'Yelü Dashi' (耶律大石 Yēlǜ Dàshí or 耶律達實 Yēlǜ Dáshí), or 'Yeh-Lu Ta-Shih' (r.
1124-
1144) was the founder of the Western Liao dynasty, or the
Kara-Khitan Khanate.
Yelü was a member of the Liao royal family - a dynasty of
Khitan tribes that had ruled areas of
Inner Mongolia,
Outer Mongolia, and
Manchuria since the
tenth century. The original Liao dynasty was displaced by the
Jurchen, a
Tungus people native to
Manchuria. Yelü led roughly 100,000 of his fellow Khitan in an exodus from Jurchen rule westward to
Turkestan. Yelü and his followers arrived in
1124 at the
Uyghur capital of
Beshbaliq. The Uyghurs - traditional vassals to the Khitans - submitted to Yelü and the army of refugees he led. Yelü, after amassing an army of Uyghurs,
Tibetans,
Qarluks, and others, fought a series of aggressive wars against his neighbors from his new kingdom and soon seized control of
Dzungaria.
Yelü was treated amicably by the
Western Xia Dynasty and the
Buddhist Kharakojas, but after being rebuffed by the
Kara-Khanid Khanate at
Gulja and
Kashgar, Yelü subjugated the Kara-Khanids and incorporated their lands, Kashgar,
Khotan, and
Ferghana to his growing kingdom in
1137. Now on the borders of
Persia, he made war against the
Seljuk Turks and conquered
Sogdia,
Bactria,
Khwarazm, and
Samarkand by
1141. The Seljuk state then collapsed into internal rebellion.
His wars against the
Muslim Turks in
Central Asia, particularly his victory at Samarkand, and his amicable relations with
Nestorian Christianity, which flourished in the Kara-Khitan Khanate, led to his association with the legend of
Prester John, a Christian king in the east who was "destined" to vanquish Islam. Bishop
Otto of Freising first chronicled the story in
1145.
Yelü died in
1144, master of much of
Central Asia. The dynasty Yelü established would last until its conquest by
Genghis Khan in
1218.