Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ongud> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 80 of
80
with 100 triples per page.
- Ongud abstract "The Ongud, (Mongol: Онгуд, untouchables) were Mongols active in Mongolia around the time of Genghis Khan (1162–1227). Many members were members of the Church of the East. They lived in an area lining the Great Wall in the northern part of the Ordos Loop and territories to the northeast of it. They appear to have had two capitals, a northern one at the ruin known as Olon Süme and another a bit to the south at a place called Koshang or Dongsheng. They acted as wardens of the marches for the Chinese Empire to the north of the province Shanxi.The ancestors of the Ongud were the Yueban who later intermixed with Turkic peoples, forming the Shatuo of the Western Turkic Khaganate. In the 7th century they moved to eastern Xinjiang under the protection of the Tang Dynasty. By the 9th century the Shato were scattered over North China and modern Inner Mongolia. A Shato warlord, Li, mobilized 10,000 Shato cavalrymen and served the Tang as ally. In 923 his son defeated the rebellious dynasty and became emperor of the Later Tang. After the overthrow of the Li family, Shatuo commanders established the Later Jin, the Later Han and the Northern Han.In the 13th century a part of Shato probably included in the Mongol Empire as an Ongut tribe, another part as White Tatars. During Mongolian time, a part of the Chuy Onguts were resettled in Khorazm, to eventually become a part of Kazakhs, and another fraction remained in Mongolia, in the 15th century they became part of the Tumed.The Ongud chief Alakush tegin revealed the Naimans plan to attack Genghis in 1205 and allied with the Mongols. When Genghis Khan invaded the Jin Dynasty in 1211, Alagush tegin (Alakush tegin) supported him. Genghis bestowed his daughter Alaga bekhi (Alaqai beki) on his son. However, the political opponents killed Alagush. Genghis put down the rebellion and took the family under his protection. Genghis Khan's daughter Alaga ruled the Ongud people as regent for several underage princes until the reign of Güyük Khan (1246–48).Many famous post-Genghis Mongols are of Ongud descent, including the well-known monk, traveler, and diplomat, Rabban Bar Sauma (1220–1294). The Ongud proved good allies to Kublai. For example, the Ongud ruler Korgiz (George) married Kublai's two granddaughters and fought against Kaidu, whose protégé Duwa captured and killed him later in 1298. A number of Öngüd were said to have been converted to Catholicism by John of Montecorvino (1246–1328).After 1221 many Onguds were resettled in Khwarezm where they served as governors for the Golden Horde. They formed part of the Argyns and the Mughal tribe. Onguds in Mongolia became an otog of the Tumed in the 15th century.The University of Hong Kong possesses a collection of around a thousand 13th- and 14th-century bronze Nestorian crosses from the Ongud region collected during the 1920s by F. A. Nixon, a British postal official working in northern China. Although their designs vary, Maltese crosses with a square central panel displaying a swastika, the Buddhist good luck symbol, predominate.The Ongud Monument Ensemble was constructed by the Turkic tribes during the 6th-8th centuries for their noblemen. This consists of over 30 man-like figures, a lion and a sheep, and about 550 standing stones in alignments reminiscent of Carnac or Avebury. There is also a large tomb made of 4 sculptured slabs. Each slab has the front face decorated with a trellis-pattern like the walls of a ger, and a simple frieze on top.".
- Ongud thumbnail Mongol_Empire_c.1207.png?width=300.
- Ongud wikiPageID "2984587".
- Ongud wikiPageLength "5196".
- Ongud wikiPageOutDegree "45".
- Ongud wikiPageRevisionID "674748341".
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Argyns.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mongol_peoples.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Christianity_among_the_Mongols.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Church_of_the_East.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Duwa.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Fayard.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Genghis_Khan.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Golden_Horde.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Great_Wall_(China).
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Great_Wall_of_China.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Güyük_Khan.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink History_of_China.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Mongolia.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Inner_Mongolia.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Jean-Paul_Roux.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Jin_dynasty_(1115–1234).
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink John_of_Montecorvino.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Kaidu.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Kazakhs.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Khorazm.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Khwarezm.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Later_Han_(Five_Dynasties).
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Later_Tang.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink List_of_medieval_Mongol_tribes_and_clans.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink List_of_medieval_Mongolian_tribes_and_clans.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Mid-Imperial_China.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Mongol_Empire.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Mongolia.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Mongolian_language.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Mongols.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Mughal_tribe.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Naimans.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink North_China.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Northern_Han.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Olon_Süme.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Ordos_Loop.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Oxford_University_Press.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Rabban_Bar_Sauma.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Shanxi.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Shatuo.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Tang_Dynasty.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Tang_dynasty.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Tumed.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Turkic_peoples.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Hong_Kong.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Western_Turkic_Khaganate.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Xinjiang.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink Yueban.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLink File:Mongol_Empire_c.1207.png.
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ongud".
- Ongud wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ongut".
- Ongud hasPhotoCollection Ongud.
- Ongud wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Ongud wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Mongolic_ethnic_groups.
- Ongud wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Ongud subject Category:Mongol_peoples.
- Ongud hypernym Mongols.
- Ongud type People.
- Ongud comment "The Ongud, (Mongol: Онгуд, untouchables) were Mongols active in Mongolia around the time of Genghis Khan (1162–1227). Many members were members of the Church of the East. They lived in an area lining the Great Wall in the northern part of the Ordos Loop and territories to the northeast of it. They appear to have had two capitals, a northern one at the ruin known as Olon Süme and another a bit to the south at a place called Koshang or Dongsheng.".
- Ongud label "Ongud".
- Ongud sameAs Onqutlar.
- Ongud sameAs Ongut.
- Ongud sameAs Ongüt.
- Ongud sameAs Онгуд.
- Ongud sameAs Öngüter.
- Ongud sameAs Onguci.
- Ongud sameAs m.08hr0h.
- Ongud sameAs Öngütler.
- Ongud sameAs Q658381.
- Ongud sameAs Q658381.
- Ongud sameAs 汪古部.
- Ongud wasDerivedFrom Ongud?oldid=674748341.
- Ongud depiction Mongol_Empire_c.1207.png.
- Ongud isPrimaryTopicOf Ongud.