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== Sources ==
== Sources ==
=== Russian sources ===
=== Sources in Russian===
* Kazakh Khanate in the second half of the 16th century. Page 17. M. Kh. Abusseitova. 1985.
* Kazakh Khanate in the second half of the 16th century. Page 17. M. Kh. Abusseitova. 1985.
* {{Cite web |url=https://docviewer.yandex.kz/view/0/?*=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%2BLdC%2B0YfQtdGA0LrQuC3QstC90LXRiNC90LXQv9C%2B0LvQuNGC0LjRh9C10YHQutC%2B0Lkt0LjRgdGC0L7RgNC40LgucGRmIiwibm9pZnJhbWUiOnRydWUsInVpZCI6IjAiLCJ0cyI6MTcxMzAyNjg4OTYyOSwieXUiOiI1NTg2NjcxNTMxNjczMTA1MDg0Iiwic2VycFBhcmFtcyI6InRtPTE3MTMwMjY4MjYmdGxkPWt6Jmxhbmc9cnUmbmFtZT0lRDAlOUElRDAlQjAlRDAlQjclRDAlQjAlRDElODUlRDElODElRDAlQkElRDAlQkUlRDAlQjUtJUQxJTg1JUQwJUIwJUQwJUJEJUQxJTgxJUQxJTgyJUQwJUIyJUQwJUJFLSVEMCVCRSVEMSU4NyVEMCVCNSVEMSU4MCVEMCVCQSVEMCVCOC0lRDAlQjIlRDAlQkQlRDAlQjUlRDElODglRDAlQkQlRDAlQjUlRDAlQkYlRDAlQkUlRDAlQkIlRDAlQjglRDElODIlRDAlQjglRDElODclRDAlQjUlRDElODElRDAlQkElRDAlQkUlRDAlQjktJUQwJUI4JUQxJTgxJUQxJTgyJUQwJUJFJUQxJTgwJUQwJUI4JUQwJUI4LnBkZiZ0ZXh0PSVEMCVCQSVEMCVCMCVEMCVCNyVEMCVCMCVEMSU4NSVEMSU4MSVEMCVCQSVEMCVCRSVEMCVCNSslRDElODUlRDAlQjAlRDAlQkQlRDElODElRDElODIlRDAlQjIlRDAlQkUrJUQwJUJFJUQxJTg3JUQwJUI1JUQxJTgwJUQwJUJBJUQwJUI4KyVEMCVCMiVEMCVCRCVEMCVCNSVEMSU4OCVEMCVCRCVEMCVCNSVEMCVCRiVEMCVCRSVEMCVCQiVEMCVCOCVEMSU4MiVEMCVCOCVEMSU4NyVEMCVCNSVEMSU4MSVEMCVCQSVEMCVCRSVEMCVCOSslRDAlQjglRDElODElRDElODIlRDAlQkUlRDElODAlRDAlQjglRDAlQjgreHYteHZpaSslRDAlQjIlRDAlQjUlRDAlQkElRDAlQkUlRDAlQjIrJUQxJTgxJUQwJUJBJUQwJUIwJUQxJTg3JUQwJUIwJUQxJTgyJUQxJThDKyVEMCVCMCVEMSU4MiVEMSU4QiVEMCVCMyVEMCVCMCVEMCVCNSVEMCVCMiZ1cmw9aHR0cHMlM0EvL3d3dy5ldXJhc2lhbi1yZXNlYXJjaC5vcmcvd3AtY29udGVudC91cGxvYWRzLzIwMjMvMDUvJTI1RDAlMjU5QSUyNUQwJTI1QjAlMjVEMCUyNUI3JTI1RDAlMjVCMCUyNUQxJTI1ODUlMjVEMSUyNTgxJTI1RDAlMjVCQSUyNUQwJTI1QkUlMjVEMCUyNUI1LSUyNUQxJTI1ODUlMjVEMCUyNUIwJTI1RDAlMjVCRCUyNUQxJTI1ODElMjVEMSUyNTgyJTI1RDAlMjVCMiUyNUQwJTI1QkUtJTI1RDAlMjVCRSUyNUQxJTI1ODclMjVEMCUyNUI1JTI1RDElMjU4MCUyNUQwJTI1QkElMjVEMCUyNUI4LSUyNUQwJTI1QjIlMjVEMCUyNUJEJTI1RDAlMjVCNSUyNUQxJTI1ODglMjVEMCUyNUJEJTI1RDAlMjVCNSUyNUQwJTI1QkYlMjVEMCUyNUJFJTI1RDAlMjVCQiUyNUQwJTI1QjglMjVEMSUyNTgyJTI1RDAlMjVCOCUyNUQxJTI1ODclMjVEMCUyNUI1JTI1RDElMjU4MSUyNUQwJTI1QkElMjVEMCUyNUJFJTI1RDAlMjVCOS0lMjVEMCUyNUI4JTI1RDElMjU4MSUyNUQxJTI1ODIlMjVEMCUyNUJFJTI1RDElMjU4MCUyNUQwJTI1QjglMjVEMCUyNUI4LnBkZiZscj0xMDI5MiZtaW1lPXBkZiZsMTBuPXJ1JnR5cGU9dG91Y2gmc2lnbj03MTU1NGVlZWMyOGNmNWEzYWFmYTE5MjZhZjQyMjY2YyZrZXlubz0wIn0%3D&lang=ru |title=Kazakh Khanate: Essays on Foreign Policy History of the 15th-17th Centuries. Page 47 |lang=Ru |author=Nurlan Atygaev |website=eurasian-research |date=2023}}

