(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Illig Qaghan - Wikipedia

Illig Qaghan[2] (Old Turkic: 𐰃𐰞𐰞𐰃𐰏𐰴𐰍𐰣; simplified Chinese: 颉利あせ; traditional Chinese: 頡利あせ; pinyin: Jiélì Kèhán; died 13 February 634), born Ashina Duobi (Chinese: おもね咄苾; pinyin: Āshǐnà Duōbì), posthumous name Prince Huang of Guiyi (かえりあらおう), was the last qaghan of the Eastern Turkic Khaganate.

Illig Khagan
頡利あせ
Fourth Khagan of the Eastern Turkic Khaganate
Reign620-630
PredecessorChulou Qaghan
SuccessorNone
BornAshina Duobi
おもね咄苾
Died13 February 634[1]
SpousePrincess Yicheng (義成よしなり公主こうしゅ)
IssueYukuk Shad
Posthumous name
Huang (あら)
HouseAshina
FatherYami Qaghan
MotherPoshi ばばほどこせ
ReligionTengrism

Background

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He was a son of Yami Qaghan and his Tuyuhun wife Poshi (ばばほどこせ). He was raised by the Tuyuhun general Külüg Tarkhan (えびす祿ろくたちかん).[3] After coming of age, he was given the title Baghatur shad (莫賀咄設) and was assigned to rule the eastern parts of the empire.

Reign

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He declared himself Illig Khagan after the death of his older brother Chuluo and married his brother's widow as well. He gave his nephew Ashina Shibobi the title of Tolis Qaghan afterwards and assigning him to his own former tribes. He continued his predecessors' pro-Sui politics, supporting puppet emperors.

Raids into Tang

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His first contacts with Tang were very hostile. In 621, Tujue forces attacked Fenyin and Xi territories, reaching as south as Yanmen in April.[4] As a response, Turkic ambassadors were arrested in China and vice versa. In May, khagan's forces crushed Tang forces commanded by Li Shuliang (叔良), Gaozu's cousin who died from arrow wounds after a month.[4] They were repelled later by Yang Shidao.

Later raids were accompanied by Gao Kaidao and Yuan Junzhang (えんくんあきら), a general formerly under Liu Wuzhou.[4] To stop raids, Gaozu offered khagan a tribute and a Chinese princess. Khagan accepted the proposal and both states released arrested envoys.

Soon raids restarted, in 623, khagan were assisted by Gao Kaidao and Liu Heita in sieging Mayi (present-day Shuozhou, Shanxi) and capturing it. Yuan Junzhang was appointed governor of Mayi. But Mayi was soon reverted by Tujue in hopes of attaining a marriage to Tang princess.

Later Liang Luoren (りょうらくじん), the brother of Liang Shidu attacked with assistance from Eastern Tujue to Ling prefecture. However Li Daozong (a cousin of Taizong) was able to repel him, and further expel the khagan's nephew Ashina Yushe (おもねいくしゃ) from the Wuyuan (はら, in modern Yulin, Shaanxi).

As raids were becoming more frequent in 624, Li Shimin stepped up to accuse Ashina Shibobi of breaking his brotherhood vows, which made Illig Khagan to grow suspect towards Shibobi.[4] Khagan soon attempted to seek peace, sending his nephew Ashina Shibobi and his uncle Ashina Simo to negotiate.[5]

In 625, khagan attacked Ling Prefecture (れいしゅう, roughly modern Yinchuan, Ningxia). Emperor Gaozu sent the general Zhang Jin (ちょう瑾) to resist Tujue with Wen Yanbo serving as Zhang's secretary general. When Zhang engaged khagan, however, he suffered a major defeat, and Wen was captured. As Wen was an important official, khagan put him under interrogation and asked him about the strengths and weaknesses of the Tang state. Wen refused to answer and khagan moved him to the Yin Mountains region.

In 626, just 19 days after Emperor Taizong took the throne, Shibobi and Illig were just across the Wei River from Chang'an. Emperor Taizong, accompanied by Gao Shilian and Fang Xuanling, was forced to meet Tujue across the river and personally negotiate peace terms, including tributes to Eastern Turks, before Illig withdrew.

