Mahmud Yalavach

Mahmud Yalavach was a Muslim[1] administrator in the Mongol Empire who ruled over Turkestan as governor and eventually went on to be mayor of Taidu (now Beijing). He was a Khorezmian merchant who served as an administrator and advisor to Genghis Khan. Somewhere in the 1230s, he devised the census system accounting for the people in the newly formed Mongol Empire so they could be readily taxed. He went on to simplify the existing tax systems in his creation of two primary tax initiatives: The first was the poll tax known as the qubchir and the other was an agricultural tax known as the qalan.

See also

References

Citations

Sources

  • Lane, George. Daily Life in the Mongol Empire. p. 62. 1st ed. Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. US. 2006.
  • Christian, David. A History of Russia, Central Asia, and Mongolia. p. 415. 1st ed. Blackwell Publishing, Cornwall, United Kingdom. 1998.
🔥 Top keywords: Main PageShannen DohertySpecial:SearchCarlos AlcarazList of United States presidential assassination attempts and plotsAttempted assassination of Donald TrumpDonald TrumpRichard Simmons2024 shooting at a Donald Trump rallyLamine YamalNovak DjokovicNico WilliamsUEFA European ChampionshipWikipedia:Featured picturesThomas Matthew CrooksProject 2025Attempted assassination of Ronald ReaganUEFA Euro 2024Jacoby JonesAR-15–style rifleMukesh AmbaniLonglegsSpain national football teamKimberly CheatleKalki 2898 ADList of Wimbledon gentlemen's singles championsCole PalmerGareth SouthgateJohn Hinckley Jr.Harry KaneLuke PerryAntifa (United States)United States Secret Service.xxxDeaths in 2024Ruth WestheimerEvan VucciButler, PennsylvaniaIndian 2