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Muhammad Shaybani

Muhammad Shaybani Khan (Uzbek: Muhammad Shayboniy;[1] c. 1451 – 2 December 1510),[a] was an Uzbek leader who consolidated various Uzbek tribes and laid the foundations for their ascendance in Transoxiana and the establishment of the Khanate of Bukhara. He was a Shaybanid or descendant of Shiban (or Shayban), the fifth son of Jochi, Genghis Khan's eldest son. He was the son of Shah-Budag, thus a grandson of the Uzbek conqueror Abu'l-Khayr Khan.[2]

Muhammad Shaybani
محمد شیبانی
Portrait of Muhammad Shaybani circa 1507 by Kamāl ud-Dīn Behzād (1455/60–1535)
Khan of the Uzbek Khanate
Reign1500–1510
PredecessorSheikh Haidar (as Uzbek Khan)
SuccessorJan Wafa Mirza
Born1451
Central Asia
Died2 December 1510 (aged 58–59)
Merv, present-day Turkmenistan
SpouseMihr Nigar Khanum
Khanzada Begum
Aisha Sultan Khanum
Zuhra Begi Agha
Khanzada Khanum
IssueMuhammad Temur Sultan
Khurram Shah Sultan
Muhammad Rahim Sultan
Names
Abu'I-Fath Muhammad Shaybani Khan bin Shahbudak Sultan
HouseBorjigin
DynastyShaybanids
FatherShah-Budag
MotherAq Quzi Begum
ReligionSunni Islam

Biography edit

The ruler of the Uzbek ulus Abu'l-Khayr Khan (1428-1468) had eleven sons, one of whom was Budaq Sultan, the father of Shaybani Khan. Shaybani Khan's mother's name was Aq Quzi Begum. Through his mother, Muhammad Shaybani was therefore the cousin of Janibek's son Kasym Khan, the latter of whom ultimately conquered most of Shaybani's territory to expand the Kazakh Khanate.[3]

According to the historian Kamal ad-Din Binai, Budaq Sultan named his eldest son as Sultan Muhammad Shaybani, and gave him the nickname Shibägh "Wormood".[4]

According to sources, the genealogy of Shaybani Khan is as follows: Abu'l-Fath Muhammad Khan Shaybani, known under the name of Shakhibek Khan, son of Sultan Budaq, son of Abu'l-Khayr Khan, son of Daulat Shaikh-oglan, son of Ibrahim-oglan, son of Fulad-oglan, son of Munk Timur Khan, son of Abdal-oglan, son of Jochi-Buk Khan, son of Yis-Buk, son of Baniyal-Bahadur, son of Shiban, son of Jochi Khan, son of Genghis Khan.[5]

IIn the Selected Chronicles from the "Book of Victories" (Chagatay: تواریخ گزیده نصرت‌نامه, romanized: Tavārīkh-i Guzīda-yi Nuṣratnāma[6]), it is noted that the wife of the ancestor of Shaybani Khan, Munk Timur, was the daughter of Jandibek, who was a descendant of Ismail Samani.[7]

Shaybani's father Budaq Sultan was an educated person on whose order extensive translations of Persian works into the Turkic languages were accomplished.[8]

Rise to power edit

Shaybani was initially an Uzbek warrior leading a contingent of 3,000 men in the army of the Timurid ruler of Samarkand, Sultan Ahmed Mirza under the Amir, Abdul Ali Tarkhan. However, when Ahmed Mirza went to war against Sultan Mahmud Khan, the Khan of Moghulistan, to reclaim Tashkent from him, Shaybani secretly met the Moghul Khan and agreed to betray and plunder Ahmed's army. This happened in the Battle of the Chirciq River in 1488 CE, resulting in a decisive victory for Moghulistan. Sultan Mahmud Khan gave Turkistan[9] to Shaybani as a reward. Here, however, Shaybani oppressed the local Kazakhs, resulting in a war between Moghulistan and the Kazakh Khanate. Moghulistan was defeated in this war, but Shaybani gained power among the Uzbeks. He decided to conquer Samarkand and Bukhara from Ahmed Mirza. Sultan Mahmud's subordinate emirs convinced him to aid Shaybani in doing so, and together they marched on Samarkand.[10]

Foundation of Shaybanid Dynasty edit

 
Chor-Bakr memorial complex, built under Muhammad Shaybani circa 1510, Bukhara

Continuing the policies of his grandfather, Abu'l-Khayr Khan, Shaybani ousted the Timurids from their capital Samarkand in 1500. He fought successful campaigns against the Timurid leader Babur, founder of the Mogul Empire.[11] In 1501 he recaptured Samarkand and in 1507 also took Herat, the southern capital of the Timurids. Shaybani conquered Bukhara in 1501 and established the Shaybanid Dynasty of the Khanate of Bukhara. In 1508–09, he carried out many raids northward, pillaging the land of the Kazakh Khanate. However, his armies suffered a major defeat from Kazakhs under Kasym Khan in 1510.