Civil war

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In 627 he attempted to levy horses from the vassal Tiele tribes after all his livestock died from a snowstorm. The Tiele revolted under a Xueyantuo coalition. Emperor Taizong of Tang wasted no time in allying with these Tiele and the Khitans in a joint attack. Illig was already facing internal dissent from the Göktürk generals jealous of the influence of Illig's Sogdian viziers.

As response, khagan gave 100,000 cavalry to the command of Yukuk Shad to suppress revolts. However shad was defeated by Huige forces commanded by Pusa (菩薩ぼさつ) near Malie (near modern Gansu). Later, more generals of Tujue were defeated by the Xueyantuo.

In 628 Kumo Xi tribes also rose in rebellion against Tujue. Eastern governor Ashina Shibobi was unsuccessful in defeating rebels, which made khagan angry and ordered him to be flogged and imprisoned for 10 days.[4] Taizong used this opportunity to invite him to flee to Tang.

End of reign

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Tang dynasty's campaign against illig Qaghan in 629–630

In summer 628, when a number of Khitan tribes surrendered to Tang, Illig offered to trade Liang Shidu for the Khitan tribes, but Emperor Taizong refused stating Liang was already on verge of surrendering himself and Khitan were no Turk. Meanwhile, Emperor Taizong sent his brother-in-law Chai Shao (しば紹) and the generals Xue Wanjun (薛萬ひとし), Liu Lancheng (りゅうらんなり), and Liu Min (Liang's former subordinate) to pressure Shuofang. They soon defeated Eastern Tujue forces and put Shuofang under siege, and Eastern Tujue forces were unable to lift the siege. When the food supplies ran out, Liang Shidu's cousin Liang Luoren assassinated Liang Shidu and surrendered the city to Tang

Around the new year 630, with Eastern Tujue in internal turmoil, khagan attacked Ashina Shibobi (おもね什鉢苾). As a reaction Emperor Taizong commissioned Li Jing, Li Shiji, Wei Xiaojie, Li Daozong, Chai Shao (しば紹), and Xue Wanche (薛萬とおる) to attack Eastern Tujue, with Li Jing in overall command. Li launched his attack in a surprise manner, from Mayi through Wuyang Range (あくみね, in modern southern Hohhot, Inner Mongolia), capturing the important city of Dingxiang (ていじょう, in modern Hohhot). In fear, khagan retreated to Qikou (磧口, in modern Xilin Gol League, Inner Mongolia). Li Jing then sent secret messengers to persuade his associate to surrender. One of them, Kangsumi (かんひそか), took Emperor Yang's wife Empress Xiao and their grandson Yang Zhengdao, whom Chuluo khagan had created the Prince of Sui, and surrendered to Li Jing. Khagan sent messengers to Emperor Taizong, offering to submit and to pay homage to him later, but was still considering fleeing further with his forces. Emperor Taizong sent the official Tang Jian (から儉) as an envoy to khagan, but also ordered Li Jing to escort khagan. Li Jing, reading between the lines and believing that Emperor Taizong's order was to attack khagan, after joining forces with Li Shiji, launched the attack. They defeated and captured most of khagan's remaining forces and killed his wife, Sui's Princess Yicheng. Khagan fled further, and was soon captured by his own men Ashina Sunishi (おもねしつ) and Ashina Nishu (おもねどろ孰) who handed him over to Li Daozong and Zhang Baoxiang (ちょうたからしょう). He was brought back to Chang'an to face Taizong on 29 March, 630. After listing his crimes against the Tang, Taizong spared the former Qaghan.

Later years

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In his later years, the former qaghan grew ill in morale. He was created a commander and appointed to be a governor of Guó Prefecture which was rich with deer in 632 by Taizong, but he declined. He died in February 634 and was created Prince of Guiyi (かえりおう) and posthumously named Huang (あら) by Taizong.[6] His teacher Kulug Tarkhan was also reported to have taken his own life in sadness.[6] Cen Wenben was ordered to carve a memorial stone. His tomb is still not found.

