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Muhammad Sultan Mirza

Muhammad Sultan Mirza (1375 – 1403) was a member of the Timurid dynasty and a grandson of its founder, the Central Asian conqueror Timur. As Timur's favourite grandson, Muhammad Sultan served as one of his principal military commanders, helping lead forces in successful campaigns against the Golden Horde, Persian kingdoms and the Ottoman Empire. Described by the historian Arabshah as "a manifest prodigy in his noble nature and vigour",[1] Muhammad Sultan was eventually appointed by Timur as heir-apparent to the empire. His premature death in 1403 greatly affected his grandfather.

Muhammad Sultan Mirza
Timurid Prince
Wedding celebrations for the marriages of Muhammad Sultan, Pir Muhammad, and Shah Rukh
Born1375
Died13 March 1403(1403-03-13) (aged 27–28)
near Afyonkarahisar (present-day Turkey)
Burial
IssueSee below
Names
Muhammad Sultan Mirza
HouseHouse of Timur
FatherJahangir Mirza
MotherKhanzada Begum
ReligionIslam

Background edit

Muhammad Sultan was born in 1375, the elder son of Jahangir Mirza and the only one by his wife, the Sufi princess Khanzada Begum.[2] His father, Timur's favourite son and original heir, died within a few months of his birth.[3][4] His mother, a maternal granddaughter of Jani Beg, Khan of the Golden Horde, was subsequently remarried to Jahangir's younger brother Miran Shah.[5][6]

Military career edit

In 1386, Timur captured Tabriz, the capital of the Jalairid Sultanate.[7] Muhammad Sultan, then only ten years old, was appointed governor of the city.[8] Five years later, he accompanied his grandfather in his invasion of the territory of Tokhtamysh, Khan of the Golden Horde. Initially part of the scouting parties which preceded the army, Timur later gave him command of the army centre, a position he held during the ensuing Battle of the Kondurcha River in June 1391.[9]

In 1393, he took part in the campaign against the Muzaffarids of Fars. He, along with his younger half-brother Pir Muhammad, were sent through Kurdistan, capturing various provinces, with orders to later re-join the main army.[10][11] Timur himself pursued the Muzaffarid king, Shah Mansur.[12] The armies of the two rulers met outside the city of Shiraz; Timur entrusted his left flank to Muhammad Sultan, the right to Pir Muhammad whilst the centre was given to their uncle Shah Rukh. The battle ultimately resulted in a Timurid victory, with Shah Mansur being killed by Timur's soldiers and his lands subsequently being incorporated into the empire.[13]

Muhammad Sultan once more joined Timur in his war against Tokhtamysh in 1395, accompanying the emperor in a second invasion of the Golden Horde. He led the right wing of the army during the Battle of the Terek River and inflicted heavy damage on the Khan's left flank, forcing it into retreat, with Tokhtamysh himself fleeing soon after.[14] The following year, he was dispatched to the kingdom of Hormuz on the Persian Gulf. After capturing various provincial forts, the prince compelled the ruler, Muhammad Shah, to submit.[15]

In 1397, he was named governor of the eastern province of Ferghana. With the idea of an eventual campaign against China in mind, Timur ordered his grandson to consolidate bases in the region, as well as develop soil cultivation along the route.[8] Muhammad Sultan was given an army of forty thousand and had a fort built in the region of Ashapara, followed by another further east by the Issyk-Kul. The prince intended to use these as a frontier line for operations against the neighbouring kingdom of Moghulistan in 1399. However, this plan was forestalled when his cousin, Iskandar Mirza, drew on Muhammad Sultan's detachments at Ashpara to launch a raid into Chinese Turkestan. This arbitrary action resulted in a grudge between the two princes.[16] Less than a year later, after Iskandar had been transferred to Ferghana while Muhammad Sultan himself was named custodian of Samarqand, the latter had his cousin captured and detained within the city. Iskandar's atabeg and twenty-six of his nobles were executed. Reports of Timur's reaction to the feud are contradictory; one account states that Timur blamed Muhammad Sultan for the dispute and upheld Iskandar, ordering restitution for his nobles. Another says that Timur sided with the former and had Iskandar's feet whipped as punishment.[17]

