Is there anymore information on his daughter & how she became a broadcaster? It is weird how she just became a radio broadcaster as soon as she moved to Afghanistan.
NordVPN has been getting hit with waves of scandals for selling user data to corporations and governments. NordVPN is not safe or secure, and it is almost impossible that TigerStar has failed to notice this, as obviously competent as he is in other areas. Shame on you.
@EyeZackZin No, Borte, Jochi's mother was kidnapped and raped by Merkits. After her rescue she gave birth to Jochi, who Temujin swore was his, but its uncertain
@EyeZackZin No, the identity of Jochi's mother wasn't disputed. It was disputed whether or not Jochi was actually the son of Genghis Khan, since Jochi's mother (Genghis Khan's wife) was abducted and raped by a tribe that were enemies with Genghis Khan. 9 months after Jochi's mother was rescued, she gave birth to him. SInce Jochi's exact conception date is unknown, it is disputable whether he was truly a son of Genghis. But i'm basing that solely on the Extra Credits series on Genghis Khan, so take my comment with a grain of salt.
Ok my dudes no idea as to who is right here but I'm suuuper interested as I always heard the first story with temujins wife getting raped and then jochi being born.
I love Produkin-Gorsky's photos. The "digital remastering" of them is just incredible. Strange to think such vibrant and clear pictures were taken before World War I!
I remember seeing his photos from across the Russian empire on the internet and I was very surprised how well they turned out, I'd have never guessed they were so old based on how good they looked
It's always fascinating learning about stories that we don't really get in history class. Like, in class when we talk about the Bolshevik revolution, the civil war is mostly glazed over as "the white army was disorganized and the red army won". It is really intriguing to see a little bit of the central Asian perspective, one not often seen in many history books at least here in America, on such an important period in history.
Every single person aged 18+ (tho some children wear it too but it's popular among adults)still wears these clothes in central asia their name is called chapon @@manlymannysmanymediocremem7026
Wow. I'm impressed. I've been following this chanel for over a year and impressed by many videos but this one takes the top for me. I lived in Tajikistan for two years and got to know the Country as well as Uzbekistan very well. I've been to Bukhara a few times and loved to visit the Ark, the Amir's fortress. As well as seeing the Palace of the Stars and Moon, a beautiful place with roaming Peacocks, their symbol of royalty. I heard about the stories of the two British men who were imprisoned in the Bug Pit and how horrible the torture was. And as for this Amir, the last descendant of Genghais Khan to hold the title "Khan", was actually an ancestor of my best friend from Tajikistan. After the Bolsheviks kicked the Amir out of Bukhara, he fled to a small town name Hisor (somtimes spelled Gisar) and stayed there until the Bolsheviks kicked him out, then fleeing to Kabul. The Bukharans did fight the Bolsheviks a bit, but it was an uphill fight. Even the Basmachi couldn't beat the Red Army. You've done a great job in this video, and I personally would love to see more topics about the Emirates of Bukhara and Khiva, and Central Asia as a whole since this is a region not commonly spoken about. Thank you for showing people about a history that they may not have known about.
That period of the Great Game is always interesting but it's a tragic tale of how the British spy and the rescuer end up beheaded and how the second rescue barely escapes with his life. enabling to document the even.
Side note: There's a fascinating tid bit where the third guy, Joseph Wolff, who escaped. Wife was the descendent of the First Prime Minster of Britain (Robert Walpole).
I did a project on the Prokudin-Gorsky photos in college. The portraits in the collection are pretty phenomenal. I always did wonder about the story of the Bukharan emir. Thanks for this.
“Since the official language was Persian, he would be whipped for speaking in Tajik.” That’s a remarkably extreme policy enforcement considering Tajik is a dialect of Persian.
I read he fled with his daughter in 1920. She would have to be at least 101 years old if she were still alive, and I couldn't find anything after 2002 about her. She probably died in obscurity.
3:21 That's the most ridicules law ever! Tajik is just dialect of Persian, it would be like wipping someone for speaking American English instead of RP.
