Sholu
Cultural1470 CE – 1850 CE3 min read49

The Three Jüz: Understanding Kazakh Tribal Structure

How the Great, Middle, and Small Hordes organized Kazakh society — and why this system still matters today

Kazakh Khanateraimhg.time
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Introduction

Every Kazakh knows their jüz (жүз). This three-part division of the Kazakh people into the Great Jüz (Ұлы жүз), Middle Jüz (Орта жүз), and Small Jüz (Кіші жүз) is one of the most distinctive features of Kazakh social organization — and one of the least understood by outsiders.
The jüz system was not a rigid caste hierarchy. It was a flexible framework for organizing nomadic life across the vast Kazakh steppe, allocating pastures, managing conflicts, and mobilizing for war. Understanding it is essential to understanding Kazakh history.

IGeography: Each Jüz Had Its Land

The three jüz occupied distinct geographical regions:
  • Great Jüz (Ұлы жүз) — Zhetysu (Seven Rivers), the southeastern region between Lake Balkhash and the Tian Shan mountains. The most fertile pastures, closest to the Silk Road cities.
  • Middle Jüz (Орта жүз) — Central Kazakhstan, the vast Saryarka steppe and the Altai foothills. The largest territory, home to the political heart of the khanate.
  • Small Jüz (Кіші жүз) — Western Kazakhstan, from the Aral Sea to the Ural River and Caspian region. Closest to Russia, which made it the first to face Russian expansion.
The names "Great," "Middle," and "Small" referred originally to seniority, not size. The Great Jüz was the most senior in genealogical terms; the Small Jüz was the youngest. In practice, the Middle Jüz was often the most powerful politically.

IITribes Within Tribes

Each jüz was composed of multiple tribes (ru), which in turn contained sub-tribes and clans. The major tribes included:
Great Jüz: Dulat, Alban, Suan, Shapyrashty, Ysty, Oshakty, Kangly, Jalayir, Sirgeli, Catagan
Middle Jüz: Argyn, Naiman, Kerey, Uak, Qypshaq, Qongyrat
Small Jüz: Alshyn (Bayuly, Alimuly, Zhetiru)
Every Kazakh could trace their lineage through seven generations (zheti ata — seven ancestors), which determined marriage rules (you could not marry within seven generations), inheritance, and social obligations. This system maintained genetic diversity across the steppe population and created a web of kinship obligations that held society together.
IVThe Jüz Today

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Keywords

three jüzҰлы жүзОрта жүзКіші жүзKazakh tribessocial structurezheti atatribal system

Sources

This article references 4 academic sources. Selected references used in preparing this article.

  1. 01

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

  2. 02

    Nurbulat Abdrakhmanov, 'Genealogical Knowledge Among the Kazakhs,' Central Asian Survey, Vol. 20 (2001)

  3. 03

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

  4. 04

    Mukhtar Magauin, Qazaq Tarihynyn Alippesi (Almaty, 2014)

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