The prince supposedly pushed Timur to pursue his campaign against the Delhi Sultanate in 1398. The Malfuzat-i Timuri, an alleged autobiography of the emperor,[18] ascribes the following speech to Muhammad Sultan:

"The whole country of India is full of gold and jewels, and in it there are seventeen mines of gold and silver, diamond and ruby and emerald and tin and steel and copper and quicksilver, etc., and of the plants which grow there are those fit for making wearing apparel, and aromatic plants, and the sugar-cane, and it is a country which is always green and verdant, and the whole aspect of the country is pleasant and delightful. Now, since the inhabitants are chiefly polytheists and infidels and idolators and worshippers of the sun, by the order of Allah and his prophet, it is right for us to conquer them."[19]

As Timur's heir edit

Sometime prior to his Indian invasion, Timur had Muhammad Sultan appointed as his heir apparent. When Delhi was conquered in December 1398, Timur had the khutba read there, with the prince's name being said alongside his own.[20] Coins were also struck with Muhammad Sultan's name and title "Vali al-lakhd" (throne-heir) following that of Timur and the puppet-Chagatai Khan.[21] The emperor's choice in successor was mainly based on birth, rather than position or accomplishment; in addition to the prince's own exalted maternal lineage, his father Jahangir, alone of Timur's four sons, was born of a free-wife as opposed to a concubine.[22]

In 1399, he was named governor of Turan. This was followed two years later by an appointment over the lands of the former Mongol Ilkhanate, which Timur termed "the throne of Hulagu." These lands had previously been governed by Muhammad Sultan's disgraced uncle/stepfather Miran Shah.[8][23]

In 1402, Timur began military engagements in anticipation for his campaign against the Ottoman Sultan, Bayezid I. This was initiated by Muhammad Sultan, recently summoned from Samarqand, besieging and storming the fortress at Kamakh. This was a direct challenge and provocation to Bayezid, who had only recently captured the stronghold from Timur's ally, Taharten.[24] The war culminated on 20 July 1402 with the Battle of Ankara, during which Muhammad Sultan led the main body of the army.[25] The Ottoman forces were decisively defeated, with Bayezid himself being taken captive soon after.[26] Immediately following the battle, the prince was dispatched to the Ottoman capital of Bursa to seize Bayezid's treasury.[27] However, he was narrowly beaten there by the Ottoman prince Süleyman Çelebi, who removed many of the city's greatest treasures. What remained was plundered by the Timurid army, including the gold and enamel inlaid bronze gates, which were later presented to Timur's empress, Saray Mulk Khanum. After the pillaging concluded, Muhammad Sultan had the city torched.[28]

Death and burial edit

 
Mourning over the catafalque of Muhammad Sultan, an illustration from Yazdi's Zafarnama
 
Muhammad Sultan Mirza's headstone beside Timur's in the Gur-i-Amir

Muhammad Sultan was ordered to march back through Ankara to re-join the main army at Kayseri.[27] However, during this journey the prince, already suffering from injuries sustained during the recent battle,[29] fell seriously ill. He died on 12 March 1403, near the city of Afyonkarahisar. Timur bitterly grieved his grandson's passing and ordered the entire army wear dark clothing in mourning. A two hundred horse procession accompanied Muhammad Sultan's body to the fortress of Avnik. From there, he was taken to be temporarily buried in the mazar of Qedar, near the city of Soltaniyeh.[30]

On the anniversary of his death the following year, Muhammad Sultan's remains, accompanied by his mother, were taken for reburial in Samarqand.[30] He was interred in a vault that bore his name, the Khangah-i Muhammad Sultan, part of an existing complex of religious buildings previously erected by the prince. Upon his own death in 1405, Timur was buried there alongside his grandson. Finally, both bodies were moved once more to their present resting-place in the Gur-i-Amir, likely around 1409 by Timur's successor Shah Rukh.[31] The tomb, originally intended for Muhammad Sultan alone, became the Timurid dynastic mausoleum.[32]

Family edit

Wives and concubines edit

  • Khanika: daughter of Muhammad II, Khan of the Chagatai Khanate
  • Tatali Bi: daughter of Musake Nukuz
  • Khand Sultan: daughter of Ali Beg Jauni Qurban Oirot
  • Mihr Agha Hazare
  • Daulat Sultan
  • Janibeg
  • La'l Chicak

