
Naren Khan was the chief of the ancient Golros tribe, originally living in the Root River Valley, the source of the three rivers on the Mongolian plateau, and in 1195 Naren Khan led the gorgolos tribes to migrate along the Nen River to the Songnen Plain at the confluence of the Two Rivers. At the site of the old city of Jiangzhou in the former Liaoning Province (Boduna), Naren KhanHot was built. Its jurisdiction area: with Ningjiang Prefecture in the Liao Dynasty, which is now Buyeo County as the center, east to the Lalin River, west to the Tao'er River, the lower reaches of the Huolin River, the south to the lower reaches of the Drinking Ma River and the Yitong River, and the north to the lower reaches of the Nen River and the south bank of the upper reaches of the main stream of the Songhua River.
In the twenty-sixth year of Ming Jiajing (1547), the Mongol chief of Nenkorqin, Kuimengk. Tashara's grandson, Habutu – Ubash, the 16th grandson of Hasar, led his troops to take over the gurgolros pastoral land of Naren Khan according to the feudal hereditary system, which was the area south of the Songhua River and the "three Zhao" areas on the north bank of the river, and stationed here with Golros as his ministry name. From then on, most of the territory of Naren Khan's Gugar rus' tribe was under the jurisdiction of the Nenkor Qin'er Only Jin clan. The territory of Naren Khan was reduced to the inner terrace at the bend of the Songhua River, under its hereditary jurisdiction, and was an independent political and military tribal entity, with its military and administrative direct administration under the direct administration of Horqin. During this period, the small-scale Naren Khanate had been nomadic along the Songhua River valley, so some historical books also recorded them as "Gaole Chude", that is, people along the river, and chinese also translated as "GuaLecha" or "Gua'ercha".
In the ninth year of the Later Jin Dynasty (1635), the Later Jin army set up an official army station in Naren Khanhot, called Theoduna Station. Gurgol Ross (Gyalcha) of Naren Khan's department and Golrose of Nen Korqin were officially submitted to Houjin in that year. The department of Gugur Ross Naren Khan was incorporated into the White Banner of the Upper Three Banners of the Eight Banners Army, named Naren Khan Sumu (a township directly under the jurisdiction of the government), and has since become the Mongolian Eight Banners. The political and military tribal entity of Naren Khan Sumu continued until the end of the Qing Dynasty and the beginning of the People's Republic, and then gradually evolved into a landlord class and then disappeared.
Naren Khanhot is an ancient city that formed the history of today's Songyuan City for 499 years from the Bohai state of Fuyu Province, Ningjiang Prefecture in the Liao Dynasty, from 1195 to the 32nd year of the Qing Kangxi Dynasty (1693). In 1693, the Manchu general Barda, the deputy capital, built the new city of Boduna in the present-day Jiangbei District of Ningjiang District, and moved the city to the north bank of the Songhua River.