The Dingling (丁零; Dīnglíng; also transcribed as Ting-ling or Dili) were an ancient nomadic people who inhabited the regions north of the Xiongnu empire, around the Altai Mountains, Lake Baikal, and the Mongolian steppe, as recorded in Chinese historiography from the 2nd century BCE.[1] They were described as a loose confederation of tribes engaged in hunting, fishing, and herding, and played a role in the shifting alliances and conflicts of Central Asian nomads during the Han Dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE).[1]Initially mentioned in the Shiji (Records of the Grand Historian) by Sima Qian around 100 BCE, the Dingling were neighbors to the Xiongnu and later allied with the Han Chinese and Xianbei against them, contributing to the Xiongnu's westward migration in the 1st century CE.[1] Over time, some Dingling groups moved westward, settling in areas like modern Kazakhstan and interacting with states such as Kangju and Sogdiana, while others integrated into emerging confederations like the Gaoche and Tiele (Türks).[1] Their linguistic and cultural affiliations are debated, with hypotheses linking them to early Turkic or possibly proto-Mongolic speakers, and remnants assimilated into Chinese populations or later nomadic empires by the 4th–5th centuries CE.[1]
Name and Identity
Etymology
The term "Dingling" is a Chinese transcription of the characters 丁零, pronounced Dīnglíng in modern Mandarin Pinyin.[2] These characters first appear in the Shiji (Records of the Grand Historian) by Sima Qian (ca. 145–86 BCE), where they denote a nomadic people located north of the Xiongnu in the Mongolian steppe and Altai regions during the 2nd century BCE.[3] In Old Chinese, the pronunciation is reconstructed as approximately *trēŋ-ljɛŋ, reflecting the phonetic conventions of the Western Han period when the Shiji was composed; this evolved into Early Middle Chinese *tɛjŋ-lɛjŋ by the 6th century CE.[4][2]Scholars such as Peter B. Golden propose that the ethnonym derives from a Proto-Altaic root *tegreg, meaning "wagon," or a related form *tägräg denoting "circle" or "hoop," which aligns with the Altaic linguistic family's terms for wheeled transport, such as Proto-Turkic *tegrek ("rim, ring, wheel") and Proto-Mongolic *terge ("vehicle").[2] This etymology underscores the Dingling's nomadic, cart-dependent lifestyle, where large-wheeled vehicles facilitated mobility across the steppes for dwellings and warfare.[2]The name may represent a transcription of the Dingling's own exonym or self-designation, possibly connoting "high carts" or "wheel people," in reference to their distinctive use of elevated, hoop-rimmed carts that set them apart from neighboring groups in terms of material culture and overland travel.[2] This Altaic origin persisted in later ethnonyms, such as the Tiele (or Chile), suggesting continuity in naming conventions tied to vehicular technology among these steppe peoples.[2]
Name Variants and Related Ethnonyms
The Dingling were recorded under various names in early Chinese historical texts, reflecting phonetic transcriptions and descriptive appellations. In the Book of Han, they appear primarily as Dingling (丁零), with occasional variants such as Dili (狄歷), denoting the same nomadic groups inhabiting regions north of the Xiongnu territories. These names emerged during the Western Han period (206 BCE–9 CE), when the Dingling were described as residing near Lake Baikal and engaging in conflicts with neighboring steppe peoples.[1]By the 4th century CE, additional variants like Chile (敕勒) and Gaoche (高車, literally "High Carts") entered the records, the latter emphasizing their distinctive large-wheeled wagons used for mobility across the steppes. The Book of Northern Wei (Weishu) explicitly links Gaoche to the Dingling, portraying them as a confederation that absorbed elements from the Xiongnu and Xianbei after migrations southward. This nomenclature persisted into the 5th century, with Gaoche Dingling noted for supplying horses to the Northern Wei court amid regional conflicts.[1][5]The Dingling are widely regarded as direct ancestors of the Tiele (鐵勒) confederation, a loose alliance of Turkic-speaking tribes documented in 5th–6th century Northern Wei annals and later Tang sources. The Tiele encompassed former Dingling groups, expanding to include up to twelve tribes by the time they allied with the emerging Turkic khaganate in 552 CE. This association is evidenced in the Weishu, which traces the Tiele's ethnogenesis to Dingling remnants scattered after earlier upheavals.[1][6]Historical records distinguish between Eastern (or Northern) and Western branches of the Dingling, differentiated by geography and subsequent nomenclature. The Eastern Dingling, centered in the Mongolian steppes, frequently merged with Xiongnu and Xianbei, adopting Gaoche and Chile designations as they moved south into areas like modern Shanxi and Hebei by the 3rd–4th centuries CE. In contrast, the Western Dingling migrated farther west to the territories of Kangju (modern Uzbekistan) and Wusun during the 1st century BCE, as detailed in the Book of Han, and later integrated into Tiele structures while maintaining trade ties with Sogdiana; these groups were sometimes referred to distinctly as Xi Dingling (西丁零).[1]