Hey Mr. Tigerstar, I am drawing a map on 1919, because the end of World War I meant that a lot of things changed, and to show how many wars there were after the war to end all wars, I wanted to ask about the many countries that kinda fell into the open after the whole ordeal. You had countries that declared from Austria in the Galician parts that I hadn’t known to have any military other than a government, do you have any good sources?
"At first, Said seemed to favor the reformists. But for an unknown reason, he went hard the other direction and remained solidly traditionalist..." - What do you think the odds are that all the military and financial bases of power were traditionalist? He's an absolute monarch; the reason is always power.
@Roshaun Roache he originated in the Ferghana valley in present day Uzbekistan. Was Turkic claiming descent from both Genghis/Chinggis Khan and Tamerlame/Ameer Timur. He would go onto invade India displacing the last of the dynasties forming the Delhi Sultanate (i.e Lodhis) and defeating other formidable rajas including Rana Singha. He founded the Mughal dynasty a vibrant mixture of India meets Persianized Turk Muslims.
I mostly remember him as that guy who was always appearing in my history books but don't know who he actually was. By the way I wasn't talking about textbooks.
@@NathanDudani Yes. Farsi and Tajiki are basically one language. There are 3 dialects of Persian, Farsi in Iran, Dari in Afghanistan and Tajiki in Tajikistan and Samarkand, Bukhara areas where Tajiks are majority.
@@ShaheenJc remember reading somewhere that Bukhara and Samarkand are pretty much Uzbek speaking cities now with a progressive decline of the use of Tajik. Anything about that?
Thanks for clearing that up dude, I knew that Tajiks speak Persian and I was confused when this Tajik writer included such an issue. It's also interesting to note that an Uzbek khanate like Bukhara had Persian as its official language.
Although this guy is probably Genghis Khan's descendant (like most people in that region, to be honest), there is no way to identify his lineage on his Y chromosome... Sure, Genghis Khan is probably his ancestors, but so are millions of other random guys, who also had a genetic code and who also transmitted it to their descent.
@@williamkarbala5718 Please consider that most Americans don't know modern Tajikistan is even a place. We have little reason to know about that part of the world besides simple curiosity. At best, if you show people it on a map where Kumal was they'd just say it's China. Though, to be blunt, the communist party has done it's fair share of saying what currently is China has always been China and if you say otherwise you're hurting the feelies of all Chinese; and maybe the other ethnicities who exist on Han ancestral territory too.........
I remember discovering Prokudin-Gorsky's photos for myself back in high school with the old StumbleUpon button. My mind was blown. To see photos of that era in colour was surreal. It's easy to forget that people lived real lives prior to mainstream colour photography. The black and white images feel so distant in a way. Seeing turn-of-the-century Russia in colour was truly eye opening.
All rulers on earth are probably of Genghis Khan lineage, to be fair. Just llike you and me. But yeah, he was the last to know all steps on his branch of the tree.
@@GreaterAfghanistanMovement Basic mathematics, my dear. I that can make you feel better, you're also the descendant of the Roman Emperors (the ones who had childrens), Charlemagne and the Chinese Emperors.
@@alioshax7797 You make no sense, the Mongols mainly killed their way through invasions not rape. And most of those descendants are located in Northern China and Central Asia where they ruled the most, not all over the world like your implying. I hate when people make false claims about being descendant of royalty to make themselves fell better lol.
I remember seeing this in a discord server. The caption was "the last Muslim ruler of Bukhara (?)". It was so cool seeing a picture from so long ago in color. Of a king, nevertheless!
In addition, he run away to Afghanistan after Russian Empire take over the Khanate. He lived rest of his life selling Karakul( Persian lamb) lather and died in 1944 ( age of 64) in Kabul. Some writings say he became blind during last years of his life.
NO, HE WAS NOT THE LAST MONGOL RULER, The last Mongol successor state was the Kumal Khanate in China(1930) I have no idea who started the rumor that this guy was the last one.
@@williamkarbala5718 The Kumul Khanate was a semi-autonomous Vassel state region in modern day Xinjiang, China. The Emirate of Bukahara was a Procterate state. While the Kumul Khanate outlasted the Emirate of Bukhara by 10 years, Emir Muhammad Alim Khan lived 10 more years then the last rule of the Kumul Khanate, Nasir. So then the Emir of Bukhara was the last descendant of Genghis Khan to rule and live.
