Tong Yabghu Qaghan

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Tong Yabghu Qaghan
Reign618-628
PredecessorSheguy
SuccessorBaghatur Qaghan
Died628
HouseAshina
Religionprobably Buddhism[1] or Tengrism

Tong Yabghu Qaghan (r. 618–628 or 630

Wade-Giles: T'ung Yeh-hu K'o-han; < Middle Chinese: *t'uong d'źiap-ġuo k'â-ġân[3]) was khagan of the Western Turkic Khaganate from 618 to 628 AD. Tong Yanghu was the brother of Sheguy (r. 611–618), the previous khagan of the western Göktürks, and was a member of the Ashina clan;[4] his reign is generally regarded as the zenith of the Western Göktürk Khaganate.[5]

Name

His name is transcribed with Chinese character 統, which means "main silk thread > guideline,

Middle Turkic as basically meaning tiger.[8] Gerard Clauson argues against Kashgari and states that toŋa means vaguely "hero, outstanding warrior".[9]

Reign

Göktürk khaganates at their height, c. 600 AD

Tong Yabghu maintained close relations with the Tang dynasty of China, and may have married into the Imperial family.[10] The Chinese

Buddhist pilgrim Xuanzang visited the western Göktürk capital Suyab in modern Kyrgyzstan and left a description of the khagan. Scholars believe the khagan described by Xuanzang was Tong Yabghu.[11] Gao and La Vaissière argue that the khagan Xuanzang met was his son Si Yabghu, rather than Tong Yabghu.[12][13]
Xuanzang described the khagan as follows:

The khan wore a green satin robe; his hair, which was ten feet long, was free. A band of white silk wound round his forehead and hung down behind. The ministers of the presence,[14] numbering two hundred in number, all wearing embroidered robes, stood on his right and left. The rest of his military retinue [was] clothed in fur, serge and fine wool, the spears and standards and bows in order, and the riders of camels and horses stretched far out of [sight].[15]

According to the

Persia to the west, connected with Kasmira (nowadays Kashmir) to the south. All countries are subjected to him. He controlled ten thousands of men with arrow and bow, establishing his power over the western region. He occupied the land of Wusun and moved his tent to Qianquan north of Tashkent. All of the princes of western region assumed the Turk office of Jielifa. Tong Yehu Kaghan also sent a Tutun to monitor them for imposition. The power of Western Turks had never reached such a state before".[16]

Campaigns against Persia