Nauryzbai Batyr (Kazakh: Наурызбай батыр) was one of the celebrated military commanders of the Kazakh people during the eighteenth-century wars against the Dzungar Khanate. He belonged to the Shapyrashty clan of the Senior Juz (Ұлы жүз), and rose to prominence as a batyr — a warrior-leader whose authority rested on courage, skill in battle, and the loyalty of the fighting men who gathered under his banner.
His dates are usually given as roughly c. 1706–1781, though, as with most steppe figures of the period, these years should be treated as approximate. Oral tradition, genealogy (shejire), and later written compilations preserve his memory, but precise birth and death records were not kept in the way that they were for contemporary sedentary states. What is consistent across the sources is his role within the generation of batyrs who came of age during the catastrophe Kazakhs remember as the Aqtaban Shubyryndy ("the Great Disaster") of 1723, when Dzungar armies overran the Kazakh winter pastures and drove whole communities into flight.
Nauryzbai is most often named in the same breath as Bogenbai Batyr of the Kanjygaly and Kabanbai Batyr of the Karakerei — the three forming a kind of triad of commanders whose names anchor the popular history of the resistance. He fought in the campaigns associated with the consolidation of Kazakh military power under Abylai Khan, the leader who would unify much of the steppe's war effort and later negotiate the fragile balance between the Qing and Russian empires. As a Senior Juz batyr, Nauryzbai linked the southern and southeastern fronts of the conflict — the lands of the Zhetysu (Semirechye) and the approaches to the Ili and Chu valleys — to the broader coalition.
The wars in which he served were not a single event but a long, grinding struggle stretching across decades. Kazakh forces suffered crushing defeats in the early 1720s, regrouped, and won significant victories in the late 1720s and 1730s, including engagements remembered in tradition as turning points where the steppe peoples pushed back against Dzungar expansion. The eventual destruction of the Dzungar Khanate in the 1750s — at the hands of the Qing rather than the Kazakhs — reshaped the region and freed the Senior Juz from its most immediate external threat, though it opened new questions about the steppe's relationship with the great surrounding empires.
It is worth distinguishing this Nauryzbai from a later and entirely separate figure: Nauryzbai Kasymov, the brother of Kenesary Khan, who fought in the anti-colonial uprising of the 1830s–1840s. The two are often confused because they share a name and a reputation for valor, but they lived a century apart and belonged to different lineages and struggles. The Nauryzbai of this article is the eighteenth-century Shapyrashty batyr of the Senior Juz.
In Kazakh cultural memory, Nauryzbai Batyr is honored less through documented biography than through the durable tradition of the heroic age — the era when the batyrs are credited with preserving the people's survival, land, and identity. His name endures in genealogies, in toponyms of the Zhetysu region, and in the collective roll of warriors invoked when Kazakhs recall the defense of the steppe.