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House of Yu

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Yu
Royal house
Yu Dynasty Banner.png
CountryGreat United Benevolent State of All Chuyan Peoples
Founded12 May 1697 (1697-05-12)
FounderYakmur Khagan (Mythical, Clan Founder)
Aysen I Khagan (As Untsangasari Imperial House)
Current headTimujin II Khagan
Estate(s)Palace of Falling Waters, Kha'ankhot

The House of Yu are an aristocratic house in Ochran, and the current imperial house of Untsangasar. The House is an extension/subset of the Yu clan, a larger clan found throughout Untsangasar and with branches in other countries, but the House proper is, at present, largely confined to Untsangasar. Before the formation of the Untsangasari khaganate, the family was also an important player in the politics of the Jade Road Khaganate, in particular wielding significant influence over the eastern and northern provices in the region known then as Aspanaken.

Family Background

The Yu clan that the noble house represents the ruling, aristocratic core of is believed to have arisen in what is now southern Untsangasar, sometime either immediately prior to the Bayarid conquests or during the Bayarid imperial period, although when exactly is not known. What is known is that by the time the post-Bayarid Nanjut Federation had emerged in eastern Ochran, a clan claiming descent from a pre-Bayarid ruler of the Zhurjin people, one Yaghimur Khagan, had emerged and begun culturally integrating with the Lo people that had settled in the area. The clan, as it Sinicized would take the name "Yu", in reference to its founder, whose name was believed to translate to "rain".

As the Lo and Nanjut states fell under the sway of the growing Jade Road Khaganate, the Yu clan's profile grew, and its leadership gained prominence in the administration of the newly-acquired territories, even as they migrated north to participate in the project of founding the city of Yakushari in the early 1500's. The family's rise continued when Koyen Yu wedded a junior princess of the Ozkanid dynasty and was appointed the Khan, or governor, of the newly formed province of Aspanaken in 1568.

Over the next century, the Yu's would slowly build a powerbase in the eastern and northern peripheries of the Jade Road Khaganate, striking alliances and building relationships even with the tribal and herding peoples living outside the Khaganate proper. Even as they did this, the Sinicized Yu's increasingly found themselves (re-)Chuyanized and began seeking their opening to advance at court and perhaps even seize the throne from, as the 1600's rolled on, an increasingly-weak and unstable Ozkanid dynasty.

Their opportunity would come during the governorship of Nurhaci Yu in the 1690's. As the situation in the imperial court in Ozhe continued to deteriorate, various factions, regionally-based and otherwise, began to sponsor their own proxy claimants to the throne. This only accelerated once Ozkan VI Khagan left Ozhe to campaign in the restive western provinces in what would ultimately prove to be a fatal error. His distant blood relations increasingly either sought patrons for protection and advancement, or found their lives under threat. One Ozkanid princess, Duygu, fearing for her life, fled east to Yakushari in winter of 1696. Seeing an opportunity, Nurhaci promised sanctuary for Duygu, on the condition that she wed his son, Nikan. Short on options, Duygu agreed, and the two were wed on 12 May 1697, even as violence unfolded around Ozhe to begin the War of the Banners in earnest. The following day, 13 May 1697, the couple were acclaimed "Khan and Khatun of Aspanaken" by an assembly of chiefs, notables, and aristocrats from the subject peoples of the province and an assortment of peoples living outside the Khaganate proper. As the civil war grew, rather than pressing a claim to the Jade Throne in Ozhe, Nikan & Duygu and their Yu backers were content to simply remain in their eastern strongholds, drive out Ozkanid garrisons, and generally defend their holdings, allowing the chaos to destroy their rivals and, unfortunately for their ambitions, the Jade Road Khaganate with it.

Although their union was arranged, the marriage of Nikan and Duygu turned out to be quite a happy one and the two had many children, including their eventual heir Aysen Khagan who was born, by all acounts large and healthy approximately six months following their marriage in 1697. She would be followed by 10 brothers and sisters (although only six of them would reach adulthood). By the time Nikan and Duygu, with failing health, abdicated in 1737 in favor of Aysen, the House of Yu had established itself as a new dynasty, ruling a wholly-distinct empire in Northeast Ochran.


Heads of the House of Yu

Name Portrait Predecessor relations Consort/Spouse Lifespan Entered office Left office Notes
Governors of Aspanaken
- Cuyen --- Son of Fiyanggu TBD 1625 - 1682 1670 1682
(Death)
Not a lot to say.
- Nurhaci --- Son of Cuyen TBD 1652 - 1714 1682 13 May 1697
(Office Abolished)
Engineered the rise of his son and daughter-in-law, along with kick-starting the creation of Untsangasar.
Monarchs of Untsangasar
1 Nikan I Nikan and Duygu.png Son of Nurhaci Duygu Tayu 1678 - 1738 (Nikan I) 13 May 1697 21 June 1737 (Both)
(Abdication)
2 Aysen Aysen of Untsangasar.png Daughter of Nikan I Phillipos 1697 - 1770 21 June 1737 23 February 1770
(Death)
3 Altan I AltanI of Untsangasar.png Son of Aysen I TBD 1719 - 1785 23 February 1770 6 October 1785
(Death)
4 Nikan II NikanII of Untsangasar.png Son of Altan I TBD 1740 - 1832 6 October 1785 15 August 1832
(Death)
5 Altan II AltanII of Untsangasar.png Grandson of Nikan I
Son of Temir Taiji
TBD 1799 - 1834 18 August 1832 19 July 1834
(Death)
6 Timujin I TimujinI of Untsangasar.png Nephew of Altan II
Son of Suna Gonji
TBD 1827 - 1880 31 July 1834 24 March 1880
(Death)
7 Oyuun OyunnI of Untsangasar.png Daughter of Timujin I TBD 1858 - 1933 27 March 1880 18 April 1933
(Abdication)
8 Erdem Erdem of Untsangasar.png Son of Oyuun TBD 1884 - 1943 18 April 1933 17 November 1943
(Death)
9 Nikan III Nikan III of Untsangasar.png Son of Erdem TBD 1917 - 1984 19 November 1943 26 May 1964
(Death)
10 Timujin II Timujin II of Untsangasar.png Son of Nikan II TBD 1943 - 2 June 1964 incumbent

Succession, naming and heirs