One day Shaybani visited Sheikh Mansour and he (Mansour) said to him: "I look at you, Uzbek, and I see that you desire to become a sovereign!". And then he ordered food to be served. When everything was eaten and the tablecloth was removed, Sheikh Mansour said: "As a tablecloth is collected from the edges, so you should start from the periphery of the state (kingdom)." Shaybani took this very unambiguous advice from his new mentor into account and eventually conquered the Timurid state.

Sultanov T. I., Genghis Khan and Genghisids. - Moscow, 2006. p.139

Foreign policy edit

Shaybani Khan maintained ties with Ottoman Empire and Ming China. In 1503, his ambassadors arrived at the court of the Ming emperor.[12] Aligning with the Ottoman sultan Bayezid II (1481-1512), Shaybani Khan opposed the Shia Safavid Shah Ismail I.[13]

Religious policy edit

Shaybani Khan did not make any distinction between Iranians and Turks based on ethnicity, but followed the hadith of Muhammad: "All Muslims are brothers".[14]

One of the authoritative religious figures, a native of Yemen, Emir Sayyid Shams ad-Din Abdallah al-Arabi al-Yamani al Khadramauti (known as Mir-i Arab), enjoyed the patronage of Shaybani Khan, and constantly took part in the meetings of the divan (court) and accompanied the Khan in his campaigns.[15]

Shayibani Khan wrote a prose essay called the Risale-yi maarif-i Shayibani in the Chagatai language in 1507 shortly after his capture of Khorasan and is dedicated to his son, Muhammad Timur (the manuscript is kept in Istanbul).[16]

The manuscript of his philosophical and religious work: "Bahr ul-Khudo", written in the Central Asian Turkic literary language in 1508 is located in London.[17]

Later years edit

The last years of Shaybani Khan were not easy. In the spring of 1509, his mother died. After her funeral in Samarkand, he went to Qarshi, where he held a meeting with relatives and allowed them to disperse to their uluses (small countries). Ubaydullah's nephew went to Bukhara, Muhammad Temur to Samarkand, and Hamza Sultan to Gissar. Shaybani Khan went to Merv (now Mary, Turkmenistan) with a small detachment.[18]

Death edit

 
The battle between Ismail I and Muhammad Shaybani in 1510.

In 1510, Shaybani Khan was in Herat. At this time, Ismail I, the Safavid emperor, having learned about the failures of Shaybani Khan and angered by his staunch support of Sunni Islam, moved against the Uzbeks and invaded western Khorasan, rapidly advancing towards Herat.

Shaybani Khan did not have a strong army at his disposal. During the military campaign against the Hazaras, he lost most of his cavalry.[19] The main army was stationed in Transoxiana, so he, having consulted with his emirs, hastened to hide behind the walls of Merv. Safavid troops captured Astrabad, Mashhad, and Sarakhs. All Shaybani's emirs who were in Khorasan, including Jan Wafa, fled from the Qizilbash soldiers of Safavid Iran and arrived to Merv. Shaybani Khan sent a messenger to Ubaydullah Khan of the Khanate of Bukhara and the Timurids for help. Meanwhile, Ismail surrounded Merv and besieged the city for a whole month, but to no avail. Therefore, to lure the khan out of the city, he resorted to a feigned retreat.

