Thursday, December 26, 2019

What Is a Kurultai (or Kuriltai)

A kuriltai is an assembly of Mongolian or Turkic clans, sometimes called a tribal council in English. Generally, a kurultai (or kuriltai) would meet for the purpose of making a major political or military decision such as the selection of a new khan or the launching of a war. Ordinarily, the nomadic Mongols and Turkic peoples lived scattered across the steppe-lands. Therefore, it was a momentous occasion when a chief called for a kurultai and was generally reserved only for great deliberations, proclamations, or celebrations of victory after a long war. Famous Examples There have been a number of these great meetings through khanate rule of Central and South Asia. In the vast  Mongol Empire, each of the ruling Hordes had separate  kuriltai since it was generally impractical to gather everyone together from across Eurasia. However, the 1206 assembly that named Temujin as Genghis Khan, meaning the Oceanic Ruler of all the Mongols, for instance, started the largest landmass empire in the history of the world. Later, Genghiss grandsons Kublai and Arik Boke held dueling kuriltai in 1259, in which both were granted the title Great Khan by their followers. Of course, Kublai Khan eventually won that contest and went on to carry his grandfathers legacy forward, continuing the spread of the Mongol Empire across much of Southeast Asia.   Originally, though, kurultai had a much simpler—if not still culturally important—as the Mongol usage. Oftentimes these gatherings were called to celebrate weddings or large events like feasts for local khanates to celebrate the year, season, or newlywed couple. Modern Kuriltai In modern usage, some Central Asian nations use the world kurultai or variants to describe their parliaments or for conferences. For example, Kyrgyzstan boasts a National Kurultai of Kyrgyz Peoples, which deals with inter-ethnic strife while Mongolias national congress is called the Great State Khural. The word kurultai comes from the Mongolian root khur, which means to gather, and ild, which means together. In Turkish, the verb kurul has come to mean to be established. In all of these roots, the modern interpretation of a gathering to determine and establish power would apply.   Although the epic kuriltai  of the Mongol Empire may long be gone from history, the tradition and the cultural impact of these large gatherings of power echo on throughout the regions history and modern governance.   These types of large cultural and political meetings didnt only serve to make huge decisions in the past, though, they also served to inspire such art and writings as J.R.R. Tolkiens about the Entmoot—a gathering of the great sentient tree-people of his epic Lord of the Rings trilogy—and even the Council of Elrond in the same series.

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