Issue edit

By Khanika

  • Yahya (b. c.1400): married Payanda Sultan Agha, daughter of Shah Rukh
  • Aka Biki (d. 1419): married Ulugh Beg
    • Habiba Sultan, Khanzada Begum (b. 1412)[33]

By Tatali Bi

  • Sa'd-i Waqqas (c.1399 – 1417/18): married Rajab Sultan, daughter of Miran Shah
    • Isiye Biki

By Khand Sultan

  • Nuh

By Mihr Agha Hazare

  • Muhammad Jahangir (c.1396 – 1433): briefly made a puppet-Chagatai Khan by Khalil Sultan,[34] married Maryam Sultan Agha, daughter of Shah Rukh
    • Muhammad Sultan II (1416 – 1438)
    • Muhammad Khalil
  • Aziz Sultan
  • A'isha Biki: married first Yusuf Dughlat, married second Sayyidi Ahmad, son of Miran Shah. Had one child by her second marriage

By Daulat Sultan

  • Shad Malik
  • Fatima Sultan

By Janibeg

  • Sivindik Sultan

By La'l Chicak

  • Isma'il

[36]

References edit

  1. ^ ibn Arabshah (1936), p. 31.
  2. ^ Woods (1991), p. 17.
  3. ^ Marefat (1991), p. 238.
  4. ^ Woods (1990), p. 112.
  5. ^ Woods (1990), p. 113.
  6. ^ Karomatov (2001), p. 57.
  7. ^ Pfeiffer (2013), p. 345.
  8. ^ a b c Jamaluddin (1995), p. 84.
  9. ^ Marozzi (2012), pp. 184–87.
  10. ^ Qazvini (1913), p. 205.
  11. ^ Yazdī (2008), p. 180.
  12. ^ Lamb (1953), p. 180.
  13. ^ Qazvini (1913), pp. 205–06.
  14. ^ Marozzi (2012), pp. 196.
  15. ^ Habib & Nizami (1970), p. 118.
  16. ^ Barthold (1963), p. 51.
  17. ^ Barthold (1963), p. 35.
  18. ^ Roy (2015), pp. 103, 111.
  19. ^ Elliot & Dowson (1871), pp. 396–97.
  20. ^ Manz (2007), p. 17.
  21. ^ Karomatov (2001), p. 82.
  22. ^ Manz (2007), p. 16.
  23. ^ Barthold (1963), p. 36.
  24. ^ Marozzi (2012), p. 337.
  25. ^ Roberts (2008), p. 336.
  26. ^ Habib & Nizami (1970), pp. 127–28.
  27. ^ a b Imber (1990), p. 55.
  28. ^ Marozzi (2012), p. 347.
  29. ^ Bernus-Taylor (2003), p. 27.
  30. ^ a b Barthold (1974), p. 76.
  31. ^ Jackson & Lockhart (1986), pp. 83, 737.
  32. ^ Masson & Pugachenkova (1980), p. 129.
  33. ^ Woods (1991), pp. 43–44.
  34. ^ Manz (2007), p. 20.
  35. ^ Woods (1991), p. 33.
  36. ^ Woods (1991), pp. 29–30.

