- the Yuan dynasty,
Oirat and
Eastern Mongols had
developed separate identities to the
point where Oirats called themselves "Four
Oirats"
while they used...
- and the
Oirats.
Mutual raiding by the
Oirats of
Russian settlements and by the
Cossacks and the Bashkirs,
Muslim v****als of the Russians, of
Oirat encampments...
-
believed that the term Four
Oirats refers to the Choros, Torghut,
Dorbet and
Khoid tribes,
there is a
theory that the
Oirats were not
consanguineous units...
-
Oirat or Elut (Chinese: 厄魯特, Èlǔtè) may
refer to:
Oirats, the
westernmost group of the
Mongols Oirat language This
disambiguation page
lists articles ****ociated...
- the late 14th century, the
Oirats emerged as the
dominant power opposing the
Khalkha Mongols. The
ruling clan of the Four
Oirat was
Choros at the time. Under...
- syllabification. In Mongolia,
Central Mongolian minority varieties have no status, so
Oirats are
supposed to use
Mongolian Cyrillic which de
facto only
represents Khalkha...
- the
leader of Dörbets was
Dalai Taishi (d.1637). In
order to
unite the
Oirats,
Dalai Taishi used the
method of
marriage of convenience;
Dalai Taishi and...
-
Western Oirats are
mainly concentrated in
Western Mongolia: 184,000
Kalmyks (2010) — Kalmykia,
Russia 205,000
Mongolian Oirats (2010) 140,000
Oirats (2010)...
- name "
Oirats" by
French missionaries. This was
sometimes vaguely extended to
cover wide
areas of
Central Asia,
including Afghanistan. The
Oirats were originally...
- the
Oirats under their leader Bahamu (Mahmud) (d. 1417)
enthroned an Ariq Bökid
Delbeg Khan in 1412.
Originally the Ming had
supported the
Oirats in their...