@@dogeofgreatness2222 Yup and Me Too, Kh Bukhara is Prounounced like Kh in Khan, Bukhara is not turkic so saying Buharan is stoopid Names of Ppl and Cities (Nouns) should not be arabized pesianized Turkized or Russianized Let them stay what they are
There are always some confusing claims about the Khan in his name. Some claim he's the last ruling descendent of Genghis Khan, but I can't find anything to back this up. I think it's probably dependent on how strictly you define 'descendent of Genghis Khan' (since a lot of Asians descent from him...). Did you come across something interesting regarding this?
No he was the direct descendent from the Gengis Khan's eldest son Jebe but that is uncertain because she was kidnapped and raped before being reunited with Gengis khan but he accepted him as his son.
Bukhara is located just north of the initial homeland of the proto-Bulgarians. The names are still relatively similar. Proto-Bulgarians left and migrated in the Caucasus and on the north shore of the Black sea somewhere between the 1st and 2nd century. Did the locals in Bukhara preferred and used this name for just as long too?
The only central asian superpower after the fall of the Timurid empire was the Turkic Afsharid dynasty everything else was just to passive and went for an easy prey for Russia
So the scenario is: The Russian Empire has been defeated, but the Soviet Union is coming, and they seem poised to topple your Emirate. What do you do? Declare independence and seek out antiSoviet foreign allies, such as Japan. Duh.
Soviet union didn't exist yet. Russian civil war is when american troops are marching in Archangelsk, japanese doing the same in Vladivostok and entire czechoslovak legion is rioting all across Siberia.
@@apalahartisebuahnama7684 Japan was active in the region. They supported White Army aligned factions in Manchuria, Mongolia, and several other places, particularly along Russia's southeastern border. Since Bukhara was vaguely in that area, getting Japanese support is somewhat more likely than getting British support. If you're the Emir of Bukhara, though, the smart thing to do is to reach out to both powers.
I own and am restoring a tricolor camera that takes color photographs, my model is a way more advanced type than Gorsky (who used a sliding back and filters on a regular camera), My Devin Tricolor 5x7 has internal mirrors that make it a one-shot tricolor camera. It is an extremely rare camera, they were essentially handmade in the 1930's, worth thousands probably. (I posted the first pic of it on the internet lol) Its a 20lb cast iron behemoth, that takes 3 glass plates PER photo. Im going to do my first test of it this weekend probably, ill probably post a video sometime of it.
Почему вы решили что, Бухара не существует? Бухара существует: и город Бухара и Республика Бухара! Только Бухарская Республика 1924 году была переименована в Республику Узбекистан. Город Бухара считается первой столицей Узбекистана (Бухарской Республики). 1925 году столица была перенесена в город Самарканд, а 1930 году в Ташкент.😂😂😂
Get 66% off NordVPN! Only $3.96/month, plus you get an additional month FREE at nordvpn.com/emperortigerstar or use code emperortigerstar!
Thank you Emperortigerstar.👍
Is there anymore information on his daughter & how she became a broadcaster? It is weird how she just became a radio broadcaster as soon as she moved to Afghanistan.
My minecraft dog died
No way I have proton VPN its free and better
NordVPN has been getting hit with waves of scandals for selling user data to corporations and governments. NordVPN is not safe or secure, and it is almost impossible that TigerStar has failed to notice this, as obviously competent as he is in other areas.
Shame on you.
He is the funny guy from Turkestan in every hoi4 mod
🤨
Yes
Yeah I swear he's in central Asia in every hoi4 mod
@Jackson West yes
True, true
That photo is from 1911 but yet it’s more higher quality than all UFO spotted videos
Cant go wrong with film
You spotted a UFO? Better lower the resolution!
They look highly edited for the worse
Fr
Most if not all of those UFO sights are outright lies, otherwise those would be filmed in 8k at this point.
