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Uzun Hasan

Uzun Hasan or Uzun Hassan (Azerbaijani: Uzun Həsən اوزون حسن; Persian: اوزون حسن; 1423 – January 6, 1478; where uzun means "tall" in Oghuz Turkic) was a ruler of the Turkoman[6] Aq Qoyunlu state and is generally considered to be its strongest ruler.[7] Hasan ruled between 1452 and 1478, and would preside over the confederation's territorial apex when it included parts or all of present-day Iraq, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Iran, Transcaucasia and Syria.

Uzun Hasan
King of Kings of Iran[1]
Sultan of Sultans of Iran[1]
Shahanshah of Iran and Ruler of Persia[1]
Padishah of Iran[2]
De facto ruler of the Aq Qoyunlu
Reign1452–1457[3]
Sultan of the Aq Qoyunlu
Reign1457 – 6 January 1478
PredecessorJahangir
SuccessorSultan Khalil bin Uzun Hasan
Born1423
Diyarbakir[4]
DiedJanuary 6, 1478 (aged 54–55)
SpouseSeljuk Shah Khatun
Jan Khatun
Tarjil Khatun
Despina Khatun
IssueUghurlu Muhammad
Mirza Khalil Beg
Yaqub Beg
Maqsud Beg
Yusuf Beg
Masih Beg
Zegnel Beg
Alamshah Halima Khatun[5]
Two other daughters
Names
Uzun Hassan bin Ali bin Qara Yoluq Osman
DynastyAq Qoyunlu
FatherAli Beg
MotherSara Khatun
ReligionSunni Islam
Tughra

Reign Edit

 
The Aq Qoyunlu empire by the end of Uzun Hassan's reign in 1478

Timur, the founder and ruler of the Timurid Empire, had appointed Uzun Hasan's grandfather, Kara Yülük Osman, as a governor of Diyarbakır, with the cities of Erzincan, Mardin, Ruha (or Urfa), and Sivas. Later, Persia was divided between two Timurid rulers, Jahan Shah of Qara Qoyunlu (the Black Sheep Turkoman) and Uzun Hasan. After twenty years of fighting, Uzun Hasan eventually defeated Jahan Shah in a battle near the sanjak of Çapakçur[8][9] in present-day eastern Turkey on October 30[10] (or November 11[11]), 1467. Upon the defeat of the latter, another Timurid ruler, Abu Sa'id Mirza, answered Jahan Shah's son's request for aid, taking much of Jahan Shah's former land and going to war with Uzun Hasan despite the latter's offers of peace. Uzun Hasan then ambushed and captured Abu Sa'id at the Battle of Qarabagh, whereupon he was executed by Yadgar Muhammad Mirza, a rival.[12]

In 1463, the Venetian Senate, seeking allies in its war against the Ottomans, sent Lazzaro Querini as its first ambassador to Tabriz,[13] but he was unable to persuade Uzun Hassan to attack the Ottomans.[14] Hassan sent his own envoys to Venice in return.[13]

In 1465, Hassan attacked and captured Harput from the Beylik of Dulkadir.

In 1471, Querini returned to Venice with Hazzan's ambassador Murad.[13] The Venetian Senate voted to send another to Persia, choosing Caterino Zeno after two other men declined.[15] Zeno, whose wife was the niece of Uzun Hassan's wife, was able to persuade Hassan to attack the Turks. Hassan was successful at first, but there was no simultaneous attack by any of the western powers.[14]

Uzun Hasan met the Ottomans in battle near Erzincan in 1471, advanced as far as Akşehir, pillaging and destroying Tokat,[16] and fought a battle at Tercan in 1473. He was defeated by Mehmed II at Battle of Otlukbeli in the late summer of 1473.[17]

In 1473, Giosafat Barbaro was selected as another Venetian ambassador to Persia, due to his experience in the Crimean, Muscovy, and Tartary.[18] Although Barbaro got on well with Uzun Hassan, he was unable to persuade the ruler to attack the Ottomans again.[14] Shortly afterwards, Hassan's son Ughurlu Muhammad, rose in rebellion, seizing the city of Shiraz.[19]

 
Ambrogio Contarini, Viaggio al signor Usun Hassan re di Persia ("Voyage to Sir Usun Hassan King of Persia"), 1487

After yet another Venetian ambassador, Ambrogio Contarini, arrived in Persia,[14] Uzun Hassan decided that Contarini would return to Venice with a report, while Giosafat Barbaro would stay.[20] Barbaro was the last Venetian ambassador to leave Persia after Uzun Hassan died in 1478.[21][22] While Hassan's sons fought each other for the throne, Barbaro hired an Armenian guide and escaped.[23]

According to Contarini, ambassador to Uzun Hasan's court from 1473 to 1476, "The king is of a good size, with a thin visage and agreeable countenance, and seemed to be about seventy years old. His manners were very affable, and he conversed familiarly with everyone around him, but I noticed that his hands trembled when he raised the cup to his lips." His name means "tall" and Contarini reported that he was also "very lean".

