Genghis Khan writes to him, Jochi does not even answer.
Jochi was an accomplished military leader
and contributed greatly to his father's conquest of Central Asia.
Perhaps this circumstance
became decisive in the decision of Genghis Khan to appoint him as heir to Jochi.
Berke Khan(13th century, exact date of birth unknown) was
the grandson of Djenghis Khan, by his eldest son Jochi.
In this case, if Jochi survived Genghis Khan,
perhaps his campaign to the West was of a different nature.
If this body really belongs to Jochi, we can conclude that the envoys of Genghis Khan
did not really hope for poison.
And in 1224, under the pretext of illness, Jochi refused to come to Kurultai-
apparently, he did not expect anything good from a meeting with his father.
The first Horde khan to completely subjugate Russia is Berke,
who was the fifth ruler of the Jochi ulus and was in power from 1257 to 1266.
And in 1224, under the pretext of illness, Jochi refused to attend the Kurultai-
apparently, he had nothing good from the meeting with her father did not expect.
Jochi is considered the eldest son of the great conqueror,
but probably his real father was an unnamed Merkit, whose wife or concubine Borte became during her captivity.
Genghis, who loved Borte, and understood his guilt(he shamefully fled during the Merkit raid, leaving his
wife, mother, and brothers to their own devices) recognized Jochi as his son.
Genghis, who liked Borte and understand his guilt(he's shamefully fled during a RAID of the Merkits, leaving
in the lurch and wife, and mother, and brothers) recognized Jochi as his son.
In 1946, Soviet archaeologists in the Karaganda region of Kazakhstan(in the Alatau mountains, about 50 km north-east of Zhezkagan) in the mausoleum, where,
according to legend, Jochi was buried,
a skeleton without a right hand with a cut skull was discovered.