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  1. Jul 24, 2021 · In 1388 Yisüder, a descendant of Qubilai Khan’s brother ARIQ-BÖKE, murdered the emperor Toghus-Temür, initiating a complex period of usurpation and conflict. On one side stood the Oirats in the northwest, first under Möngke-Temür (fl. 1400) and by 1403 under three chiefs, Mahmud (d. 1417), Taiping (d. 1426), and Batu-Bolod.

  2. Sep 22, 2022 · Togon-temür. Togon-temür (1320–1370) was the last emperor of the Yuan Dynasty, ruling from 1333 to 1370. He was a great-great-grandson of Kublai Khan. He ascended to the throne in 1333 at the age of nine, after the death of his father, Toğöz Temür. Togon-temür’s reign was marked by a series of civil wars that ultimately resulted in ...

  3. Möngke Temür (Mengu-Timur) Khan was born in 1249, in birth place, to Toqoqan Khan and Buka Khan (born Üjin). His occupations were occupation and occupation . Möngke passed away in 1280, at age 31 in death place .

  4. Toghon Temür was born to Kuśala, known as Khutughtu Khan or Emperor Mingzong, when he was in exile in Central Asia. Toghon Temür's mother was Mailaiti, descendant of Arslan Khan, the chief of the Karluks. According to a folk legend, the former Chinese Southern Song Emperor Gong of Song, Zhao Xian, had an affair with Yuan Empress Mailaiti.

  5. Kubiláj kán ( 1215. szeptember 23. – 1294. február 18.) a Mongol Birodalom nagykánja ( 1260 – 1294 ), a kínai Jüan-dinasztia alapítója és első császára ( 1279 – 1294 ). Korábban a mongol kánok egyszerűen birtokolták Kínát, míg Kubiláj deklarálta a Jüan-dinasztia létrehozását. Nevét Kubláj, Kublaj és Hubilai ...

  6. Yesün Temür ( Mongolian: Есөн Төмөр ᠶᠢᠰᠦᠨ ᠲᠡᠮᠦᠷ; Chinese: 也孫鐵木兒, 1293 – August 15, 1328) was a great-grandson of Kublai Khan and an emperor of the Yuan dynasty of China from 1323 to 1328. Apart from Emperor of China, he is regarded as the 10th Khagan of the Mongol Empire, although it was only nominal ...

  7. khan of the Golden Horde from 1266 to 1282. Grandson of Khan Batu. During the reign of Möngke-Temür, the Tatars and their allies, the Russian princes, conducted campaigns against Byzantium (c. 1269–71), Lithuania (1275), and the Caucasus (1277).