Revision as of 14:50, 8 September 2024

The Kazakh-Bukhara War was an armed conflict between the Kazakh Khanate and the Bukhara Khanate that took place in 1598, when Tauekel Khan made a campaign to Northern Bukhara.

Kazakh-Bukhara War (1598)
Part of Kazakh-Bukhara war
Date1698
Location
Result Kazakhs occupied Turkestan, Tashkent and Andijan, but could not take Bukhara[1].
Belligerents
Kazakh Khanate Bukhara Khanate
Commanders and leaders
Tauekel Khan
Yesim Khan

Tauekel Khan's campaign to Northern Bukhara

The attack of Tauke-khan on the khanate was carefully planned. He began preparations upon learning about the quarrel between Abdullah-khan II and his son, launching the attack at the end of 1597. When it was discovered that Tauke-khan was besieging Tashkent, Abdullah-khan sent a detachment against him. Tauke-khan was an experienced warrior, having learned the art of war under the leadership of his brother - Ibodulla, the brother of Abdullah-khan II. Meeting the army of Bukhara between Tashkent and Samarkand, he inflicted a crushing defeat upon them. Abdullah-khan realized that he himself would have to confront him. Gathering his army, he set out from Bukhara to Samarkand, but the battle did not take place - Tauke-khan retreated upon hearing of his approach, and soon after arriving in Samarkand, Abdullah-khan II passed away[2].

Abdullah-khan, forced to engage in military actions with his own son Abdulmumin, prepared a new army but passed away before clashing with the Kazakh Chingizids* Burton Audrey, The Bukharans. A dynastic, diplomatic and commercial history 1550—1702. Curzon, 1997..

Abdullah-khan II died on February 8, 1598, and his son Abd al-Mumin went to Syr Darya to resolve the conflict with his cousin Hazrat Sultan, son of Uzbek Sultan, who had rebelled and proclaimed himself khan. Abd al-Mumin initially moved east to Shahruhiya and Akhsiket, then north to Tashkent. By the time he returned to Samarkand, Tauke-khan was frightened and forced to submit[2].

Subsequently, Abd al-Mumin appointed Muhammad Baki Bi as the ruler of Samarkand, visited Bukhara and Balkh, and amassed a large army for an upcoming campaign in Khorasan. However, his life ended in Zamin, near Samarkand, on June 30, 1598. The death of Abd al-Mumin led to a period of instability in the khanate[2].

Notes

Sources

Sources in Russian

  • Kazakh Khanate in the second half of the 16th century. Page 17. M. Kh. Abusseitova. 1985.
  • Nurlan Atygaev (2023). "Kazakh Khanate: Essays on Foreign Policy History of the 15th-17th Centuries. Page 47". eurasian-research (in Russian).
  1. ^ Kuzembayuly Amanzhol. Abil Erkin (2006). "Source". Archived from the original on 2024-04-16. Retrieved 2024-04-13.
  2. ^ a b c Burton Audrey, The Bukharans. A dynastic, diplomatic and commercial history 1550—1702. Curzon, 1997, p.96