Bibliography edit

  • ibn Arabshah, Ahmad (1936), Tamerlane or Timur: The Great Amir, translated by J.H. Sanders, London: Luzac & Co.
  • Barthold, Vasilii Vladimirovitch (1963), Four Studies on the History of Central Asia, vol. 2, Leiden: E.J. Brill
  • Barthold, Vasilii Vladimirovitch (1974), translated by J. M. Rogers, "V. V. Bartol'd's Article O Pogrebenii Timura ("The Burial of Tīmūr")", Iran, Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies, British Institute of Persian Studies, 12: 65–87, doi:10.2307/4300504, JSTOR 4300504
  • Bernus-Taylor, Marthe (2003), Tombs of Paradise: The Shah-e Zende in Samarkand and Architectural Ceramics of Central Asia, Monelle Hayot, ISBN 978-2-903824-43-3
  • Elliot, Henry Miers; Dowson, John (1871), The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians: The Muhammadan Period, vol. III, London: Trübner and Company
  • Habib, Mohammad; Nizami, Khaliq Ahmad (1970), A Comprehensive History of India: The Delhi Sultanat: (A.D. 1206-1526), vol. V The Delhi Sultanat: (A.D. 1206-1526, People's Publishing House
  • Imber, Colin (1990), The Ottoman empire: 1300-1481, The Isis Press, ISBN 978-975-428-015-9
  • Jackson, Peter; Lockhart, Lawrence (1986), The Cambridge History of Iran, vol. VI, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-20094-3
  • Jamaluddin, Syed (1995), The state under Timur: a study in empire building, New Delhi: Har-Anand Publications
  • Karomatov, Ḣamidulla (2001), Amir Temur in world history, Shaq
  • Lamb, Harold (1953), The Earth Shakers, Garden City: Doubleday & Company, Inc.
  • Manz, Beatrice Forbes (2007), Power, Politics and Religion in Timurid Iran, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-1-139-46284-6
  • Marefat, Roya (1991), Beyond the Architecture of Death: Shrine of the Shah-i Zinda in Samarqand, Harvard University
  • Marozzi, Justin (2012), Tamerlane: Sword of Islam, Conqueror of the World, HarperCollins Publishers, ISBN 978-0-00-736973-7
  • Masson, M. E.; Pugachenkova, G. A. (1980), translated by J. M. Rogers, "Shakhri Syabz pri Timure i Ulug Beke ("Shahr-i Sabz from Tmur to Ulugh Beg")", Iran, Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies, Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies, 18: 121–143, doi:10.2307/4299695, JSTOR 4299695
  • Pfeiffer, Judith (2013), Politics, Patronage and the Transmission of Knowledge in 13th - 15th Century Tabriz, Leiden, Boston: BRILL, ISBN 978-90-04-26257-7
  • Qazvini, Ḥamd Allah Mustawfi (1913), Tarikh-i-guzida, E.J.W. Gibb Memorial Series, vol. 14, translated by Edward Granville Browne
  • Roberts, Andrew (2008), The Art of War: Great Commanders of the Ancient and Medieval Worlds 1600 BC - AD 1600, London: Quercus
  • Roy, Kaushik (2015), Warfare in Pre-British India - 1500BCE to 1740CE, Abingdon, New York: Taylor & Francis, ISBN 978-1-317-58691-3
  • Woods, John E. (1991), The Timurid dynasty, Indiana University, Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies
  • Woods, John E. (1990), Martin Bernard Dickson; Michel M. Mazzaoui; Vera Basch Moreen (eds.), "Timur's Genealogy", Intellectual Studies on Islam: Essays Written in Honor of Martin B. Dickson, Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, ISBN 978-0-87480-342-6
  • Yazdī, Sharaf al-Dīn ʻAlī (2008), Amir Timur Beg (1336-1396): English rendering of Molana Sharf-ud-din Ali Yezdi's Persian Zafarnamah, vol. 1, translated by K̲h̲ān Muḥammad ʻĀt̤if, Lucknow: New Royal Book Company, ISBN 978-81-89267-61-2

