The Daurs are genetic descendants of the…
March 1651 CE
The Daurs are genetic descendants of the Khitan (as recent DNA analyses have proven).
Some or all of the Daurs live in the 1600s along the Shilka, upper Amur, and on the Zeya River.
They thus give their name to the region of Dauria, also called Transbaikal, now the area of Russia east of Lake Baikal.
When the Russian explorers and raiders arrive in the region in the early 1650 (notably, during Yerofei Khabarov's 1651 raid), they often see the Daur farmers burn their smaller villages and taking refuge in larger towns.
The Daurs, when told by the Russians to submit to the rule of the Czar and to pay yasak (tribute), often refuse, saying that they already pay tribute to the Shunzhi Emperor (whose name the Russians record from the Daurs as Shamshakan).
The Cossacks then attack, usually being able to take Daur towns with only small losses.
For example, Khabarov reports that in 1651 he had only four of his Cossacks killed while storming the town of the Daur prince Guigudar (another forty-five Cossacks were wounded, but all were able to recover).
Meanwhile the Cossacks report killing six hundred and sixty-one "Daurs big and small" at that town (of which, four hundred and twenty-seven during the storm itself), and taking two hundred and forty-three women and one hundred and eighteen children prisoners, as well as capturing two hundred and thirty-seven horse and one hundred and thirtyeen cattle.
The captured Daur town of Yaxa becomes the Russian town Albazin.