Nūr Ali Khan
Нұр Әли хан
نور علي خان
Khan
Khanzada
Sultan
2nd Khan of the Junior jüz
Reign1748-1786
PredecessorAbu'l-Khair Khan
SuccessorJar-Muhammad Khan
Born1704
Kazakh Khanate
Died1790
Ufa, Russian Empire
SpouseNurbanu Begum
Names
زير الله نور علي غازي بهادور بن ابو الخير خان
Zairūllah Nūr-Ali Ghāzi-Bahadur bin Abū'l-Khair Khan
HouseHouse of Borjigin
DynastyTore
House of Urus Khan
FatherAbu'l Khair Khan
MotherFarida Begum
ReligionSunni Islam

Zairūllah Nūr-Ali Ghāzi-Bahadur bin Abū'l-Khair Khan (Kazakh: Зайрұллаh Нұр-Әли Ғази-Баһадүр бин Әбілқайыр хан, زير الله نور علي غازي بهادور بن أبو الخير خان, romanized: Zairūllah Nūr-Äli Ğazi-Bahadür bin Äbılqaiyr han), also known as Nūr Ali Khan (1704–1790) was the khan of the Junior juz, eldest son of Abu'l Khair Khan.[1]

Rise to power and reign

Nur Ali Khan was born in 1704 as the oldest son of Abu'l-Khair Muhammed Khan and his consort Farida Begum. He was given the name Zairullah at birth and went by it until after ascending to the throne. Through his father, Zairullah was the grandson of the Kazakh mırza Abdullah Sultan, who was best known for rising to the royal ranks after completing his hajj from his home in modern-day Nur-Sultan to Mecca.

Zairullah Nur Ali Khan ascended to the throne in 1748 following the death of his father. His reign was largely characterized by a fragmentation of the Kazakh Khanate into the three jüzes once again. Zairullah (referred to as Nur Ali Khan hereafter) occupied the Junior jüz that his father originally ruled before uniting the Kazakh people under his rule.

As ruler of the Junior jüz, Nur Ali Khan was granted full authority over most of western and central Kazakhstan, but was unable to assert his authority anywhere else. Facing threats in the west from the Buddhist Kalmyks and the Qing Chinese to the east, Nur Ali Khan spent much of his time gathering resources and forming strong troops to prevent his state from crumbling to expanding foreign neighbors.

Nur Ali Khan was initially hesitant to accept Russian rule as he thought it would erase the cultural identity of the Turko-Persian, Sunni Muslim Kazakhs. Though his father made an alliance with the Russian Empire to protect the Kazakh Khanate from foreign enemies, Nur Ali Khan broke the alliance and waged war against the Russian Empire in 1752. The famous Kazakh war hero Nasrullah Nauryzbai Bahadur was the commander of the army at this time, and led the Muslim Kazakh ghazis on most of the battles along with Nur Ali himself. After numerous military defeats, however, Nur Ali made peace with the Russians once again and agreed to join the Russian Empire as an autonomous state.

Nur Ali Khan was deposed in 1786 after being deemed to old and unwell to rule. His younger brother, Jar Muhammad Khan, took over the throne of the Junior jüz in his place for a few years and exiled him to the Russian trading town of Ufa. In 1790, Nur Ali Khan died in Ufa at the age of 86.

References

  1. Khodarkovsky, Michael (2002). Russia's Steppe Frontier: The Making of a Colonial Empire, 1500-1800. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp. 166–168.


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