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Shah Rukh

Shah Rukh or Shahrukh Mirza (Persian: شاهرخ, Šāhrokh)[note 1] (20 August 1377 – 13 March 1447) was the ruler of the Timurid Empire between 1405 and 1447.

Sharukh
Sultan, Padshah, Bahadur
Forensic facial reconstruction
Ruler of the Timurid Empire
Reign20 February 1405 – 13 March 1447
PredecessorTimur
SuccessorUlugh Beg
Born(1377-08-20)20 August 1377
Samarkand, Timurid Empire
Died13 March 1447(1447-03-13) (aged 69)
Rayy, Timurid Empire
Burial
ConsortGawhar Shad
Wives
  • Malikat Agha
  • Tuti Agha
  • Aq Sultan Agha
  • Mihr Nigar Agha
  • La'l Takin Agha
Issue
Names
Sultan Mahmud[1] Moin-ud-din Shah Rukh[2]
DynastyTimurid
FatherTimur
MotherTaghay Tarkhan Agha
ReligionSunni Islam

He was the son of the Central Asian conqueror Timur (Tamerlane), who founded the Timurid dynasty in 1370. However, Shah Rukh ruled only over the eastern portion of the empire established by his father, comprising most of Persia and Transoxiana, the western territories having been lost to invaders in the aftermath of Timur's death. In spite of this, Shah Rukh's empire remained a cohesive dominion of considerable extent throughout his reign, as well as a dominant power in Asia.

Shah Rukh controlled the main trade routes between Asia and Europe, including the legendary Silk Road, and became immensely wealthy as a result. He chose to have his capital not in Samarqand as his father had done, but in Herat. This was to become the political centre of the Timurid empire and residence of his principal successors, though both cities benefited from the wealth and privilege of Shah Rukh's court.

Shah Rukh was a great patron of the arts and sciences, which flourished under his rule. He spent his reign focusing on the stability of his lands, as well as maintaining political and economic relations with neighbouring kingdoms. In the view of historians Thomas W. Lentz and Glenn D. Lowry, "unlike his father, Shahrukh ruled the Timurid empire, not as a Turco-Mongol warlord-conqueror, but as an Islamic sultan. In dynastic chronicles he is exalted as a man of great piety, diplomacy, and modesty—a model Islamic ruler who repaired much of the physical and psychological damage caused by his father."[3]

Early life edit

Shah Rukh was born on 20 August 1377, the youngest of Timur's four sons.[4] In Persian, his name's elements have multiple meanings: شاه shah means "a king, a sovereign. [specifically], shah, title of the ruler of Persia", "the king" in chess, "used as a prefix meaning 'the best, greatest, main', etc. Ex. شاهکار shahkar, masterpiece" or "a bridegroom" (synonymous with داماد dâmâd);[5] رخ rokh means "the face or figure; also, the cheek; the countenance", "the castle or rook" in chess; and the roc,"a fabulous bird; perhaps the condor".[6] This is also the Persian term for the chess move "castling". According to Ibn 'Arabshah, Timur, who was a talented chess player, was involved in a match when he received the news of Shah Rukh's birth, using this chess move as a name for the newborn child.[7][8]

Some sources suggest that his mother was the Empress Saray Mulk Khanum, formerly a Chaghatai princess and Timur's chief consort; she had been captured by Timur from the harem of Amir Husayn Qara'unas several years prior to Shah Rukh's birth. However, it was stated by the 15th-century historian Khwandamir that Shah Rukh's mother was a certain Taghay Tarkhan Agha of the Qara Khitai,[9] a Tajik concubine of Timur's. Khwandamir used a genealogical record written during Shah Rukh's reign as his source for this assertion.[10] Regardless of his maternal origins, the prince was personally raised by Saray Mulk, alongside Timur's grandson Khalil Sultan.[11]

Reign of Timur edit

Timur appears not to have had particularly close relations with Shah Rukh, despite the latter never having incurred his displeasure. In 1397, Shah Rukh was appointed governor of Khorasan by his father, with his viceregal capital being Herat. Although this was a significant region, it was also the same post that had been awarded to Shah Rukh's brother Miran Shah when the latter had been thirteen years old. Shah Rukh was never promoted beyond this position during his father's lifetime. Further to this, during Timur's campaign to China, Shah Rukh's young sons took pride of place in the procession while he himself was passed over.[12]

Historical sources give no explanation for their relationship, though there is some evidence which suggests that it was Shah Rukh's ancestry which had affected Timur's lack of favour, being the son of a concubine as opposed to a freeborn wife.[3] Alternatively, there have been suggestions that Timur believed Shah Rukh did not possess the personal qualities required for ruling; the prince by this point had acquired a reputation for excessive modesty as well as personal piety.[13] It might also have been this Islamic adherence and subsequent rejection of the laws of Genghis Khan, which had always been so strongly revered by Timur, that had resulted in the alienation of Shah Rukh from his father.[14]

Shah Rukh, alongside most of the royal family, accompanied Timur west in his campaign against the Ottoman Empire, which culminated in the Battle of Ankara in 1402. Shah Rukh commanded the left wing of the army, Miran Shah the right and Timur himself in the centre. The vanguard was headed by two of Shah Rukh's nephews. The battle resulted in a Timurid victory, as well as the capture and subjugation of the Ottoman Sultan, Bayezid I.[15]

War of succession edit

 
Miniature from Hafiz-i Abru's Majma al-tawarikh. "Story of Hushang", commissioned by Shah Rukh c. 1400

Timur died in 1405, whilst leading his army east in a campaign against the Ming Dynasty. He was reported to have said on his deathbed that he "had no other desire than to see the Mirza Shah Rukh once more" and had lamented the fact that he did not have time to do so.[16]

Timur had no unambiguously appointed heir at the time of his death; as a result, a succession dispute erupted among his surviving sons and grandsons.[17] Khalil Sultan proclaimed himself emperor at Tashkent soon after his grandfather's death and seized the royal treasury, as well as Timur's imperial capital Samarqand.[18] Shah Rukh marched his army out of Herat to the Oxus river but made no offensive move against his nephew at this point. This was likely due to Miran Shah, Khalil Sultan's father, who posed a serious threat as he, along with his other son Abu Bakr, had led an army out of Azerbaijan in support of the younger prince. They were both forced to withdraw prior to joining with Khalil Sultan however, due to invasions to their rear by the Jalayirids and the Qara Qoyunlu, who took advantage of the death of the old emperor to seize territory. Miran Shah was killed in battle in 1408 whilst attempting to repel the invaders, with Abu Bakr dying similarly the year after.[19][20]

In the years following Timur's death, Shah Rukh and Khalil Sultan had a series of unproductive negotiations as well as many military encounters, with Khalil Sultan frequently emerging victorious.[18] During this time, other pretenders also pursued their own claims to the throne. Among these was Sultan Husayn Tayichiud, a maternal grandson of Timur who later aligned himself with Khalil Sultan, before betraying him in order to reassert his own claim. Sultan Husayn was defeated by his former ally and fled to Shah Rukh, who had him executed, with his body parts being displayed in the bazaars of Herat.[21] Two more of Timur's grandsons, Iskandar and Pir Muhammad, also made bids for the throne. They were defeated by Shah Rukh and Khalil Sultan respectively, with each being spared by their subjugator. Pir Muhammad was later assassinated by one of his nobles in 1407, while Iskandar was executed in 1415 following a failed rebellion.[22][23]