He was also the last ruler that can be traced dynastically from Genghis Khan
edit: this is apparently incorrect
That’s disputed
@EyeZackZin he was jochid and there is a problem about paternity of jochi khan
@EyeZackZin No, Borte, Jochi's mother was kidnapped and raped by Merkits. After her rescue she gave birth to Jochi, who Temujin swore was his, but its uncertain
@EyeZackZin No, the identity of Jochi's mother wasn't disputed. It was disputed whether or not Jochi was actually the son of Genghis Khan, since Jochi's mother (Genghis Khan's wife) was abducted and raped by a tribe that were enemies with Genghis Khan. 9 months after Jochi's mother was rescued, she gave birth to him. SInce Jochi's exact conception date is unknown, it is disputable whether he was truly a son of Genghis. But i'm basing that solely on the Extra Credits series on Genghis Khan, so take my comment with a grain of salt.
Ok my dudes no idea as to who is right here but I'm suuuper interested as I always heard the first story with temujins wife getting raped and then jochi being born.
You're not the only person who loves that photo.
Profile pic checks out
Sergej-prudokin gorsky is basically a god for you if you adore that photo
Still alive?
@@saddamhussein8237 no, dead.
Haha!
I love Produkin-Gorsky's photos. The "digital remastering" of them is just incredible. Strange to think such vibrant and clear pictures were taken before World War I!
I have a camera like Gorsky's actually
I remember seeing his photos from across the Russian empire on the internet and I was very surprised how well they turned out, I'd have never guessed they were so old based on how good they looked
You forgot to mention that he claimed direct patrilineal descent from Genghis Khan, the last hereditary monarch to ever do so.
The prince of Mengijiang claimed direct descent from Genghis khan too.
@@r-i-n-n-e-r The emir was the last independent monarch i guess
@@googane7755 independent?
@@apalahartisebuahnama7684 When the russian empire collapsed he was briefly independent during the civil war.
Why does everyone think that Khiva and Bukara we're the last Mongol Khantes? The Kumal Khanate in China outlasted them both by 12 years.
The drip this man has is beyond this world.
Oh my god they made the guy from Kaiserreich into a real thing
Lol
lol
Lol
Or the real thing into Kaiserreich.
@@billisultan6224 you ruined it
It's always fascinating learning about stories that we don't really get in history class. Like, in class when we talk about the Bolshevik revolution, the civil war is mostly glazed over as "the white army was disorganized and the red army won". It is really intriguing to see a little bit of the central Asian perspective, one not often seen in many history books at least here in America, on such an important period in history.
Where did men's fashion go so wrong? I feel like it's time to bring this back lads.
Maybe people still sometimes wear this sort of clothes in central asia
Modern Western fashion ruined everything.
Every single person aged 18+ (tho some children wear it too but it's popular among adults)still wears these clothes in central asia their name is called chapon @@manlymannysmanymediocremem7026
I am kinda ashamed that I only knew him from hoi4...
not alone bro
We each have our own routes to knowledge 🤷 Nothing to be ashamed of there. I suspect most of the world have no idea who this is.
same
Same here bro
At least you know him. Most people don't.
Wow. I'm impressed. I've been following this chanel for over a year and impressed by many videos but this one takes the top for me. I lived in Tajikistan for two years and got to know the Country as well as Uzbekistan very well. I've been to Bukhara a few times and loved to visit the Ark, the Amir's fortress. As well as seeing the Palace of the Stars and Moon, a beautiful place with roaming Peacocks, their symbol of royalty. I heard about the stories of the two British men who were imprisoned in the Bug Pit and how horrible the torture was. And as for this Amir, the last descendant of Genghais Khan to hold the title "Khan", was actually an ancestor of my best friend from Tajikistan. After the Bolsheviks kicked the Amir out of Bukhara, he fled to a small town name Hisor (somtimes spelled Gisar) and stayed there until the Bolsheviks kicked him out, then fleeing to Kabul. The Bukharans did fight the Bolsheviks a bit, but it was an uphill fight. Even the Basmachi couldn't beat the Red Army. You've done a great job in this video, and I personally would love to see more topics about the Emirates of Bukhara and Khiva, and Central Asia as a whole since this is a region not commonly spoken about. Thank you for showing people about a history that they may not have known about.
That period of the Great Game is always interesting but it's a tragic tale of how the British spy and the rescuer end up beheaded and how the second rescue barely escapes with his life. enabling to document the even.
