![]() ![]() Hun in its original pronunciation is Khun and thus Khan. It is also used by some Muslim Rajputs of India and Pakistan after earlier converts from Hinduism to Islam translated the term Rajput (son of Raja) to Khanzada (son of Khan)in order to claim Muslim nobility rather than their Hindu origin. The more plausible explanation is the Hun origin of the Pashtuns. In South Asia it has become a part of many South Asian Muslim names, especially when Pashtun descent is claimed. Rulers of the Göktürks, Avars and Khazars used the higher title Kaghan, as rulers of distinct nations. Jurchen and Manchu rulers also used the title Khan ( Han in Manchu) and “han” appears in Japanese language as the word for fief and for group units for example, Nurhaci was called Genggiyen Han. Khan was also used in the Seljuk Turk dynasties of the near-east to designate a head of multiple tribes, clans or nations, who was below an Atabeg in rank. Khan – Mongols and Xianbei… the title Khan was also common in some of the polities of the various – generally Islamic – peoples in the territories of the Mongol Golden Horde and its successor states, which, like the Mongols in general, were commonly called Ta(r)tars by Europeans and Russians, and were all eventually subdued by Muscovia which became the Russian Empire. Kalm-yk Dzungar (Kalmyk or Kalmuck people branch) ![]() Qam – Arabic usage Prince of Princes (the Ashina and Turkmen have no kings only princes ) “i” as the suffix to Japanese equivalent word – Kam-i or Kam-uy (Ainu borrowed usage from solar worshipping later immigrants?), therefore may also point to an original and now-forgotten meaning “deity or god of Kam”.Ĭrown prince, princely ruler, prince, sacred or shamanic prince (the shaman is also called the kam) – see Ashina or Ashina royal clan lineage usage, while Michael Witzel proposes that the name Cambyses, may originate as a title given to the Persian crown prince. The word is from a Proto-Semitic archaic biliteral ʔ-L meaning “ god” (possibly with a wider meaning of “strong”), Possibly, ʾsince god in Arabic is Ilāh (Arabic), we already know from linguists that the ancient word for deity god or God, ʾIlāh is cognate to Northwest Semitic ʾēl and Akkadian ilum. Kam is the title for the shaman all over Siberia (but especially with the Altaians) and the shaman was in ancient times the preeminent sacral ruler for their tribal societies and chiefdoms (see Shamanism in Siberia). Land of Kam also in Siberian lands refers to the Land of God, of the sacred, of the shaman. To the Hebrews this name was known as “Khám” or “Ham” and in the Bible the Egyptians are referred to as “Sons of Ham” or “Children of Ham.”” ![]() Kam … Kom … Cambyses … Cambodia from the old Kamboja-Kambujiya-Khambhoj-Kambhuj were names of lands inhabited by the Kamboj peoples. In the “ Wisdom of the Egyptians” Brian Brown writes “IN ancient times the land that is now called Egypt was called by the people, then inhabiting that part of Africa, “Kam,” a word that means “black” or “dark-colored” and referred to the dark color of the muddy soil in their land. Kamboja – top lefthand corner of map Bottom Cambodia is in the shaded area ![]()
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