Contarini also wrote, "The empire of Uzun-Hassan is very extensive and is bounded by Turkey and Caramania, belonging to the Sultan, and which latter country extends to Aleppo. Uzun-Hassan took the kingdom of Persia from Causa, whom he put to death. The city of Ecbatana, or Tauris, is the usual residence of Uzun-Hassan; Persepolis or Shiras ...,[24] which is twenty-four days journey from thence, being the last city of his empire, bordering on the Zagathais, who are the sons of Buzech, sultan of the Tartars, and with whom he is continually at war. On the other side is the country of Media, which is under subjection to Sivansa, who pays a kind of yearly tribute to Uzun-Hassan. It is said that he has likewise some provinces on the other side of the Euphrates, in the neighbourhood of the Turks. The whole country, all the way to Ispahan... is exceedingly arid, having very few trees and little water, yet it is fertile in grain and other provisions.

"His eldest son, named Ogurlu Mohamed, was much spoken of when I was in Persia, as he had rebelled against his father. He had other three sons; Khalil Mirza, the elder of these was about thirty-five years old, and had the government of Shiras. Yaqub Beg, another son of Uzun-Hassan, was about fifteen, and I have forgotten the name of a third son. By one of his wives, he had a son named Masubech, or Maksud beg, whom he kept in prison because he was detected corresponding with his rebellious brother Ogurlu, and whom he afterward put to death. According to the best accounts which I received from different persons, the forces of Uzun-Hassan may amount to about 50,000 cavalries, a considerable part of whom are not of much value. It has been reported by some who were present, that at one time he led an army of 40,000 Persians to battle against the Turks, for the purpose of restoring Pirameth to the sovereignty of Karamania, whence he had been expelled by the infidels.

Family Edit

 
A flag of Uzun Hasan, located in Topkapı Palace

Consorts Edit

Uzun Hasan had four wives:

  • Seljuk Shah Khatun, daughter of his paternal uncle, Kur Muhammad[25]
  • Jan Khatun, daughter of Daulat Shah Buldukani
  • Tarjil Khatun, daughter of Omer Zaraki
  • In 1458 Uzun Hasan married Theodora Megale Komnene, the daughter of Emperor John IV of Trebizond, better known in histories as Despina Khatun.[26]

Sons Edit

Uzun Hasan had at least seven sons:

  • Ughurlu Muhammad (before 1441–1477) – with Jan Khatun. After failing to seize the throne, he fled to Constantinople, where he was taken in by the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II, who gave him his daughter Gevherhan Hatun in marriage. Their son, Ahmad Beg, in turn married an Ottoman princess, Aynışah Sultan, daughter of Bayezid II, and managed to seize the throne for himself, but died soon after in an attempt to keep it.
  • Mirza Khalil Beg (c. 1441–1478) – with Seljuk Shah Khatun. He toke the throne after his father and proclamed himself sultan.
  • Ya'qub Beg (c. 1461–1490) – with Seljuk Shah Khatun. After defeating and executing his brother Khalil, he became sultan.
  • Maqsud Beg (? – 1478) – with Despina Khatun. Executed by Khalil in 1478.
  • Yusuf Beg (? – ?) – with Seljuk Shah Khatun. Exiled by Khalil in 1478.
  • Masih Beg (? – before 1473) – with Despina Khatun
  • Zegnel Beg (? – before 1473) – with Tarjil Khatun

Daughters Edit

Uzun Hassan had at least three daughters:

Legacy Edit

Uzun Hasan was the first Aq Qoyunlu ruler who openly disembarked on a campaign to transform the Aq Qoyunlu tribal confederation into a Perso-Islamic sultanate.[29] This transformation campaign commenced after his conquests of northwestern and central Iran, where he, as a byproduct, displaced the waning authority of the Timurids.[29] As his realm grew to preside over ever more Iranian land, he employed Iranian bureaucrats with experience in working for previous local polities to administer the newly obtained Aq Qoyunlu provinces.[29] Although these Aq Qoyunlu-era Iranian bureaucrats did not have the same level of political authority as Nizam al-Mulk (died 1092) did under the Seljuks, they did share the same role of conducting the assimilation of Turkic tribesmen into a political tradition characterized by Perso-Islamic facets.[29] Uzun Hasan also provided for the Islamic aspect of his rudimentary Perso-Islamic state, for he took great care in nourishing Islamic organizations and Sufi orders, including the ever more powerful Safavid order.[29] In the process, he married off his sister to Shaykh Junayd, the then leader of the Safavid order, and one of his daughters to Junayd's son and successor, Shaykh Haydar.[29]