According to some sources, one of the wives of Muhammad Shaybani Khan, Aisha Sultan Khanum, better known as Moghul Khanum, enjoyed great influence on her husband and his court. The sources say that at the Kengesh (council of the Khan), the question arose whether or not to come out of Merv and fight the retreating troops of Shah Ismail. The emirs of Shaybani Khan suggested waiting two or three days until the auxiliary forces arrived from Transoxiana. Mogul Khanum, who took part in the military council, said to the Khan: “And you are afraid of the Qizilbash! If you are afraid, I will take the troops myself and lead them. Now is the right moment, there will be no such moment again." After these words of Mogul Khanum, everyone seemed to be ashamed, and the Khan's troops went into battle, which resulted in their complete defeat and the death of Shaybani Khan.[20]

In the Battle of Marv (1510), Muhammad Shaybani was defeated and killed when trying to escape. Shaybani Khan's army was surrounded by Ismail's 17,000-strong army and was defeated after fierce resistance. The remnants of the army ended up dying under enemy arrows.[21][22][23]

At the time of Shaybani's death, the Uzbeks controlled all of Transoxiana, the area between the Syr Darya and Amu Darya. After capturing Samarkand from Babur, Shaybani had married Babur's sister, Khanzada Begum. Babur's liberty to leave Samarkand was made contingent upon his assent to this alliance. After Shaybani's death, Ismail I gave liberty to Khanzada Begum with her son and, at Babur's request, sent them to his court. For this reason, Shaybani was succeeded not by a son but by an uncle, a cousin, and a brother whose descendants would rule Bukhara until 1598 and Khwarezm (later named Khiva) until 1687.

The accounts of Babur, i.e. the Baburnama, state that Emperor Ismail beheaded Shaybani and had his skull turned into a bejewelled skull cup[24] which was drunk from when entertaining;[11] he later sent the cup to Babur as a goodwill gesture. The rest of Shaybani's body parts were either sent to various areas of the empire for display[11] or put on a spike at the main gate of Samarkand.[25]

Personality edit

Shaybani Khan was fond of history in his youth. In 1475, he was specially presented with a book about the life of Alexander the Great imported from the Ottoman Empire: the 1194 Alexander Romance of Nizami Ganjavi, which was composed in Shirvanshah Azerbaijan.[26] The medieval author Nisari recognized Shaybani Khan as a scholar of the Quran.[27]

The manuscript of his philosophical and religious work Bahru’l-Huda, written in the Central Asian literary language Chaghatai in 1508, is in London.[28] Shaybani Khan used various works on theology when writing his essay. It contains his views on religious issues. The author presents his idea of the basics of Islam: repentance for sins, showing mercy, and others. Shaybani Khan shows excellent knowledge of the rituals and daily duties of devout Muslims.[29]

Family edit

Consorts

Shaybani had five consorts:

Sons

He had three sons:

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also known as Abul-Fath Shaybani Khan, Shayabak Khan, Shahi Beg Khan (originally named "Shibägh", which means "wormwood" or "obsidian").

