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The qualifier Mongol tribes was established as an umbrella term in the early 13th century, when Temüjin (later Genghis Khan) united the different tribes under his control and established the Mongol Empire. There were 19 Nirun tribes (marked (N) in the list) that descended from Bodonchar and 18 Darligin tribes (marked (D) in the list), [1 ...
List of medieval Mongol tribes and clans; N. Naimans This page was last edited on 30 December 2023, at 15:54 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
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Mongolian tribes and clans (3 C, 7 P) Mongols (13 C, 37 P) ... List of medieval Mongol tribes and clans; List of modern Mongol clans; Mongolic peoples; Mongols; A ...
The Mughals, descendants of the Barlas [citation needed] and other Mongol tribes [citation needed], currently speak Indo-Aryan languages of their respective regions, including Urdu [9] and Punjabi. Although they acknowledge their Mongolic roots, their ethnic identity has shifted to their local South Asian ethnic group.
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]
Some sources speak of the Katagans as being part of the Uzbek tribes in the mid-16th century. [4] The Katagans are mentioned in the lists of 92 Uzbek tribes. [5]Muhammad Yar Arab Katagan, a famous descendant of the Uzbek Katagan tribe, was a 16th-century historian and the author of Musahhir al-bilad ('The conquest of lands') in Persian on the history of the Shaybanids.
The Naiman (/ ˈ n aɪ m ə n /; Mongolian: ᠨᠠᠶᠢᠮᠠᠨ [ˈnɛːmɴ̩]; Kazakh and Kyrgyz: Найман), meaning The Eight, were a medieval tribe originating in the territory of modern Western Mongolia [9] (possibly during the time of the Uyghur Khaganate), [10] and are one of the 92 tribes of Uzbeks, modern Mongols [2] and in the middle juz of the Kazakhs.