Side note: There's a fascinating tid bit where the third guy, Joseph Wolff, who escaped. Wife was the descendent of the First Prime Minster of Britain (Robert Walpole).
I did a project on the Prokudin-Gorsky photos in college. The portraits in the collection are pretty phenomenal. I always did wonder about the story of the Bukharan emir. Thanks for this.
DJ KHALED!
WE DA BEST MUSIC!!!
Oh god, what if dj khaled is actually using his music as a weapon to regain control of bukhara, now thats some scary stuff
@@nikitahichoii482 lmao
@@joao_1986 brasil kkkkjjj
@@i05CrafterGames Por acaso sou tuga mas mesmo assim é bom ver pessoal de língua Portuguesa aqui
“Since the official language was Persian, he would be whipped for speaking in Tajik.”
That’s a remarkably extreme policy enforcement considering Tajik is a dialect of Persian.
It's in the same family as farsi/Persian
But I believe it's considered a sperate language
Like Kurdish ossetian balochi Pashto.
The official language of the Bukhara Emirate was 2 Chagatai and Tajik languages
I read he fled with his daughter in 1920. She would have to be at least 101 years old if she were still alive, and I couldn't find anything after 2002 about her. She probably died in obscurity.
He lived till 1944 in exile. His daughter was likely born after being deposed.
he could have had another daughter
She died in Kabul
No the daughter name is Shukria Alimi Raad she actually lives in us and was part of voa
Great video! Keep up the amazing work! 👍
2 days ago ? Did you use the playlist glitch ?
Wtf
Bruh how
@@iiillliiill5917 nope. patreon supporter
@@iiillliiill5917 yes
We need more videos like this
Hey, nice to see a video about a city in my home country! Please do visit Uzbekistan - we are a great place to visit for history geeks
Central Asia as a whole is very underrated
Thank god there's finally a video on this guy I love the history of Uzbekistan
3:21 That's the most ridicules law ever! Tajik is just dialect of Persian, it would be like wipping someone for speaking American English instead of RP.
Hey Mr. Tigerstar, I am drawing a map on 1919, because the end of World War I meant that a lot of things changed, and to show how many wars there were after the war to end all wars, I wanted to ask about the many countries that kinda fell into the open after the whole ordeal. You had countries that declared from Austria in the Galician parts that I hadn’t known to have any military other than a government, do you have any good sources?
Bumping your comment
@@ronikar1 bumping your comment
@@Kosiahswag1 Bumping your comment.
@Oscar Gr bumping your comment
@@janema6828 Bumping your comment
When you're on the mod In the name of the Tsar, Kaiserreich, etc
That photo is kind of bizarre. Like, modern technology (for that time) is able to capture the last expression of a bygone age or kings and emirs.
Wait this guy was the last descendant of Genghis Khan to be a monarch! From 1206 to 1918 a khan had ruled in some form over Asia.
Wasn’t everyone a descendant of him though?
@@thematthew761 1 in every 200 males today are. But he was the last confirmed descendant to rule.
No he wasn't, Google Kumal Khanate, China. They were the last ones.
@@williamkarbala5718 wait were they descendants of Genghis or not?
"At first, Said seemed to favor the reformists. But for an unknown reason, he went hard the other direction and remained solidly traditionalist..."
- What do you think the odds are that all the military and financial bases of power were traditionalist? He's an absolute monarch; the reason is always power.
No one's gonna talk about the fact that her daughter is still alive and now works in the US??
Young Turks and Young Bukarians.
I’m seeing a pattern here.
"Wait not while your foe fits arrow to bowstring when you can send your own arrow into him"
- Zahiruddin Babur (Turkic Conqueror)
👍
@Roshaun Roache he originated in the Ferghana valley in present day Uzbekistan. Was Turkic claiming descent from both Genghis/Chinggis Khan and Tamerlame/Ameer Timur. He would go onto invade India displacing the last of the dynasties forming the Delhi Sultanate (i.e Lodhis) and defeating other formidable rajas including Rana Singha. He founded the Mughal dynasty a vibrant mixture of India meets Persianized Turk Muslims.
@@dogeofgreatness2222 Rānā Sāngā not Singha lol
@@orionsbelt927
Aye been a long time since I read about him.
