Astrakhan Khanate

Khanate of Astrakhan
حاجی‌ترخان خانلیغی
1466–1556
Astrakhan Khanate in 1466–1556
Astrakhan Khanate in 1466–1556
CapitalAstrakhan (Xacitarxan)
Official languagesChagatai language, Kypchak
Common languagesKipchak languages
Religion
Sunni Islam
GovernmentKhanate
Astrakhan Khan 
• 1466
Makhmud Astrakhan
• 1554–1556
Darwish Ghali
History 
• Established
1466
• Russian conquest
1556
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Golden Horde
Tsardom of Russia
Kalmyk Khanate
Today part ofRussia

The Khanate of Astrakhan (Turki/Kypchak: حاجی‌ترخان خانلیغی[n 1]), also referred to as the Xacitarxan Khanate, was a Tatar state that arose during the break-up of the Golden Horde. The Khanate existed in the 15th and 16th centuries in the area adjacent to the mouth of the Volga river, around the modern city of Astrakhan. Its khans claimed patrilineal descent from Toqa Temür,[1] the thirteenth son of Jochi and grandson of Genghis Khan.

Mahmud bin Küchük established the Khanate in the 1460s. The capital was the city of Xacitarxan, also known as Astrakhan in Russian chronicles. Its territory included the Lower Volga valley and the Volga Delta, including most of what is now Astrakhan Oblast and the steppeland on the right bank of Volga in present-day Kalmykia. To the south was the Caspian sea, to the east the Nogai Horde, and to the west Nogais who were theoretically subjects of the Crimean Khanate.


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  1. ^ Welsford 2012, p. 37.

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