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  1. It was Mahmud Ghazan (1295 – 1304) who solved the Ilkhanate’s continued religious and economic problems. He was the first Ilkhan to convert to Islam, thus rehabilitating their image in the eyes of their Muslim subjects and making their rule much more acceptable.

  2. Arghun died in 1291 and a struggle for succession followed. In 1295 Ghazan Khan ascended the throne of the Il-Khans and proclaimed himself a Muslim monarch. With his conversion, Islam won the battle for the soul of the Mongols. This victory was decisive. From now on Asia would belong to Islam. Christianity was to be relegated to the west.

  3. The Legend of Korra (Libro 3) Libro Tres: Cambio, es el tercer libro de la serie animada de televisión La leyenda de Korra distribuida por Nickelodeon. Está compuesto por trece episodios. Es la continuación del Libro 2: Espíritus. Este tercer libro se trata acerca del cambio provocado por la Convergencia Armónica y la pelea que tuvo Korra ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ghazan_IIGhazan II - Wikipedia

    Ghazan II (Persian: غازان) was the last nominal ruler of the Ilkhanate. Life [ edit ] His existence is known through works of medieval authors and numismatics, but otherwise is unattested in history.

  5. 17. Nala Hamzah Ghazan Nala: jantung hati Hamzah: kuat, berani, tabah Ghazan: orang yang berbakti kepada keluarganya. 18. Nasir Nadim Ghazan Nasir: penolong Nadim: pendamping Ghazan: orang yang berbakti kepada keluarganya. 19. Irwan Biantara Ghazan Irwan: kemurnian Biantara: penguasa udara Ghazan: orang yang berbakti kepada keluarganya. 20.

  6. "History and myth: the Persianisation of Ghazan Khan" Charles P Melville Irano-Turkic Cultural contacts in the 11th-17th centuries, ed. E. Jeremias, Piliscaba, 2003, pp.133-160

  7. The Mongol invasions of the Islamic world began in 1221 with the conquest of eastern Iran. A more devastating wave of conquest, however, came with Genghis Khan’s grandson Hülegü, when Mongol forces subjugated all of Iran and by 1258 had also taken Baghdad, thus bringing to an end the Abbasid caliphate (750–1258).