He was Mongol not Turkic
This is one of your best videos in a long time.
Love this video! I couldn't find nothing on this man
I mostly remember him as that guy who was always appearing in my history books but don't know who he actually was. By the way I wasn't talking about textbooks.
3:20 Persian and Tajik are both one language. They are dialects.
Of Farsi?
@@NathanDudani Yes. Farsi and Tajiki are basically one language. There are 3 dialects of Persian, Farsi in Iran, Dari in Afghanistan and Tajiki in Tajikistan and Samarkand, Bukhara areas where Tajiks are majority.
@@ShaheenJc remember reading somewhere that Bukhara and Samarkand are pretty much Uzbek speaking cities now with a progressive decline of the use of Tajik. Anything about that?
Thanks for clearing that up dude, I knew that Tajiks speak Persian and I was confused when this Tajik writer included such an issue.
It's also interesting to note that an Uzbek khanate like Bukhara had Persian as its official language.
@@diargakande6740 Not true actually. Tajiks are still majority there, they speak Tajiki. That's where I come from.
The last Monarch of Mongols ever, until now. And his Y chromosome is Genghis-Khan's not Timur's.
Although this guy is probably Genghis Khan's descendant (like most people in that region, to be honest), there is no way to identify his lineage on his Y chromosome...
Sure, Genghis Khan is probably his ancestors, but so are millions of other random guys, who also had a genetic code and who also transmitted it to their descent.
Why does no one know about the Kumal Khanate!? For real it lasted until 1930!
@@williamkarbala5718 Please consider that most Americans don't know modern Tajikistan is even a place. We have little reason to know about that part of the world besides simple curiosity. At best, if you show people it on a map where Kumal was they'd just say it's China. Though, to be blunt, the communist party has done it's fair share of saying what currently is China has always been China and if you say otherwise you're hurting the feelies of all Chinese; and maybe the other ethnicities who exist on Han ancestral territory too.........
Not Mongols
I remember discovering Prokudin-Gorsky's photos for myself back in high school with the old StumbleUpon button. My mind was blown. To see photos of that era in colour was surreal. It's easy to forget that people lived real lives prior to mainstream colour photography. The black and white images feel so distant in a way. Seeing turn-of-the-century Russia in colour was truly eye opening.
He looks like a taxi driver who talks loudly in another language on a ear piece
Been to Bukhara many times and I'm absolutely thrilled to see that corner of the world getting some time on such a good history channel.
Fun fact: my great great grandfather was the royal chef for an emir of bukhara
Interesting. Do you have any family stories related to this you're willing to share? Thanks in advance.
@@whafflete6721 im related to alim khan hes my great grandfather😁
Skip ad 1:56
The Nord VPM pitch is weak (not yours, its). "Buy this service, to get more our of this service you're already using!" (Netflix)
Great video
Bro I had no idea DJ KHALID IS ROYALTY!?!
Wasn't this guy that last ruler of Genghis Khan's lineage?
Yes
All rulers on earth are probably of Genghis Khan lineage, to be fair. Just llike you and me. But yeah, he was the last to know all steps on his branch of the tree.
@@alioshax7797 No they are not lmao.
@@GreaterAfghanistanMovement Basic mathematics, my dear.
I that can make you feel better, you're also the descendant of the Roman Emperors (the ones who had childrens), Charlemagne and the Chinese Emperors.
@@alioshax7797 You make no sense, the Mongols mainly killed their way through invasions not rape. And most of those descendants are located in Northern China and Central Asia where they ruled the most, not all over the world like your implying.
I hate when people make false claims about being descendant of royalty to make themselves fell better lol.
Thanks for the information of Bukhara recently just obtained a flag pole topper from the Bukhara SSR though finding information was hard 🤝
It's kind of interesting that you make about the bukharan history
I remember seeing this in a discord server. The caption was "the last Muslim ruler of Bukhara (?)". It was so cool seeing a picture from so long ago in color. Of a king, nevertheless!
In addition, he run away to Afghanistan after Russian Empire take over the Khanate. He lived rest of his life selling Karakul( Persian lamb) lather and died in 1944 ( age of 64) in Kabul. Some writings say he became blind during last years of his life.