References edit

  1. ^ Shiban Han divani. Edited Y.Karasoy. Ankara, 1998
  2. ^ Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Vol. 33. 1880. p. 365.
  3. ^ Kamal-ad-Din Binai, Shaybaninameh (in Russian)
  4. ^ Materials on the history of the Khazakh khans of XV—XVIII centuries. (Extracts from the Persian and Turkic writings). Almaty (Nur-Sultan); "Nauka" publishing house; 1969; p.97
  5. ^ Materials on the history of the Khazakh khans of XV—XVIII centuries. (Extracts from the Persian and Turkic writings). Almaty (Nur-Sultan); "Nauka" publishing house; 1969; p.390
  6. ^ Comstock-Skipp, J. K. (2022-10-18). Scions of Turan: Illustrated epic manuscripts of the 16th-century Abū’l-Khairid Uzbeks and their cross-dynastic exchanges. Leiden University Scholarly Publications.
  7. ^ Materials on the history of the Khazakh khans of XV—XVIII centuries. (Extracts from the Persian and Turkic writings). Almaty (Nur-Sultan); "Nauka" publishing house; 1969; p.35
  8. ^ History of Kazakhstan in Persian sources. T.5. Almaty: Dyke Press; 2007. p.376
  9. ^ This probably means Turkestan (city). Needs check and clarification.
  10. ^ Mirza Muhammad Haidar Dughlat. Tarikh-i-Rashidi, 1546.
  11. ^ a b c Holden, Edward S. (2004). The Mogul Emperors of Hindustan (1398-1707 A.D). New Delhi, India: Asian Educational Services. pp. 74–76. ISBN 81-206-1883-1.
  12. ^ Chinese documents and materials on the history of East Turkestan, Central Asia and Kazakhstan of the XIV-XIX centuries. Almaty, 1994, p. 52
  13. ^ Peter B. Golden. "Central Asia in World History", Oxford University Press, 2011. p.107
  14. ^ Semenov, A.A. On the Origin and Composition of the Uzbeks od Shaybani Khan; Materials on the History of the Tajiks and Uzbeks of Central Asia; 1st ed., 1954, p.70
  15. ^ Fazlallah ibn Ruzbihan Isfahani. Mikhman-nameyi Bukhoro ("Notes of a Bukhara's guest"). Translated by Jalilova, R.P. "Nauka"; 1976. pp.78-79
  16. ^ Bodrogligeti A.J.E. Muḥammad Shaybānī Khan’s Apology to the Muslim Clergy // Archivum Ottomanicum. 1994a. Vol. 13. (1993/1994), р.98
  17. ^ A.J.E.Bodrogligeti, «Muhammad Shaybanî’s Bahru’l-huda : An Early Sixteenth Century Didactic Qasida in Chagatay», Ural-Altaische Jahrbücher, vol.54 (1982), p. 1 and n.4
  18. ^ Ahmedov, B. Uzbek ulusi (The Uzbek ulus). Т.; 1992. p.144
  19. ^ Materials on the History of Turkmens and Turkmenia. Т. 2; М.; L., 1938. p.44
  20. ^ Turkmenistan and Turkmens in the late 15th-first half of the 16th century, according to "Alam Ara-i Safavi". Ashgabat. Ylym. 1981, pp.101-103
  21. ^ Mukminova R. G. The Shaybanids in History of civilizations of Central Asia. Volume V. / Editors Chahryar Adle and Irfan Habib. Co-editor Karl M. Baypakov. — UNESCO publishers, 2003. — P. 36.
  22. ^ The Cambridge history of Inner Asia. / Edited by Nicola di Cosmo, Allen J. Frank and Peter B. Golden. — Cambridge University Press, 2009. — P. 292.
  23. ^ Dani, Ahmad Hasan; Masson, Vadim Mikhaĭlovich (2003). History of Civilizations of Central Asia: Development in contrast from the sixteenth to the mid-nineteenth century. UNESCO. ISBN 978-92-3-103876-1.
  24. ^ Morgan, David (19 September 2014). Medieval Persia 1040-1797. ISBN 9781317871392. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
  25. ^ Abraham Eraly (17 September 2007). Emperors Of The Peacock Throne: The Saga of the Great Moghuls. Penguin Books Limited. p. 25. ISBN 978-93-5118-093-7.
  26. ^ Allworth E., The modern Uzbeks. from the fourteenth century to the present. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press,1990,p.53-54
  27. ^ Allworth E., The modern Uzbeks. from the fourteenth century to the present. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press,1990,p.52
  28. ^ A.J.E.Bodrogligeti, «Muḥammad Shaybānī’s Bahru’l-huda: An Early Sixteenth Century Didactic Qasida in Chagatay», Ural-Altaische Jahrbücher, vol.54 (1982), p.1
  29. ^ Bodrogligeti A. J. E. Muhammed Shaybânî’s «Bahru’l- Hudâ»: An Early Sixteenth Century Didactic Qasida in Chagatay // Ural-Altaische Jahrbücher. 1982. Vol. 54. p.2
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h Begum, Gulbadan (1902). The History of Humayun (Humayun-Nama). Royal Asiatic Society. pp. 211–212, 223–24 250–251, 264, 289, 297.
  31. ^ Babur, Emperor; Beveridge, Annette Susannah (1922). The Baburnam in English (Memoirs of Babur) - Volume 1. Luzac & Co., London. pp. 329 n. 1.
  32. ^ Subtelny, Maria (August 30, 2007). Timurids in Transition: Turko-Persian Politics and Acculturation in Medieval Iran. BRILL. pp. 252. ISBN 978-9-047-42160-3.
  33. ^ Balabanlilar, Lisa (January 15, 2012). Imperial Identity in Mughal Empire: Memory and Dynastic politics in Early Modern Central Asia. I. B. Tauris. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-848-85726-1.

