Turkic Khanate located in southwestern Siberia with a Turco-Mongol ruling class
The Siberian Khanate was a Turkic state in southwestern Siberia governed by a ruling class of Turco-Mongol descent. It represents an important example of how Mongol and Turkic political traditions shaped the diverse societies that emerged across northern Asia.
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Today part ofRussia
The Khanate of Sibir (Siberian Tatar: Себер ҡанныҡ, romanized: Seber qannïq; Russian: Сибирское царство, Сибирский юрт, romanized: Sibirskoye tsarstvo, Sibirsky yurt) was a Siberian Tatar state in western Siberia. It was founded at the end of the 15th century, following the break-up of the Golden Horde. Throughout its history, members of the Shaybanid and Taibugid dynasties often contested the rulership over the Khanate between each other; both of these competing tribes were direct patrilineal descendants of Genghis Khan through his eldest son Jochi and Jochi's fifth son Shayban (Shiban) (died 1266). The area of the Khanate had once formed an integral part of the Mongol Empire; it later came under the control of the White Horde, and under the Golden Horde from 1242 to 1468.
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