It was not until 1409 that the war started to turn in Shah Rukh's favour. During this time, Khalil Sultan began to lose support among his emirs in Samarqand. His wife Shadi Mulk had been given a large amount of authority in court.[note 2] Under her influence, low-ranking individuals were given high positions instead of Timur's old nobles. Additionally, several of the old emperor's widows and concubines were remarried (somewhat forcefully) to men of undistinguished backgrounds.[18]

Following a famine which further spread discontent among the populace, Khalil Sultan was eventually taken captive by the powerful emir Khudaidad Hussain, leader of the Dughlat tribe and a former mentor of the prince. Hussain took Khalil Sultan to Ferghana and had him proclaimed ruler in Andijan. Samarqand, having been left abandoned, was taken unopposed by Shah Rukh. When he later captured Shadi Mulk, Khalil Sultan was forced to go to his uncle in Samarqand and submit to him. The prince had his wife returned to him and was appointed governor of Rayy, but died in 1411, with Shadi Mulk committing suicide soon after.[25]

Following the deaths of Khalil Sultan, Sultan Husayn and Pir Muhammad, Shah Rukh had no immediate Timurid rivals to contest his rule and he began his reign as Timur's successor. However, rather than ruling from Samarqand as his father had done, Shah Rukh held court in Herat, which had formerly been his viceregal capital. Samarqand was instead bestowed on his eldest son Ulugh Beg, who was appointed governor of Transoxiana.[25]

Military campaigns edit

War with the Qara Qoyunlu edit

The new emperor began his reign by launching expeditions against regions which had begun to break away during the war of succession. Fars, which was held by Shah Rukh's nephew Bayqara, was taken in 1414. Two years later Kirman, which had been ruled as an independent kingdom by Sultan Uwais Barlas since 1408, was also subdued. The area under Shah Rukh's rule continued to be extended and consolidated over the following years, either through voluntary subjugation by minor rulers or through alliances. By 1420, the eastern portion of Timur's empire, as well as central and southern Persia, had been brought under Shah Rukh's rule.[26]

However, despite Shah Rukh's successes, the western portion of the empire, including Azerbaijan and Mesopotamia, remained out of his control. These were held by Qara Yusuf of the Qara Qoyunlu (Black Sheep Turkoman), who had defeated and killed Shah Rukh's brother Miran Shah several years previously. With the conquests of several prominent cities such as Baghdad, Qazvin and Diyarbakır, the Qara Qoyunlu had established themselves as dangerous neighbours to the Timurids.[27] This threat was one which remained unresolved for decades. Shah Rukh made many attempts to pacify his western border, both through political and military means (having launched three campaigns against Azerbaijan), none of which proved entirely successful.[27]

Qara Yusuf died during the first of the campaigns in November 1420, which ended in the Timurid capture of Azerbaijan and Armenia. However, less than a year later Shah Rukh was forced to face off a rebellion by the late Turkoman prince's sons.[27] One of these sons, Qara Iskander, continued his attempts to reassert Turkoman authority over the following years, necessitating the second campaign in 1429. This too resulted in a Timurid victory and the installation of a Qara Qoyunlu prince, Abu Said, as a puppet ruler. However, Qara Iskander reoccupied the city of Tabriz two years later and had Abu Said executed.[27]

This action prompted the third and final campaign in 1434, in which Qara Iskander was once more forced to flee. He was later assassinated by his son Qubad in the fortress of Alinja. Although this campaign did not result in a final resolution of the Turkoman issue, it did achieve stability in the region for the remainder of Shah Rukh's reign with the installation of Qara Iskander's less bellicose brother Jahan Shah as the Turkoman ruler.[28][29]

Conflict with Hurufis and anti-intellectual purges edit

 
Miniature from Hafiz-i Abru's Majma al-tawarikh. "Noah's Ark"

The Hurufis were a Sufi sect who based their doctrine on the mysticism of letters.[30] In the late 14th century, the group was accused of heresy by traditional Islamic scholars.[31] As a result, in 1394 the founder of the movement, Fazlallah Astarabadi, had been arrested and executed on Timur's orders by his son Miran Shah.[32] The death of their leader led Astarabadi's followers to have a specific hatred against the Timurids.[33]

While leaving a mosque in 1426, Shah Rukh became the victim of an assassination attempt. The attacker, Ahmed Lur, approached the emperor under the pretence of presenting a petition, before stabbing him in the stomach. Lur however, failed to give a fatal blow and was quickly killed by Shah Rukh's servant.[34] Shah Rukh recovered within a few days and an investigation was launched, which linked Lur to the Hurufis as well as to the family of Astarabadi.[35]

There was an immediate backlash against the sect, which resulted in the execution of Astarabadi's grandson, Azud. High-ranking members of the group were subject to extensive interrogations. These eventually extended beyond the sect, with many intellectuals residing in Herat having to defend themselves against accusations of blasphemy. These included the Persian historian Sharaf-ud-din Ali Yazdi, author of the Zafarnama, and his teacher Sain-ud-din Turka. The prominent poet and Sufi, Qasem-e Anvar was expelled from the capital on Shah Rukh's orders. These accusations even went beyond Shah Rukh's court in Herat, with Ma'ruf-i Khattat, a prominent calligrapher under the patronage of Prince Baysunghur, also being arrested and interrogated.[36]

The extent to which the Hurufis were involved in the assassination attempt has not yet been clearly established. However, the subsequent purges served to worsen the already strained relations between the Timurid court and the intellectuals of the empire.[37]

Rebellions edit

In the early part of his reign, in what was likely an attempt to stave off rebellion amongst his relations, Shah Rukh regularly made transfers between the governorships they held. For example, Khalil Sultan was moved from Samarqand to Rayy, Umar Mirza from Azerbaijan to Astrabad, Iskandar Mirza from Ferghana to Hamadan to Shiraz etc.[28]

These attempts did not prove to be entirely successful, as Shah Rukh had to repeatedly suppress rebellions by his various family members. Iskandar Mirza, after encouraging his brother to revolt in 1413, himself rebelled and devastated the cities of Isfahan and Kerman. Bayqara, after his initial defeat in Fars, rebelled once more soon after in Shiraz. These insurrections even continued into Shah Rukh's old age. In 1446, at nearly seventy years old, he had to march against his grandson Sultan Muhammad, who had revolted in the empire's western provinces.[28]

Administration edit

Shah Rukh's reign saw a marked improvement in economic standards and cultural achievements in many areas of the empire. Although this may partly be accredited to Shah Rukh's more diplomatic character in contrast to the ruthlessness of Timur, evidence does not assign Shah Rukh with superior skill as a statesman. It is instead believed that other influences on his government led to the relative success of his rule. These include his empress, Gawhar Shad, who along with her sons and some state officials, maintained orderly continuity of state affairs. Some of the highest state officials appear to have been unusually talented individuals who were able to endure in their positions for several decades. These include Jalal-ud-din Firuz Shah, who was supreme commander of the army for thirty-five years, Ghiyath al-Din Pir Ahmad Khvafi, supreme secretary for thirty-one years and Amir Alika Kokultash, head of state finance for forty-three years.[38]

