Background
Tsewang Dorji Namjal became khan on the death of his father, Galdan Tseren in 1745.
策妄多尔济那木扎尔
Tsewang Dorji Namjal became khan on the death of his father, Galdan Tseren in 1745.
The Khanate was in political, military and economic terms an important power in Central Asia. Since 1739 there had been a form of peace with the Chinese Qing dynasty. As a result, trade opportunities between Dzungaria and China expanded significantly and had a positive impact on the economic base of the Khanate.
Galdan Tseren had implemented modern irrigation systems in the fertile oases of his empire by bringing in Turkic Taranchi people who possessed the requisite skills for such innovations.
He also improved trade and productivity in the local economy. In the last years of Galdan Tseren era there was talk of increasing tension with Imperial Russia, but bipartisan relations were not beyond repair.
An influential faction within the Russian political elite saw the maintenance of an independent khanate in Dzungaria as an important counterbalance to Chinese influence on the southeastern border with Siberia. In the period after the death of Galdan Tseren an unprecedented internal power-struggle broke out within the Khanate, which resulted in total anarchy and its eventual destruction.
At his death, the eldest son Lama Dorji (d 1752) was 17 years old, the middle son, Tsewang Dorji Namjal, 13 years old and the youngest son, Tsewang Dashi just seven years old.
In his will Galdan Tseren determined that it should be Tsewang Dorji Namjal who succeeded him. In 1746, he was also proclaimed by the nobility of the Dzungars as their new leader. Little is known about Tsewang Dorji Namjal.
However, available sources describe him as someone who was seen in his youth as a perverse, cruel and paranoid man who drank copious amounts of alcohol and was "more interested in killing dogs than attending to affairs of state".
According to one source, "The king"s favorite ways were to roam around in the villages, drinking chang, seducing girls and indulging in carnal pleasures". Several missions to Tibet had depleted Tsewang Dorji Namjal"s influence amongst the Dzungarian elite.
He died in 1750.