I knew the photo but not the story… it’s fascinating! Thank you for this insight!
Hey ! I from Uzbekistan. So weird to see this guy from our history books in RUclips
It weird how by coloring these old photo, it makes feel more recent
NO, HE WAS NOT THE LAST MONGOL RULER, The last Mongol successor state was the Kumal Khanate in China(1930) I have no idea who started the rumor that this guy was the last one.
You are right Mullah
Last descedant of genghis khan ruler*
l really enjoy vids like this from you
Those boots are dope!
This guy was also the last of the rulers in the Khan family.
Yes, but the word "Khan" is a title, not a family name. Not all Khans were descendants of Genghais khan, but he was.
@@musofir2204 Borjigid Clan, was it not?
@@Garangus Yes, Genghis Khan was a member of this clan
No he wasn't, Google Kumal Khanate.
@@williamkarbala5718 The Kumul Khanate was a semi-autonomous Vassel state region in modern day Xinjiang, China. The Emirate of Bukahara was a Procterate state. While the Kumul Khanate outlasted the Emirate of Bukhara by 10 years, Emir Muhammad Alim Khan lived 10 more years then the last rule of the Kumul Khanate, Nasir. So then the Emir of Bukhara was the last descendant of Genghis Khan to rule and live.
You forgot to mention he was the last descendat of Genghis Khan to be ruler
No he wasn't, Google Kumal Khanate, China. They were the last ones.
When, The Last Chan of Khiwa?
he didn't even know how to read lmao (He usurped power)
Way to go on just reading out the wikipedia page tigerstar!
He is the great grandpa of the Turkish streamer called Jahrein.
Really?
Lan oğlum ciddiye alanlar var sdgkdğe
@@pavolverescak1712
Yes...
@@papazataklaattiranimam
Hehehe
@@papazataklaattiranimam
Lan benim grammar'im ne kadar bozukmuş la
I read his Wiki page and saw that he was awarded the Order of Prince Danilo I, which is Montenegrin. How and why?
I’m a Bukharian Jew, a word with “kh” is pronounced like a rough “h”, not k.
Or as it's written in Perso-Arabic script "خ"
maybe he knows but cant pronounce it, like a lotta english speakers
Thank Goodness someone said it. I start to lose my nerve when someone says کھ instead of خ or گھ instead of غ۔
@@shaheenakhter9975 پاکستانی؟
@@dogeofgreatness2222 Yup and Me Too,
Kh Bukhara is Prounounced like Kh in Khan,
Bukhara is not turkic so saying Buharan is stoopid Names of Ppl and Cities (Nouns) should not be arabized pesianized Turkized or Russianized Let them stay what they are
I saw this picture a few months ago and now it’s see it again
There are always some confusing claims about the Khan in his name. Some claim he's the last ruling descendent of Genghis Khan, but I can't find anything to back this up. I think it's probably dependent on how strictly you define 'descendent of Genghis Khan' (since a lot of Asians descent from him...). Did you come across something interesting regarding this?
No he was the direct descendent from the Gengis Khan's eldest son Jebe but that is uncertain because she was kidnapped and raped before being reunited with Gengis khan but he accepted him as his son.
@@shubhamsingh-lc8km is the connection with Jebe verified?
@@shubhamsingh-lc8km Jebe? AFAIK it was Jochi. Jebe was a general of Genghis Khan:)
Mehmed The Conquer
The Kumal Khante outlasted these guys by 12 years. I have no idea where the rumor started this guy was the last one.
I have this pic saved...I think I got it from the met's website? I didnt know much about it
Thanks!
For some reason this photo just evokes chill beats in my mind
Bukhara is located just north of the initial homeland of the proto-Bulgarians. The names are still relatively similar. Proto-Bulgarians left and migrated in the Caucasus and on the north shore of the Black sea somewhere between the 1st and 2nd century. Did the locals in Bukhara preferred and used this name for just as long too?
🤣🤣🤣 ignore this comment people. That’s a nonsense nationalistic claim.
Bulgarians migrated from the Volga which is nowhere near Bukhara.
@@daveharrison84 Bulgarians are natives of Balkans who have nothing to do with Turkic Bulgars from Central Asian steppe
Great video..... without the background music.