Uzun Hasan also ordered the Quran to be translated into Turkic.[30]

He initiated some financial and administrative reforms to weaken the separatism of the military and tribal nobility and to strengthen his vast state.[citation needed]

The sources do not provide detailed information about Uzun Hasan's reformist activities. Although the texts of his laws have not reached us, it is possible to judge the reforms on the basis of little information about the laws that the chroniclers called "King Hasan's Laws" or "Dasturi-Hasan Bey". Some documents related to the western territories of the Aq Qoyunlu state, which became part of the Ottoman Empire (Diyarbakir, Mardin, Urfa, etc.) are kept in the Turkish archives. These sources are important in terms of studying feudal relations in the provinces of the Aq Qoyunlu. The general nature of Uzun Hasan's reform is stated in "Tarikh al-Qiyasi":[31]

"Uzun Hasan was fair and kind. He wanted to abolish taxes throughout the country. But the emirs did not agree with him. The Sultan then reduced the taxes by half to twenty-one dirhams ... He clarified the amount of taxes collected in the whole country. Uzun Hasan demanded that lawbreakers be severely punished. The Sultan "sent the law to every province of the State to put into effect."[citation needed][according to whom?]

After the conquest of eastern Anatolia in 1517–18, and of Iraq in 1537, the Ottomans preserved the laws of Uzun Hasan (Qānūn-nāma-ye Ḥasan Pādšāh).[32][33] It was after 1540, that the Ottoman regulations replaced the Aq Qoyunlu code.[32] Large parts of his tax and trade laws are recorded in Ottoman sources.[33]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Muʾayyid S̲ābitī, ʻAlī (1967). Asnad va Namahha-yi Tarikhi (Historical documents and letters from early Islamic period towards the end of Shah Ismaʻil Safavi's reign.). Iranian culture & literature. Kitābkhānah-ʾi Ṭahūrī., pp. 193, 274, 315, 330, 332, 422 and 430. See also: Abdul Hussein Navai, Asnaad o Mokatebaat Tarikhi Iran (Historical sources and letters of Iran), Tehran, Bongaah Tarjomeh and Nashr-e-Ketab, 2536, pp. 578, 657, 701–702 and 707
  2. ^ H.R. Roemer, "The Safavid Period", in Cambridge History of Iran, Vol. VI, Cambridge University Press 1986, p. 339: "Further evidence of a desire to follow in the line of Turkmen rulers is Ismail's assumption of the title 'Padishah-i-Iran', previously held by Uzun Hasan."
  3. ^ Ehsan Yar-Shater (1982). Encyclopaedia Iranica. Vol. 2. Routledge & Kegan Paul. p. 165. Uzun Ḥasan successfully resumed the war with the Qara Qoyunlū and in the autumn of 856/1452 seized Āmed in a bloodless coup while Jahāngīr was away on a military expedition in Kurdistan.
  4. ^ Kia, Mehrdad. The Ottoman Empire: A Historical Encyclopedia [2 Volumes.] ABC-CLIO, 2017.
  5. ^ Called Martha by Christian sources
  6. ^ V. Minorsky. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, Vol. 17, No. 3 (1955), pp. 449–462: "There still remain many interesting and important problems connected with the emergence in the 14th century of the Turkman federations of the Qara-qoyunlu (780–874/1378–1469) and Aq-qoyunlu (780–908/1378–1502). The roots of the Persian Risorgimento under the Safavids (1502–1722) go deep into this preparatory period."
  7. ^ V. Minorsky, "The Aq-qoyunlu and Land Reforms (Turkmenica, 11)", Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 17 (1955), pp. 449–462: "There still remain many interesting and important problems connected with the emergence in the 14th century of the Turkman federations of the Qara-qoyunlu (780–874/1378–1469) and Aq-qoyunlu (780–908/1378–1502). The roots of the Persian Risorgimento under the Safavids (1502–1722) go deep into this preparatory period."
  8. ^ Alexander Mikaberidze (2011). Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 907. ISBN 978-1598843361. Retrieved February 13, 2013.
  9. ^ Peter Jackson, Lawrence Lockhart (1986). The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 6. Cambridge University Press. p. 173. ISBN 978-0521200943. Retrieved February 13, 2013.