Origins and Early History
Geographic Origins
The Dingling people originated in the Minusinsk Basin of southern Siberia, a expansive steppe region along the upper Yenisey River that spans modern-day Khakassia and extends into Tuva Republic. This homeland, characterized by fertile river valleys and surrounding mountain ranges like the Sayan and Altai, supported their emergence as a distinct group around the 3rd to 2nd centuries BCE. The basin's geography, with its mix of grasslands and forested uplands, fostered a semi-arid climate ideal for seasonal migrations and resource exploitation.[7]Archaeological associations tie the proto-Dingling to the Tagar culture, which dominated the Minusinsk Basin from the 8th to 3rd centuries BCE. The Tagar, viewed as ancestral to the Dingling, practiced pastoral nomadism centered on horse and cattle herding, with evidence from numerous kurgan burials revealing horse sacrifices, bronze weaponry, and animal motifs indicative of a mobile, equestrian society. These burial mounds, often clustered along riverbanks, contained log-frame chambers sealed with clay, reflecting rituals tied to steppe traditions.[7][8]The Yenisey River's valleys played a pivotal role in shaping Dingling society, enabling horse breeding through access to water and pasture while serving as natural corridors for early trade routes connecting Siberia to Central Asia. This environmental context not only sustained their nomadic economy but also positioned the region as a cultural crossroads, as noted in initial Chinese historical records describing the Dingling's northern steppe abode.[7][9]
Initial Chinese Records
The Dingling first appear in Chinese historical records in the Shiji (Records of the Grand Historian), compiled by Sima Qian in the late 2nd century BCE, where they are portrayed as nomadic tribes inhabiting the northern steppes beyond the Xiongnu territory.[10] Sima Qian describes them as dwelling north of the Xiongnu, in a region characterized by swamps and lakes, emphasizing their position as distant northern nomads outside direct Han influence but within the broader sphere of steppe interactions. Sima Qian records them as numbering about 120,000 families.[10] This initial depiction frames the Dingling as a distinct ethnic group among other northern peoples, such as the Yuezhi and Gekun, highlighting their nomadic lifestyle and separation from sedentary Chinese society.[10]In the Shiji, the Dingling are noted for their subjugation by the Xiongnu under Chanyu Maodun around the early 3rd century BCE, yet they maintained a semi-independent status as tributary subjects who occasionally rebelled against Xiongnu authority.[10] Sima Qian records that Maodun's campaigns to the north incorporated the Dingling alongside tribes like the Hunyu, Qushe, Gekun, and Xinli, unifying them under Xiongnu hegemony but not fully eradicating their autonomy.[10] Han records portray them as a numerous people, though exact figures vary; they functioned as semi-independent entities capable of resisting full incorporation into the Xiongnu empire through periodic uprisings that required repeated subjugation.[10]
Migrations and Interactions
Relations with Xiongnu
The Dingling were subjugated by the Xiongnu during the expansion of the latter's empire in the 2nd century BCE, particularly under Modu Chanyu (r. 209–174 BCE), who incorporated them as vassals through military conquests in the northern steppes.[11] This subjugation placed the Dingling under Xiongnu overlordship, subjecting them to periodic raids and demands for loyalty amid the broader Han-Xiongnu conflicts.[1]As the Xiongnu empire weakened due to internal strife and Han pressures, the Dingling participated in significant revolts. In 71 BCE, following a major Han-Wusun campaign against the Xiongnu, the Dingling, led by Zhai Jin, launched coordinated attacks from the north, alongside Wuhuan incursions from the east and Wusun assaults from the west, inflicting heavy losses on Xiongnu forces and capturing thousands.[12] According to records in the Hou Hanshu, this multi-front offensive further eroded Xiongnu control over northern tributaries like the Dingling.[13] A later revolt occurred around 85 CE, when Dingling groups rebelled against lingering Xiongnu influence during the Han dynasty's campaigns against the Northern Xiongnu, contributing to the empire's fragmentation.