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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. Genghis Khan may have thought that his son was plotting his death, but Jöchi died before he could take any action. Genghis Khan died six months later, and Jöchi’s lands were divided among his sons. His eldest son, Orda, founded the White Horde, his second son, Batu, the Golden Horde.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. The deceased would be referred to through posthumous titles- Jochis likely being Ulush-idi, and causes of death are rarely expounded upon. For Chinggis Khan himself, every writer in thirteenth century Asia had his own version of how the Khan died, and the likeliest source, the Mongolian Secret History of the Mongols , merely states that the ...

  4. 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
  5. Jul 29, 2020 · The great khan did not die without planning for his successor, his middle son Ogedei, to take power after he was gone. 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.

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  7. It is believed that in 1359, with the death of Berdi Beg, who ruthlessly destroyed his kin, the Batu dynasty ceased to exist and the throne passed to another branch. This was probably the immediate cause of the country’s slow descent into a deep and bloody crisis.

  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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