In regards to his policies, Shah Rukh distanced himself from Timur, with less importance being placed on Mongol concepts of authority. He abandoned the institution of a figurehead Khan and replaced the Mongol tribunals with Sharia courts. Like his father, Shah Rukh was married to a Mongol princess; Malikat Agha, daughter of Khizr Khoja and widow of his brother Umar Shaikh Mirza I. He did not however, claim the title of Küregen (son-in-law) which had been enjoyed by Timur. He similarly did not employ Timur's title of Amir,[39] instead adopting the Islamic and Persian styles of Sultan and Padshah.[40]

Shah Rukh's religious advisor Jalal-Din al-Qayini, described the abolishment of the Mongol tribunals in 1411: "His Majesty’s correct thinking on the subject of giving currency to the Sharia and reviving the customs of the Sunna has progressed so far at this time that, in Dhul-Qada 813 (i.e., February–March 1411), he abolished the yarghu court of investigation and the customs of the törä which had been observed by Turko-Mongolian rulers since ancient times."[41]

The Timurid author Sain ad-Din Ali Turka Isfahani praised Shah Rukh for ruling by Islamic Law in the following words: “Absolutely everyone with a legal case has it heard in accordance with the Sharia, and thanks to the felicity of the favour of this Faith-promoting padshah (i.e. Shahrukh), not a trace has remained anywhere of the Yarghu Tribunal which (God preserve us!) had for a long time exercised its tyranny over the minds of rulers and polluted the lands of Islam, and no creature has the power [to conduct] this type of interrogation except in secret."[42][43]

Cultural influence edit

 
Gawhar Shad Mosque

Shah Rukh's wife, Gawhar Shad, funded the construction of two mosques and theological colleges in Mashhad and Herat. The Gawhar Shad Mosque was finished in 1418. The mixed ethnic origins of the ruling dynasty led to a distinctive character in its cultural outlook, which was a combination of Persian civilization and art, with borrowings from China, and literature written in Persian as well as Chagatay and Arabic. Shah Rukh commissioned the production of a number of historical and geographic works by Hafiz-i Abru. Among them is Tāriḵ-e Šāhroḵ(i), the history of Shah Rukh's reign through 1413-14 (816 AH). It was later incorporated by its author into larger "universal history" compilations, Majmuʿa-ye Ḥāfeẓ-e Abru (a universal history work) and Majmaʿ al-tawāriḵ [al-solṭāni(ya)] (section Zobdat al-tawāriḵ-e Bāysonḡori).[44]

Foreign relations edit

During Shah Rukh's reign, relations between the Timurid state and Ming China, under the rule of the Yongle Emperor and his descendants, were normalised.[45] This was contrasted by the preceding era of Timur and the Hongwu Emperor (the first emperor of Ming China) who almost started a war with each other (which was only averted by the death of Timur). Chinese embassies, led by Chen Cheng, visited Samarqand and Herat several times in 1414–1420,[46][47] while a large embassy sent by Shah Rukh (and immortalized by its diarist, Ghiyāth-ud-dīn Naqqāsh) travelled to Beijing in 1419–22 and were hosted with lavish banquets and the exchange of gifts.[40][48][49] Shah Rukh sent two letters in Arabic & Persian to the Yongle emperor inviting him to Islam & praising the virtues of Islamic Law (as opposed to the Yasa).[50][51][52] The letters were also meant to assert Shah Rukh's independence & to clarify that the Timurids were not the vassals of the Ming dynasty.[53]

Through his promotion of commercial and political relations with neighbouring kingdoms, Shah Rukh also maintained contact with several other contemporary rulers. Monarchs of the Aq Qoyunlu, India, Hurmuz and (in the early part of his reign) the Ottoman Empire made homage to him.[54] Successive Sultans of Delhi, starting with Khizr Khan, exchanged embassies with the Timurid court and swore their loyalty to the emperor, while the Sultan of Bengal, Shamsuddin Ahmad Shah, had sought his military support.[54][55] Relations with the Mamluks of Egypt, however, were increasingly tense due to Shah Rukh's attempts to assert dominance. They eventually normalised on the ascension of Sultan Jaqmaq, under whom the two rulers were amicable, but equal.[54]

Death and succession edit

 
Shah Rukh's headstone (third from the left) beside Timur's in the Gur-e-Amir

Soon after suppressing Sultan Muhammad's revolt, Shah Rukh, by this point weakened by ill-health, died in his winter quarters in Rayy in March 1447.[28] Despite initial attempts to conceal it, news of the emperor's death quickly spread. Chaos erupted in the military camp, rendering transport of Shah Rukh's body to the capital for burial impossible. It was only on the third day following his death that the body, accompanied by the now-dowager empress Gawhar Shad and Shah Rukh's grandson Abdal-Latif, began its journey east. However, within a few days Abdal-Latif took both his grandmother and the corpse hostage, possibly in the hopes of launching his own bid for the vacant throne, or to support that of his father, Shah Rukh's last surviving son Ulugh Beg. Ala al-Dawla, another grandson, defeated his cousin's troops and liberated Gawhar Shad, and afterwards had Shah Rukh interred in the Gawhar Shad Mausoleum in Herat. When Ulugh Beg captured the city the following year, he ordered his father's body to be exhumed before reburying it with Timur's in the Gur-e-Amir in Samarqand.[56][note 3]

The succession struggle among Shah Rukh's family continued for several years, initially between Ulugh Beg and Ala al-Dawla, in which the former emerged victorious. However, he was murdered by his son Abdal-Latif in 1449, and in the subsequent civil wars, control of the Timurid Empire passed from Shah Rukh's descendants.[58][59]

Personal life edit

Consorts edit

Sons edit

  • Ulugh Beg (1394–1449) – with Gawhar Shad Begum. Viceroy of Transoxiana, later succeeded his father.
  • Sultan Ibrahim Mirza (1394–1435). Viceroy of Persia.
  • Baysunghur (1397–1433) – with Gawhar Shad Begum. Shah Rukh's artistic third son never had a vice-royal position, but played an important part in his father's government in Samarqand.[60]
  • Soyurghatmish Mirza (1399–1426) – with Malikat Agha. Viceroy of India and Ghazni.
  • Muhammad Juki Mirza (1402–1444) – with Gawhar Shad Begum. Viceroy of Garmsir and Khuttal.

Daughters edit

  • Maryam Sultan Agha (d. 1441) – with Gawhar Shad Begum. Married to Muhammad Jahangir Mirza, son of Muhammad Sultan Mirza, son of Jahangir Mirza
  • Qutlugh Turkan Agha – with Gawhar Shad Begum
  • Qutlugh Sultan Agha – with Tuti Agha
  • Taghay Turkan Agha – with Tuti Agha
  • Sa'adat Sultan Agha – with Gawhar Shad Begum
  • Payanda Sultan Agha with Aq Sultan Agha. Married to Yahya Mirza, son of Muhammad Sultan Mirza, son of Jahangir Mirza

Facial reconstruction edit

Soviet anthropologist Mikhail Mikhaylovich Gerasimov reconstructed the facial features of Timur, his son Shah Rukh and grandson Ulugh Beg. Relative to the others, Timur appears to have been phenotypically East Asian, while Shah Rukh, the son of a Tajik woman, had more Europoid features. Shah Rukh appeared more similar to brachycephalic Europoids.[61][62] Shah Rukh's son Ulugh Beg, however, had predominantly Mongoloid features, and no obvious Caucasoid influence.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Alternatives: Shāhruh, Shāhrokh or Shāhrukh
  2. ^ Khalil Sultan's marriage to Shadi Mulk several years earlier had caused a great scandal due to her being the widow of one of Timur's most powerful amirs.[24]
  3. ^ Alternatively, historian Maria Subtelny attributes the final transfer of Shah Rukh's body, as well as the commissioning of his marble tombstone, to his daughter Payanda Sultan.[57]

