Kaidu -
Introduction: The Rebel Prince In the popular imagination, the Mongol Empire under Genghis Khan was a monolithic, unstoppable force. Yet within a single generation of the great conqueror’s death in 1227, the empire fractured into a collection of warring factions. The most formidable and charismatic leader of this fragmentation was Kaidu (c. 1230 – 1301) , a grandson of Genghis Khan. For nearly forty years, Kaidu waged a relentless war against his cousins, the Great Khans of the Yuan dynasty in China, turning the vast grasslands of Central Asia into a bloody chessboard. More than a mere rebel, Kaidu represented the struggle for a fading world: the nomadic, egalitarian steppe against the creeping bureaucracy and settled luxury of the Chinese court. Early Life and the Seeds of Hatred Kaidu was the son of Kashin, the fifth son of Ögedei Khan (Genghis’s third son and immediate successor). When Ögedei died in 1241, the empire was ruled by a succession of weak khans from the Ögedeid and Toluid lines. The fragile peace shattered in 1251, when a coup placed Möngke Khan, a member of the Toluid family (Genghis’s youngest son’s line), on the throne.
Consequently, Kaidu presented himself as the guardian of the true Mongol way. He kept his court nomadic, moving between the valleys of the Tarbagatai Mountains. He distributed spoils of war directly to his warriors, not to tax collectors. And he fiercely resisted any attempt to build cities or permanent garrisons in his domains. No account of Kaidu is complete without his legendary daughter, Khutulun (c. 1260 – 1306). A warrior of immense strength and skill, she was her father’s most trusted companion and military commander. Marco Polo, who claimed to have met her, wrote that she could ride into enemy ranks, snatch a captive, “as a hawk pounces on a bird.” Introduction: The Rebel Prince In the popular imagination,
Kaidu perfected the and the "infinite chase." He would raid deep into Yuan territory (Mongolia and Xinjiang), burn pastures, steal horses, and vanish into the desert before a counter-force could arrive. When the Yuan army pursued, he would lead them into waterless steppes, then circle around to attack their supply lines. His mobility was terrifying: his warriors could ride 100 miles a day on remounts, fighting in the morning and retreating by nightfall. 1230 – 1301) , a grandson of Genghis Khan