[1]The Dingling formed strategic alliances against the Xiongnu, often in coordination with the Han dynasty and neighboring groups such as the Wusun. These partnerships included joint military efforts during the Xiongnu civil war between Huhanye and Zhizhi Chanyus, aiding in the isolation of Xiongnu factions and facilitating Han diplomatic overtures. Such alliances were pivotal in shifting steppe power dynamics, with the Dingling providing northern flank support to disrupt Xiongnu supply lines.[12]Economically, the Dingling were bound to the Xiongnu through tribute systems, supplying horses essential for cavalry and furs from their northern hunting grounds, which bolstered the Xiongnu's military and trade networks across the steppes.[14] This dependency integrated Dingling resources into the Xiongnu economy, where horses and furs served as key commodities in exchanges with sedentary powers like the Han.[13]Culturally, interactions fostered shared nomadic practices between the Dingling and Xiongnu, including pastoral herding, mounted warfare tactics, and tribal confederation structures, as both groups adapted to the harsh Eurasian steppe environment under Xiongnu hegemony.[1] These exchanges reinforced a common steppe nomadic identity, evident in archaeological parallels of mobile encampments and equestrian gear from the period.[15]
Movements and Conflicts in Central Asia
Under pressure from the Xiongnu Empire during the 2nd century BCE, the Dingling, originally residing around Lake Baikal, experienced subjugation and displacement, leading to their gradual migration southward into the Mongolian steppes and the fringes of northern China by the 1st century BCE to 1st century CE.[1] This movement intensified following the Xiongnu civil war and weakening in the late 1st century BCE, as the Dingling exploited the power vacuum to expand into former Xiongnu territories east of the Altai Mountains.[13] Chinese records describe how these migrations involved alliances and skirmishes, with Dingling groups settling among other nomadic tribes while maintaining a semi-nomadic lifestyle focused on herding and raiding.[1]In the western branches, known as the Western Dingling (Xi Dingling), defeats against the Xiongnu prompted further westward relocation during the Former Han period (206 BCE–8 CE), with some groups invited by the Kangju state to settle south of Lake Balkhash in what is now Kazakhstan.[1] By the 5th century CE, as documented in the Wei Shu (Book of Wei), these Western Dingling had established communities in the Tarim Basin and broader Kazakh steppes, engaging in agriculture, trade with Sogdian merchants along the Syr Darya, and interactions with local kingdoms.[1] This settlement phase marked a shift toward more sedentary elements, though nomadic traditions persisted amid regional pressures from expanding powers like the Rouran Khaganate.[16]The Dingling engaged in significant conflicts across Central Asia, particularly allying with the Xianbei against the Northern Xiongnu in the late 1st century CE. In 85 CE, the Xianbei formed a coalition including the Dingling, Southern Xiongnu, and Tarim Basin city-states to launch raids on Northern Xiongnu territories, as recorded in the Hou Hanshu (Book of the Later Han).[17] This alliance culminated in 87 CE, when Xianbei forces, supported by Dingling contingents, invaded and killed the Northern Xiongnu chanyu Youliu near the Kerulen River, contributing to the Xiongnu's westward flight.[17] Han Dynasty authorities indirectly facilitated these actions by granting the Xianbei autonomy as vassals, though direct Han military participation in the 87 CE strike was limited; subsequent Han-led expeditions in 89 CE, under General Dou Xian, further incorporated Dingling allies to decisively defeat Xiongnu remnants at the Battle of Ikh Bayan.[16]Later conflicts arose with the Rouran Khaganate in the 4th–5th centuries CE, as Rouran expansion displaced Dingling groups from the Mongolian steppes, forcing some into the Altai Mountains and Tarim Basin while others integrated as the Gaoche (High Cart) subgroup under Rouran suzerainty.[1] These engagements involved raids and tribute demands, with Dingling tribes resisting Rouran dominance through sporadic revolts and alliances with neighboring powers like the Northern Wei, highlighting their role in the shifting nomadic power dynamics of Central Asia.[17]
Linguistic and Cultural Affiliations
Turkic Hypothesis
