-
Ambaghai or
Hambaqai Khan (Mongolian: ᠠᠮᠪᠠᠭᠠᠢ; ? – died 1156) was a Khan of the
Khamag Mongol,
succeeding his
cousin Khabul Khan. He was one of the great-grandsons...
-
invasions of the Jurchen-led Jin armies.
Khabul Khan was
succeeded by
Ambaghai Khagann of the Taichiud.
Ambagai was
captured by the
Tatar confederation...
-
confederation in the
Mongolian Plateau during the 12th century,
founded by
Ambaghai Khan in 1148 AD, and
finally ended with
Sultan Husayn Tayichud in 1405...
-
politically unify the Mongols.
Though Khabul Khan had 7 sons, he
nominated Ambaghai, a son of
Sengun Bilge from the
Taichuud clan, as his successor. Khabul...
-
Mongol khan,
Ambaghai of the Taichiud,
under the
pretense of
making peace and
handed him over to the Jin court.
Before he was captured,
Ambaghai managed to...
-
Mongol (complete list) – Khaidu,
ruler (?–c.1100) Khabul, Khan (1120–1148)
Ambaghai, Khan (1148–1156) Hotula, Khan (1156–1160)
Yesugei de
facto ruler (?–1171)...
- Khabul's successor,
Ambaghai, and
handed him over to the Jin
imperial court.
Emperor Xizong of the Jin
dynasty had
ordered Ambaghai executed by crucifixion...
-
against Tatars and Jin Dynasty. He
pillaged the
Tatars in
retaliation of
Ambaghai and his own brother, Ökin Barkak's
kidnapping and execution,
along with...
- Munkhag's great-great-grandson
Khaidu Khan. Khaidu's
grandsons Khabul Khan and
Ambaghai Khan (founder of the
Taichiut clan)
succeeded him. Thereafter, Khabul's...
- past
wrongs committed by the Jin,
foremost among which was the
death of
Ambaghai Khan in the mid-12th century, and to win the vast
amounts of
plunder his...