References edit

  1. ^ Binbas, İlker Evrim (2016). Intellectual Networks in Timurid Iran: Sharaf al-Dīn 'Alī Yazdī and the Islamicate Republic of Letters. Cambridge University Press. p. 265. ISBN 978-1-107-05424-0.
  2. ^ Barzegar, Karim Najafi (2000). Mughal-Iranian relations: during sixteenth century. Indian Bibliographies Bureau. p. 17. ISBN 978-81-85004-60-0.
  3. ^ a b Lentz, Thomas W.; Lowry, Glenn D. (1989). Timur & Princely Vision. Smithsonian. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-87474-706-5.
  4. ^ 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. New Royal Book Co. p. 93. ISBN 978-81-89267-61-2.
  5. ^ New Persian-English dictionary p. V2-0164
  6. ^ New Persian-English dictionary p. V1-0926
  7. ^ ibn Arabshah, Ahmad (1936). Tamerlane or Timur: The Great Amir. Translated by J.H. Sanders. London: Luzac & Co. p. 47.
  8. ^ McNeill, William; Bentley, Jerry; Christian, David; Croizier, Ralph; McNeill, J. (2010). Berkshire Encyclopedia of World History (2 ed.). Berkshire Publishing Group. p. 2514.[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ Woods, John E. (1990). The Timurid dynasty. Indiana University, Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies. p. 19.
  10. ^ Barthold, Vasilii Vladimirovitch (1963). Four Studies on the History of Central Asia. Vol. 2. Brill Archive. p. 24.
  11. ^ Jamaluddin, Syed (1995). The state under Timur: a study in empire building. Har-Anand. p. 78. ISBN 9788124102589.
  12. ^ Barthold (1963, pp. 32–33, 37)
  13. ^ Ghiasian, Mohamad Reza (2018). Lives of the Prophets: The Illustrations to Hafiz-i Abru's "Assembly of Chronicles". BRILL. p. 7. ISBN 978-90-04-37722-6.
  14. ^ Barthold (1963, p. 33)
  15. ^ Tucker, Spencer (2011). Battles that Changed History: An Encyclopedia of World Conflict. ABC-CLIO. p. 140. ISBN 978-1-59884-429-0.
  16. ^ Richardson, S.; Osborne, T.; Hitch, C.; Millar, A.; Rivington, John; Crowder, S.; Davey, P.; Law, B.; Longman, T.; Ware, C. (1759). The Modern Part of an Universal History: From the Earliest Account of Time. Vol. V. London. p. 366.
  17. ^ Sykes, Percy Molesworth (1915). A History of Persia. Macmillan and Company, limited. p. 136.
  18. ^ a b c Jackson, Peter; Lockhart, Lawrence (1986). The Cambridge History of Iran. Vol. VI. Cambridge University Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-521-20094-3.
  19. ^ Jackson & Lockhart (1986, pp. 100, 102)
  20. ^ 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. p. 131.
  21. ^ Barthold (1963, pp. 65–66)
  22. ^ Manz, Beatrice Forbes (2007). Power, Politics and Religion in Timurid Iran. Cambridge University Press. p. 163. ISBN 978-1-139-46284-6.
  23. ^ Barthold (1963, pp. 70–71)
  24. ^ Marozzi, Justin (2012). Tamerlane: Sword of Islam, Conqueror of the World. HarperCollins Publishers. p. 396. ISBN 978-0-00-736973-7.
  25. ^ a b Jackson & Lockhart (1986, p. 101)
  26. ^ Jackson & Lockhart (1986, pp. 101–2)
  27. ^ a b c d Jackson & Lockhart (1986, p. 102)
  28. ^ a b c d Jackson & Lockhart (1986, p. 103)
  29. ^ Minorsky, Vladimir (1931). Medieval Iran and its neighbours. Vol. 1. Variorum Reprints. p. 176. ISBN 978-0-86078-114-1.
  30. ^ Bolle, Kees W. (1987). Secrecy in Religions. Brill Archive. p. 89. ISBN 90-04-08342-1.
  31. ^ Ames, Christine Caldwell (2015). Medieval Heresies. Cambridge University Press. p. 302. ISBN 978-1-107-02336-9.
  32. ^ Bashir, Shahzad (2012). Fazlallah Astarabadi and the Hurufis. Oneworld Publications. p. 34. ISBN 978-1-78074-192-5.
  33. ^ Petrushevsky, Ilya Pavlovich (1985). Islam in Iran. Translated by Hubert Evans. London: Athlone Press. p. 260. ISBN 9780887060700.
  34. ^ Petrushevsky (1985, p. 262)
  35. ^ Binbas (2016, p. 17)
  36. ^ Binbas (2016, pp. 17–18)
  37. ^ Binbas (2016, p. 18)
  38. ^ Jackson & Lockhart (1986, p. 104)
  39. ^ Manz, Beatrice Forbes (1988). "Tamerlane and the symbolism of sovereignty". Iranian Studies. 21 (1–2): 105–122. doi:10.1080/00210868808701711. JSTOR 4310596.
  40. ^ a b Ghiasian (2018, p. 13)
  41. ^ Subtelny, Maria (2007). Timurids in Transition: Turko-Persian Politics and Acculturation in Medieval Iran. Brill. p. 25. ISBN 978-9004160316.
  42. ^ Subtelny (2007, p. 27)
  43. ^ ابن محمد الترکه, صائن الدین علی (1351). چهارده رساله فارسی (in Persian). تهران. p. 171.
  44. ^ Maria Eva Subtelny and Charles Melville, Ḥāfeẓ-e Abru at Encyclopædia Iranica
  45. ^ Dreyer, Edward L. (2007). Zheng He: China and the Oceans in the Early Ming Dynasty, 1405–1433. New York: Pearson Longman. pp. 60–61. ISBN 9780321084439.
  46. ^ Tsai, Shih-Shan Henry (2002), Perpetual Happiness: The Ming Emperor Yongle, University of Washington Press, p. 162, ISBN 0-295-98124-5
  47. ^ Goodrich, L. Carrington; Tay, C. N. (1976), "Ch'en Ch'eng", in Goodrich, L. Carrington; Fang, Chaoying (eds.), Dictionary of Ming Biography, 1368–1644. Volume I (A-L), Columbia University Press, pp. 144–145, ISBN 0-231-03801-1
  48. ^ Brook, Timothy (1978), "Chapter 10, Communications and commerce", in Twitchett, Denis Crispin; Fairbank, John King (eds.), The Cambridge History of China, vol. 8, "The Ming Dynasty: 1368–1644", Part 2, Cambridge University Press, pp. 583–584, ISBN 0-521-24333-5
  49. ^ Brook, Timothy (1998), The Confusions of Pleasure: Commerce and Culture in Ming China, University of California Press, pp. 34–38, ISBN 0-520-21091-3
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  51. ^ نوائى (1977). اسناد و مکاتبات تاریخی ایران از تیمور تا شاه اسماعیل (in Persian). طهران. pp. 133–137.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  52. ^ سمرقندي, عبد الرزاق (1946). مطلع سعدين و مجمع بحرين؛ جلد دوم؛ جزء أول (in Persian). لاهور. pp. 131–134.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  53. ^ The Chinese World Order: Traditional China's Foreign Relations. Harvard University Press. 1968. pp. 211–212.
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  55. ^ Sengupta, Nitish Kumar (2011). Land of Two Rivers: A History of Bengal from the Mahabharata to Mujib. New Delhi: Penguin Books India. p. 79. ISBN 978-0-14-341678-4.
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  58. ^ Manz (2007, p. 262)
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  60. ^ BĀYSONḠOR, ḠĪĀT-AL-DĪN B. ŠĀHROḴ B. TĪMŪR in Encyclopedia Iranica
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  62. ^ Ich suchte Gesichter. Author:Mikhail Mikhaĭlovich Gerasimov
Shah Rukh
Preceded by Timurid Empire
1405–1447
Succeeded by

