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The unification created a new common ethnic identity as Mongols. Descendants of those clans form the Mongolian nation and other Inner Asian people. [citation needed] Almost all of tribes and clans mentioned in the Secret History of the Mongols [2] and some tribes mentioned in the Tarikh-i-Rashidi, there are total 33 Mongol tribes. [citation needed]
Donghu people (5 C, 8 P) N. Nirun Mongols (4 C, 7 P) Pages in category "Mongolian tribes and clans" ... List of medieval Mongol tribes and clans; N. Naimans
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; List of medieval Mongolian tribes and clans
For the Mongolian people , see the ... List of medieval Mongol tribes and clans; List of modern Mongol clans; Mongolic peoples; Mongols; A. Altai Uriankhai; Asud; B.
Male-mediated Western Steppe Herders ancestry increased by the establishment of Türkic and Uyghur rule in Mongolia, which was accompanied by an increase in the West Eurasian haplogroups R and J. [25] There was a male-mediated rise in East Asian ancestry in the late medieval Mongolian period, paralleling the increase of haplogroup C2b. [26]
The proto-Mongols emerged from an area that had been inhabited by humans as far back as 45,000 years ago during the Upper Paleolithic. [1] The people there went through the Bronze and Iron Ages, forming tribal alliances, peopling, and coming into conflict with early polities in the Central Plain. [citation needed]
One common theory sees the name as a cognate with the Mongolian [хар/khar] Error: {{Lang}}: Non-latn text (pos 1)/Latn script subtag mismatch and Turkic qarā for "black, swarthy". There have been various other Mongol and Turkic tribes with names involving the term, which are often conflated. [9]
Mongol Empire c.1207, Ongud and their neighbours. The Ongud (also spelled Ongut or Öngüt; Mongolian: Онгуд, Онход; Chinese: 汪古, Wanggu; from Old Turkic öng "desolate, uninhabited; desert" plus güt "class marker" [1]) were a Turkic tribe that later became Mongolized [2] [3] active in what is now Inner Mongolia in northern China around the time of Genghis Khan (1162–1227). [4]