Mir Khvand Profile picture
Apr 27, 2019 7 tweets 2 min read Read on X
I highly recommend this book if you’re interested in the history of the Eurasian steppe. It’s specifically about Kazakh ethnogenesis but touches on many related subjects such as state formation and the ethnogenesis of other groups like the Uzbeks and Ukrainians. Image
Qazaqs were political vagabonds or ambitious brigands, and their way of life was known as qazaqlïq. When Babur lost his kingdom to the Uzbeks and was wandering in the political and geographical wasteland, he described this phase of his life as his qazaqlïq.
The terms “qazaq” and “qazaqlïq” became widespread in the Qipchaq steppe and Transoxiana in the 15th century.

Why? The Mongol successor states were past their prime and instability produced more vagabonds and brigands. There was a need for a term to describe this phenomenon.
The ethnonym “Uzbek” was first applied to the nomadic population of the Golden Horde after Uzbek Khan (r. 1313–41) made Islam the religion of state. The Jochid Ulus became the Uzbek Ulus. Image
Later, “Uzbek” became fixed as a designation for nomads of the eastern Qipchaq steppe and fell out of use for those of the western Qipchaq steppe. The eastern Qipchaq steppe included what is now modern Kazakhstan and neighboring regions of Russia.
Due to a political conflict that lasted generations between two Chinggisid clans, the Abu al-Khayrids (Shibanids) and the Urusids, the Uzbeks were split into the Qazaq Uzbeks (Uzbak-i qazāq) and the Shibanid Uzbeks (Uzbak-i Shībān).
The Qazaq Uzbeks eventually gave rise to the Kazakhs and the Shibanid Uzbeks contributed to the (modern) Uzbeks. Image

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More from @mirchond

Apr 4
South Asian rulers founded at least four madrasas in Mecca during the Mamluk period: the Bangaliyya (بنجالية), Khaljiyya, Ghulbarghiyya, and Kanba’iyya.
The Bangaliyya was naturally founded by the Sultan of Bengal, Ghiyath al-Din A‘zam Shah (r. 1390-1411).
The Khaljiyya was founded by the Sultan of Malwa, Mahmud Shah Khalji (r. 1436-69), a scion of the Khalji dynasty that once sat on the throne of Delhi and arguably produced its greatest sultan, ‘Ala al-Din Khalji.
Read 7 tweets
Nov 5, 2021
Finished this book about the historical relationship between the Tatars and Bashkirs of Imperial Russia and Bukhara.
One of the main sources for this book is the Tārīkh-i Barāngavī of Ahmad al-Barangavi, which Frank calls “one of the most extensive autobiographies in Tatar Islamic literature.” Ahmad al-Barangavi was a native son of Paran'ga and a madrasa student in Bukhara from 1901 to 1905.
Barangavi came from a line of ulama who dominated Paran'ga's Islamic institutions in the 19th and early 20th centuries. His Tārīkh includes biographical information on his father, Hafiz al-Din, and uncle, Burhan al-Din, both of whom also studied in Bukhara.
Read 22 tweets
Sep 28, 2021
Finished this book. It's a comparative history of the Ottoman and Mughal Empires from the 16th to early 18th centuries.
There are obvious similarities between the Ottoman and Mughal Empires. They were patrimonial, bureaucratic, agrarian empires at different ends of the Persianate cultural complex. The Hanafi school of law was dominant in both empires.
The reigning dynasties were agnatically descended from a Sunni Turk: Osman for the Ottomans and Babur for the Mughals. In modern historiography the Ottomans and Mughals, along with the Safavids, make up a triumvirate of early modern Islamic gunpowder empires.
Read 20 tweets
Aug 1, 2020
I'm trying to find out who was the last Chinggisid ruler. If you try to look this up you'll come across wrong answers. The historian of the Mongol Empire Timothy May claims (incorrectly) in one of his books that the "last Chinggisid ruler abdicated his throne in Khiva in 1920." ImageImage
However, the last Khan of Khiva Said Abdullah wasn't a Chinggisid but rather a Qungrat. In an article, May claims that the "Soviets deposed the last Chinggisid ruler of the Khanate of Bukhara . . . in 1920." You may recognize the last Khan of Bukhara from this pic. ImageImage
However, the last Khan of Bukhara Muhammad Alim Khan was a Manghit rather than a Chinggisid. The Manghits got rid of the last Chinggisid ruler of Bukhara in 1785 after maintaining them as puppets for decades (much as Timur had done).
Read 4 tweets
May 15, 2020
Finished this book about a unique polity, the Crimean Khanate, which was a successor state of the Golden Horde, an Ottoman vassal, and (according to the author) an elective monarchy. Image
The Crimean khans reigned over most of Crimea and the Nogay steppes north of the Black Sea. They also claimed suzerainty over certain Circassian tribes. (There was a long and complex relationship between Crimea and Circassia.) Image
The khans shared the Crimean peninsula with the Ottoman governor at Kefe (Caffa, Feodosia), the capital and namesake of an Ottoman province that included noncontiguous territory on the southern Black Sea littoral of Crimea, Azov, and the Taman Peninsula in northwest Circassia.
Read 16 tweets
Apr 18, 2020
Bukhara is one of the most important cities in the history of Central Asia and Islam. Until the Soviets banned Islamic education in 1928, Bukhara’s madrasas were still drawing students from throughout imperial Russian and beyond (Afghanistan, British India, and China).
Classes were not in session during the summer, and some students took on summer jobs in order to make a living. One option was to spend the summer with nomadic Kazakhs or Turkmen.
In exchange for food and shelter (and fees), madrasa students would provide certain services to the nomads, including performing marriage ceremonies, providing education, recording wills, and leading prayers (for funerals and so on).
Read 17 tweets

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