  10. ^ Edward Granville Browne (2009). A History of Persian Literature Under Tartar Dominion (A.D, 1265–1502). Cambridge: The University press Publication. p. 89. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  11. ^ Peter Jackson, Lawrence Lockhart (1986). The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 6. Cambridge University Press. p. 1120. ISBN 978-0521200943. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  12. ^ Stevens, John. The history of Persia. Contains, the lives and memorable actions of its kings from the first erecting of that monarchy to this time; an exact Description of all its Dominions; a curious Account of India, China, Tartary, Kerman, Arabia, Nixabur, and the Islands of Ceylon and Timor; as also of all Cities occasionally mentioned, as Schiras, Samarkand, Bukhara, &c. Manners and Customs of those People, Persian Worshippers of Fire; Plants, Beasts, Product, and Trade. With many instructive and pleasant digressions, being remarkable Stories or Passages, occasionally occurring, as Strange Burials; Burning of the Dead; Liquors of several Countries; Hunting; Fishing; Practice of Physick; famous Physicians in the East; Actions of Tamerlan, &c. To which is added, an abridgment of the lives of the kings of Hormuz, or Ormuz. The Persian history was written in Arabic, by Mirkond, a famous Eastern Author of Ormuz, by Torunxa, King of that Island, both of them translated into Spanish, by Antony Teixeira, who lived several Years in Persia and India; and now rendered into English.
  13. ^ a b c Mehmed the Conqueror & His Time, Franz Babinger, Trans. Ralph Manheim, Princeton University Press; 1992, p. 305 [1] ISBN 0-691-01078-1
  14. ^ a b c d The Cambridge history of Iran, William Bayne Fisher, Peter Jackson, Laurence Lockhart, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986, p. 377 [2] ISBN 0-521-20094-6
  15. ^ Mehmed the Conqueror & His Time, Franz Babinger, Trans. Ralph Manheim, Princeton University Press; 1992, p. 306 [3] ISBN 0-691-01078-1
  16. ^ Lambton, Lewis & Holt 1985, p. 299.
  17. ^ Babinger, Franz (1978). Mehmed the Conqueror and his Time. Bollingen Series XCVI. ed. by William C. Hickman, trans. by Ralph Manheim. Princeton University Press. pp. 314–315. ISBN 0-691-09900-6.
  18. ^ Historical account of discoveries and travels in Asia, Hugh Murray, Edinburgh, A. Constable, and Co; 1820. p. 10 [4]
  19. ^ Historical account of discoveries and travels in Asia, Hugh Murray, Edinburgh, A. Constable and Co; 1820. p. 15 [5]
  20. ^ Historical account of discoveries and travels in Asia, Hugh Murray, Edinburgh, A. Constable and Co; 1820. p. 19 [6]
  21. ^ "Biographie universelle, ancienne et moderne", J Fr Michaud; Louis Gabriel Michaud, Paris, Michaud, 1811–28., p. 327 [7]
  22. ^ Mehmed the Conqueror & His Time, Franz Babinger, Trans. Ralph Manheim, Princeton University Press; 1992, p. 322 [8] ISBN 0-691-01078-1
  23. ^ Historical account of discoveries and travels in Asia, Hugh Murray, Edinburgh, A. Constable and Co; 1820. p. 16 [9]
  24. ^ Project Gutenberg e-book A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Volume II, by Robert Kerr
  25. ^ John E. Woods, The Aqquyunlu: Clan, Confederation, Empire (1999), p. 62
  26. ^ Caterino Zeno, Iosafat Barbaro, Antonio Contarini, and a "Merchant in Persia," Travels to Tana and Persia, (London: Hakluyt Society, 1883), p. 74 n. 1
  27. ^ Also Halime, Alamşah, Alemshah, Alemşah
  28. ^ Roger Savory, "Iran Under the Safavids", p. 18
  29. ^ a b c d e f Dale, Stephen Frederic (2020). "Turks, Turks and türk Turks: Anatolia, Iran and India in Comparative Perspective". In Peacock, A.C.S.; McClary, Richard Piran (eds.). Turkish History and Culture in India: Identity, Art and Transregional Connections. Brill. p. 73.
  30. ^ Langaroodi & Negahban 2015.
  31. ^ V. Minorsky, “A Civil and Military Review in Fārs in 881/1476,” BSOAS 10, 1939, pp. 141–178
  32. ^ a b Halil İnalcık (1973). The Ottoman Empire: The Classical Age 1300–1600. p. 71.
  33. ^ a b "AQ QOYUNLŪ". Encyclopaedia Iranica.