Plot twist - he’s not sitting.
Central Asia is really one of the most interesting places we know nothing about
The Young Bukaran's sounds like the cheaper knockoff version of The Young Turk's your mom would buy for you instead.
Also the stress of Bukhara is on the last syllable. Bukhará and not Bukára
4K video ever than every bigfoot picture
Wow, this guy looks pretty nice in his colorful outfit!
I want that belt
Wow the original colors photo from 1911 is very impressive from the time, it look like it was made yesterday.
shouldn't the negatives be in cyan, yellow and magenta?
Interestingly one of his sons renounced his claim to Bukhara throne and fought as Soviet officer in Red Army in World War 2
Please make such a video about Khiva Khanate it is more interesting.
Aren't Persian and Tajik the same language?
Wish we had more of these commentary videos
Those are some dope threads.
But the Persian language is the same as the tajik language, I think you got something wrong there. You probably meant uzbek
The only central asian superpower after the fall of the Timurid empire was the Turkic Afsharid dynasty everything else was just to passive and went for an easy prey for Russia
Knk dcye yaz ara sıra
@@papazataklaattiranimam Ok yazdım şimdi deneme :D
May allah have mercy on his soul
“An Amir without a homeland is miserable and insignificant
The beggar if he died in the homeland - is an Amir “ words of the emir
Ameen
Very interesting video
Bukhara after the battle 😭
👃🔯💸💴🤮🤮🤮😳😳😳😳
Fausto Giorno AMOGUS?
Kumul Survive 10 more years
So the scenario is:
The Russian Empire has been defeated, but the Soviet Union is coming, and they seem poised to topple your Emirate. What do you do?
Declare independence and seek out antiSoviet foreign allies, such as Japan. Duh.
Soviet union didn't exist yet. Russian civil war is when american troops are marching in Archangelsk, japanese doing the same in Vladivostok and entire czechoslovak legion is rioting all across Siberia.
Why Japan? They're far away! I would wisely choose the British side.
@@apalahartisebuahnama7684
Japan was active in the region. They supported White Army aligned factions in Manchuria, Mongolia, and several other places, particularly along Russia's southeastern border. Since Bukhara was vaguely in that area, getting Japanese support is somewhat more likely than getting British support.
If you're the Emir of Bukhara, though, the smart thing to do is to reach out to both powers.
@@Nikolapoleon Bukhara was far away from that area
Now I am not getting the nord vpn because I wanted +3% off
That guy photos are very impressing
Wasn't this guy like the last descendant of Genghis Khan?
No, Google Kumal Khanate, China. They were the last ones.
@3:20 how does that work when Persian and Tajik are the same language
oh this guy from kaiserreich
I own and am restoring a tricolor camera that takes color photographs, my model is a way more advanced type than Gorsky (who used a sliding back and filters on a regular camera), My Devin Tricolor 5x7 has internal mirrors that make it a one-shot tricolor camera. It is an extremely rare camera, they were essentially handmade in the 1930's, worth thousands probably. (I posted the first pic of it on the internet lol) Its a 20lb cast iron behemoth, that takes 3 glass plates PER photo. Im going to do my first test of it this weekend probably, ill probably post a video sometime of it.
its the dude from kaiserreich
Basmachis deserve more recognition
amazing
I know Bukhara for playing age of civilization 2 as northern siberian tribes lol
Bukhara may no longer exist, but people in my comments still ask if I'm from there.
...well? Are you?
Aronow doesn’t sound Bukharian or Russian, so you’re probably not a Bukharian Jew
@@benjaminpilosov Aronov can be a Bukharan Jewish name, but in my case it is not.
Почему вы решили что, Бухара не существует? Бухара существует: и город Бухара и Республика Бухара! Только Бухарская Республика 1924 году была переименована в Республику Узбекистан.
Город Бухара считается первой столицей Узбекистана (Бухарской Республики). 1925 году столица была перенесена в город Самарканд, а 1930 году в Ташкент.😂😂😂
What if Bukhara won WW1?
Bukhara is not fighting against German
The language spoke by Persians is Farsi.
That's like saying the language spoken by the Spanish is Espanol. It's Persian in English.