Kaidu Better Access

Möngke conducted a brutal purge of the Ögedeid and Chagatai families, whom he saw as rivals. Kaidu’s father, Kashin, had already died, but Kaidu himself was spared due to his youth and obscurity. However, he was placed under close surveillance. According to The Secret History of the Mongols , the young prince was assigned a small, impoverished appanage in the remote Emil River valley (modern-day eastern Kazakhstan). It was a deliberate insult—a barren, rocky region incapable of supporting a large army. But it was here that Kaidu forged his character. He learned patience, honed his skills in riding and archery, and began quietly building a network of loyal followers among the discontented clans. The memory of the Toluid usurpation and the humiliation of his family never left him. The death of Möngke Khan in 1259 triggered the great Toluid Civil War between his brothers: Kublai (who favored Chinese-style sedentary rule) and Ariq Böke (who championed Mongol traditionalism). Kaidu shrewdly supported Ariq Böke, seeing a chance to restore Ögedeid power. Although Ariq Böke lost in 1264, Kaidu emerged not as a defeated vassal, but as a defiant warlord. He refused to appear at Kublai’s new capital, Khanbaliq (modern Beijing), to swear fealty.

Yet Kaidu’s legacy outlasted his empire. He had proven that the nomadic warrior spirit could defy the world’s greatest land power for four decades. He delayed the Yuan dynasty’s consolidation of Central Asia by half a century, allowing Turkic and Mongol identities to survive. Later steppe rebels—from Timur (Tamerlane) to the Oirats—would invoke Kaidu’s name as a symbol of resistance against settled empires. Möngke conducted a brutal purge of the Ögedeid

Khutulun famously declared she would only marry a man who could defeat her in wrestling. Hundreds of suitors tried; all lost, forfeiting 100 horses each. Eventually, she amassed a herd of 10,000 horses. She fought alongside Kaidu in his greatest battles, often saving his life. After Kaidu’s death, she became a power broker, but her story was later distorted by Persian and European chroniclers into the romantic legend of “Turandot” (though the opera by Puccini bears little resemblance to the real woman). As Kaidu aged, his raids grew bolder. In 1297, he ambushed and killed Kublai’s grandson, Prince Kokechu, in Mongolia. Kublai, now in his 80s, was enraged. He appointed his best general, Bayalun (or, more famously, Temür – Kublai’s successor after 1294), to crush Kaidu once and for all. According to The Secret History of the Mongols