The Kensu and Dzholkolot multiphase intrusions are situated in the eastern part of the “Main Structural Line of Tien Shan”, or the “Nikolaev Line”. The plutons comprise mafic to intermediate (monzogabbro, monzonite, syenite, quartz syenite) and silicic (quartz monzonite, monzogranite, and leucogranite-alaskite) members, together with the interim (camptonite) and final monzodiorite-porphyry dikes. Geochemical signatures of the igneous rocks correspond to high-K calc-alkaline to shoshonitic series intrusions, with a strong A-type affinity, emplaced in post-collisional setting. Magmatic evolution included a generation of shoshonitic magma by a low-degree partial melting of the metasomatically-enriched upper mantle, followed by amphibole fractionation in a deep (lower crustal?) magma chamber. This was followed by a generation of mantle-induced granitic magmas in a crustal protolith, with possible mixing/mingling of various magmas. The rocks crystallized at shallow levels, in an oxidized environment, under decreasing pressure and temperature toward the younger (granitic) intrusion phases.Isotopic U-Pb (LA-ICP-MS) zircon dating of the igneous rocks indicates their Late Carboniferous age (ca. 325–302 Ma). The magma emplacement included a number of intrusion phases from monzogabbro (321 ± 4 Ma), monzonite (319 ± 4 Ma), and camptonite (306 ± 4 Ma), to quartz syenite (305.5 ± 2 Ma to 302 ± 3.7 Ma), quartz monzonite (305 ± 3 Ma) and subsequent granitic phases. Although the ages identified correspond to those of the subduction-related magmatism in the western part of the Middle Tien Shan, geochemical characteristics of the rocks supporting rather post-collisional setting of the plutons are in agreement with a “scissor-like” closure of the Turkestan paleoocean, starting from the east. Zircon xenocrysts dated at ca. 1.9 Ga suggest the presence of an underlying old continental crust.The skarn-porphyry W-Mo(−Cu-Au) mineralization complements the group of similar deposits associated with high-K calc-alkaline to shoshonitic series intrusions in the Middle Tien Shan and globally. The high endowment in W and Mo can be related to the fertilization of subduction-modified subcontinental lithospheric mantle in these metals, together with more common fertilization in Cu and Au, with its subsequent involvement in the magma generation in post-collisional setting. The endowment in W and Mo can also reflect a greater involvement of an ancient continental crust as the magma source(s). The oxidized paragenesis of hydrothermal alteration assemblages and mineralization corresponds to the respective affinities of the igneous rocks.