muhammad, sultan, mirza, other, people, named, muhammad, sultan, muhammad, sultan, disambiguation, 1375, 1403, member, timurid, dynasty, grandson, founder, central, asian, conqueror, timur, timur, favourite, grandson, muhammad, sultan, served, principal, milit. For other people named Muhammad Sultan see Muhammad Sultan disambiguation Muhammad Sultan Mirza 1375 1403 was a member of the Timurid dynasty and a grandson of its founder the Central Asian conqueror Timur As Timur s favourite grandson Muhammad Sultan served as one of his principal military commanders helping lead forces in successful campaigns against the Golden Horde Persian kingdoms and the Ottoman Empire Described by the historian Arabshah as a manifest prodigy in his noble nature and vigour 1 Muhammad Sultan was eventually appointed by Timur as heir apparent to the empire His premature death in 1403 greatly affected his grandfather Muhammad Sultan MirzaTimurid PrinceWedding celebrations for the marriages of Muhammad Sultan Pir Muhammad and Shah RukhBorn1375Died13 March 1403 1403 03 13 aged 27 28 near Afyonkarahisar present day Turkey BurialGur i Amir Samarqand present day Uzbekistan IssueSee belowNamesMuhammad Sultan MirzaHouseHouse of TimurFatherJahangir MirzaMotherKhanzada BegumReligionIslam Contents 1 Background 2 Military career 3 As Timur s heir 4 Death and burial 5 Family 5 1 Wives and concubines 5 2 Issue 6 References 7 BibliographyBackground editMuhammad Sultan was born in 1375 the elder son of Jahangir Mirza and the only one by his wife the Sufi princess Khanzada Begum 2 His father Timur s favourite son and original heir died within a few months of his birth 3 4 His mother a maternal granddaughter of Jani Beg Khan of the Golden Horde was subsequently remarried to Jahangir s younger brother Miran Shah 5 6 Military career editIn 1386 Timur captured Tabriz the capital of the Jalairid Sultanate 7 Muhammad Sultan then only ten years old was appointed governor of the city 8 Five years later he accompanied his grandfather in his invasion of the territory of Tokhtamysh Khan of the Golden Horde Initially part of the scouting parties which preceded the army Timur later gave him command of the army centre a position he held during the ensuing Battle of the Kondurcha River in June 1391 9 In 1393 he took part in the campaign against the Muzaffarids of Fars He along with his younger half brother Pir Muhammad were sent through Kurdistan capturing various provinces with orders to later re join the main army 10 11 Timur himself pursued the Muzaffarid king Shah Mansur 12 The armies of the two rulers met outside the city of Shiraz Timur entrusted his left flank to Muhammad Sultan the right to Pir Muhammad whilst the centre was given to their uncle Shah Rukh The battle ultimately resulted in a Timurid victory with Shah Mansur being killed by Timur s soldiers and his lands subsequently being incorporated into the empire 13 Muhammad Sultan once more joined Timur in his war against Tokhtamysh in 1395 accompanying the emperor in a second invasion of the Golden Horde He led the right wing of the army during the Battle of the Terek River and inflicted heavy damage on the Khan s left flank forcing it into retreat with Tokhtamysh himself fleeing soon after 14 The following year he was dispatched to the kingdom of Hormuz on the Persian Gulf After capturing various provincial forts the prince compelled the ruler Muhammad Shah to submit 15 In 1397 he was named governor of the eastern province of Ferghana With the idea of an eventual campaign against China in mind Timur ordered his grandson to consolidate bases in the region as well as develop soil cultivation along the route 8 Muhammad Sultan was given an army of forty thousand and had a fort built in the region of Ashapara followed by another further east by the Issyk Kul The prince intended to use these as a frontier line for operations against the neighbouring kingdom of Moghulistan in 1399 However this plan was forestalled when his cousin Iskandar Mirza drew on Muhammad Sultan s detachments at Ashpara to launch a raid into Chinese Turkestan This arbitrary action resulted in a grudge between the two princes 16 Less than a year later after Iskandar had been transferred to Ferghana while Muhammad Sultan himself was named custodian of Samarqand the latter had his cousin captured and detained within the city Iskandar s atabeg and twenty six of his nobles were executed Reports of Timur s reaction to the feud are contradictory one account states that Timur blamed Muhammad Sultan for the dispute and upheld Iskandar ordering restitution for his nobles Another says that Timur sided with the former and had