The Turkic hypothesis posits that the Dingling were among the earliest Turkic-speaking nomadic groups in Central Asia, based on linguistic parallels and historical lineages traceable from the 2nd century BCE through later confederations. This view emphasizes their role as precursors to subsequent Turkic entities, supported by etymological matches between Dingling terms recorded in Chinese sources and reconstructed Proto-Turkic lexicon. A key example is the Dingling word kūnzǐ (昆子), attested in the 3rd-century CE Weilüe as denoting the steppe fox (Vulpes corsac), which corresponds closely to Common Turkic karsak ("steppe fox"), reflecting shared phonetic and semantic features, including vowel patterns akin to those in Siberian Turkic branches like Tuvan and Yakut. This alignment suggests an early attestation of Turkic phonology among the Dingling, dating to at least the 3rd century CE.[18] Recent genetic studies (as of 2024) further support this by showing continuity from Bronze Age Siberian cultures (e.g., Tagar) to Xiongnu and early Turkic groups, with predominantly East Asian ancestry and minor Western Eurasian admixture consistent with Turkic ethnogenesis.[19]Historical records further link the Dingling to the Tiele (鐵勒) confederation of the 6th-8th centuries CE, a loose alliance of Turkic tribes that included the Uyghur as a leading clan, indicating continuity in tribal organization and nomenclature. Chinese annals, such as the Suishu and Zhou shu, describe the Dingling as integrating into the Tiele following their subjugation by the Rouran in the 4th-5th centuries CE, with shared onomastic elements like clan names (e.g., variants of Dili or Chile evolving into Tiele tribal designations) persisting across these groups. This evolution culminated in the Uyghur Khaganate (744-840 CE), where Tiele-derived clans, including those traceable to Dingling lineages, formed the core of the ruling Toquz Oghuz ("Nine Tribes") structure, as evidenced by Orkhon inscriptions and Tang dynasty records attributing Uyghur origins to northern steppe nomads like the Dingling-Tiele. Such continuity underscores the Dingling's foundational role in the ethnogenesis of eastern Turkic polities.[20]Scholarly consensus on the Turkic affiliation draws from 20th- and 21st-century reconstructions of Altaic languages, with pioneers like Gustav Ramstedt (1860-1956) providing early comparative frameworks that highlight Turkic nomadic vocabulary—terms for pastoralism, kinship, and terrain—as bridging ancient steppe groups like the Dingling to later Turkic speakers. Ramstedt's etymological studies in works such as Einführung in die altaische Sprache (1957, posthumous) reconstructed proto-forms for animal husbandry and migration concepts that align with Dingling contexts in Han-era texts, reinforcing their Turkic identity through lexical innovations absent in non-Turkic neighbors. Modern analyses, including those by Peter B. Golden, build on this by integrating epigraphic and historiographical data to affirm the Dingling as proto-Turkic, distinguishing their linguistic profile from alternative Indo-European or para-Mongolic theories.[20]
Alternative Theories
Some scholars have proposed a Tungusic affiliation for the Dingling, primarily based on Tang dynasty (7th century) Chinese historical records that link them to the Shiwei peoples, who exhibited eastern Siberian traits such as nomadic pastoralism and linguistic features associated with Tungusic languages. These records, including the New Book of Tang, describe the Shiwei as descendants of earlier northern groups like the Dingling, sharing cultural elements like fur-clad attire and riverine settlements that align with later Tungusic distributions in Manchuria and Siberia. However, this hypothesis is limited by the absence of direct linguistic evidence connecting Dingling speech to Proto-Tungusic, and it overlooks the predominant steppe nomadic patterns in early Dingling descriptions that better match Altaic groups.The Dené-Yeniseian hypothesis proposes links between ancient Siberian languages like Yeniseian (ancestral to modern Ket) and Na-Dené languages in North America, with Yeniseian origins potentially in southern Siberia near Lake Baikal around the 1st century BCE, as explored in Edward Vajda's comparative work.[21][22] This theory draws on Chinese annals portraying northern groups as hunter-gatherers along the Yenisei, possibly displaced by Xiongnu expansions, but it faces significant criticism for lacking archaeological corroboration specific to Yeniseian artifacts and for relying on sparse lexical matches amid dominant Turkic influences in the region.Fringe theories occasionally suggest Indo-European ties, associating the Dingling with cultures like the Tagar (ca. 700–300 BCE) in the Minusinsk Basin, where Iranian-speaking nomads left kurgan burials and horse-riding artifacts that some interpret as overlapping with early Dingling territories. Proponents point to physical anthropological data showing caucasoid features in some Siberian remains, implying Indo-Iranian admixture, but these claims are widely dismissed due to insufficient genetic or linguistic evidence linking Dingling ethnonyms and records to Proto-Indo-European branches, and they contradict the consensus on Turkic primacy derived from onomastic and migration patterns. Overall, while these alternatives highlight the complex ethnic mosaic of ancient Siberia, the scholarly consensus favors a primary Turkic affiliation for the Dingling, with non-Turkic elements representing possible substrate influences or later assimilations.