External links edit

Regnal titles
Preceded by
Haider Sultan
Khan of the Uzbeks
Khanate of Bukhara

1500–1510
Succeeded by
Kochkunju Muhammad bin Abul-Khayr Khan

muhammad, shaybani, confused, with, muhammad, shaybani, khan, uzbek, muhammad, shayboniy, 1451, december, 1510, uzbek, leader, consolidated, various, uzbek, tribes, laid, foundations, their, ascendance, transoxiana, establishment, khanate, bukhara, shaybanid, . Not to be confused with Muhammad al Shaybani Muhammad Shaybani Khan Uzbek Muhammad Shayboniy 1 c 1451 2 December 1510 a was an Uzbek leader who consolidated various Uzbek tribes and laid the foundations for their ascendance in Transoxiana and the establishment of the Khanate of Bukhara He was a Shaybanid or descendant of Shiban or Shayban the fifth son of Jochi Genghis Khan s eldest son He was the son of Shah Budag thus a grandson of the Uzbek conqueror Abu l Khayr Khan 2 Muhammad Shaybani محمد شیبانیPortrait of Muhammad Shaybani circa 1507 by Kamal ud Din Behzad 1455 60 1535 Khan of the Uzbek KhanateReign1500 1510PredecessorSheikh Haidar as Uzbek Khan SuccessorJan Wafa MirzaBorn1451Central AsiaDied2 December 1510 aged 58 59 Merv present day TurkmenistanSpouseMihr Nigar KhanumKhanzada BegumAisha Sultan KhanumZuhra Begi AghaKhanzada KhanumIssueMuhammad Temur SultanKhurram Shah SultanMuhammad Rahim SultanNamesAbu I Fath Muhammad Shaybani Khan bin Shahbudak SultanHouseBorjiginDynastyShaybanidsFatherShah BudagMotherAq Quzi BegumReligionSunni Islam Contents 1 Biography 2 Rise to power 3 Foundation of Shaybanid Dynasty 4 Foreign policy 5 Religious policy 6 Later years 7 Death 8 Personality 9 Family 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksBiography editThe ruler of the Uzbek ulus Abu l Khayr Khan 1428 1468 had eleven sons one of whom was Budaq Sultan the father of Shaybani Khan Shaybani Khan s mother s name was Aq Quzi Begum Through his mother Muhammad Shaybani was therefore the cousin of Janibek s son Kasym Khan the latter of whom ultimately conquered most of Shaybani s territory to expand the Kazakh Khanate 3 According to the historian Kamal ad Din Binai Budaq Sultan named his eldest son as Sultan Muhammad Shaybani and gave him the nickname Shibagh Wormood 4 According to sources the genealogy of Shaybani Khan is as follows Abu l Fath Muhammad Khan Shaybani known under the name of Shakhibek Khan son of Sultan Budaq son of Abu l Khayr Khan son of Daulat Shaikh oglan son of Ibrahim oglan son of Fulad oglan son of Munk Timur Khan son of Abdal oglan son of Jochi Buk Khan son of Yis Buk son of Baniyal Bahadur son of Shiban son of Jochi Khan son of Genghis Khan 5 IIn the Selected Chronicles from the Book of Victories Chagatay تواریخ گزیده نصرت نامه romanized Tavarikh i Guzida yi Nuṣratnama 6 it is noted that the wife of the ancestor of Shaybani Khan Munk Timur was the daughter of Jandibek who was a descendant of Ismail Samani 7 Shaybani s father Budaq Sultan was an educated person on whose order extensive translations of Persian works into the Turkic languages were accomplished 8 Rise to power editShaybani was initially an Uzbek warrior leading a contingent of 3 000 men in the army of the Timurid ruler of Samarkand Sultan Ahmed Mirza under the Amir Abdul Ali Tarkhan However when Ahmed Mirza went to war against Sultan Mahmud Khan the Khan of Moghulistan to reclaim Tashkent from him Shaybani secretly met the Moghul Khan and agreed to betray and plunder Ahmed s army This happened in the Battle of the Chirciq River in 1488 CE resulting in a decisive victory for Moghulistan Sultan Mahmud Khan gave Turkistan 9 to Shaybani as a reward Here however Shaybani oppressed the local Kazakhs resulting in a war between Moghulistan and the Kazakh Khanate Moghulistan was defeated in this war but Shaybani gained power among the Uzbeks He decided to conquer Samarkand and Bukhara from Ahmed Mirza Sultan Mahmud s subordinate emirs convinced him to aid Shaybani in doing so and together they marched on Samarkand 10 Foundation of Shaybanid Dynasty edit nbsp Chor Bakr memorial complex built under Muhammad Shaybani circa 1510 