Learn the history of the Oirats, a Mongolic people who once ruled the steppes from Eastern Europe to Xinjiang. 00:00 Intro 00:04 Four Oirat 01:29 Oirat migrations 02:13 Russian and Chinese conquest 02:48 Modern Oirats 03:33 Ending credits
@@coleob8547 Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
@@smithjohn3266 Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
Oirats is literally a pure mongol people. Theres absolutely no diffrence between mongolic and tsorot oriats. Even the west oirats are closer to mongolic than tuva. So yeah oirats is literally mongolic
Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
By the way, there was Crimean khanate which was nomadic by culture and one of the descendants the of Golden Horde. It fell only in 1774. We also may add here Kazakh zhuzes, which were practically independent from Russia before Speransky's reforms in the first half of 19 century
Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
@@muhammedjaseemshajeef6781 not according to extremist Uighurs. To them Dzungaria is also part of thier fictitious east Turkistan, so the Dzungar history of Dzungaria has to go for them to be able to claim what never belonged to them.
Hello Dragon Historian! I love your videos! Please make History of Morocco or History of South Africa, it can be interesting!!! Greetings from France 🇫🇷 (I am Italian-Moroccan)
throughout history we have often been enemies with the Oirats. But we feel sorry for the sad history of Oirats. Today we have no animosity towards them. I wish them luck. Stay safe, good luck
Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
This was sad for me to watch because I knew the Dzungar Genocide was coming. Also, do you do detailed Closed Caption text for all your videos or have I only just noticed it? It's very good to see you cover the history of a once great, but now small group of people.
@@TheDragonHistorian Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
@bodatotalitarian7278 sounds exactly like what a Uighur would say, in an attempt to cleanse Xinjiang province of dzungar history so thier ferry tale country of east Turkestan, can claim all the land in the province.
Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
Even tho our ancestors fought against each other But we're still Mongolians still brothers Adopts the Mongol name under khabul Khan United under Genghis Khan's sword Separated by our ignorant behave And finally accept our mistakes by kindness of our brothers n sisters
The name Mongol appeared first in the eighth-century Chinese records of the Tang dynasty, but only resurfaced in the eleventh century during the rule of the Khitan. At first, it was applied to some small and insignificant nomadic tribes in the area of the Onon River. In the thirteenth century, however, the name Mongol grew into an umbrella term for a large group of Mongolic and Turkic tribes united under the rule of Genghis Khan. It is not clear what the Mongols called themselves in their own languages. In fact, the specific origin of the Mongolic languages is unclear. Some linguists have proposed a link to languages like Tungusic and Turkic, which are often included alongside Mongolic in a hypothetical language group called “Altaic languages”, but the evidence for this is rather weak.
@@SxVaNm345 Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
1 Double check Kara Del border, Esen didn’t control Chigin, Shazhou, Handong or Anding Uyghur 2 Esen Taisi was stay on the south of Khangai Mountains before invaded Ming 3 After Esen died, the north of Kara Del there was a Islamic tribe 乜克力 gain Taishi title and attacked Esen’s son.
@@hf_61 They are the ones who invaded uyghurs territory,it was Oirats who overthrew the Kara-Khanid Khanate of Uyghurs(The one of most powerful dynasty in Uyghur history). They have been influenced by a lot of Uyghur culture in history. and I think the name "Kalmyk" may from Uyghur Language.
So sad that the West Altaic peoples are still barely free, and are mostly trapped in Chinese and Russian lands, only Mongolia being the exception. Hopefully someday in the future the imperialist countries will calm down sometime in the future and let individual ethnic groups be free.
@@hf_61 Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
Manchus or Tungusic people have common origin with the Mongols that seperated thousands of years ago unlike turkic people who formed in Altai mountain during Mongol Rouran khanate. It was other Mongol force, Manchu and chinese combined force which defeated powerful Dzungar khanate.
@@coleob8547 Its so sad now, radical Uighurs in their effort to claim the entirety of Xinjiang as thier own are claiming or deleting Oirat/Dzungar history in other to suit thier agenda.
Kalmyk Khanate only appeared after the Dzungar Khanate was destroyed by the Great Qing empire (mostly in battle and small pox). Kalmyk are descendants of the Dzungar. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-KbpsWsj0hMo.html
The name Mongol appeared first in the eighth-century Chinese records of the Tang dynasty, but only resurfaced in the eleventh century during the rule of the Khitan. At first, it was applied to some small and insignificant nomadic tribes in the area of the Onon River. In the thirteenth century, however, the name Mongol grew into an umbrella term for a large group of Mongolic and Turkic tribes united under the rule of Genghis Khan. It is not clear what the Mongols called themselves in their own languages. In fact, the specific origin of the Mongolic languages is unclear. Some linguists have proposed a link to languages like Tungusic and Turkic, which are often included alongside Mongolic in a hypothetical language group called “Altaic languages”, but the evidence for this is rather weak.
You’re every where 😂 Always going video to video about Mongols claiming Mongolian empire . But no one will believe your propaganda other than Turks . Especially Turkish don’t have any right to claim Genghis Khan .
@@TheDragonHistorian you have many mistakes, but you are not Kazakh, so you don't know my history well. and I do not know the history of your nation better than you
@@TheDragonHistorian The Oirats were defeated by the second Kazakh Khan Janibek. The Oirats were subordinate to Kasym Khan, the fourth Kazakh khan. After the death of Kasym Khan, the Oirats regained their independence.
Yeah, if not for our ignorance, we would unite into one great empire of nomads. The main thing is to learn from the mistakes of the past and not repeat them in the present. Peace and prosperity to you from the Republic of Kalmykia