Archaeology and Physical Characteristics
Associated Archaeological Cultures
The Dingling people are primarily associated with the Tagar culture, which flourished in the Minusinsk Basin of southern Siberia from the 8th to the 1st centuries BCE. This archaeological culture, part of the broader Scythian-Saka horizon, is characterized by extensive kurgan burials—pyramidal mounds often enclosed by vertical stone slabs—that reflect a semi-nomadic pastoralist lifestyle. Excavations reveal single or collective inhumations in timber chambers, accompanied by bronze weaponry such as roller-handled daggers, battle-axes with zoomorphic butts, and trilobed arrowheads, alongside horse harnesses and cauldrons indicative of equestrian mobility and warfare. These artifacts underscore the Tagar's continuity from earlier Karasuk traditions, with increasing mound sizes signaling social hierarchies over time.[8]Later phases of the Tagar culture, particularly the Tes' horizon extending into the 2nd century BCE to 1st century CE, show links to variants of the Pazyryk culture in the Altai Mountains, where permafrost preservation has yielded exceptional organic remains. Sites in the Pazyryk Valley and Ukok Plateau feature elite kurgans with horse gear, including bronze bridle bits and saddles, as well as finely woven textiles, felt rugs, and wooden artifacts adorned in the dynamic Animal Style. These elements, dating mainly to the 4th–3rd centuries BCE but with continuity into early CE periods, suggest cultural exchanges among highland nomadic groups, potentially including Dingling subgroups involved in horse breeding and ritual burials.[23][8]Direct archaeological attribution to the Dingling remains challenging due to the absence of unambiguous inscriptions or ethnically specific markers, with associations inferred from historical texts identifying Minusinsk Basin inhabitants as Dingling and from material continuity into Tiele-era sites in the region. Chinese records, such as the Shiji, place the Dingling near Lake Baikal and the Altai, aligning with these locales, while the lack of written evidence necessitates reliance on typological parallels in burial rites and artifacts for ethnic correlations.[24]
Genetic and Anthropological Evidence
Anthropological evidence for the Dingling, often associated with the Tagar culture of southern Siberia (8th–1st centuries BCE), draws from both ancient textual descriptions and modern analyses of skeletal remains. Chinese historical records, such as the Shiji and Hanshu, provide no specific details on the Dingling's physical appearance, portraying them instead as nomadic herders integrated into the broader steppe confederations without ethnic differentiation based on traits. This silence contrasts with occasional mythological depictions in Chinese folklore, where some northern steppe peoples, including those linked to the Dingling, are fancifully described as having horse-like legs, possibly reflecting exaggerated accounts of their equestrian lifestyle.[1]Non-Chinese sources, particularly Greco-Roman accounts of Scythian-like groups in the Eurasian steppes, offer more vivid descriptions that align with the Dingling's eastern Scythian cultural horizon. Herodotus, in his Histories (Book IV), portrays Scythians as tall and robust nomads with fair complexions, while the pseudo-Hippocratic Airs, Waters, Places attributes to them pale skin, red or light hair, and blue eyes due to the harsh northern climate. These traits—emphasizing a Western Eurasian phenotype—resonate with archaeological identifications of the Dingling as part of Scythian-type cultures, including the Tagar, where skeletal analyses reveal predominantly Europoid features such as elongated crania and robust builds.Genetic studies of Tagar culture remains, considered representative of the Dingling, confirm a mixed Eurasian steppe ancestry with significant Western Eurasian components. Analyses, including a 2009 study of 12 Tagar individuals, identified Y-DNA haplogroup R1a1-M17 in all six male samples, a marker associated with Indo-Iranian steppe migrations, alongside diverse mtDNA lineages dominated by Western Eurasian groups like U4, H, and T1 (e.g., 60% of pigmentation variants indicating blue/green eyes, fair skin, and blond/light brown hair). A 2018 examination of 79 Tagar mtDNA samples further revealed 64.6% Western Eurasian haplogroups (H, U subclades, T, K) and 35.4% East Eurasian (A, C, D, F1b, G2a), reflecting female-mediated admixture from local Siberian populations. Recent 2020s research on related steppe groups, such as a 2022 Tashtyk study (successors to Tagar), confirms genetic continuity with significant Western Eurasian ancestry in Minusinsk Basin populations, underscoring the Dingling's role in early Indo-European and East Asian genetic exchanges; recent analyses (as of 2025) indicate a rise in East Eurasian mtDNA lineages in middle Tagar stages, from ~35% to nearly 45%, without dominant East Asian Y-chromosomal lineages like Q in core samples. These findings establish the Dingling as biologically intermediate between Western steppe nomads and indigenous Siberian groups, consistent with their archaeological profile.[25][26][27]
