- Kimek
The Kimek or Kimak (Yemek, Yamak, Djamuk) are one of the Turkic tribes known from
Arab and Persian medieval geographers and writers as being one of the seven tribes in the Kimak Kaganate in the period of 743-1050 AD. The other six constituent tribes, according toAbu Said Gardizi (d. 1061), wereYamak ,Kipchaks ,Tatars ,Bayandur ,Lanikaz , andAjlad . Medieval Chinese geographers did not know theethnonym "Kimaks", just as the names "Chumuhun " and Üeban (Pinyin: Yueban) were not known by Arabian and Persian geographers; all these names refer to the same "Kimak" tribe. [Gumilev, L.N. "Ancient Turks", Moscow, "Science", 1967, Ch.27 http://gumilevica.kulichki.net/OT/ot27.htm]Name
The common name Kimek arose from the union of twin tribes Imi and Imek. No separate tribe was self-described as "Kimek". The names "Imi" and "Imek" are named after the river Imi in the valley of the
Argun River ("Silver"), a tributary of the Amur, occupied by the Kimeks. Marquart suggested a Turkic etymology as Kimäk Iki Imäk "Two Imeks". Information about the eastern Kimeks always carried the concept of a pair. [Ü. Zuev, "Early Türks: Sketches of History and Ideology", Almaty, Dayk-Press, 2002, pp. 133-134, ISBN 9985-441-52-9]History
Chinese annals call the tribes Üeban, or "Weak Huns", listing
Chumuhun among them. From 155 to 166 AD theXianbei organized a state, and took over the lands of the Hun empire streaching for 6500 km, from theUssuri River to the Volga and the Urals. After that, the future Kipchaks, theDingling , were pushed into theSayan Mountains and faded from the records. The strongest Huns, with new Ugrian and Caucasian allies, reached Europe, where they dominated theAlans and theGoths . The Üeban, the "weak Huns", remained in Jety-Su and established a princedom that existed until the 5th century AD. While severe defeats from the Huns created their reputation as bandits and robbers among many western European peoples, the Chinese authors characterized them as the most cultured people of all "barbarians" [Gumilev, L.N. "Ancient Turks", Moscow, "Science", 1967, Ch.15 http://gumilevica.kulichki.net/OT/ot15.htm] .In the 2nd century AD the Üeban Huns settled in
Tarbagatai , and later spread to Jety-Su. In the 5th century the Üeban Huns were conquered by the Uyghurs, and separated into four tribes: Chuüe, Chumi, Chumugun, and Chuban. Not later than 436 AD the Central Asian Huns in the Jety-Su formed a territory called Üeban, and sent an embassy to China to seek an alliance against the Jujans. A.N. Bernshtam equated these people with the tribe by the name of Chuban, with its related Chuy tribes Chuüe, Chumi, Chumugun, two divisions of Chuban and Shato (descended from Chuüe), all of them are descendants of the Huns [Gumilev, L.N. "Ancient Turks", Moscow, "Science", 1967, Ch.22 http://gumilevica.kulichki.net/OT/ot22.htm] . A part of the Chuüe tribe intermixed with theTürküts and formed a tribe called Shato, which lived in southernDzungaria , to the west ofLake Baikal [Gumilev, L.N. "Ancient Turks", Moscow, "Science", 1967, Ch.20 http://gumilevica.kulichki.net/OT/ot20.htm] . The Chuy tribes are known as a consolidated group from the 6th century AD. In theWestern Turkic Khaganate the Chuy tribes occupied a privileged position of being voting members of the confederation, same as theNushibi (left wing) tribes. The Shato Turks separated from the Chuüe in the middle of the 7th century, and presently are a well known ethnic group, listed in the censuses taken in Tzarist Russia and in the 20th century.After the disintegration, in 743 AD, of the Western Türkic Kaganate, a part of the Chuy tribes remained in its successor, the
Uyghur Kaganate (740-840), and another part retained their independence [Faizrakhmanov, G. "Ancient Turks in Siberia and Central Asia"] . During the Uyghur period, the Chuy tribes consolidated into the nucleus of the tribes known as Kimaks in the Arab and Persian sources [S.A. Pletneva, "Kipchaks", p.26] . The head of the Kimak confederation was titled "Shad Tutuk", i.e. "Prince Governing, or Ruling” [Faizrakhmanov, G. "Ancient Turks in Sibiria and Central Asia"] . By the middle of the eighth century, the Kimaks occupied territory between the rivers Yaik and Emba, and from the Aral andCaspian steppes, to the Jety-Su area. After the 840 AD breakup of the Uyghur Kaganate, the Kimaks headed a new political tribal union, creating a new Kimak Kaganate state, a federation of seven tribes, seven Khanlyks.Abu Said Gardizi (d. 1061) wrote that the Kimak federation consisted of seven tribes:Kimaks (Imak, Imek, Yemek), Imi,Tatars ,Bayandur ,Kipchak ,Lanikaz andAjlad . Later, an expanded Kimak Kaganate partially controlled the territories of theOguz ,Kangly , and Bagjanak tribes, and in the west bordered theKhazarian andBulgar territories. The Kimaks led a semi-settled life, while the Kipchaks were predominantly nomadic herders.In the beginning of the eleventh century the Kipchak Khanlyk moved west, occupying lands that had earlier belonged to the Oguz. After seizing the Oguz lands, the Kipchaks grew considerably stronger, and the Kimaks became dependents of the Kipchaks. The fall of the Kimak Kaganate in the middle of the 11th century was caused by the migration of Central Asian Mongolian-speaking nomads displaced by the Mongolian-speaking Khitan state of Liao, which formed in 916 AD in Northern China. The Khitan nomads occupied Kimak and Kipchak lands west of the Irtysh. In the eleventh to twelfth centuries a Mongol-speaking
Naiman tribe displaced the Kimaks and Kipchaks from the Mongolian Altai and Upper Irtysh as it moved west.Between the ninth and thirteenth centuries Kimak nomadic tribes were coaching in the steppes of the modern
Astrakhan Oblast of Russia. A portion of the Kimaks that left theOb -Irtysh interfluvial region joined theKipchak confederation that survived until theMongol invasion, and later united with the Nogai confederation of the Kipchak descendents. The last organized tribes of the Nogai in Russian sources were dispersed with Russian construction of "zaseka" bulwarks in the Don and Volga regions in the 17th-18th centuries, which separated the cattle breeding populations from their summer pastures. Another part of the Nogai were deported from theBudjak steppes after Russian conquest of Western Ukraine and Moldova in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century.ee also
*
History of Kyrgyzstan
*History of Kazakhstan
*History of Mongolia
*History of China Notes
References
*Faizrakhmanov G., "Ancient Turks in Sibiria and Central Asia" Kazan, 'Master Lain', 2000, ISBN 5-93139-069-3
*Gumilev L.N., "Ancient Turks", Moscow, 'Science', 1967
*Gumilev L.N., "Hunnu in China", Moscow, 'Science', 1974
*Kimball L., "The Vanished Kimak Empire", Western Washington U., 1994
*Pletneva S.A., "Kipchaks", Moscow, 'Science', 1990, ISBN 5-02-009542-7External links
*http://www.ozturkler.com/data_english/0001/0001_16.htm The Kimek People
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