- Changshi
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Changshi was one of the last effective khans (r.1335-1338[1]) of the Chagatai Khanate. His father was prince Ebugen who was the son of Duwa, the Chagatai Khan.
Western sources claimed that he was anti-Muslim and quite tolerant toward Christians. Before his succession, Changshi sent the Yuan Great Khan Tugh Temur 170 Russian prisoners. However, he was probably Nestorian. He was given a pecuniary reward from the court of Yuan Dynasty. He overthrew Muslim princes from the power of the ulus in 1334–1335. But he was murdered by his family in 1338 after a short period of his reign.
Preceded by
BuzanKhan of Chagatai Khanate
1335–1338Succeeded by
Yesun TemurReferences
- Turkestan Down to the Mongol Invasion - W. Barthold
- The Cambridge History of Iran - William Bayne Fisher, John Andrew Boyle, Ilya Gershevitch
References
- ^ The Cambridge History of Iran By William Bayne Fisher, John Andrew Boyle, Ilya Gershevitch. Vol. V, p.421
Some
campaigns
and battlesAsia1205–1209 Western China · 1211–1234 Northern China · 1211–1234 Manchuria · 1235–1276 Southern China · 1236 and 1252 Tibet · 1231–1260 Korea · 1274–1281 Japan
Middle East
peopleViceroys (khans)MilitaryPolitical and militaryCategories:- 1338 deaths
- Chagatai khans
- Borjigin
- 14th-century monarchs in Asia
- Central Asian history stubs
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