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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › YoshmutYoshmut - Wikipedia

    Yoshmut (Persian: يوشموت) was Ilkhanate prince and one of eldest sons of Hulagu. According to Dai Matsui and Daniel King, his name was of Christian Uyghur origin and ultimately derived from Sogdian word "ʿywšmbt" (cognate with Persian: دوشنبه, romanized: Dushanbah, lit. 'Monday').

  2. Suleiman Kan (también conocido como Solayman Kan o Sulaiman Kan) fue un títere chupánida para el trono del ilkanato durante el colapso de la autoridad central en Persia. Era bisnieto del tercer hijo de Ilkan Hulagu, Yoshmut. Suleiman ascendió al trono alrededor de mayo de 1339 por Hasan Kucek.

  3. academia-lab.com › enciclopedia › suleiman-khanSuleiman Khan _ AcademiaLab

    El hijo de Yoshmut y Ilyas; El abuelo Sogai fue ejecutado por traición contra Arghun en 1289. Ilyas fue elevado al trono alrededor de mayo de 1339 por el chobanida Hasan Kucek y recibió el título de Suleiman Khan.

  4. Abaqa, Qonqurtai, Jumghur, Yoshmut i Möngke Temür Ahmad Tegüder o Ahmad Takudar (vers 1247 - 1284 ) fou el tercer Il-kan de Pèrsia (1282-1284), setè fill d' Hulagu amb la reina Qutui Khatun. El seu nom original era Tegüder, un nom mongol que vol dir "perfecte".

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › IlkhanateIlkhanate - Wikipedia

    Ilkhanate. The Ilkhanate or Il-khanate, ruled by the Il-Khans or Ilkhanids ( Persian: ایلخانان, romanized : Īlkhānān ), and known to the Mongols as Hülegü Ulus ( lit. 'people or state of Hülegü' ), [8] was a Mongol khanate established from the southwestern sector of the Mongol Empire.

  6. Life. His birth name was Ilyas and descended from the great-grandson of the Ilkhan Hülegü's third son Yoshmut. Like Jalayirid puppet Jahan Temür, his ancestors were fallen out of favor in Ilkhanate. Yoshmut lost a qurultai to Abaqa in 1265 [1] and died on 18 Jul 1271.

  7. 656/February 1258), and his subsequent dispatch of his son Yoshmut to subjugate Mayyafariqin, located east of the Tigris River. Al-Malik al-Kamil Muhammad b. al Muzaffar GhazT, the Ayyubid ruler of the city, had submitted to the Mongols as far back as 650/1253. Yet paradoxically, with the approach of Hiilegii to the area, al-Kamil showed