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BABUR’S TIMURID SULTANATE

Zahiriddin Muhammad Bobur merosining Sharq davlatchiligi va madaniyati rivojida tutgan o‘rni, 2023
This article discusses the historical neglect of Babur, the founder of the Babur Empire in South Asia, and the recent resurgence of interest in his role due to political and religious controversies. Historically, scholars have focused on his son Akbar as the empire's founder, largely ignoring Babur's heritage and his reign's early years ...
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Timurid Stucco Decoration

Annales islamologiques, 1984
O'Kane Bernard. Timurid Stucco Decoration. In: Annales islamologiques 20, 1984. pp. 61-84.
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The Timurid Empire

2020
The author discusses in detail the genesis and make-up of the gigantic empire founded by Timur (Temur) or Tamerlane at Samarqand in 1370. Despite the period of disorder following Timur’s death the empire faced a second period of reconsolidation under Shahrukh. However, it was not able to survive the vicious succession struggles that followed Shahrukh’s
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Timurid India

2018
This chapter will show how the Mughals in India entered a world in which the value of Timurid sovereignty (initially crucial following the capture of Delhi by Timur) had become irrelevant, leaving behind only the traumatic memories of destruction and pillage.
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Timurid Signs of Sovereignty

Oriente Moderno, 1996
As rulers of Iran and Central Asia in the late 14th and 15 th centuries, the Timu ids drew upon diverse sources to establish their authority and legitimacy. They considered themselves heirs to the Chinghizid line, but they were also rulers of a Muslim polity, and several scholars, notably Manz (1988), Woods (1990) and Subtelny (1994; 1995), have ...
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Timurid Commercial Relations with China

2023
Political and commercial relations between the Timurid Empire (1370–1507) and the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) in China are mostly framed by the so-called “tribute system.” It is indeed difficult to investigate and analyze these relations without referring to this theoretical framework.
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Centralisation and Timurid Creativity

Oriente Moderno, 1996
The myth of the Timurid period as one of super-creativity, if not actu ally adumbrated by Tamerlane himself,1 was propaga ed, largely for political reasons, by his successors,2 and by later dynasties, the Safavids, the Mughals and even the Ottomans. It was strikingly successful: only the Mamluks, who nevertheless shared the Timurids' Turco-Mongolian ...
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Tamerlane and the Timurids

2018
The Timurid dynasty was founded in 1370 by the Turkic warlord Temür, usually known in the west as Tamerlane (Temür the lame). Rising to power within the realm of Chinggis Khan’s second son Chaghadai, Temür established his capital at Samarqand and embarked on a career of conquest throughout the former Mongolian Empire and the Central Islamic lands ...
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The Legacy of the Timurids

Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1998
The term Timurid is generally understood to comprise all Timur's descendants who reigned or competed for power in western Turkistan, Iran and Afghanistan in the century demarcated by the deaths of Timur in 1405 and Sultan Husayn Bayqara of Herat in 1506.
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Tabrizi Woodcarvings in Timurid Iran

2014
The entrance doors to the Yesil Turbe in Bursa of western Anatolia are artefacts of manifold interest for the study of the importance of the city of Tabriz in Iran of the Timurid era. The doors to this particular tomb-shrine can be dated to the early 15th century, having been carved and constructed for the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed I who died in the month ...
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