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  1. Also known as. English. Mengu-Timur. Khan of the Golden Horde (r. 1266-1280) Manggetiemuer. Mungke Temur. Möngke Temür Khan, Khan of the Golden Horde 1267-1280.

  2. Apr 11, 2024 · Temür (born 1265, China—died 1307, China) was the grandson and successor of the great Kublai Khan; he ruled (1295–1307) as emperor of the Yuan (Mongol) dynasty (1206–1368) of China and as great khan of the Mongol Empire. He was the last Yuan ruler to maintain firm control over China, but he never exercised real power over Mongol ...

  3. 蒙哥帖木兒 (— 1282年 4月17號 )係 伊兒汗國 君主 旭烈兀 嘅仔。. 蒙哥帖木兒多次參戰。. 1281年,佢喺 敘利亞 打敗仗。. 1282年4月17號,Möngke Temür 死咗。. 屬於5類 :. 未知生年. 1282年死.

  4. Jun 18, 2012 · Mengu-Timur or Möngke Temür (Mongolian: Мөнхтөмөр) (? - 1280), Son of Toqoqan Khan and Buka Ujin of Oirat and the grandson of Batu Khan. He was a khan of the golden horde in 1266-1280. His name literally means "Eternal Iron" in the Mongolian language.

  5. Möngke Temür (Chinese: 猛哥帖木耳; pinyin: Měnggē Tiē mù'ěr or 猛哥帖木儿; Měnggē Tiēmù'er) or Dudu Mengtemu (Manchu: ᡩᡠᡩᡠ ᠮᡝᡢᡨᡝ᠋ᠮᡠ; 孟特穆; Mèngtèmù) (1370–1433) was a Jurchen chieftain of the Odoli tribe, one of the three tribes of the lower Sunggari river valley in Manchuria. In the 1380s the tribe migrated southward towards the lower ...

  6. Möngke Temür (猛哥帖木儿) of the Odoli became leader of the Jianzhou Left Wei (建州左卫) and accepted the Chinese surname of Tóng (童) not long afterward. The Korean king ordered Meng not to comply with the request of Ming, he first complied with this order only to capitulate, visiting Nanjing in September 1405, leaving with an ...

  7. A key Jurchen leader named Mengtemu (Möngke Temür), chief of the Odoli Jurchens, who had always claimed he had been a servant of the Taejo of Joseon since Taejo's days as a border general of Goryeo, and even following him (Taejo Lee Seong-gye) to his wars, because he fed Mengtemu's family and provided land for him to live during his ...