- The
Torghut (Mongolian: Торгууд, ᠲᠤᠷᠭᠣᠣᠠ, Torguud, "Guardsman",
simplified Chinese: 土尔扈特;
traditional Chinese: 土爾扈特) are one of the four
major subgroups...
-
donkeys and camels. Paul
Pelliot translated the name "
Torghut" as
garde de jour. He
wrote that the
Torghuts owed
their name
either to the
memory of the guard...
-
known as
Torghuts.
While the
first phase of
their movement became the Old
Torghuts, the Qing
called the
later Torghut immigrants "New
Torghut". Various...
-
composed of four
major tribes:
Dzungar (Choros or Olots/Elut/Yelut/Èlǔtè),
Torghut, Dörbet and Khoshut. The
political elite of the
Rouran and
Tobgach empires...
-
Ubashi Khan (Mongolian: ᠣᠪᠠᠱᠢ ᠬᠠᠨ; Chinese: 渥巴锡汗; 1744 – 1774) was a
Torghut-Kalmyk
prince and the last Khan of the
Kalmyk Khanate. In
January 1771, he...
- (also
written Derbet) and the Khoid.
Later on,
elements of the
Khoshut and
Torghut were
forcibly incorporated into the
Dzungar military, thus
completing the...
- 1580-1644) was an
Oirat prince and
Taish of the
Torghut-Oirat tribe.
Around 1616, Kho
Orluk persuaded the
other Torghut princes and
lesser nobility to move their...
- Olots),
Torghut, Zakhchin.
Kalmyks — Baatud, Buzava, Choros, Durvud, Khoid, Olots,
Torghut.
Upper Mongolian Oirats — Choros, Khoshut,
Torghut. In modern-day...
-
Dzungar Khoid Khoshut Khoton*
Kalmyk incl.
Buzava Myangad Olot Sart
Kalmyk Torghut Upper Mongols Zakhchin Buryats Barga Hamnigan* Soyot*
Other Aimaq** Bonan...
- to the
Kalmyk Khanate to
convey an
imperial edict to
Ayuka Khan of the
Torghuts. They left Beijing,
crossed Mongolia and then
entered Russia. In order...