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  1. Boraqchin (Tatar) Boraqchin Khatun was an Alchi Tatar woman. This is a tribe of Mongolic people (Mongols). Chinese called them Alchi Tatars, but they called themselves Alchin for women and Alchitai for men. She was the chief or senior wife of Batu Khan, and probably the mother of Sartaq Khan.

  2. 19 de ene. de 2019 · Genealogy for khatun Borakchin of Alchi Tatars (c.1220 - 1257) family tree on Geni, with over 230 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

    • Batu, Khan of The Golden Horde
  3. 20 de ene. de 2024 · Birthdate: circa 1230. Death: 1256 (21-30) (Assassinated by order of Bärkä) Immediate Family: Son of Batu, Khan of the Golden Horde and khatun Borakchin of Alchi Tatars. Father of khatun Feodora Sartakovna; Ulagchi, Khan of the Golden Horde; Touktouva Borjigin and Khougchi Borjigin.

    • Bloodline of The Kipchak Khans
    • Early Years
    • Invasion of Rus
    • Invasion of Central Europe
    • Aftermath
    • Legacy
    • References

    Although Genghis Khan recognized Jochi as his son, his parentage was always in question, as his mother Börte, Genghis Khan's wife, had been captured and he was born shortly after her return. During the lifetime of Genghis, this issue was public knowledge, but it was taboo to publicly discuss it. Still, it drove a wedge between Jochi and his father;...

    After his Jochi's death, his territory was divided between his sons; Orda received "the right bank of the Syr Darya and the districts around the Sari Bu" and Batu the "north coast of the Caspian Sea as far as the Ural River." In 1229, Ogedei dispatched three tumens under Kukhdei and Sundei against the tribes on lower Ural. Batu then joined Ogedei's...

    In 1235 Batu, who had earlier directed the conquest of the Crimea, was assigned an army of possibly 130,000 to oversee an invasion of Europe. His relatives and cousins Guyuk, Buri, Mongke, Khulgen, Kadan, Baidar, and notable Mongol generals Subotai (Сүбээдэй), Borolday (Боролдай) and Mengguser (Мөнхсар) joined him by order of his uncle Ogedei. The ...

    Batu Khan decided to push into central Europe. Some modern historiansspeculate that Batu Khan intended primarily to assure his flanks were safe for the future from possible interference from the Europeans, and partially as a precursor to further conquest. Most believe he intended the conquest of all Europe, as soon as his flanks were safe, and his ...

    By late 1241, Batu and Subutai were finishing plans to invade Austria, Italy and Germany, when the news came of the death of Ögedei Khan (died in December, 1241), and the Mongols withdrew in the late spring of 1242, as the Princes of the blood, and Subutai, were recalled to Karakorum where the kurultai (meeting or assembly) was held. Batu did not a...

    The Kipchak Khanate ruled Russia through local princes for the next 230 years. The Kipchak Khanate was known in Rus and Europe as the Golden Horde (Zolotaya Orda) some think because of the Golden color of the Khan's tent. "Horde" comes from the Mongol word "orda/ordu" or camp. "Golden" is thought to have had a similar meaning to "royal" (Royal Camp...

    Chambers, James. The Devil's Horsemen: The Mongol Invasion of Europe. New York, NY: Atheneum, 1979. ISBN 978-0689109423
    de Hartog, Leo. Genghis Khan: conqueror of the World. New York, NY: Barnes & Noble, 1999. ISBN 978-0760711927
    Morgan, David. The Mongols. The Peoples of Europe. Oxford, UK: B. Blackwell, 1986. ISBN 978-0631135562
    Nicolle, David, and Richard Hook. The Mongol Warlords: Genghis Khan, Kublai Khan, Hulegu, Tamerlane. London, UK: Brookhampton Press, 1998. ISBN 978-1860194078
  4. 20 de ene. de 2024 · circa 1200. Birthplace: Ulus, Ulus, Bartın, Turkey. Death: 1255 (50-59) Sarai, Saraevskiy rayon, Ryazanskaya oblast', Russia (Russian Federation) Immediate Family: Son of Jochi, Khan of the Ulus of Jochi and Ikikhatun Öki Onggïrat. Husband of khatun Borakchin of Alchi Tatars and 26 wives of Batu-Khan.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ögedei_KhanÖgedei Khan - Wikipedia

    Other wives included Möge Khatun (former concubine of Genghis Khan) and Jachin Khatun. Principal wives: Boraqchin; Töregene. Güyük – the 3rd Great Khan of the Mongols; Koden – the first Buddhist Mongol prince; Köchü (died 1237) – during the campaign in Song China. Shiremün – appointed heir by Ögedei. Boladchi; Söse ...

  6. Sartaq (también transcrito como Sartak o Sartach, en mongol: Сартаг, en tártaro: Сартак) Kan (? - 1257) fue el hijo de Batú Kan y su esposa Boraqchin de Alchi . 1 Sartaq fue el sucesor de Batú como kan de la Horda de Oro . Reinado. Viviendo aún su padre ya participaba en el gobierno, siendo responsable de la zona entre los ríos Don y Volga.