Yes! First son of Genghis Khan with 1st wife Borte. Jochi born 1185, died 1227. Check out Wikpedia internet encyclopedia.
2006-07-19 22:01:54
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answer #1
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answered by The Mick "7" 7
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There are no contemporaneous accounts of Jesus life - and the one that comes closest, the 2d C. Gospel according to Mark, has neither birth narrative nor resurrection story. (The early 2d C. church, interestingly, included in their canon exactly none of the documents that comprise the current New Testament; and the New Testament includes exactly none of the books of the canon of the early 2d C. church.) Moral of this thread - the history of the church intersects and merges with Jesus Christ (or the of Jesus the Christ, b oth those words are titles, by the way, not names). Similarly, there are significant documentary issues pertaining to the person of Genghis Khan. I am not yet aware of contemporaneous documents of a singular person Genghis Khan, only secondary documents. A mysterious death, a secret tomb. Just as the early church emerged from a mystical community (or a group of them) with a visionary leader focused only on the group around him, it is likely that Genghis Khan was at most a spiritual/military leader of a group of apostles - and this group provided the intellectual energy and evil genius behind the Mongolian empire. Genghis himself, as Jesus, was not widely traveled - and did *I am not aware of* third person first-person accounts outside of his inner circle. And there was no playwright named Wm. Shakespeare, either.
2016-03-19 00:23:16
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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Genghis Khan's empress and first wife Borte had four sons, Jochi (1185–1226), Chagatai (?—1241), Ögedei (?—1241), and Tolui (1190–1232).
Genghis Khan also had many other children with his other wives, but they were excluded from the succession, and records on what daughters he may have had are scarce.
The paternity of Genghis Khan's eldest son, Jochi, remains unclear to this day and was a serious point of contention in his lifetime. Soon after Borte's marriage to Temüjin, she was kidnapped by the Merkits and reportedly given to one of their men as a wife. Though she was rescued, she gave birth to Jochi nine months later, clouding the issue of his parentage.
This uncertainty over Jochi's true father was voiced most strongly by Chagatai, who probably wanted to make his succession clear. According to The Secret History of the Mongols, just before the invasion of the Khwarezmid Empire by Genghis Khan, Chagatai declared before his father and brothers that he would never accept Jochi as Khagan (that is, as Genghis Khan's successor).
In response to this tension and possibly for other reasons, it was Ögedei who was appointed as successor and who ruled as Khagan after Genghis Khan's death. Jochi died in 1226, before his father. Genghis Khan himself never doubted Jochi's lineage; he claimed that he was his first son
2006-07-20 01:57:04
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answer #3
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answered by cookie 2
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NO.. he was the son of Chilger Boke..
2006-07-19 20:42:25
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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rubbish,i am the real one!
2006-07-20 00:22:21
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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