The Uzbek Khanate, also known as the Abulkhair Khanate, Shibanid Khanate, was an Shaybanid state after the collapse of Golden Horde and preceding the Khanate of Bukhara. During the few years it existed, the Uzbek Khanate was the preeminent state in Central Asia, ruling over most of modern-day Uzbekistan, much of Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, and parts of southern Russia. This is the first state of the Abulkhairids, a branch of the Shaybanids.
The dynasty of Abu'l-Khayr Khan and his descendants is named after him, and the states ruled by them are known as Abulkhairids, such as in the Khanate of Bukhara. They may also be referred to as Shaybanids, although this is more of an umbrella term as a rival dynasty called the Arabshahids of Khwarezm were also Shaybanids, but not Abulkhairids.
Originally, the ethnonym âÂÂUzbekâ was not used as a self-designation for a distinct ethnic group in the eastern part of the Ulus of Jochi. In fact, there was no separate ethnic group with this name at that time. The territory of the Golden Horde was inhabited by nomadic tribes, which were usually referred to as âÂÂTatarsâ in Arabic, Russian, and European sources, and as âÂÂUzbeksâ in Central Asian sources. In the early period, the term âÂÂUzbeksâ was used in Central Asia to refer to the entire nomadic population of the Ulus of Jochi. After the campaigns of Muhammad Shaybani in the region, the meaning of this name became more restricted and came to denote mainly the descendants of the specific group of nomads who resettled in Central Asia along with the Shaybanids. Thus, it can be said that there was no separate ethnic group of âÂÂnomadic Uzbeksâ in the Ulus of Jochi; rather, there was a unified nomadic Golden Horde people, known in Europe as âÂÂTatarsâ and in Central Asia as âÂÂUzbeksâÂÂ.
A similar position is held by the Kazakhstani historian Uskembay K. Z.. According to him, in Timurid sources the nomadic population of Ak Orda is designated by the term âÂÂUzbeks.â The historian notes that this tradition became so entrenched in Central Asian historiography that later, during the reign of Barak Khan and the Shibanid Abulkhair Khan, their subjects and even the state continued to be called by this term. A similar conclusion is also reached by the Kazakhstani historian Sabitov Zh. M., who considers the term âÂÂUzbekâ as a Central Asian exo-ethnonym (an external name) applied to the nomadic population of the entire Ulus of Jochi. According to the historian, the term âÂÂnomadic Uzbeksâ was coined in 1965 by B. A. Akhmedov and is not mentioned in the sources.
Starting with Shiban, brother of Batu Khan who was the ruler of the Golden Horde, the Shaybanids and their descendants held land and sway over many tribes granted to Shiban by Batu. These lands included the Golden Horde domains east of the Urals, and lands north of the Syr Darya river. Central control in the Golden Horde eroded away quickly in the east and breakaway states like the Nogai Horde and the Khanate of Sibir appeared in the region.
By the time of Abu'l-Khayr's birth in 1412, the ulus of Shiban was fractured. At this time the eastern part of the Golden Horde (White Horde) had become outside of complete control of the Golden Horde khans and pretenders, especially after the assassination of Barak Khan in 1427. Abu'l-Khayr was taken prisoner after a battle in 1427 and was released in 1428. After the passing of the then Khan of the Uzbeks and pretender to the throne of the Golden Horde, Barak Khan, Ulug Beg, the leader of the Timurid Empire, secretly orchestrated the title of khan to pass to Abu'l-Khayr. He began his rule by consolidating tribes in Siberia around his capital at Chimgi-Tura (Modern-day Tyumen). He was able to depose the reigning Khan of Sibir, Hajji Muhammad, a former khan of the Golden Horde from 1419 to 1423, and took the entirety of the area under Shaybanid control.
In 1430 or 1431, Abu'l-Khayr and his army marched south into Timurid-held Khwarezm and occupied Urganj. Between 1430 and 1446 the Uzbek Khanate took land in Transoxiana from the Timurids.
