Far fewer people are related to Genghis Khan than previously thought, new genomic study suggests


Kazakh folklore says that the body of Jochi, Genghis Khan’s eldest son, lies in a mausoleum in the Ulytau region, in the country’s central highlands. However, when archaeologists recently studied the body from the medieval mausoleum, they did not find Jochi – but they did find a new genetic lineage that may have been carried on by Genghis himself.

Genghis Khanborn Temüjin in the Khentii Mountains of northeastern Mongolia, was a Central Asian warrior who founded the sprawling Mongol Empire in 1206. The Mongols’ astonishing horsemanship and skill with the bow and arrow enabled them to quickly conquer a territory stretching from the Pacific to central Europe. Genghis Khan and his wife Börte had four sons and five daughters. Their eldest son, Jochi, was born around 1182 and died around 1227, shortly before Genghis’ own death. The northwestern part of the Mongol Empire that Jochi (also spelled Joshi, Zhoshi and Jüshi) ruled was later known as Golden Horde.

Add Comment