BukharaContinuing the policies of his grandfather Abu l Khayr Khan Shaybani ousted the Timurids from their capital Samarkand in 1500 He fought successful campaigns against the Timurid leader Babur founder of the Mogul Empire 11 In 1501 he recaptured Samarkand and in 1507 also took Herat the southern capital of the Timurids Shaybani conquered Bukhara in 1501 and established the Shaybanid Dynasty of the Khanate of Bukhara In 1508 09 he carried out many raids northward pillaging the land of the Kazakh Khanate However his armies suffered a major defeat from Kazakhs under Kasym Khan in 1510 One day Shaybani visited Sheikh Mansour and he Mansour said to him I look at you Uzbek and I see that you desire to become a sovereign And then he ordered food to be served When everything was eaten and the tablecloth was removed Sheikh Mansour said As a tablecloth is collected from the edges so you should start from the periphery of the state kingdom Shaybani took this very unambiguous advice from his new mentor into account and eventually conquered the Timurid state Sultanov T I Genghis Khan and Genghisids Moscow 2006 p 139Foreign policy editShaybani Khan maintained ties with Ottoman Empire and Ming China In 1503 his ambassadors arrived at the court of the Ming emperor 12 Aligning with the Ottoman sultan Bayezid II 1481 1512 Shaybani Khan opposed the Shia Safavid Shah Ismail I 13 Religious policy editShaybani Khan did not make any distinction between Iranians and Turks based on ethnicity but followed the hadith of Muhammad All Muslims are brothers 14 One of the authoritative religious figures a native of Yemen Emir Sayyid Shams ad Din Abdallah al Arabi al Yamani al Khadramauti known as Mir i Arab enjoyed the patronage of Shaybani Khan and constantly took part in the meetings of the divan court and accompanied the Khan in his campaigns 15 Shayibani Khan wrote a prose essay called the Risale yi maarif i Shayibani in the Chagatai language in 1507 shortly after his capture of Khorasan and is dedicated to his son Muhammad Timur the manuscript is kept in Istanbul 16 The manuscript of his philosophical and religious work Bahr ul Khudo written in the Central Asian Turkic literary language in 1508 is located in London 17 Later years editThe last years of Shaybani Khan were not easy In the spring of 1509 his mother died After her funeral in Samarkand he went to Qarshi where he held a meeting with relatives and allowed them to disperse to their uluses small countries Ubaydullah s nephew went to Bukhara Muhammad Temur to Samarkand and Hamza Sultan to Gissar Shaybani Khan went to Merv now Mary Turkmenistan with a small detachment 18 Death edit nbsp The battle between Ismail I and Muhammad Shaybani in 1510 In 1510 Shaybani Khan was in Herat At this time Ismail I the Safavid emperor having learned about the failures of Shaybani Khan and angered by his staunch support of Sunni Islam moved against the Uzbeks and invaded western Khorasan rapidly advancing towards Herat Shaybani Khan did not have a strong army at his disposal During the military campaign against the Hazaras he lost most of his cavalry 19 The main army was stationed in Transoxiana so he having consulted with his emirs hastened to hide behind the walls of Merv Safavid troops captured Astrabad Mashhad and Sarakhs All Shaybani s emirs who were in Khorasan including Jan Wafa fled from the Qizilbash soldiers of Safavid Iran and arrived to Merv Shaybani Khan sent a messenger to Ubaydullah Khan of the Khanate of Bukhara and the Timurids for help Meanwhile Ismail surrounded Merv and besieged the city for a whole month but to no avail Therefore to lure the khan out of the city he resorted to a feigned retreat According to some sources one of the wives of Muhammad Shaybani Khan Aisha Sultan Khanum better known as Moghul Khanum enjoyed great influence on her husband and his court The sources say that at the Kengesh council of the Khan the question arose whether or not to come out of Merv and fight the retreating troops of Shah Ismail The emirs of Shaybani Khan suggested waiting two or three days until the auxiliary