shah, rukh, other, uses, disambiguation, shahrukh, mirza, persian, شاهرخ, Šāhrokh, note, august, 1377, march, 1447, ruler, timurid, empire, between, 1405, 1447, sharukhsultan, padshah, bahadurforensic, facial, reconstructionruler, timurid, empirereign20, febru. For other uses see Shah Rukh disambiguation Shah Rukh or Shahrukh Mirza Persian شاهرخ Sahrokh note 1 20 August 1377 13 March 1447 was the ruler of the Timurid Empire between 1405 and 1447 SharukhSultan Padshah BahadurForensic facial reconstructionRuler of the Timurid EmpireReign20 February 1405 13 March 1447PredecessorTimurSuccessorUlugh BegBorn 1377 08 20 20 August 1377Samarkand Timurid EmpireDied13 March 1447 1447 03 13 aged 69 Rayy Timurid EmpireBurialGur e Amir Samarkand UzbekistanConsortGawhar ShadWivesMalikat Agha Tuti Agha Aq Sultan Agha Mihr Nigar Agha La l Takin AghaIssueUlugh Beg Sultan Ibrahim Baysunghur Soyurghatmish Muhammad Juki Several othersNamesSultan Mahmud 1 Moin ud din Shah Rukh 2 DynastyTimuridFatherTimurMotherTaghay Tarkhan AghaReligionSunni IslamHe was the son of the Central Asian conqueror Timur Tamerlane who founded the Timurid dynasty in 1370 However Shah Rukh ruled only over the eastern portion of the empire established by his father comprising most of Persia and Transoxiana the western territories having been lost to invaders in the aftermath of Timur s death In spite of this Shah Rukh s empire remained a cohesive dominion of considerable extent throughout his reign as well as a dominant power in Asia Shah Rukh controlled the main trade routes between Asia and Europe including the legendary Silk Road and became immensely wealthy as a result He chose to have his capital not in Samarqand as his father had done but in Herat This was to become the political centre of the Timurid empire and residence of his principal successors though both cities benefited from the wealth and privilege of Shah Rukh s court Shah Rukh was a great patron of the arts and sciences which flourished under his rule He spent his reign focusing on the stability of his lands as well as maintaining political and economic relations with neighbouring kingdoms In the view of historians Thomas W Lentz and Glenn D Lowry unlike his father Shahrukh ruled the Timurid empire not as a Turco Mongol warlord conqueror but as an Islamic sultan In dynastic chronicles he is exalted as a man of great piety diplomacy and modesty a model Islamic ruler who repaired much of the physical and psychological damage caused by his father 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Reign of Timur 3 War of succession 4 Military campaigns 4 1 War with the Qara Qoyunlu 4 2 Conflict with Hurufis and anti intellectual purges 4 3 Rebellions 5 Administration 6 Cultural influence 7 Foreign relations 8 Death and succession 9 Personal life 9 1 Consorts 9 2 Sons 9 3 Daughters 10 Facial reconstruction 11 See also 12 Notes 13 ReferencesEarly life editShah Rukh was born on 20 August 1377 the youngest of Timur s four sons 4 In Persian his name s elements have multiple meanings شاه shah means a king a sovereign specifically shah title of the ruler of Persia the king in chess used as a prefix meaning the best greatest main etc Ex شاهکار shahkar masterpiece or a bridegroom synonymous with داماد damad 5 رخ rokh means the face or figure also the cheek the countenance the castle or rook in chess and the roc a fabulous bird perhaps the condor 6 This is also the Persian term for the chess move castling According to Ibn Arabshah Timur who was a talented chess player was involved in a match when he received the news of Shah Rukh s birth using this chess move as a name for the newborn child 7 8 Some sources suggest that his mother was the Empress Saray Mulk Khanum formerly a Chaghatai princess and Timur s chief consort she had been captured by Timur from the harem of Amir Husayn Qara unas several years prior to Shah Rukh s birth However it was stated by the 15th century historian Khwandamir that Shah Rukh s mother was a certain Taghay Tarkhan Agha of the Qara Khitai 9 a Tajik concubine of Timur s Khwandamir used a genealogical record written during Shah Rukh s reign as his source for this assertion 10 Regardless of his maternal origins the prince was personally raised by Saray Mulk alongside Timur s grandson Khalil Sultan 11 Reign of Timur editTimur appears not to have had particularly close relations with Shah Rukh despite the latter never having incurred his displeasure In 1397 Shah Rukh was appointed governor of Khorasan by his father with his viceregal capital being Herat Although this was a significant region it was also the same post that had been awarded to Shah Rukh s brother Miran Shah when the latter had been thirteen years old Shah Rukh was never promoted beyond this position during his father s lifetime Further to this during Timur s campaign to China Shah Rukh s young sons took pride of place in the procession while he himself was passed over 12 Historical sources give no explanation for their relationship though there is some evidence which suggests that it was Shah Rukh s ancestry which had affected Timur s lack of favour being the son of a concubine as opposed to a freeborn wife 3 Alternatively there have been suggestions that Timur believed Shah Rukh did not possess the personal qualities required for ruling the prince by this point had acquired a reputation for excessive modesty as well as personal piety 13 It might also have been this Islamic adherence and subsequent rejection of the laws of Genghis Khan which had always been so strongly revered by Timur that had resulted in the alienation of Shah Rukh from his father 14 Shah Rukh alongside most of the royal family accompanied Timur west in his campaign against the Ottoman Empire which culminated in the Battle of Ankara in 1402 Shah Rukh commanded the left wing of the army Miran Shah the right and Timur himself in the centre The vanguard was headed by two of Shah Rukh s nephews The battle resulted in a Timurid victory as well as the capture and subjugation of the Ottoman Sultan Bayezid I 15 War of succession edit nbsp Miniature from Hafiz i Abru s Majma al tawarikh Story of Hushang commissioned by Shah Rukh c 1400Timur died in 1405 whilst leading his army east in a campaign against the Ming Dynasty He was reported to have said on his deathbed that he had no other desire than to see the Mirza Shah Rukh once more and had lamented the fact that he did not have time to do so 16 Timur had no unambiguously appointed heir at the time of his death as a result a succession dispute erupted among his surviving sons and grandsons 17 Khalil Sultan proclaimed himself emperor at Tashkent soon after his grandfather s death and seized the royal treasury as well as Timur s imperial capital Samarqand 18 Shah Rukh marched his army out of Herat to the Oxus river but made no offensive move against his nephew at this point This was likely due to Miran Shah Khalil Sultan s father who posed a serious threat as he along with his other son Abu Bakr had led an army out of Azerbaijan in support of the younger prince They were both forced to withdraw prior to joining with Khalil Sultan however due to invasions to their rear by the Jalayirids and the Qara Qoyunlu who took advantage of the death of the old emperor to seize territory Miran Shah was killed in battle in 1408 whilst attempting to repel the invaders with Abu