Chabi

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Empress Chabi
YuanEmpressAlbumChabi.jpg
Predecessor Empress Quan
Tegulen
Successor Empress Nambui
Born 1227
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Spouse Kublai Khan
Issue Zhenjin, Crown Prince Mingxiao
Posthumous name
Empress Zhaorui Shunsheng 昭睿順聖皇后
Father Anchen of the Onggirat tribe
Religion Buddhism

Empress Chabi (1227–1281) was an Onggirat (Mongolian: Khongirat; Kazakh: Kongrat) empress consort of the Yuan dynasty in China, married to Kublai Khan. As such, she was the wife to the Mongol Khagan who had conquered all of China in the 1270s.

According to "The Secret History of the Mongols", Chabi was the favorite wife of Kublai and a valued unofficial adviser throughout his reign. She was a patron of the arts and may have played a key role in advancing the interests of the young Venetian traveler, Marco Polo. It is suspected that Chabi herself may have come under Christian influence, like her mother-in-law, Sorhatani.

Empress Chabi exemplified the high role of women in Mongol culture. As Kublai's wife and advisor, she was an important political and diplomatic influence, especially in pleasing the Chinese masses through reconciliation. Chabi promoted Buddhism in the high levels of government. She suggested the better treatment of the north Chinese imperial family in order to appease the people. Chabi also helped Kublai prevent the conversion of Chinese cultivating land into Mongol pastures, out of respect to the Chinese people. Chabi and Kublai's combined cosmopolitan views were effective at adopting Chinese culture without being overwhelmed by it. With Chabi's help, Kublai was able to control his ambitious brother and the potentially unruly Chinese scholar-gentry and peasantry.

Sources

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Preceded by Consort of Kublai Khan
1260–1281
Succeeded by
Nambui
Preceded by Khatun of the Mongols
1260–1281
Preceded by Empress of China
1274–1281