forces arrived from Transoxiana Mogul Khanum who took part in the military council said to the Khan And you are afraid of the Qizilbash If you are afraid I will take the troops myself and lead them Now is the right moment there will be no such moment again After these words of Mogul Khanum everyone seemed to be ashamed and the Khan s troops went into battle which resulted in their complete defeat and the death of Shaybani Khan 20 In the Battle of Marv 1510 Muhammad Shaybani was defeated and killed when trying to escape Shaybani Khan s army was surrounded by Ismail s 17 000 strong army and was defeated after fierce resistance The remnants of the army ended up dying under enemy arrows 21 22 23 At the time of Shaybani s death the Uzbeks controlled all of Transoxiana the area between the Syr Darya and Amu Darya After capturing Samarkand from Babur Shaybani had married Babur s sister Khanzada Begum Babur s liberty to leave Samarkand was made contingent upon his assent to this alliance After Shaybani s death Ismail I gave liberty to Khanzada Begum with her son and at Babur s request sent them to his court For this reason Shaybani was succeeded not by a son but by an uncle a cousin and a brother whose descendants would rule Bukhara until 1598 and Khwarezm later named Khiva until 1687 The accounts of Babur i e the Baburnama state that Emperor Ismail beheaded Shaybani and had his skull turned into a bejewelled skull cup 24 which was drunk from when entertaining 11 he later sent the cup to Babur as a goodwill gesture The rest of Shaybani s body parts were either sent to various areas of the empire for display 11 or put on a spike at the main gate of Samarkand 25 Personality editShaybani Khan was fond of history in his youth In 1475 he was specially presented with a book about the life of Alexander the Great imported from the Ottoman Empire the 1194 Alexander Romance of Nizami Ganjavi which was composed in Shirvanshah Azerbaijan 26 The medieval author Nisari recognized Shaybani Khan as a scholar of the Quran 27 The manuscript of his philosophical and religious work Bahru l Huda written in the Central Asian literary language Chaghatai in 1508 is in London 28 Shaybani Khan used various works on theology when writing his essay It contains his views on religious issues The author presents his idea of the basics of Islam repentance for sins showing mercy and others Shaybani Khan shows excellent knowledge of the rituals and daily duties of devout Muslims 29 Family editConsortsShaybani had five consorts Zuhra Begi Agha m 1499 1500 an Uzbek lady and formerly a consort of Sultan Mahmud Mirza 30 Mihr Nigar Khanum m 1500 div 1501 daughter of Yunus Khan and Aisan Daulat Begum former wife of Sultan Ahmed Mirza 30 Khanzada Begum m 1501 div daughter of Umar Shaikh Mirza II and Qutlugh Nigar Khanum and mother of Khurram Shah 30 Aisha Sultan Khanum m 1503 daughter of Mahmud Khan Chaghatai and mother of Muhammad Rahim Sultan 30 Khanzada Khanum m 1507 daughter of Ahmad Khan of Haji Tarkhan and Badi ul Jamal Begum and former wife of Muzaffar Husayn Mirza Bayqara 31 SonsHe had three sons Muhammad Temur Sultan married firstly to Mihr Sultan Khanum daughter of Qazaq Khan Burunduq 32 married secondly in 1500 to Sultanum Begum daughter of Sultan Ahmed Mirza and Qatak Begum 30 married thirdly in 1503 to Daulat Sultan Khanum daughter of Yunus Khan and Shah Begum 30 married fourthly in 1507 to Ruqaiya Agha former wife of Badi al Zaman Mirza 33 Khurram Shah Sultan with Khanzada Begum 30 Muhammad Rahim Sultan with Aisha Sultan Khanum 30 Notes edit Also known as Abul Fath Shaybani Khan Shayabak Khan Shahi Beg Khan originally named Shibagh which means wormwood or obsidian References edit Shiban Han divani Edited Y Karasoy Ankara 1998 Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland Vol 33 1880 p 365 Kamal ad Din Binai Shaybaninameh in Russian Materials on the history of the Khazakh khans of XV XVIII centuries Extracts from the Persian and Turkic writings Almaty Nur Sultan Nauka publishing house 1969 p 97 Materials on the history of the Khazakh khans of XV XVIII