Dörbet Oirat

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The Dörbet (UK: /ˈdɜːbɛt/, US: /ˈdɔːrbɛt/),[a] known in English as The Fours, is the second largest subgroup of Mongol people in modern Mongolia and was formerly one of the major tribes of the Four Oirat confederation in the 15th-18th centuries. In early times, the Dörbets and the Öold were overruled by collateral branches of the Choros lineage. The Dörbets are distributed among the western provinces of Mongolia, Kalmykia and in a small portion in Heilongjiang, China. In modern-day Mongolia, the Dörbets are centered in Uvs Province.

Dörbet
ᠳᠥᠷᠪᠡᠳ
Location of the Dörbet in the Oirat Confederation
Total population
130,000–150,000
Regions with significant populations
 Mongolia72,403[1]
 Russia54,000
Languages
Oirat, Russian, Mongolian
Religion
Tibetan Buddhism, Mongolian Shamanism, Atheism
Related ethnic groups
Mongols, especially Oirats

History

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Dörbet delegation to the camp of the Chinese Qianlong Emperor in the Chengde Mountain Resort in 1754, in 萬樹園賜宴圖, painted in 1755 by Jean-Denis Attiret

A Dörben clan existed within the Mongol tribe in the 12th–13th centuries, but the Dörböds appear as an Oirat tribe only in the latter half of the 16th century. What their relation, if any, is to the Dörben clan of the 12th–13th centuries is unclear. The name probably means "döröv"; "four" (Middle Mongolian: dörbe).

In the 17th century, the leader of Dörbets was Dalai Taishi (d.1637). In order to unite the Oirats, Dalai Taishi used the method of marriage of convenience; Dalai Taishi and Khoshut leader Güshi Khan married the Torghut leader Kho Orluk sisters.[2] During the Dalai Taishi period (circa 1625), the Oirat tribes lived in harmony.

In 1616, Dalai Taishi established diplomatic relations with the Tsardom of Russia. The next year Dalai Taishi's son Solom Tseren joined the Kalmyks on the Volga with 4,000 households. In 1699 a body of the Dörbets joined the Don Cossacks, eventually becoming the Buzava Kalmyks. Trapped west of the Volga, the Do'rbets could not join the 1771 flight of the Torguds, and hence dominated the remaining Kalmyks. In the early 19th century, they had split into the Lesser Dörbets, living in northern Kalmykia and the Greater Dörbets, living around Lake Manych-Gudilo.

 
Tseren (车凌, 1697-1758), leader of the Mongolian Tribe of the Dorbet, in Qing dynasty costume.

Meanwhile, the Dörbets in the Oirat homeland remained a major sub-group of the Dzungars. In 1753 during a worsening civil war amongst the Oirat, three Dörbet leaders submitted to the Qing dynasty.[3] They were resettled first in Bayankhongor Province, and then in Uvs Province in 1759. They formed into 16 banners of the Sain Zayaatu Leagues. The Dörbets nobility's 15,000 subjects included Bayids and a small number of Khotongs.

From the 1880s, the Khalkha influenced Dörbet socio-economic trends. The Kalmyk Dambijantsan headed the anti-communist disturbances; and separatist feeling remained strong until the 1930s.

Number

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The Dörbets in Mongolia numbered 55,200 in 1989. In 2000 - 66,706.[4]

Notable people

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Notes

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  1. ^ Kalmyk: Дөрвд, romanized: Dörwd, IPA: [ˈtørʋ̩t]; Mongolian: Дөрвөд, romanizedDörbhöd, IPA: [ˈtɵrʷʊt]; Chinese: 杜尔伯特部; pinyin: Dùrbótè Bù

References

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  1. ^ National Census 2010 Archived September 15, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ 那顺达来 (2004). The Study on the Oyirad Durbet Tribe (M.A. thesis) (in Simplified Chinese). Inner Mongolia University. CNKI:CDMD:2.2004.105920. Archived from the original on 2013-02-21.
  3. ^ Haines, R Spencer (2016). "The Physical Remains of the Zunghar Legacy in Central Eurasia: Some Notes from the Field". Paper presented at the Social and Environmental Changes on the Mongolian Plateau Workshop, Canberra, ACT, Australia. The Australian National University.
  4. ^ Хойт С.К. Последние данные по локализации и численности ойрат // Проблемы этногенеза и этнической культуры тюрко-монгольских народов. Вып. 2. Элиста: Изд-во КГУ, 2008. с. 136-157. - in russian Archived 2012-03-14 at the Wayback Machine.
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