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Саяси1680 б.з. – 1718 б.з.4 мин оқу23

Tauke Khan and the Zheti Zhargy: When the Steppe Got Its Constitution

How a Kazakh khan codified nomadic law, created a council of elders, and built the most organized steppe state of its era

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Бөлісу

Кіріспе

Around 1680, Kazakh Khan Tauke did something extraordinary: he gathered the most respected bi (judges) from all three jüz and asked them to create a unified legal code. The result — the Zheti Zhargy ("Seven Statutes") — was not written on paper. It was memorized, debated, and transmitted orally across the vast steppe. But it functioned as a constitution, regulating everything from murder to marriage, property to pasture, warfare to water rights.
In an age when European philosophers were theorizing about the social contract, a Central Asian nomadic khan was implementing one.

IThe Three Great Bis

Tauke Khan's legal reform is inseparable from the three legendary judges who shaped it:
  • Tole Bi (1663-1756) — Chief judge of the Great Jüz, based in Zhetysu. Known for his eloquence and poetic legal reasoning. His judgments were considered so fair that even enemies accepted them without appeal.
  • Kazybek Bi (1667-1764) — Chief judge of the Middle Jüz. Famous for his diplomatic missions and his ability to resolve inter-tribal disputes through dialogue rather than force.
  • Aiteke Bi (1644-1700) — Chief judge of the Small Jüz. The oldest of the three, respected for his deep knowledge of steppe customary law and his stern sense of justice.
These three men, working with Tauke Khan, synthesized centuries of steppe legal tradition into a coherent system. Their names are inscribed on the Monument of Independence in Almaty today.

IIWhat the Zheti Zhargy Covered

The Seven Statutes addressed the fundamental questions of nomadic life:
  1. Land and pasture law (Jer dau) — Rules for seasonal migration routes, water access, and pasture allocation between tribes. This was the most critical domain: in a nomadic economy, pasture rights were more important than all other property combined.
  2. Family law — Marriage rules (including the kalym bride price), divorce, inheritance, and the rights of widows. The seven-generation exogamy rule (zheti ata) was formalized here.
  3. Criminal law — Penalties for murder, theft, kidnapping, and assault. The system favored compensation (kun) over punishment: a murderer's family paid blood money to the victim's family, preventing cycles of revenge.
  4. Military law — Obligations of military service, distribution of war spoils, treatment of prisoners, and rules of conduct during campaigns.
  5. Commercial law — Regulation of trade, debts, and livestock transactions. Livestock theft was treated as one of the most serious crimes.
  6. Law of widows and orphans — Protections for the vulnerable, including the amengerlik custom (a widow could marry her deceased husband's brother for economic protection).
  7. Judicial procedure — Rules of evidence, the role of witnesses, and the authority of the bi courts.
IVLegacy and Destruction

Оқуды жалғастыру

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Кілт сөздер

Tauke KhanZheti ZhargyKazakh lawTole BiKazybek BiAiteke Bisteppe constitutioncustomary lawnomadic democracy

Дереккөздер

Бұл мақалада 4 академиялық дереккөзге сілтеме жасалған. Бұл мақаланы дайындауда пайдаланылған негізгі еңбектер мен сілтемелер.

  1. 01

    Irene Schneider, 'The Legal System of the Kazakhs,' in Central Asian Law: An Historical Overview (2012)

  2. 02

    Martha Brill Olcott, The Kazakhs (Hoover Institution Press, 1995)

  3. 03

    Nurbolat Masanov, The Nomadic Civilization of the Kazakhs (Almaty, 2011)

  4. 04

    S. G. Klyashtorny and T. I. Sultanov, Kazakhstan: Annals of Three Millennia (Almaty, 2006)

Тарихи мақалаларды алыңыз

Жаңа зерттеулер мен мақалалар туралы хабарлама алыңыз

Спам жоқ. Кез келген уақытта бас тартуға болады.

Интерактивті картада 5 000 жылдық тарихты зерттеңіз

Толық атласқа, AI-көмекшіге, викториналарға және қауымдастық форумына тегін қол жеткізіңіз

Tauke Khan and the Zheti Zhargy: When the Steppe Got Its Constitution (1680 б.з. – 1718 б.з.) | Sholu