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The Keraits or Kereyids (Kazakh: Керейлер Kereiler) is a Kazakh tribe of a Turkic origin. Several hundreds of thousands of Keraits constitute a considerable population in Pavlodar, Qaraganda, Qostanai,Shyghys Qazaqstan regions of Kazakhstan, Bayan-Ölgiy province of Mongolia and Ili Kazakh Autonomous Prefecture of China. They lived along the upper reaches of the Orkhon River west of the Tula River and north of the Ongiin River. According to the Syrian Bar Hebraeus, the Kerait were converted to Nestorianism, a sect of Christianity, about the year 1008. They lived to the east of the Naimans. The area around Ulaanbaatar, the present capital city of Mongolia, was inhabited by the Kerait.
Their khan Toghrul was granted the title of Wang Khan (King) by the Jin Emperor in 1183. Toghrul is best known as foster-father to Temüjin (later Genghis Khan) until the two had a falling out. The Kerait were part of the united Mongol nation forged by Genghis Khan in the first years of the 13th century AD.
During the 10th and 11th centuries, due to Nestorian missionary activities, several Turkic tribes were entirely or to a great extent Christian, notably the Kerait, Uyghur, Naiman and Merkit. They were a cluster of hunting tribes east and south of Lake Baikal. The principal tribes evangelized there by the Nestorians were the Naiman, the Merkit, and the Kerait. The Kerait capital at this time was Karakorum, where Marco Polo later found a church.
It seems that the Gospel was taken to those tribes by Christian merchants. An account of the conversion of the Kerait is given by the 13th century Jacobite historian Gregory Bar Hebraeus. According to Hebraeus, in early 11th century, a Kerait king lost his way while hunting in the high mountains. When he had abandoned all hope, a saint appeared in a vision and said, "If you will believe in Christ, I will lead you lest you perish." He returned home safely. When he met Christian merchants, he remembered the vision and asked them about their faith. At their suggestion, he sent a message to the Metropolitan of Merv for priests and deacons to baptize him and his tribe. As a result of the mission that followed, the king and 20000 of his people were baptized. (R. Grousset, The Empire of the Steppes, New Brunswick, NJ, Rutgers University Press, 1970, p. 191. See also Moffett, A History of Christianity in Asia pp. 400-401.)
The Prester John legend was connected to the Christian rulers of the Kerait ("The history of this race of Christian kings, afterward so celebrated in Europe under the name of Prester John, is properly referable to the two succeeding centuries." (Asahel Grant, op. cit., p. 376)). At one point in the legend, Prester John was explicitly identified with Wang Khan.
The Kerait organized themselves into a confederation and thus influenced the later political organization among the Mongols. They also had religious influence over the Mongols through royal marriage. Genghis Khan’s eldest daughter-in-law was a Nestorian Kerait princess called Sorghaghtani Beki (or Sorghaghtani).
Now the Keraits are Sunni Muslims.
See also
Other Kazakh tribes include
Category: