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  1. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › KaiduKaidu - Wikipedia

    Kaidu ( Middle Mongol: ᠬᠠᠢ᠌ᠳᠤ [ˈqʰaɪd̥ʊ], Qayidu, Modern Mongol: Хайду Haidu, [ˈχæˑtʊ̽]; Chinese: 海都; pinyin: Hǎidū; c. 1230 [1] – 1301) was a grandson of the Mongol khagan Ögedei (1185–1241) and thus leader of the House of Ögedei and the de facto khan of the Chagatai Khanate, a division of the Mongol Empire.

  2. Kaidu was the leader of the House of Ögedei and the de facto khan of the Chagatai Khanate, while Kublai was the founder of the Yuan dynasty. The Kaidu–Kublai war followed the Toluid Civil War (1260–1264) and resulted in the permanent division of the Mongol Empire.

  3. Kaidu was a Mongol khan who reigned from 1269–1301. He was the great-grandson of Genghis Khan, grandson of Ögödei, and a leader of the opposition to Kublai Khan’s rule over the Mongol empire. Kaidu controlled Turkistan and, for a time, much of Mongolia proper, including Karakorum, the former.

  4. The Toluid Civil War, and the wars that followed it (such as the Berke–Hulagu war and the KaiduKublai war), weakened the authority of the Great Khan over the Mongol Empire and split the empire into autonomous khanates.

  5. history-maps.com › story › Golden-HordeKaidu–Kublai war

    Apr 25, 2024 · The KaiduKublai war was a war between Kaidu, the leader of the House of Ögedei and the de facto khan of the Chagatai Khanate in Central Asia, and Kublai Khan, the founder of the Yuan dynasty in China and his successor Temür Khan that lasted a few decades from 1268 to 1301.

  6. Kaidu (Middle Mongol: ᠬᠠᠢ᠌ᠳᠤ [ˈqʰaɪd̥ʊ], Qayidu, Modern Mongol: Хайду Haidu, [ˈχæˑtʊ̽]; Chinese: 海都; pinyin: Hǎidū; c. 1230 – 1301) was a grandson of the Mongol khagan Ögedei (1185–1241) and thus leader of the House of Ögedei and the de facto khan of the Chagatai Khanate, a division of the Mongol Empire.

  7. May 30, 2018 · To protect against surprise attacks from the north, Subotai dispatched a force of 30,000 men under Kaidu, grandson of Ögedai Khan (the third son of Genghis Khan), to engage European forces in Poland, Bohemia and Silesia.

  8. The most active and successful proponent of this policy was Kaidu, a grandson of Ögödei, who made several attempts to carve out an empire for himself in the heartland from lands ruled by other Mongol princes. In the course of time, he extended his control over most of the Semirechye, Kashgaria, and Transoxania, and in 1269 he even assumed the ...

  9. The KaiduKublai war was a war between Kaidu and Kublai (and his successor Temür) from 1268 to 1301. Kaidu was the leader of the House of Ögedei and the de facto khan of the Chagatai Khanate, while Kublai was the founder of the Yuan dynasty.

  10. Kaidu (1230-1301) was the fifth and last Khan of the Mongol Empire, reigning from 1270 to 1301. He reigned as Khan of the Chagatai Khanate from 1270 after seizing power, and after engaging in 30 years of endless warfare against his uncle Kublai Khan and his successor Temur Khan, Kaidu became the...