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Olkhonud (Mongolian: Олхуноуд, Олхонууд, Олгонууд; Chinese: 斡勒忽讷; pinyin: wòlēihūnè), also rendered as Olqunuut, [1] was the clan of Hoelun, the mother of Genghis Khan. [2] They helped Genghis to defeat the Naimans. The Olkhunut people were very closely related to the Hongirad tribe.
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 [11] and Punjabi. Although they acknowledge their Mongolic roots, their ethnic identity has shifted to their local South Asian ethnic group.
Like all the Oirat tribes, the Bayads were not a consanguineal unit but a political-ethnographic one, formed of at least 40 different yasu, or patrilineages, of the most diverse origins. [ 2 ] It is also mentioned that the Bayads are presumably of Siberian Turkic origin, as the Bayad clan name is attested in Siberia from early times.
The Bayad (Mongol: Баяд/Bayad, lit. "the Riches") is the third largest subgroup of the Mongols in Mongolia and they are a tribe in Four Oirats. Bayads were a prominent clan within the Mongol Empire. Bayads can be found in both Mongolic and Turkic peoples. Within Mongols, the clan is spread through Khalkha, Inner Mongolians, Buryats and Oirats.
Chonos, one of the Mongol tribes, can be found in Kalmykia, Buryatia, and the Irkutskaya province in the Russian Federation, and also in Mongolia and the People's Republic of China. The name of the tribe translates as "wolves" or "wolf's", and it is one of the most ancient Mongolian tribes. It is famous as a first tribe which joined Genghis Khan.
The Shar Darkhad, Dalhut, [1] or Darhut [2] (Mongolian for "Untouchables", [3] "Protected Ones"; Chinese: 达尔扈特, pinyin: Dá'ěrhùtè) are a subgroup of Mongol people living mainly in Inner Mongolia in northern China. [2] In 1947, 2071 people from 462 households were eligible to be Darkhad. [4]
In 555 AD, the 3rd Khan of the Göktürks Kigin conquered the tribes of the Sayan Mountains.The Mongolian, Turkic, and Samoyedic tribes living in the taiga of southern Siberia were collectively referred to as "Forest People" Among these forest tribes, some lived in yurts, hunted in the taiga, and herded reindeer, while more powerful tribes raised livestock, including the Oirats.
Dörbet delegation to the camp of the Chinese Qianlong Emperor in the Chengde Mountain Resort in 1754, in 萬樹園賜宴圖, painted in 1755 by Jean-Denis Attiret. A Dörben clan existed within the Mongol tribe in the 12th–13th centuries, but the Dörbets appear as an Oirat tribe only in the latter half of the 16th century.