Bakr dying similarly the year after 19 20 In the years following Timur s death Shah Rukh and Khalil Sultan had a series of unproductive negotiations as well as many military encounters with Khalil Sultan frequently emerging victorious 18 During this time other pretenders also pursued their own claims to the throne Among these was Sultan Husayn Tayichiud a maternal grandson of Timur who later aligned himself with Khalil Sultan before betraying him in order to reassert his own claim Sultan Husayn was defeated by his former ally and fled to Shah Rukh who had him executed with his body parts being displayed in the bazaars of Herat 21 Two more of Timur s grandsons Iskandar and Pir Muhammad also made bids for the throne They were defeated by Shah Rukh and Khalil Sultan respectively with each being spared by their subjugator Pir Muhammad was later assassinated by one of his nobles in 1407 while Iskandar was executed in 1415 following a failed rebellion 22 23 It was not until 1409 that the war started to turn in Shah Rukh s favour During this time Khalil Sultan began to lose support among his emirs in Samarqand His wife Shadi Mulk had been given a large amount of authority in court note 2 Under her influence low ranking individuals were given high positions instead of Timur s old nobles Additionally several of the old emperor s widows and concubines were remarried somewhat forcefully to men of undistinguished backgrounds 18 Following a famine which further spread discontent among the populace Khalil Sultan was eventually taken captive by the powerful emir Khudaidad Hussain leader of the Dughlat tribe and a former mentor of the prince Hussain took Khalil Sultan to Ferghana and had him proclaimed ruler in Andijan Samarqand having been left abandoned was taken unopposed by Shah Rukh When he later captured Shadi Mulk Khalil Sultan was forced to go to his uncle in Samarqand and submit to him The prince had his wife returned to him and was appointed governor of Rayy but died in 1411 with Shadi Mulk committing suicide soon after 25 Following the deaths of Khalil Sultan Sultan Husayn and Pir Muhammad Shah Rukh had no immediate Timurid rivals to contest his rule and he began his reign as Timur s successor However rather than ruling from Samarqand as his father had done Shah Rukh held court in Herat which had formerly been his viceregal capital Samarqand was instead bestowed on his eldest son Ulugh Beg who was appointed governor of Transoxiana 25 Military campaigns editWar with the Qara Qoyunlu edit The new emperor began his reign by launching expeditions against regions which had begun to break away during the war of succession Fars which was held by Shah Rukh s nephew Bayqara was taken in 1414 Two years later Kirman which had been ruled as an independent kingdom by Sultan Uwais Barlas since 1408 was also subdued The area under Shah Rukh s rule continued to be extended and consolidated over the following years either through voluntary subjugation by minor rulers or through alliances By 1420 the eastern portion of Timur s empire as well as central and southern Persia had been brought under Shah Rukh s rule 26 However despite Shah Rukh s successes the western portion of the empire including Azerbaijan and Mesopotamia remained out of his control These were held by Qara Yusuf of the Qara Qoyunlu Black Sheep Turkoman who had defeated and killed Shah Rukh s brother Miran Shah several years previously With the conquests of several prominent cities such as Baghdad Qazvin and Diyarbakir the Qara Qoyunlu had established themselves as dangerous neighbours to the Timurids 27 This threat was one which remained unresolved for decades Shah Rukh made many attempts to pacify his western border both through political and military means having launched three campaigns against Azerbaijan none of which proved entirely successful 27 Qara Yusuf died during the first of the campaigns in November 1420 which ended in the Timurid capture of Azerbaijan and Armenia However less than a year later Shah Rukh was forced to face off a rebellion by the late Turkoman prince s sons 27 One of these sons Qara Iskander continued his attempts to reassert Turkoman authority over the following years necessitating the second campaign in 1429 This too resulted in a Timurid victory and the installation of a Qara Qoyunlu prince Abu Said as a puppet ruler However Qara Iskander reoccupied the city of Tabriz two years later and had Abu Said executed 27 This action prompted the third and final campaign in 1434 in which Qara Iskander was once more forced to flee He was later assassinated by his son Qubad in the fortress of Alinja Although this campaign did not result in a final resolution of the Turkoman issue it did achieve stability in the region for the remainder of Shah Rukh s reign with the installation of Qara Iskander s less bellicose brother Jahan Shah as the Turkoman ruler 28 29 Conflict with Hurufis and anti intellectual purges edit nbsp Miniature from Hafiz i Abru s Majma al tawarikh Noah s Ark The Hurufis were a Sufi sect who based their doctrine on the mysticism of letters 30 In the late 14th century the group was accused of heresy by traditional Islamic scholars 31 As a result in 1394 the founder of the movement Fazlallah Astarabadi had been arrested and executed on Timur s orders by his son Miran Shah 32 The death of their leader led Astarabadi s followers to have a specific hatred against the Timurids 33 While leaving a mosque in 1426 Shah Rukh became the victim of an assassination attempt The attacker Ahmed Lur approached the emperor under the pretence of presenting a petition before stabbing him in the stomach Lur however failed to give a fatal blow and was quickly killed by Shah Rukh s servant 34 Shah Rukh recovered within a few days and an investigation was launched which linked Lur to the Hurufis as well as to the family of Astarabadi 35 There was an immediate backlash against the sect which resulted in the execution of Astarabadi s grandson Azud High ranking members of the group were subject to extensive interrogations These eventually extended beyond the sect with many intellectuals residing in Herat having to defend themselves against accusations of blasphemy These included the Persian historian Sharaf ud din Ali Yazdi author of the Zafarnama and his teacher Sain ud din Turka The prominent poet and Sufi Qasem e Anvar was expelled from the capital on Shah Rukh s orders These accusations even went beyond Shah Rukh s court in Herat with Ma ruf i Khattat a prominent calligrapher under the patronage of Prince Baysunghur also being arrested and interrogated 36 The extent to which the Hurufis were involved in the assassination attempt has not yet been clearly established However the subsequent purges served to worsen the already strained relations between the Timurid court and the intellectuals of the empire 37 Rebellions edit In the early part of his reign in what was likely an attempt to stave off rebellion amongst his relations Shah Rukh regularly made transfers between the governorships they held For example Khalil Sultan was moved from Samarqand to Rayy Umar Mirza from Azerbaijan to Astrabad Iskandar Mirza from Ferghana to Hamadan to Shiraz etc 28 These attempts did not prove to be entirely successful as Shah Rukh had to repeatedly suppress rebellions by his various family members Iskandar Mirza after encouraging