Assimilation and Legacy
Integration into Other Groups
Surviving Dingling groups underwent significant assimilation into larger nomadic confederations at different periods. Assimilation into the Xiongnu occurred primarily from the 2nd century BCE to the 1st century CE through subjugation, with Dingling tribes incorporated via military hierarchies and intermarriages between chieftains. Historical records indicate that after the Xiongnu's peak power waned in the late 1st century CE, Dingling remnants shifted alliances, including participation in attacks against Xiongnu leaders alongside the Xianbei around 85 CE.[28] From the 2nd century CE onward, as the Xianbei rose and expanded, they absorbed Dingling remnants from regions around Lake Baikal, particularly after the Xianbei confederacy's formation around 181 CE, unifying diverse tribes under Xianbei leadership and fostering cultural exchanges through shared pastoral practices and marital ties among elites. This process continued into the 3rd to 5th centuries CE, with an estimated 450,000 Dingling merging into Xianbei structures by moving southeast.[29]In the 4th century CE, Dingling remnants in central China formed a short-lived polity in Henan under the leadership of Zhai Liao, a Dingling chieftain who established the Zhai Wei state in 388 CE amid the chaos of the Sixteen Kingdoms period. This state, centered in the region between rival powers, represented an attempt by Dingling groups to assert autonomy but lasted only until 392 CE, when it was conquered by the Later Yan dynasty, a Xianbei state under Murong Chui. The incorporation of Zhai Wei's territories and populations into Later Yan marked a key phase of Dingling absorption into a Sinicized nomadic empire, with former Zhai elites often integrated into the Later Yan administrative and military systems.[30]By the 6th century CE, accounts in the Sui Shu describe the Tiele—direct descendants of the Dingling—as having undergone notable cultural blending, adopting elements of sedentary agriculture alongside traditional nomadism and embracing Buddhism, which facilitated their interactions with Chinese states and other Central Asian groups. This shift is evidenced in Tiele tribal structures, where some leaders patronized Buddhist monasteries and incorporated settled communities, reflecting broader processes of religious and economic adaptation in the post-Northern Wei era.
Descendants and Modern Relevance
The Dingling are regarded as direct ancestors of the Tiele (also known as Gaoche or Tiele), a confederation of nomadic tribes that emerged in the 4th to 6th centuries CE and included various proto-Turkic groups.[31] Among these, the Uyghur (Huihe) branch rose to prominence, establishing the Uyghur Khaganate in the 8th century after the collapse of the Second Turkic Khaganate.[32] The distinct name "Dingling" largely faded from Chinese historical records by the 7th century, as the tribes were absorbed into the expanding Göktürk Khaganate during its campaigns of unification in the 6th century, leading to their reidentification under the broader Tiele umbrella.[31]In contemporary Turkic historiography, the Dingling hold a significant place as one of the earliest documented proto-Turkic or Turkic-affiliated peoples in the Eurasian steppes, contributing to narratives of indigenous origins in Siberia and Central Asia.[33] This perspective underscores their role in the ethnogenesis of Turkic groups, with some Siberian Turkic communities, including historical Yenisei Kyrgyz, invoking Dingling heritage to assert deep-rooted indigenous ties to the region.[34] Recent genetic studies from the 2020s further illuminate these connections, revealing that modern Kazakh and Kyrgyz populations carry substantial ancestry from ancient Siberian and Inner Eurasian hunter-gatherers and pastoralists, consistent with proto-Turkic profiles potentially including Dingling-related groups, through shared components such as East Asian, Siberian, and West Eurasian admixtures.[35][36]The legacy of the Western Dingling, particularly their material culture and settlements in what is now Kazakhstan, remains understudied in archaeological contexts, with limited excavations despite evidence of nomadic influences in the region's Bronze and Iron Age sites.[37]