Iskandar s feet whipped as punishment 17 The prince supposedly pushed Timur to pursue his campaign against the Delhi Sultanate in 1398 The Malfuzat i Timuri an alleged autobiography of the emperor 18 ascribes the following speech to Muhammad Sultan The whole country of India is full of gold and jewels and in it there are seventeen mines of gold and silver diamond and ruby and emerald and tin and steel and copper and quicksilver etc and of the plants which grow there are those fit for making wearing apparel and aromatic plants and the sugar cane and it is a country which is always green and verdant and the whole aspect of the country is pleasant and delightful Now since the inhabitants are chiefly polytheists and infidels and idolators and worshippers of the sun by the order of Allah and his prophet it is right for us to conquer them 19 As Timur s heir editSometime prior to his Indian invasion Timur had Muhammad Sultan appointed as his heir apparent When Delhi was conquered in December 1398 Timur had the khutba read there with the prince s name being said alongside his own 20 Coins were also struck with Muhammad Sultan s name and title Vali al lakhd throne heir following that of Timur and the puppet Chagatai Khan 21 The emperor s choice in successor was mainly based on birth rather than position or accomplishment in addition to the prince s own exalted maternal lineage his father Jahangir alone of Timur s four sons was born of a free wife as opposed to a concubine 22 In 1399 he was named governor of Turan This was followed two years later by an appointment over the lands of the former Mongol Ilkhanate which Timur termed the throne of Hulagu These lands had previously been governed by Muhammad Sultan s disgraced uncle stepfather Miran Shah 8 23 In 1402 Timur began military engagements in anticipation for his campaign against the Ottoman Sultan Bayezid I This was initiated by Muhammad Sultan recently summoned from Samarqand besieging and storming the fortress at Kamakh This was a direct challenge and provocation to Bayezid who had only recently captured the stronghold from Timur s ally Taharten 24 The war culminated on 20 July 1402 with the Battle of Ankara during which Muhammad Sultan led the main body of the army 25 The Ottoman forces were decisively defeated with Bayezid himself being taken captive soon after 26 Immediately following the battle the prince was dispatched to the Ottoman capital of Bursa to seize Bayezid s treasury 27 However he was narrowly beaten there by the Ottoman prince Suleyman Celebi who removed many of the city s greatest treasures What remained was plundered by the Timurid army including the gold and enamel inlaid bronze gates which were later presented to Timur s empress Saray Mulk Khanum After the pillaging concluded Muhammad Sultan had the city torched 28 Death and burial edit nbsp Mourning over the catafalque of Muhammad Sultan an illustration from Yazdi s Zafarnama nbsp Muhammad Sultan Mirza s headstone beside Timur s in the Gur i AmirMuhammad Sultan was ordered to march back through Ankara to re join the main army at Kayseri 27 However during this journey the prince already suffering from injuries sustained during the recent battle 29 fell seriously ill He died on 12 March 1403 near the city of Afyonkarahisar Timur bitterly grieved his grandson s passing and ordered the entire army wear dark clothing in mourning A two hundred horse procession accompanied Muhammad Sultan s body to the fortress of Avnik From there he was taken to be temporarily buried in the mazar of Qedar near the city of Soltaniyeh 30 On the anniversary of his death the following year Muhammad Sultan s remains accompanied by his mother were taken for reburial in Samarqand 30 He was interred in a vault that bore his name the Khangah i Muhammad Sultan part of an existing complex of religious buildings previously erected by the prince Upon his own death in 1405 Timur was buried there alongside his grandson Finally both bodies were moved once more to their present resting place in the Gur i Amir likely around 1409 by Timur s successor Shah Rukh 31 The tomb originally intended for Muhammad Sultan alone became the Timurid dynastic mausoleum 32 Family editWives and concubines edit Khanika daughter of Muhammad II Khan of the Chagatai Khanate Tatali Bi daughter of Musake Nukuz Khand Sultan daughter of Ali Beg Jauni Qurban Oirot Mihr Agha Hazare Daulat Sultan Janibeg La l ChicakIssue edit By Khanika Yahya b c 1400 married Payanda Sultan Agha daughter of Shah Rukh Aka Biki d 1419 married Ulugh Beg Habiba Sultan Khanzada Begum b 1412 33 By Tatali Bi Sa d i Waqqas c 1399 1417 18 married Rajab Sultan daughter