Kazak nomads and Mongols continually raid the…
1684 CE to 1827 CE
The Khanate of Bukhara loses the fertile Fergana region in the beginning of the eighteenth century, and a new Uzbek khanate is formed in Quqon.
The following period is one of weakness and disruption, with continuous invasions from Iran and from the north.
In this period, a new group, the Russians, begins to appear on the Central Asian scene.
As Russian merchants begin to expand into the grasslands of present-day Kazakstan, they buils strong trade relations with their counterparts in Tashkent and, to some extent, in Khiva.
For the Russians, this trade is not rich enough to replace the former transcontinental trade, but it makes them aware of the potential of Central Asia.
Russian attention also is drawn by the sale of increasingly large numbers of Russian slaves to the Central Asians by Kazak and Turkmen tribes.
Russians kidnapped by nomads in the border regions and Russian sailors shipwrecked on the shores of the Caspian Sea usually end up in the slave markets of Bukhoro or Khiva.
Beginning in the eighteenth century, this situation evokes increasing Russian hostility toward the Central Asian khanates.
Meanwhile, new dynasties lead the khanates to a period of recovery in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
These dynasties—the Qongrats in Khiva, the Manghits in Bukhara, and the Mins in Quqon—establish centralized states with standing armies and new irrigation works, but their rise coincides with the ascendance of Russian power in the Kazak steppes and the establishment of a British position in Afghanistan.
The region is caught by the early nineteenth centur between these two powerful European competitors, each of which tries to add Central Asia to its empire in what comes to be known as the Great Game.
The Central Asians, who do not realize the dangerous position they are in, continue to waste their strength in wars among themselves and in pointless campaigns of conquest.
Groups
Khwarezm
View →
Kazakhs (also spelled Kazaks, Qazaqs)
View →
Oirats
View →
Russians (East Slavs)
View →
Uzbeks
View →
Dzungars
View →
Kazak Khanate
View →
Persia, Safavid Kingdom of
View →
Khiva, Khanate of (Khwarezm)
View →
Bukhara, (Astrakhanid) Khanate of
View →
Kokand (Quqon), Khanate of
View →
Russian Empire
View →