his brother to revolt in 1413 himself rebelled and devastated the cities of Isfahan and Kerman Bayqara after his initial defeat in Fars rebelled once more soon after in Shiraz These insurrections even continued into Shah Rukh s old age In 1446 at nearly seventy years old he had to march against his grandson Sultan Muhammad who had revolted in the empire s western provinces 28 Administration editShah Rukh s reign saw a marked improvement in economic standards and cultural achievements in many areas of the empire Although this may partly be accredited to Shah Rukh s more diplomatic character in contrast to the ruthlessness of Timur evidence does not assign Shah Rukh with superior skill as a statesman It is instead believed that other influences on his government led to the relative success of his rule These include his empress Gawhar Shad who along with her sons and some state officials maintained orderly continuity of state affairs Some of the highest state officials appear to have been unusually talented individuals who were able to endure in their positions for several decades These include Jalal ud din Firuz Shah who was supreme commander of the army for thirty five years Ghiyath al Din Pir Ahmad Khvafi supreme secretary for thirty one years and Amir Alika Kokultash head of state finance for forty three years 38 In regards to his policies Shah Rukh distanced himself from Timur with less importance being placed on Mongol concepts of authority He abandoned the institution of a figurehead Khan and replaced the Mongol tribunals with Sharia courts Like his father Shah Rukh was married to a Mongol princess Malikat Agha daughter of Khizr Khoja and widow of his brother Umar Shaikh Mirza I He did not however claim the title of Kuregen son in law which had been enjoyed by Timur He similarly did not employ Timur s title of Amir 39 instead adopting the Islamic and Persian styles of Sultan and Padshah 40 Shah Rukh s religious advisor Jalal Din al Qayini described the abolishment of the Mongol tribunals in 1411 His Majesty s correct thinking on the subject of giving currency to the Sharia and reviving the customs of the Sunna has progressed so far at this time that in Dhul Qada 813 i e February March 1411 he abolished the yarghu court of investigation and the customs of the tora which had been observed by Turko Mongolian rulers since ancient times 41 The Timurid author Sain ad Din Ali Turka Isfahani praised Shah Rukh for ruling by Islamic Law in the following words Absolutely everyone with a legal case has it heard in accordance with the Sharia and thanks to the felicity of the favour of this Faith promoting padshah i e Shahrukh not a trace has remained anywhere of the Yarghu Tribunal which God preserve us had for a long time exercised its tyranny over the minds of rulers and polluted the lands of Islam and no creature has the power to conduct this type of interrogation except in secret 42 43 Cultural influence edit nbsp Gawhar Shad MosqueShah Rukh s wife Gawhar Shad funded the construction of two mosques and theological colleges in Mashhad and Herat The Gawhar Shad Mosque was finished in 1418 The mixed ethnic origins of the ruling dynasty led to a distinctive character in its cultural outlook which was a combination of Persian civilization and art with borrowings from China and literature written in Persian as well as Chagatay and Arabic Shah Rukh commissioned the production of a number of historical and geographic works by Hafiz i Abru Among them is Tariḵ e Sahroḵ i the history of Shah Rukh s reign through 1413 14 816 AH It was later incorporated by its author into larger universal history compilations Majmuʿa ye Ḥafeẓ e Abru a universal history work and Majmaʿ al tawariḵ al solṭani ya section Zobdat al tawariḵ e Baysonḡori 44 Foreign relations editDuring Shah Rukh s reign relations between the Timurid state and Ming China under the rule of the Yongle Emperor and his descendants were normalised 45 This was contrasted by the preceding era of Timur and the Hongwu Emperor the first emperor of Ming China who almost started a war with each other which was only averted by the death of Timur Chinese embassies led by Chen Cheng visited Samarqand and Herat several times in 1414 1420 46 47 while a large embassy sent by Shah Rukh and immortalized by its diarist Ghiyath ud din Naqqash travelled to Beijing in 1419 22 and were hosted with lavish banquets and the exchange of gifts 40 48 49 Shah Rukh sent two letters in Arabic amp Persian to the Yongle emperor inviting him to Islam amp praising the virtues of Islamic Law as opposed to the Yasa 50 51 52 The letters were also meant to assert Shah Rukh s independence amp to clarify that the Timurids were not the vassals of the Ming dynasty 53 Through his promotion of commercial and political relations with neighbouring kingdoms Shah Rukh also maintained contact with several other contemporary rulers Monarchs of the Aq Qoyunlu India Hurmuz and in the early part of his reign the Ottoman Empire made homage to him 54 Successive Sultans of Delhi starting with Khizr Khan exchanged embassies with the Timurid court and swore their loyalty to the emperor while the Sultan of Bengal Shamsuddin Ahmad Shah had sought his military support 54 55 Relations with the Mamluks of Egypt however were increasingly tense due to Shah Rukh s attempts to assert dominance They eventually normalised on the ascension of Sultan Jaqmaq under whom the two rulers were amicable but equal 54 Death and succession edit nbsp Shah Rukh s headstone third from the left beside Timur s in the Gur e AmirSoon after suppressing Sultan Muhammad s revolt Shah Rukh by this point weakened by ill health died in his winter quarters in Rayy in March 1447 28 Despite initial attempts to conceal it news of the emperor s death quickly spread Chaos erupted in the military camp rendering transport of Shah Rukh s body to the capital for burial impossible It was only on the third day following his death that the body accompanied by the now dowager empress Gawhar Shad and Shah Rukh s grandson Abdal Latif began its journey east However within a few days Abdal Latif took both his grandmother and the corpse hostage possibly in the hopes of launching his own bid for the vacant throne or to support that of his father Shah Rukh s last surviving son Ulugh Beg Ala al Dawla another grandson defeated his cousin s troops and liberated Gawhar Shad and afterwards had Shah Rukh interred in the Gawhar Shad Mausoleum in Herat When Ulugh Beg captured the city the following year he ordered his father s body to be exhumed before reburying it with Timur s in the Gur e Amir in Samarqand 56 note 3 The succession struggle among Shah Rukh s family continued for several years initially between Ulugh Beg and Ala al Dawla in which the former emerged victorious However he was murdered by his son Abdal Latif in 1449 and in the subsequent civil wars control of the Timurid Empire passed from Shah Rukh s descendants 58 59 Personal life editConsorts edit Gawhar Shad daughter of Ghiyas ud din Tarkhan Malikat Agha daughter of Khizr Ughlan Chaghatay widow of Umar Shaikh Mirza I Tuti Agha a Narin Mughal lady Aq Sultan Agha daughter of Charkas bin Timan Ilchigiday Mihr Nigar Agha an Uzbek Bisut lady La l Takin AghaSons edit Ulugh Beg 1394 1449 with Gawhar Shad Begum Viceroy of Transoxiana later succeeded his father Sultan Ibrahim Mirza 