Rinchinbal Khan

10th Emperor of Yuan China (r. Oct-Dec 1332)
ᠡᠷᠳᠡᠨᠢᠴᠣᠭᠲᠤ ᠬᠠᠭᠠᠨ14th Khagan of the Mongol Empire
(Nominal due to the empire's division)
Emperor of China
(10th Emperor of the Yuan dynasty)
Portrait of Rinchinbal Khan, Emperor Ningzong of Yuan
Emperor of the Yuan dynastyReignOctober 23, 1332 – December 14, 1332CoronationOctober 23, 1332PredecessorJayaatu Khan Tugh TemürSuccessorUkhaghatu Khan Toghon Temür
BornMay 1, 1326DiedDecember 14, 1332(1332-12-14) (aged 6)
Dadu, Yuan ChinaEmpressEmpress Daliyetemishi of Khongirad clan (m. 1332–1332)
Names
Mongolian: ᠷᠢᠨᠴᠢᠨᠪᠠᠯ
Chinese: 懿璘質班
Rinchinbal
Era dates
Zhishun (至順) 1332
Posthumous name
Emperor Chongsheng Sixiao (沖聖嗣孝皇帝)
Temple name
Ningzong (寧宗)
HouseBorjiginDynastyYuanFatherKusalaMotherBabusha of the Naiman

Rinchinbal (Mongolian: Ринчинбал ᠷᠢᠨᠴᠢᠨᠪᠠᠯ, Chinese: 懿璘質班; Standard Tibetan: རིན་ཆེན་དཔལ།), also known by his temple name as the Emperor Ningzong of Yuan (Chinese: 元寧宗; May 1, 1326 – December 14, 1332), was a son of Kuśala (Emperor Mingzong) who was briefly installed to the throne of the Yuan dynasty of China, but died soon after he was installed to the throne. Apart from Emperor of China, he is also considered the 14th Great Khan of the Mongol Empire, although it was only nominal due to the division of the empire.

Biography

He was the second son of Kuśala (Emperor Mingzong) and a younger brother of Toghun Temür (Emperor Huizong). His mother was Babusha of the Naiman tribe, who met Kusala when he lived in exile in Central Asia under the Chagatai Khanate.

When his father Kuśala died and was succeeded by his younger brother Tugh Temür (who is thought to have poisoned Kuśala), Rinchinbal was appointed to Prince of Fu. Tugh Temur made his son Aratnadara heir apparent in January 1331.[1] In order to secure her son's throne, Tugh Temur's Khatun Budashiri executed Rinchinbal's mother, Babusha, and exiled Toghan Temur to Korea.[2] These proved unnecessary, however, Aratnadara died one month after his designation as heir.[3]

Rinchinbal's consort and mother.

Although Tugh Temür had a son named El Tegüs when he died in 1332, it is said that on his deathbed the Khagan expressed remorse for what he had done to his elder brother and his intention to pass the throne to Toghan Temur, Kusala's eldest son, instead of his own son. The grand councilor El Temür resisted letting Kuśala's eldest son Toghun Temür accede to the throne since he was suspected of having poisoned his father Kuśala. When Tugh Temur's widow and El Tegüs's mother Budashiri Khatun respected Tugh Temür's will of making Kuśala's son succeed the throne, the 6 year old Rinchinbal was chosen. While Toghun Temür was kept far away from the capital Dadu, Rinchinbal was in Dadu and had become favored by Tugh Temür. Rinchinbal was enthroned as the new emperor on October 23, 1332, but he died on December 14.[3]

El Temür again asked Budashiri to install El Tegüs but it was declined again. He had no choice but to invite Toghun Temür back from far-away Guangxi[4] in southwest China.

Ancestry

Ancestors of Rinchinbal Khan
16. Zhenjin(=28)
8. Darmabala
17. Kokejin?(=29)
4. Külüg Khan
18. Hundtemur
9. Dagi of the Khunggirat
2. Khutughtu Khan Kusala
20. Tieliqian Noyan of Ikires
10. Suolanha Noyan of Ikires
21. Princess Chalun
5. Shoutong
22. Manggala
11. Princess Nugulan
23. Qutui khatun
1. Rinchinbal Khan
3. Babusha
28. Zhenjin(=16)
14. Gammala
29. Kokejin?(=17)
7. Princess Shouning

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Yuan shi, 34. p. 754.
  2. ^ Yuan shi, 34. p. 774.
  3. ^ a b Herbert Franke, Denis Twitchett, John King Fairbank-The Cambridge History of China: Alien regimes and border states, 907–1368, p. 557.
  4. ^ Jeremiah Curtin-The Mongols: A history, p. 392.
Rinchinbal Khan
Born: 1326 Died: 1332
Regnal titles
Preceded by Great Khan of the Mongol Empire
(Nominal due to the empire's division)

1332
Succeeded by
Emperor of the Yuan dynasty
1332
Emperor of China
1332
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Yuan
Early Mongol rulers posthumously honoured by Kublai as Yuan emperors

Following Kublai's enthronement as Khagan-Emperor in 1260, proclamation of the dynastic name "Great Yuan" in 1271, and conquest of Southern Song in 1279, Yuan ruled all of China.

Northern Yuan
Note: Before Kublai announced the dynastic name "Great Yuan" in 1271, Khagans (Great Khans) of the "Great Mongol State" (Ikh Mongol Uls) already started to use the Chinese title of Emperor (Chinese: 皇帝; pinyin: Huángdì) practically in the Chinese language since the enthronement of Genghis Emperor (成吉思皇帝) in 1206.
Xia → Shang → Zhou → Qin → Han → 3 Kingdoms → Jìn / 16 Kingdoms → S. Dynasties / N. Dynasties → Sui → Tang → 5 Dynasties & 10 Kingdoms → Liao / Song / W. Xia / Jīn → Yuan → Ming → Qing → ROC / PRC