13]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Hope, Michael (2016). Power, Politics, and Tradition in the Mongol Empire and the Īlkhānate of Iran. Oxford University Press. p. 36. ISBN 9780191081071.
  2. ^ Frank McLynn, Genghis Khan (2015), 231.
  3. ^ Christopher P. Atwood, Pu'a's Boast and Doqolqu's Death: Historiography of a Hidden Scandal in the Mongol Conquest of the Jin.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r de Rachewiltz, Igor; Wang, May (1993). In the Service of the Khan Eminent Personalities of the Early Mongol-Yüan Period (1200-1300). Harrassowitz. p. 7.
  5. ^ de Rachewiltz, I. (ed.) (1993) In the Service of the Khan, Harrassowitz Verlag, Weisbaden
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b Broadbridge, Anne F. (2018). Women and the Making of the Mongol Empire. Cambridge University Press. p. 153. ISBN 9781108636629.
  7. ^ "Muqali - Mongolian general". Britannica. Archived from the original on 17 May 2021. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b Buell, Paul D. (2016). Women and the Making of the Mongol Empire. ABC-Clio. pp. 8–9. ISBN 9781610693400.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b c McLynn, Frank (2015). Genghis Khan The Man Who Conquered the World. Random House. ISBN 9781446449295.
  10. ^ John Gillingham, John Lazenby; Peter Connolly, eds. (2016). The Hutchinson Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Warfare. Taylor & Francis. p. 222. ISBN 9781135936747.
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Herbert Franke; Denis C. Twitchett, eds. (1978). The Cambridge History of China: Volume 6, Alien Regimes and Border States, 907-1368. Cambridge University Press. p. 36. ISBN 9780521243315.
  12. ^ Matthews, Rupert (2015). Mongols. Gareth Stevens Publishing. ISBN 9781482431711.
  13. ^ Louis Hambis (1954). Le chapitre CVIII du Yuan che : les fiefs attribués aux membres de la famille impériale et aux ministres de la cour mongole d'après l'histoire chinoise officielle de la dynastie mongole. Monographies du Tʿoung pao, v. 3. Tableau5,généalogie de muqali
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