The word was used to describe the sacred mountain of the ancient Turks. It was mentioned by Bilge Khagan in the Orkhon inscriptions as "the place from where the tribes can be controlled". A force called qut was believed to emanate from this mountain, granting the local potentate the divine right to rule all the Turkic tribes.[4]
Although never identified precisely, Ötüken probably stretched "from the Khangai Range of Central Mongolia to the Sayan Mountains of Tuva, at the centre of which is the Orkhon Valley",[5] which for centuries was regarded as the seat of the imperial power of the steppes.
If you stay in the land of the Ötüken, and send caravans from there, you will have no trouble. If you stay at the Ötüken Mountains, you will live forever dominating the tribes!
^Franke, Herbert. The Cambridge History of China. Cambridge University Press, 1994. ISBN0-521-21447-5. Page 347.
^Jarich G. Oosten, Henri J. M. Claessen. Ideology and the Formation of Early States. Brill Academic Publishers, 1996. ISBN90-04-10470-4. Pages 124-125.
^Besim Atalay, ed. (1939). Divanü lûgat-it-Türk tercümesi (in Turkish). Vol. 1. Alâeddin Kiral Basimevi. p. 138.
^Henryk Jankowski (2006). A Historical-Etymological Dictionary of Pre-Russian Habitation Names of the Crimea. p. 1040. ISBN978-90-474-1842-9.
^Drompp, Michael R. (1999). "Breaking the Orkhon Tradition: Kirghiz Adherence to the Yenisei Region after A. D. 840". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 119 (3): 390–403. doi:10.2307/605932. JSTOR605932.
Bibliography
C. E. Bosworth: Artikel "ÖTÜKEN" in: Encyclopaedia of Islam; Leiden. Digitale Edition