centuries Extracts from the Persian and Turkic writings Almaty Nur Sultan Nauka publishing house 1969 p 390 Comstock Skipp J K 2022 10 18 Scions of Turan Illustrated epic manuscripts of the 16th century Abu l Khairid Uzbeks and their cross dynastic exchanges Leiden University Scholarly Publications Materials on the history of the Khazakh khans of XV XVIII centuries Extracts from the Persian and Turkic writings Almaty Nur Sultan Nauka publishing house 1969 p 35 History of Kazakhstan in Persian sources T 5 Almaty Dyke Press 2007 p 376 This probably means Turkestan city Needs check and clarification Mirza Muhammad Haidar Dughlat Tarikh i Rashidi 1546 a b c Holden Edward S 2004 The Mogul Emperors of Hindustan 1398 1707 A D New Delhi India Asian Educational Services pp 74 76 ISBN 81 206 1883 1 Chinese documents and materials on the history of East Turkestan Central Asia and Kazakhstan of the XIV XIX centuries Almaty 1994 p 52 Peter B Golden Central Asia in World History Oxford University Press 2011 p 107 Semenov A A On the Origin and Composition of the Uzbeks od Shaybani Khan Materials on the History of the Tajiks and Uzbeks of Central Asia 1st ed 1954 p 70 Fazlallah ibn Ruzbihan Isfahani Mikhman nameyi Bukhoro Notes of a Bukhara s guest Translated by Jalilova R P Nauka 1976 pp 78 79 Bodrogligeti A J E Muḥammad Shaybani Khan s Apology to the Muslim Clergy Archivum Ottomanicum 1994a Vol 13 1993 1994 r 98 A J E Bodrogligeti Muhammad Shaybani s Bahru l huda An Early Sixteenth Century Didactic Qasida in Chagatay Ural Altaische Jahrbucher vol 54 1982 p 1 and n 4 Ahmedov B Uzbek ulusi The Uzbek ulus T 1992 p 144 Materials on the History of Turkmens and Turkmenia T 2 M L 1938 p 44 Turkmenistan and Turkmens in the late 15th first half of the 16th century according to Alam Ara i Safavi Ashgabat Ylym 1981 pp 101 103 Mukminova R G The Shaybanids in History of civilizations of Central Asia Volume V Editors Chahryar Adle and Irfan Habib Co editor Karl M Baypakov UNESCO publishers 2003 P 36 The Cambridge history of Inner Asia Edited by Nicola di Cosmo Allen J Frank and Peter B Golden Cambridge University Press 2009 P 292 Dani Ahmad Hasan Masson Vadim Mikhaĭlovich 2003 History of Civilizations of Central Asia Development in contrast from the sixteenth to the mid nineteenth century UNESCO ISBN 978 92 3 103876 1 Morgan David 19 September 2014 Medieval Persia 1040 1797 ISBN 9781317871392 Retrieved 1 January 2015 Abraham Eraly 17 September 2007 Emperors Of The Peacock Throne The Saga of the Great Moghuls Penguin Books Limited p 25 ISBN 978 93 5118 093 7 Allworth E The modern Uzbeks from the fourteenth century to the present Stanford Hoover Institution Press 1990 p 53 54 Allworth E The modern Uzbeks from the fourteenth century to the present Stanford Hoover Institution Press 1990 p 52 A J E Bodrogligeti Muḥammad Shaybani s Bahru l huda An Early Sixteenth Century Didactic Qasida in Chagatay Ural Altaische Jahrbucher vol 54 1982 p 1 Bodrogligeti A J E Muhammed Shaybani s Bahru l Huda An Early Sixteenth Century Didactic Qasida in Chagatay Ural Altaische Jahrbucher 1982 Vol 54 p 2 a b c d e f g h Begum Gulbadan 1902 The History of Humayun Humayun Nama Royal Asiatic Society pp 211 212 223 24 250 251 264 289 297 Babur Emperor Beveridge Annette Susannah 1922 The Baburnam in English Memoirs of Babur Volume 1 Luzac amp Co London pp 329 n 1 Subtelny Maria August 30 2007 Timurids in Transition Turko Persian Politics and Acculturation in Medieval Iran BRILL pp 252 ISBN 978 9 047 42160 3 Balabanlilar Lisa January 15 2012 Imperial Identity in Mughal Empire Memory and Dynastic politics in Early Modern Central Asia I B Tauris p 24 ISBN 978 1 848 85726 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Muhammad Shaybani Babur s capture and loss of Samarkand 1501 Babur meeting Khanzada BegumRegnal titlesPreceded byHaider Sultan Khan of the UzbeksKhanate of Bukhara1500 1510 Succeeded byKochkunju Muhammad bin Abul Khayr Khan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Muhammad Shaybani amp oldid 1191910125, 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