External links Edit

  • A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels – Volume 02 eBook
Preceded by Ruler of the Aq Qoyunlu
1453–1478
Succeeded by
Sultan Khalil bin Uzun Hasan

Sources Edit

Further reading Edit

  • Melvin-Koushki, Matthew (2011). "The Delicate Art of Aggression: Uzun Hasan's Fathnama to Qaytbay of 1469". Iranian Studies. 44 (2): 193–214. doi:10.1080/00210862.2011.541688. S2CID 162248528.

uzun, hasan, uzun, hassan, azerbaijani, uzun, həsən, اوزون, حسن, persian, اوزون, حسن, 1423, january, 1478, where, uzun, means, tall, oghuz, turkic, ruler, turkoman, qoyunlu, state, generally, considered, strongest, ruler, hasan, ruled, between, 1452, 1478, wou. Uzun Hasan or Uzun Hassan Azerbaijani Uzun Hesen اوزون حسن Persian اوزون حسن 1423 January 6 1478 where uzun means tall in Oghuz Turkic was a ruler of the Turkoman 6 Aq Qoyunlu state and is generally considered to be its strongest ruler 7 Hasan ruled between 1452 and 1478 and would preside over the confederation s territorial apex when it included parts or all of present day Iraq Turkey Azerbaijan Iran Transcaucasia and Syria Uzun HasanKing of Kings of Iran 1 Sultan of Sultans of Iran 1 Shahanshah of Iran and Ruler of Persia 1 Padishah of Iran 2 De facto ruler of the Aq QoyunluReign1452 1457 3 Sultan of the Aq QoyunluReign1457 6 January 1478PredecessorJahangirSuccessorSultan Khalil bin Uzun HasanBorn1423Diyarbakir 4 DiedJanuary 6 1478 aged 54 55 SpouseSeljuk Shah KhatunJan KhatunTarjil KhatunDespina KhatunIssueUghurlu MuhammadMirza Khalil BegYaqub BegMaqsud BegYusuf BegMasih BegZegnel BegAlamshah Halima Khatun 5 Two other daughtersNamesUzun Hassan bin Ali bin Qara Yoluq OsmanDynastyAq QoyunluFatherAli BegMotherSara KhatunReligionSunni IslamTughra Contents 1 Reign 2 Family 2 1 Consorts 2 2 Sons 2 3 Daughters 3 Legacy 4 References 5 External links 6 Sources 7 Further readingReign EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The Aq Qoyunlu empire by the end of Uzun Hassan s reign in 1478Timur the founder and ruler of the Timurid Empire had appointed Uzun Hasan s grandfather Kara Yuluk Osman as a governor of Diyarbakir with the cities of Erzincan Mardin Ruha or Urfa and Sivas Later Persia was divided between two Timurid rulers Jahan Shah of Qara Qoyunlu the Black Sheep Turkoman and Uzun Hasan After twenty years of fighting Uzun Hasan eventually defeated Jahan Shah in a battle near the sanjak of Capakcur 8 9 in present day eastern Turkey on October 30 10 or November 11 11 1467 Upon the defeat of the latter another Timurid ruler Abu Sa id Mirza answered Jahan Shah s son s request for aid taking much of Jahan Shah s former land and going to war with Uzun Hasan despite the latter s offers of peace Uzun Hasan then ambushed and captured Abu Sa id at the Battle of Qarabagh whereupon he was executed by Yadgar Muhammad Mirza a rival 12 In 1463 the Venetian Senate seeking allies in its war against the Ottomans sent Lazzaro Querini as its first ambassador to Tabriz 13 but he was unable to persuade Uzun Hassan to attack the Ottomans 14 Hassan sent his own envoys to Venice in return 13 In 1465 Hassan attacked and captured Harput from the Beylik of Dulkadir In 1471 Querini returned to Venice with Hazzan s ambassador Murad 13 The Venetian Senate voted to send another to Persia choosing Caterino Zeno after two other men declined 15 Zeno whose wife was the niece of Uzun Hassan s wife was able to persuade Hassan to attack the Turks Hassan was successful at first but there was no simultaneous attack by any of the western powers 14 Uzun Hasan met the Ottomans in battle near Erzincan in 1471 advanced as far as Aksehir pillaging and destroying Tokat 16 and fought a battle at Tercan in 1473 He was defeated by Mehmed II at Battle of Otlukbeli in the late summer of 1473 17 In 1473 Giosafat Barbaro was selected as another Venetian ambassador to Persia due to his experience in the Crimean Muscovy and Tartary 18 Although Barbaro got on well with Uzun Hassan he was unable to persuade the ruler to attack the Ottomans again 14 Shortly afterwards Hassan s son Ughurlu Muhammad rose in rebellion seizing the city of Shiraz 19 nbsp Ambrogio Contarini Viaggio al signor Usun Hassan re di Persia Voyage to Sir Usun Hassan King of Persia 1487After yet another Venetian ambassador Ambrogio Contarini arrived in Persia 14 Uzun Hassan decided that Contarini would return to Venice with a report while Giosafat Barbaro would stay 20 Barbaro was the last Venetian ambassador to leave Persia after Uzun Hassan died in 1478 21 22 While Hassan s sons fought each other for the throne Barbaro hired an Armenian guide and escaped 23 According to Contarini ambassador to Uzun Hasan s court from 1473 to 1476 The king is of a good size with a thin