1394 1435 Viceroy of Persia Baysunghur 1397 1433 with Gawhar Shad Begum Shah Rukh s artistic third son never had a vice royal position but played an important part in his father s government in Samarqand 60 Soyurghatmish Mirza 1399 1426 with Malikat Agha Viceroy of India and Ghazni Muhammad Juki Mirza 1402 1444 with Gawhar Shad Begum Viceroy of Garmsir and Khuttal Daughters edit Maryam Sultan Agha d 1441 with Gawhar Shad Begum Married to Muhammad Jahangir Mirza son of Muhammad Sultan Mirza son of Jahangir Mirza Qutlugh Turkan Agha with Gawhar Shad Begum Qutlugh Sultan Agha with Tuti Agha Taghay Turkan Agha with Tuti Agha Sa adat Sultan Agha with Gawhar Shad Begum Payanda Sultan Agha with Aq Sultan Agha Married to Yahya Mirza son of Muhammad Sultan Mirza son of Jahangir MirzaFacial reconstruction editSoviet anthropologist Mikhail Mikhaylovich Gerasimov reconstructed the facial features of Timur his son Shah Rukh and grandson Ulugh Beg Relative to the others Timur appears to have been phenotypically East Asian while Shah Rukh the son of a Tajik woman had more Europoid features Shah Rukh appeared more similar to brachycephalic Europoids 61 62 Shah Rukh s son Ulugh Beg however had predominantly Mongoloid features and no obvious Caucasoid influence See also editAhmed Lur Miraj NamehNotes edit Alternatives Shahruh Shahrokh or Shahrukh Khalil Sultan s marriage to Shadi Mulk several years earlier had caused a great scandal due to her being the widow of one of Timur s most powerful amirs 24 Alternatively historian Maria Subtelny attributes the final transfer of Shah Rukh s body as well as the commissioning of his marble tombstone to his daughter Payanda Sultan 57 References edit Binbas Ilker Evrim 2016 Intellectual Networks in Timurid Iran Sharaf al Din Ali Yazdi and the Islamicate Republic of Letters Cambridge University Press p 265 ISBN 978 1 107 05424 0 Barzegar Karim Najafi 2000 Mughal Iranian relations during sixteenth century Indian Bibliographies Bureau p 17 ISBN 978 81 85004 60 0 a b Lentz Thomas W Lowry Glenn D 1989 Timur amp Princely Vision Smithsonian p 80 ISBN 978 0 87474 706 5 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 New Royal Book Co p 93 ISBN 978 81 89267 61 2 New Persian English dictionary p V2 0164 New Persian English dictionary p V1 0926 ibn Arabshah Ahmad 1936 Tamerlane or Timur The Great Amir Translated by J H Sanders London Luzac amp Co p 47 McNeill William Bentley Jerry Christian David Croizier Ralph McNeill J 2010 Berkshire Encyclopedia of World History 2 ed Berkshire Publishing Group p 2514 permanent dead link Woods John E 1990 The Timurid dynasty Indiana University Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies p 19 Barthold Vasilii Vladimirovitch 1963 Four Studies on the History of Central Asia Vol 2 Brill Archive p 24 Jamaluddin Syed 1995 The state under Timur a study in empire building Har Anand p 78 ISBN 9788124102589 Barthold 1963 pp 32 33 37 Ghiasian Mohamad Reza 2018 Lives of the Prophets The Illustrations to Hafiz i Abru s Assembly of Chronicles BRILL p 7 ISBN 978 90 04 37722 6 Barthold 1963 p 33 Tucker Spencer 2011 Battles that Changed History An Encyclopedia of World Conflict ABC CLIO p 140 ISBN 978 1 59884 429 0 Richardson S Osborne T Hitch C Millar A Rivington John Crowder S Davey P Law B Longman T Ware C 1759 The Modern Part of an Universal History From the Earliest Account of Time Vol V London p 366 Sykes Percy Molesworth 1915 A History of Persia Macmillan and Company limited p 136 a b c Jackson Peter Lockhart Lawrence 1986 The Cambridge History of Iran Vol VI Cambridge University Press p 100 ISBN 978 0 521 20094 3 Jackson amp Lockhart 1986 pp 100 102 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 p 131 Barthold 1963 pp 65 66 Manz Beatrice Forbes 2007 Power Politics and Religion in Timurid Iran Cambridge University Press p 163 ISBN 978 1 139 46284 6 Barthold 1963 pp 70 71 Marozzi Justin 2012 Tamerlane Sword of Islam Conqueror of the World HarperCollins Publishers p 396 ISBN 978 0 00 736973 7 a b Jackson amp Lockhart 1986 p 101 Jackson amp Lockhart 1986 pp 101 2 a b c d Jackson amp Lockhart 1986 p 102 a b c d Jackson amp Lockhart 1986 p 103 Minorsky Vladimir 1931 Medieval Iran and its neighbours Vol 1 Variorum Reprints p 176 ISBN 978 0 86078 114 1 Bolle Kees W 1987 Secrecy in Religions Brill Archive p 89 ISBN 90 04 08342 1 Ames Christine Caldwell 2015 Medieval Heresies Cambridge University Press p 302 ISBN 978 1 107 02336 9 Bashir Shahzad 2012 Fazlallah Astarabadi and the Hurufis Oneworld Publications p 34 ISBN 978 1 78074 192 5 Petrushevsky Ilya Pavlovich 1985 Islam in Iran Translated by Hubert Evans London Athlone Press p 260 ISBN 9780887060700 Petrushevsky 1985 p 262 Binbas 2016 p 17 Binbas 2016 pp 17 18 Binbas 2016 p 18 Jackson amp Lockhart 1986 p 104 Manz Beatrice Forbes 1988 Tamerlane and the symbolism of sovereignty Iranian Studies 21 1 2 105 122 doi 10 1080 00210868808701711 JSTOR 4310596 a b Ghiasian 2018 p 13 Subtelny Maria 2007 Timurids in Transition Turko Persian Politics and Acculturation in Medieval Iran Brill p 25 ISBN 978 9004160316 Subtelny 2007 p 27 ابن محمد الترکه صائن الدین علی 1351 چهارده رساله فارسی in Persian تهران p 171 Maria Eva Subtelny and Charles Melville Ḥafeẓ e Abru at Encyclopaedia Iranica Dreyer Edward L 2007 Zheng He China and the Oceans in the Early Ming Dynasty 1405 1433 New York Pearson Longman pp 60 61 ISBN 9780321084439 Tsai Shih Shan Henry 2002 Perpetual Happiness The Ming Emperor Yongle University of Washington Press p 162 ISBN 0 295 98124 5 Goodrich L Carrington Tay C N 1976 Ch en Ch eng in Goodrich L Carrington Fang Chaoying eds Dictionary of Ming Biography 1368 1644 Volume I A L Columbia University Press pp 144 145 ISBN 0 231 03801 1 Brook Timothy 1978 Chapter 10 Communications and commerce in Twitchett Denis Crispin Fairbank John King eds The Cambridge History of China vol 8 The Ming Dynasty 1368 1644 Part 2 Cambridge University Press pp 583 584 ISBN 0 521 24333 5 Brook Timothy 1998 The Confusions of Pleasure Commerce and Culture in Ming China University of California Press pp 34 38 ISBN 0 520 21091 3 Subtelny 2007 p 25 نوائى 1977 اسناد و مکاتبات تاریخی ایران از تیمور تا شاه اسماعیل in Persian طهران pp 133 137 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link سمرقندي عبد الرزاق 1946 مطلع سعدين و مجمع بحرين جلد دوم جزء أول in Persian لاهور pp 131 134 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link The Chinese World Order Traditional China s Foreign Relations Harvard University Press 1968 pp 211 212 a b c Ghiasian 2018 pp 13 14 Sengupta Nitish Kumar 2011 Land of Two Rivers A History of Bengal from the Mahabharata to Mujib New Delhi Penguin Books India p 79 ISBN 978 0 14 341678 4 Manz 2007 pp 257 8 263 64 Subtelny 2007 p 179 Manz 2007 p 262 Asimov Muchammed Sajfiddinoviĉ Dani Ahmad Hasan Bosworth Clifford Edmund 1992 History of Civilizations of Central Asia Motilal Banarsidass Publ p 350 ISBN 978 81 208 1595 7 BAYSONḠOR ḠiAT AL DiN B SAHROḴ B TiMuR in Encyclopedia Iranica Greater Iran a 20th century odyssey Author Ich suchte Gesichter Author Mikhail Mikhaĭlovich Gerasimov Shah RukhTimurid dynastyPreceded byKhalil Sultan Timurid Empire1405 1447 Succeeded byUlugh Beg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shah Rukh amp oldid 1216654970, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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