"Möngke Temür" redirects here. For the thirteenth century khan of the Golden Horde, see Mengu-Timur.
Möngke Temür (Chinese: 猛哥帖木耳; pinyin: Měnggē Tiē mù'ěr or 猛哥帖木儿; Měnggē Tiēmù'er) or Dudu Mengtemu (Manchu: ᡩᡠᡩᡠ ᠮᡝᡢᡨᡝ᠋ᠮᡠ;[1]孟特穆; Mèngtèmù) (1370–1433) was a Jurchen chieftain of the Odoli tribe, one of the three tribes of the lower Sunggari river valley in Manchuria. In the 1380s the tribe migrated southward towards the lower valley of the Tumen River and settled in Womuho (present day Hoeryong).
As a distant ancestor of the Aisin Gioro clan which founded the Qing dynasty, Möngke Temür was accorded the posthumous name Emperor Yuan (原皇帝) and the temple name Zhaozu (肇祖) by the Shunzhi Emperor of the Qing dynasty. His son was Cungšan.
Měnggē Tiē mù'ěr or 猛哥帖木儿; Měnggē Tiēmù'er) or Dudu Mengtemu (Manchu: ᡩᡠᡩᡠ ᠮᡝᡢᡨᡝ᠋ᠮᡠ; 孟特穆; Mèngtèmù) (1370–1433) was a Jurchen chieftain of the Odoli tribe...
capital of the Later Jin. the Yongling Mausoleum (清永陵), the joint burials of Mengtemu, Fuman, Giocangga and Taksi, also located at this county. There are nine...
chieftain of the Wanyan tribe, honored as Zhaozu (昭祖) in the Jin dynasty Mengtemu (1370–1433), Jurchen chieftain of the Odoli tribe, honored as Zhaozu (肇祖)...
(1113–1123) Located on the banks of Hun River(渾江) Bukūri Yongšon (布库里雍顺) Mengtemu (孟特穆) or Möngke Temür (童孟哥帖木兒) (1405–1433) (Temple name: Zhàozǔ 肇祖) Cungšan...
Ala. He was Nurhaci's fifth generation grand uncle. The second son of Mengtemu, Cungšan's brother. In 1433, when his father and his brother Agu were killed...