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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › JochiJochi - Wikipedia

    Jochi Khan (Mongolian: ᠵᠦᠴᠢ Mongolian: Зүчи, Züchi; Chinese: 朮赤; pinyin: Zhú chì; Crimean Tatar: Cuçi, Джучи, جوچى; also spelled Juchi; Djochi, and Jöchi; c. 1182 – February 1227) was a Mongol army commander who was the eldest son of Temüjin (aka Genghis Khan), and presumably one of the four sons by his principal wife Börte, though issues concerning his ...

  2. Died: February 1227. Jöchi (died February 1227) was a Mongol prince, the eldest of Genghis Khans four sons and, until the final years of his life, a participant in his father’s military campaigns.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. How was Genghis Khan affected by Jochi's death? According to Wikipedia, Jochi died in February 1227 while Temujin died in August of that year. I know Jochi never forgave his father for skipping over him for succession, so how did the elder Khan take his estranged son's death?

  4. At the very beginning of 1227, Jochi died. He was buried in the Jochi mausoleum, which is located in Central Kazakhstan in Karaganda region of Kazakhstan 50 kilometers northeast of the city of Zhezkazgan in the Ulytau mountains. Kazakhs have preserved one legend about Jochi, which is called Aksak-Kulan (lame Kulan).

  5. Oct 12, 2021 · Following Genghis Khan's death in 1229, this partition was finalized in the Kurultai, and Jochi's dynasty was given the lands in the west up to the point where Mongol horses' hooves had stomped. Six months before Genghis Khan, Jochi had died.

    • 1182 (Khamag Mongol)
    • None
    • 1227
    • OrdaBatuBerke
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  7. Jul 29, 2020 · He likely died happy, knowing that he had at least deferred a succession crisis and civil war for a generation because his eldest (likely bastard) son, Jochi, pre-deceased him. Mongol historian Frank McLynn believes that “It was a moral certainty that Genghis Khan had Jochi poisoned.”

  8. Jochi died in 1226, before his father. Some scholars, notably Ratchnevsky, have commented on the possibility that Jochi was secretly poisoned by order of Genghis Khan. Rashid al-Din reports that Genghis Khan sent for his sons in the spring of 1223, and while his brothers heeded the order, Jochi remained in Khorasan.

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