Results 71 to 80 of about 824 (151)
Mediating Sacred Kingship: Conversion and Sovereignty in Mongol Iran [PDF]
This dissertation focuses on the fashioning of new discourses on authority and sacral kingship in thirteenth and fourteenth-century Mongol-ruled Iran. It examines how Jewish and Muslim (both Shiʿi and Sunni) bureaucrats, court historians, scholars, and ...
Brack, Jonathan Z.
core
Ilkhanid Sources in the Mamluk Sultanate: The Use of Juvaynī’s Tārīkh-i Jahāngushā by al-ʿUmarī and Ibn Kathīr [PDF]
In the Mamluk Sultanate there was clearly not only an elaborate interest in the Mongols, but an active exchange of ideas and information between the sultanate and Mongol territories, especially the Ilkhanate.
van den Bent, Josephine
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Political Repressions in the Mongol Empire, Golden Horde and Other Turkic-Mongol States, and their Justifications (13th–16th cc.) [PDF]
In this article the author analyses the cases of political repressions in the Mongol Empire, Golden Horde and other Turkic-Mongol states of the 13th–16th centuries.
R.Yu. Pochekaev
doaj
Ibn Kammūnah Is Going to Hell! Muslim-Jewish Polemics at the Ilkhanid Court [PDF]
This article offers some initial findings concerning the triangular relationship between three Ilkhanid intellectuals: the convert and vizier Rashīd al-Dīn, the Muslim polymath al-Shīrāzī, and the Jewish philosopher Ibn Kammūnah. By exploring these links,
Brack, Jonathan
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Dimitri Korobeinikov. “The Ilkhans in the Byzantine Sources” [PDF]
openaire +3 more sources
The current study sheds light on the role of one of the most important Prince and leaders of the history of Mongolian Ilkhanate country in Iran: he is Prince Qutlugh, the son of Manghuhdaye of the Mangaquti tribe who were Mongolians.
Sarmad Farhan, Othman Omer
doaj +1 more source
The Term Turkī Khāliṣ in Mamluk Sources [PDF]
The phenomenon of mamluks of Mongol origin during the early Mamluk period (roughly 648–741/1250–1341) has been studied by several scholars, but mamluks of Mongol origin during later periods have hardly received scholarly attention.
Yosef, Koby
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With the death of Abū Sa‘īd Bahādur Khan in 1335 without an heir, powerful tribes under the centralised Ilkhanid state sought to assert control. Among them was the Mongolized Jalayir tribe, originally Turkic.
Ahmet Korkmaz
doaj +1 more source
History of Islamic Medical Schools in Turkey’s Territory [PDF]
Çıkmaz S, Mesut R.
europepmc +1 more source

