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Are the Tatars and Walas Mongolians?

The Mongols in the Ming Dynasty were divided into Oara and Tatar. Oara is Mongolia and Oirat Mongolia. Oirat is divided into four major tribes: Junggar, Heshuote, Durbot, and Turgut. Later, when the Junggar became powerful, they forced Shuote, Durbot, and Turgut to move westward to the Volga River and became the "Kalmyks." After the Qing Dynasty eliminated the Junggar tribe, some Kalmyks returned to China.

The "Tatar" mentioned in the Ming Dynasty of China refers to the eastern Mongolia ruled by Arutai.

Safin is a Kazan Tatar. In the 13th century, Batu, the grandson of Genghis Khan, established a powerful Kipchak Khanate or Golden Horde in the region from the lower Danube River in the west to Central Asia in the east. During this period, the various Turkic tribes that were incorporated into the Golden Horde, the Bulgars of the Huns, and the minority Mongols who moved westward combined with each other in language and culture to form Tatars, which were divided by region: Kazan Tatars, Astrakhan Tatars, Crimean Tatars, Siberian Tatars.

The Mongols themselves are also divided into Nylon Mongolia and Dielejin Mongolia. Their origins are also different. Many Mongolian tribes were originally Turkic tribes or Xianbei tribes.

So objectively speaking, Safin's ancestors are mainly Kipchaks of Turkic origin, with very little Mongolian ancestry, so naturally he does not look like a Mongolian.

Study the origins of the Kangli people, Kipchaks, and Mongols, and the process of their development into Tatars, Kazakhs, and Uzbeks after different mixing from the 13th to the 17th century. I believe you will Have a clearer understanding of this.