visage and agreeable countenance and seemed to be about seventy years old His manners were very affable and he conversed familiarly with everyone around him but I noticed that his hands trembled when he raised the cup to his lips His name means tall and Contarini reported that he was also very lean Contarini also wrote The empire of Uzun Hassan is very extensive and is bounded by Turkey and Caramania belonging to the Sultan and which latter country extends to Aleppo Uzun Hassan took the kingdom of Persia from Causa whom he put to death The city of Ecbatana or Tauris is the usual residence of Uzun Hassan Persepolis or Shiras 24 which is twenty four days journey from thence being the last city of his empire bordering on the Zagathais who are the sons of Buzech sultan of the Tartars and with whom he is continually at war On the other side is the country of Media which is under subjection to Sivansa who pays a kind of yearly tribute to Uzun Hassan It is said that he has likewise some provinces on the other side of the Euphrates in the neighbourhood of the Turks The whole country all the way to Ispahan is exceedingly arid having very few trees and little water yet it is fertile in grain and other provisions His eldest son named Ogurlu Mohamed was much spoken of when I was in Persia as he had rebelled against his father He had other three sons Khalil Mirza the elder of these was about thirty five years old and had the government of Shiras Yaqub Beg another son of Uzun Hassan was about fifteen and I have forgotten the name of a third son By one of his wives he had a son named Masubech or Maksud beg whom he kept in prison because he was detected corresponding with his rebellious brother Ogurlu and whom he afterward put to death According to the best accounts which I received from different persons the forces of Uzun Hassan may amount to about 50 000 cavalries a considerable part of whom are not of much value It has been reported by some who were present that at one time he led an army of 40 000 Persians to battle against the Turks for the purpose of restoring Pirameth to the sovereignty of Karamania whence he had been expelled by the infidels Family Edit nbsp A flag of Uzun Hasan located in Topkapi PalaceConsorts Edit Uzun Hasan had four wives Seljuk Shah Khatun daughter of his paternal uncle Kur Muhammad 25 Jan Khatun daughter of Daulat Shah Buldukani Tarjil Khatun daughter of Omer Zaraki In 1458 Uzun Hasan married Theodora Megale Komnene the daughter of Emperor John IV of Trebizond better known in histories as Despina Khatun 26 Sons Edit Uzun Hasan had at least seven sons Ughurlu Muhammad before 1441 1477 with Jan Khatun After failing to seize the throne he fled to Constantinople where he was taken in by the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II who gave him his daughter Gevherhan Hatun in marriage Their son Ahmad Beg in turn married an Ottoman princess Aynisah Sultan daughter of Bayezid II and managed to seize the throne for himself but died soon after in an attempt to keep it Mirza Khalil Beg c 1441 1478 with Seljuk Shah Khatun He toke the throne after his father and proclamed himself sultan Ya qub Beg c 1461 1490 with Seljuk Shah Khatun After defeating and executing his brother Khalil he became sultan Maqsud Beg 1478 with Despina Khatun Executed by Khalil in 1478 Yusuf Beg with Seljuk Shah Khatun Exiled by Khalil in 1478 Masih Beg before 1473 with Despina Khatun Zegnel Beg before 1473 with Tarjil KhatunDaughters Edit Uzun Hassan had at least three daughters Halima Alamshah Khatun 27 1460 1522 She married her cousin Shaykh Haydar son of Khadija Khatun sister of her father and Shaykh Junayd in 1471 1472 They had three son and four daughters One of them was Shah Ismail I father of Shah Tahmasp I She was called Martha in Christian sources 28 Two unnamed daughters with Despina Khatun They were still alive in 1473 citation needed Legacy EditUzun Hasan was the first Aq Qoyunlu ruler who openly disembarked on a campaign to transform the Aq Qoyunlu tribal confederation into a Perso Islamic sultanate 29 This transformation campaign commenced after his conquests of northwestern and central Iran where he as a byproduct displaced the waning authority of the Timurids 29 As his realm grew to preside over ever more Iranian land he employed Iranian bureaucrats with experience in working for previous local polities to administer the newly obtained Aq Qoyunlu provinces 29 Although these Aq Qoyunlu era Iranian bureaucrats did not have the same level of political authority as Nizam al Mulk died 1092 did under the Seljuks they did share the same role of conducting the assimilation of Turkic tribesmen into a political tradition characterized by Perso Islamic facets 