of Miran Shah Isiye BikiBy Khand Sultan NuhBy Mihr Agha Hazare Muhammad Jahangir c 1396 1433 briefly made a puppet Chagatai Khan by Khalil Sultan 34 married Maryam Sultan Agha daughter of Shah Rukh Muhammad Sultan II 1416 1438 Muhammad Khalil Aziz Sultan A isha Biki married first Yusuf Dughlat married second Sayyidi Ahmad son of Miran Shah Had one child by her second marriage Sultan Ahmad 35 By Daulat Sultan Shad Malik Fatima SultanBy Janibeg Sivindik SultanBy La l Chicak Isma il 36 References edit ibn Arabshah 1936 p 31 Woods 1991 p 17 Marefat 1991 p 238 Woods 1990 p 112 Woods 1990 p 113 Karomatov 2001 p 57 Pfeiffer 2013 p 345 a b c Jamaluddin 1995 p 84 Marozzi 2012 pp 184 87 Qazvini 1913 p 205 Yazdi 2008 p 180 Lamb 1953 p 180 Qazvini 1913 pp 205 06 Marozzi 2012 pp 196 Habib amp Nizami 1970 p 118 Barthold 1963 p 51 Barthold 1963 p 35 Roy 2015 pp 103 111 Elliot amp Dowson 1871 pp 396 97 Manz 2007 p 17 Karomatov 2001 p 82 Manz 2007 p 16 Barthold 1963 p 36 Marozzi 2012 p 337 Roberts 2008 p 336 Habib amp Nizami 1970 pp 127 28 a b Imber 1990 p 55 Marozzi 2012 p 347 Bernus Taylor 2003 p 27 a b Barthold 1974 p 76 Jackson amp Lockhart 1986 pp 83 737 Masson amp Pugachenkova 1980 p 129 Woods 1991 pp 43 44 Manz 2007 p 20 Woods 1991 p 33 Woods 1991 pp 29 30 Bibliography editibn Arabshah Ahmad 1936 Tamerlane or Timur The Great Amir translated by J H Sanders London Luzac amp Co Barthold Vasilii Vladimirovitch 1963 Four Studies on the History of Central Asia vol 2 Leiden E J Brill Barthold Vasilii Vladimirovitch 1974 translated by J M Rogers V V Bartol d s Article O Pogrebenii Timura The Burial of Timur Iran Iran Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies British Institute of Persian Studies 12 65 87 doi 10 2307 4300504 JSTOR 4300504 Bernus Taylor Marthe 2003 Tombs of Paradise The Shah e Zende in Samarkand and Architectural Ceramics of Central Asia Monelle Hayot ISBN 978 2 903824 43 3 Elliot Henry Miers Dowson John 1871 The History of India as Told by Its Own Historians The Muhammadan Period vol III London Trubner and Company Habib Mohammad Nizami Khaliq Ahmad 1970 A Comprehensive History of India The Delhi Sultanat A D 1206 1526 vol V The Delhi Sultanat A D 1206 1526 People s Publishing House Imber Colin 1990 The Ottoman empire 1300 1481 The Isis Press ISBN 978 975 428 015 9 Jackson Peter Lockhart Lawrence 1986 The Cambridge History of Iran vol VI Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 20094 3 Jamaluddin Syed 1995 The state under Timur a study in empire building New Delhi Har Anand Publications Karomatov Ḣamidulla 2001 Amir Temur in world history Shaq Lamb Harold 1953 The Earth Shakers Garden City Doubleday amp Company Inc Manz Beatrice Forbes 2007 Power Politics and Religion in Timurid Iran Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 46284 6 Marefat Roya 1991 Beyond the Architecture of Death Shrine of the Shah i Zinda in Samarqand Harvard University Marozzi Justin 2012 Tamerlane Sword of Islam Conqueror of the World HarperCollins Publishers ISBN 978 0 00 736973 7 Masson M E Pugachenkova G A 1980 translated by J M Rogers Shakhri Syabz pri Timure i Ulug Beke Shahr i Sabz from Tmur to Ulugh Beg Iran Iran Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies Iran Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies 18 121 143 doi 10 2307 4299695 JSTOR 4299695 Pfeiffer Judith 2013 Politics Patronage and the Transmission of Knowledge in 13th 15th Century Tabriz Leiden Boston BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 26257 7 Qazvini Ḥamd Allah Mustawfi 1913 Tarikh i guzida E J W Gibb Memorial Series vol 14 translated by Edward Granville Browne Roberts Andrew 2008 The Art of War Great Commanders of the Ancient and Medieval Worlds 1600 BC AD 1600 London Quercus Roy Kaushik 2015 Warfare in Pre British India 1500BCE to 1740CE Abingdon New York Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 58691 3 Woods John E 1991 The Timurid dynasty Indiana University Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies Woods John E 1990 Martin Bernard Dickson Michel M Mazzaoui Vera Basch Moreen eds Timur s Genealogy Intellectual Studies on Islam Essays Written in Honor of Martin B Dickson Salt Lake City University of Utah Press ISBN 978 0 87480 342 6 Yazdi Sharaf al Din ʻAli 2008 Amir Timur Beg 1336 1396 English rendering of Molana Sharf ud din Ali Yezdi s Persian Zafarnamah vol 1 translated by K h an Muḥammad ʻAt if Lucknow New Royal Book Company ISBN 978 81 89267 61 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Muhammad Sultan Mirza amp oldid 1145728395, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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