Abu'l-Khayr invaded the Golden Horde sometime after this and defeated Mustafa Khan near Astrakhan. The Uzbeks lost around 4,500 men during this campaign.
Prior to the death of Shah Rukh in 1448 Sighnaq and other cities in Turan such as Uzkend and Sozak were invaded and captured by the Uzbeks. Sighnaq became one of the principal cities of Central Asia during this time.
In 1451, Abu'l-Khayr allied with the Timurid Abu Sa'id against his rival 'Abdullah and the two both marched on Samarkand. The Uzbek-Abu Sa'id alliance was successful and in return Abu Sa'id paid tribute to the Uzbeks.
Starting in the 1460s, the Kazakh khans warred for control of modern-day Kazakhstan, led by Janibeg and Kerei Khan, the sons of the claimant to the throne of the Golden Horde, Barak Khan, founded the Kazakh Khanate. This war was made especially difficult for the Uzbeks because of a recent war with the Dorben Oirat Mongols on the Uzbeks' eastern borders. Janibeg and Kerei sought to capitalize on Uzbek weakness following the conflict.
Regarding these events, 16th century Khaidar Duglati in his Tarikh-i Rashidi reports:
Somewhere around 1468âÂÂ1470, Abu'l-Khayr Khan died in battle against the Kazakhs along with several of his sons. Sheikh Haidar, also known as Baruj Oghlan (Some sources have them as the same person or different persons), the eldest of Abu'l-Khayr's sons, succeeded him. Sheikh Haidar's reign was short and was ended after conflicts with a rival khan, Ibak.
Muhammad Shaybani, Abu'l-Khayr's grandson, succeeded his father, Sheikh Haidar. Shaybani had been, along with his brother, Mahmud Sultan, given refuge by the Khan of Astrakhan, Qasim.
After Shaybani was helped by the Moghul Khans to reclaim land in Transoxiana, he became a Moghul vassal from 1488 until around 1500. After this point, Shaybani led his own conquests which largely consisted of cities in the fractured Timurid successor states (Such as Samarkand and Bukhara). Shaybani's main rivals were the Timurid Babur and the Persian Shah Ismail.
In 1500, Shaybani officially conceded all the Kazakh held lands in Dasht-i Qipchaq to the Kazakh Khanate. Shortly after this in 1506, Shaybani captured Bukhara and the Uzbek Khanate became the Khanate of Bukhara.
Muhammad Shaybani was killed in the Battle of Marv by the Safavids ruled by Shah Ismail in 1510, and had his skull turned into a jeweled drinking goblet.
In 1428, Abulkhair Khan was proclaimed the ruler of a new political union of the Uzbeks, which in historical science is often referred to as the âÂÂKhanate of Abulkhairâ or the âÂÂState of the Nomadic Uzbeks.â However, the term âÂÂState of the Nomadic Uzbeksâ and âÂÂKhanate of Abulkhair,â introduced by Academician B. A. Akhmedov, has been criticized by Ilya Zaytsev, who considers it not entirely appropriate.
Some Kazakhstani historians, in particular A. K. Kushkumbaev and Zh. M. Sabitov, believe that the use in modern historiography of such terms as âÂÂState of the Nomadic Uzbeks,â âÂÂUzbek Khanate,â or âÂÂKhanate of the Nomadic Uzbeksâ does not reflect the real picture of the Eastern Ulus of Jochi. These terms were first introduced into scholarly circulation in the 1960s by the Soviet historian B. A. Akhmedov in the context of nation-building in Soviet Uzbekistan and are not based on the sources of that era. Historians also note that Abulkhair Khan was one of the khans of the Golden Horde who continued its political tradition, and not the founder of a new state called the âÂÂState of the Nomadic UzbeksâÂÂ.
These are the khans ruling over the domains of the Uzbeks prior to the Abulkhairids.