29 Uzun Hasan also provided for the Islamic aspect of his rudimentary Perso Islamic state for he took great care in nourishing Islamic organizations and Sufi orders including the ever more powerful Safavid order 29 In the process he married off his sister to Shaykh Junayd the then leader of the Safavid order and one of his daughters to Junayd s son and successor Shaykh Haydar 29 Uzun Hasan also ordered the Quran to be translated into Turkic 30 He initiated some financial and administrative reforms to weaken the separatism of the military and tribal nobility and to strengthen his vast state citation needed The sources do not provide detailed information about Uzun Hasan s reformist activities Although the texts of his laws have not reached us it is possible to judge the reforms on the basis of little information about the laws that the chroniclers called King Hasan s Laws or Dasturi Hasan Bey Some documents related to the western territories of the Aq Qoyunlu state which became part of the Ottoman Empire Diyarbakir Mardin Urfa etc are kept in the Turkish archives These sources are important in terms of studying feudal relations in the provinces of the Aq Qoyunlu The general nature of Uzun Hasan s reform is stated in Tarikh al Qiyasi 31 Uzun Hasan was fair and kind He wanted to abolish taxes throughout the country But the emirs did not agree with him The Sultan then reduced the taxes by half to twenty one dirhams He clarified the amount of taxes collected in the whole country Uzun Hasan demanded that lawbreakers be severely punished The Sultan sent the law to every province of the State to put into effect citation needed according to whom After the conquest of eastern Anatolia in 1517 18 and of Iraq in 1537 the Ottomans preserved the laws of Uzun Hasan Qanun nama ye Ḥasan Padsah 32 33 It was after 1540 that the Ottoman regulations replaced the Aq Qoyunlu code 32 Large parts of his tax and trade laws are recorded in Ottoman sources 33 References Edit a b c Muʾayyid S abiti ʻAli 1967 Asnad va Namahha yi Tarikhi Historical documents and letters from early Islamic period towards the end of Shah Ismaʻil Safavi s reign Iranian culture amp literature Kitabkhanah ʾi Ṭahuri pp 193 274 315 330 332 422 and 430 See also Abdul Hussein Navai Asnaad o Mokatebaat Tarikhi Iran Historical sources and letters of Iran Tehran Bongaah Tarjomeh and Nashr e Ketab 2536 pp 578 657 701 702 and 707 H R Roemer The Safavid Period in Cambridge History of Iran Vol VI Cambridge University Press 1986 p 339 Further evidence of a desire to follow in the line of Turkmen rulers is Ismail s assumption of the title Padishah i Iran previously held by Uzun Hasan Ehsan Yar Shater 1982 Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol 2 Routledge amp Kegan Paul p 165 Uzun Ḥasan successfully resumed the war with the Qara Qoyunlu and in the autumn of 856 1452 seized Amed in a bloodless coup while Jahangir was away on a military expedition in Kurdistan Kia Mehrdad The Ottoman Empire A Historical Encyclopedia 2 Volumes ABC CLIO 2017 Called Martha by Christian sources V Minorsky Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies Vol 17 No 3 1955 pp 449 462 There still remain many interesting and important problems connected with the emergence in the 14th century of the Turkman federations of the Qara qoyunlu 780 874 1378 1469 and Aq qoyunlu 780 908 1378 1502 The roots of the Persian Risorgimento under the Safavids 1502 1722 go deep into this preparatory period V Minorsky The Aq qoyunlu and Land Reforms Turkmenica 11 Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 17 1955 pp 449 462 There still remain many interesting and important problems connected with the emergence in the 14th century of the Turkman federations of the Qara qoyunlu 780 874 1378 1469 and Aq qoyunlu 780 908 1378 1502 The roots of the Persian Risorgimento under the Safavids 1502 1722 go deep into this preparatory period Alexander Mikaberidze 2011 Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World A Historical Encyclopedia Volume 1 ABC CLIO p 907 ISBN 978 1598843361 Retrieved February 13 2013 Peter Jackson Lawrence Lockhart 1986 The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 6 Cambridge University Press p 173 ISBN 978 0521200943 Retrieved February 13 2013 Edward Granville Browne 2009 A History of Persian Literature Under Tartar Dominion A D 1265 1502 Cambridge The University press Publication p 89 Retrieved February 4 2013 Peter Jackson Lawrence Lockhart 1986 The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 6 Cambridge University Press p 1120 ISBN 978 0521200943 Retrieved February 4 2013 Stevens John The history of Persia Contains the lives and memorable actions of its kings from the first erecting of that