Family

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He was married to Princess Yicheng of Sui (義成よしなり公主こうしゅ) and a number of wives. He had at least five issues:

  • Ashina Dieluozhi (おもねたたみささえ) - he was captured by alongside his mother Li Jing in 630. Taizong reportedly told about him "filial respect for mother and father is same for every person be it Chinese or non-Chinese".[7] He died single.[4]
  • Ashina Yukuk (おもねほっだに) - he was ruling prince of Tiele tribes before 627, he would later go on to be khagan of Western Wing.
  • Ashina Poluomen (おもね婆羅門ばらもん) - lived between 610 and 651. He was a general in Tang army. His tomb was found in October 2005, near Xi'an.[6]
  • Ashina Tegin (おもねとくつとむ)[6] - yabgu of Eastern Tujue.
    • Ashina Jian (おもね暕, 629–671) - a Tang general, Commandant of the Left Guard.
      • Ashina Gande (おもねかんとく) - a Prince of Guiyi (かえりおう), lived between 664 and 691. Married to an Ashide woman.[8]
  • Etmish Beg - Ilterish Qaghan, founder of Second Turkic Kaghanate was a descendant of Illig[4] through Etmish beg.[9] Some scholars such as Vladimir Sychev suggest he was same person with Ashina Nishufu.[10]

References

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  1. ^ ([贞观はちねん]はる正月しょうがつみずのと,突厥颉利あせそつ。) Zizhi Tongjian, vol.194. Emperor Taizong's biography in Old Book of Tang also gave the same death date, but referred to him by his name "Ashina Tubi". ([贞观]はちねん正月しょうがつみずのとみぎ大将たいしょう军阿吐苾そつ。) Jiu Tang Shu, vol.03.
  2. ^ The Cambridge History of China, Vol. 3., Cambridge University Press, 1978, p. 181.
  3. ^ New Book of Tang, vol 215
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Ahmet., Taşağil (1995–2004). Gök-Türkler. Atatürk Kültür, Dil, ve Tarih Yüksek Kurumu (Turkey). Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi. ISBN 975161113X. OCLC 33892575.
  5. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2013). Li Shi Min, Founding the Tang Dynasty: The Strategies that Made China the Greatest Empire in Asia. Algora Publishing. ISBN 9780875869803.
  6. ^ a b c d Ekrem, Erkin. "Gök Türk Hsieh-li Kağan'ın (618-630) Oğlu A-shih-na P'o-luo-men'in Mezar Kitabesi Üzerine" (PDF). Ankara University (in Turkish). Retrieved 2018-07-27.
  7. ^ "とう演義えんぎ/016 - 维基ぶん库,自由じゆうてき图书馆". zh.wikisource.org (in Chinese). Retrieved 2018-07-27.
  8. ^ SAITO, Shigeo. "「突厥「おもねかんとく墓誌ぼし訳注やくちゅうこう──から羈縻支配しはいにおける突厥集団しゅうだん性格せいかく──」『内陸ないりくアジア言語げんご研究けんきゅう』26, 2011, pp. 1-38.(The Study on the Epitaph of Ashina Gande おもねかんとく of the Türks (Tujue 突厥): The Characteristics of the Türks under the Loose Rein (Jimi羈縻) Control of Tang. In: Studies on the Inner Asian Languages 26, 2011, pp. 1-38)". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. ^ "Гумилев Л. Н. Древние тюрки. Генеалогические таблицы". gumilevica.kulichki.net. Retrieved 2018-07-27.
  10. ^ Vladimirovich), Sychev, Nikolaĭ (Nikolaĭ; Владимирович), Сычев, Николай (Николай (2006). Kniga dinastiĭ. Moskva: AST. ISBN 5170324952. OCLC 173821140.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

Sources

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See also

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Illig Qaghan
Preceded by Khagan of the Eastern Turkic Khaganate
620–630
Succeeded by