monarchy to this time an exact Description of all its Dominions a curious Account of India China Tartary Kerman Arabia Nixabur and the Islands of Ceylon and Timor as also of all Cities occasionally mentioned as Schiras Samarkand Bukhara amp c Manners and Customs of those People Persian Worshippers of Fire Plants Beasts Product and Trade With many instructive and pleasant digressions being remarkable Stories or Passages occasionally occurring as Strange Burials Burning of the Dead Liquors of several Countries Hunting Fishing Practice of Physick famous Physicians in the East Actions of Tamerlan amp c To which is added an abridgment of the lives of the kings of Hormuz or Ormuz The Persian history was written in Arabic by Mirkond a famous Eastern Author of Ormuz by Torunxa King of that Island both of them translated into Spanish by Antony Teixeira who lived several Years in Persia and India and now rendered into English a b c Mehmed the Conqueror amp His Time Franz Babinger Trans Ralph Manheim Princeton University Press 1992 p 305 1 ISBN 0 691 01078 1 a b c d The Cambridge history of Iran William Bayne Fisher Peter Jackson Laurence Lockhart New York Cambridge University Press 1986 p 377 2 ISBN 0 521 20094 6 Mehmed the Conqueror amp His Time Franz Babinger Trans Ralph Manheim Princeton University Press 1992 p 306 3 ISBN 0 691 01078 1 Lambton Lewis amp Holt 1985 p 299 Babinger Franz 1978 Mehmed the Conqueror and his Time Bollingen Series XCVI ed by William C Hickman trans by Ralph Manheim Princeton University Press pp 314 315 ISBN 0 691 09900 6 Historical account of discoveries and travels in Asia Hugh Murray Edinburgh A Constable and Co 1820 p 10 4 Historical account of discoveries and travels in Asia Hugh Murray Edinburgh A Constable and Co 1820 p 15 5 Historical account of discoveries and travels in Asia Hugh Murray Edinburgh A Constable and Co 1820 p 19 6 Biographie universelle ancienne et moderne J Fr Michaud Louis Gabriel Michaud Paris Michaud 1811 28 p 327 7 Mehmed the Conqueror amp His Time Franz Babinger Trans Ralph Manheim Princeton University Press 1992 p 322 8 ISBN 0 691 01078 1 Historical account of discoveries and travels in Asia Hugh Murray Edinburgh A Constable and Co 1820 p 16 9 Project Gutenberg e book A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels Volume II by Robert Kerr John E Woods The Aqquyunlu Clan Confederation Empire 1999 p 62 Caterino Zeno Iosafat Barbaro Antonio Contarini and a Merchant in Persia Travels to Tana and Persia London Hakluyt Society 1883 p 74 n 1 Also Halime Alamsah Alemshah Alemsah Roger Savory Iran Under the Safavids p 18 a b c d e f Dale Stephen Frederic 2020 Turks Turks and turk Turks Anatolia Iran and India in Comparative Perspective In Peacock A C S McClary Richard Piran eds Turkish History and Culture in India Identity Art and Transregional Connections Brill p 73 Langaroodi amp Negahban 2015 V Minorsky A Civil and Military Review in Fars in 881 1476 BSOAS 10 1939 pp 141 178 a b Halil Inalcik 1973 The Ottoman Empire The Classical Age 1300 1600 p 71 a b AQ QOYUNLu Encyclopaedia Iranica External links EditA General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels Volume 02 eBookPreceded byM uizz al Din Jihangir ibn Ali ibn Qara Yuluk Ruler of the Aq Qoyunlu1453 1478 Succeeded bySultan Khalil bin Uzun HasanSources EditAube Sandra 2016 The Uzun Hasan Mosque in Tabriz New Perspectives on a Tabrizi Ceramic Tile Workshop Muqarnas Online 33 1 33 62 doi 10 1163 22118993 03301P004 Lambton Ann Katherine Swynford Lewis Bernard Holt P M eds 1985 The Cambridge History of Islam Vol 2 Cambridge University Press Langaroodi Reza Rezazadeh Negahban Farzin 2015 Aq quyunlu In Madelung Wilferd Daftary Farhad eds Encyclopaedia Islamica Online Brill Online ISSN 1875 9831 Minorsky V 1960 Aḳ Ḳoyunlu In Gibb H A R Kramers J H Levi Provencal E Schacht J Lewis B amp Pellat Ch eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Volume I A B 2nd ed Leiden E J Brill pp 311 312 OCLC 495469456 Minorsky V amp Bosworth C E 2000 Uzun Ḥasan In Bearman P J Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E amp Heinrichs W P eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Volume X T U 2nd ed Leiden E J Brill pp 963 967 ISBN 978 90 04 11211 7 Quiring Zoche R 1986 Aq Qoyunlu Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol II Fasc 2 pp 163 168 Further reading EditMelvin Koushki Matthew 2011 The Delicate Art of Aggression Uzun Hasan s Fathnama to Qaytbay of 1469 Iranian Studies 44 2 193 214 doi 10 1080 00210862 2011 541688 S2CID 162248528 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Uzun Hasan amp oldid 1169899695, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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