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  1. Khawand Toghay (14th-century), was a slave wife of Al-Nasir Mohammad Ibn Qala'un. She was his slave before he freed her and married her. She was known for having a kind heart, and attending to all her slaves' needs after she was freed. She gave birth to Prince Anook. She was noted as an influential woman in court decisions. References

  2. Khawand Toghay: Información profesional; Ocupación: Monarca, gobernante y comandante militar: Conflictos: Batalla de Homs y Batalla de Marj al-Suffar

  3. 6 de dic. de 2023 · In 1320, one of al-Nasir Muhammad’s wives, Khawand Toghay, arrived in Cairo (Egypt). She almost certainly arrived with luxury items and gifts that may have introduced Chinese motifs to the Mamluks. Similarly, in 1326, the Uljaytu Qur’an, a lavish Qur’an , commissioned by the Ilkhanid sultan Uljaytu and prominently featuring ...

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  4. This spectacular brass candlestick bears the name of the sultan (king) al-Malik al-Nasir Muhammad ibn Qalawun. al-Nasir Muhammad was a member of the Mamluk dynasty that ruled over key areas of West Asia and North Africa between 1250 and 1517, including the important sacred cities of Mecca and Medina.

  5. Khawand Toghay (m. 1321, d. December 1348 – January 1349, buried in her own mausoleum in the Northern Cemetery, City of the Dead.) — was a Turkish slave-girl he bought from Tankiz al-Husami, his governor in Syria. She had a brother named Amir Aqbugha. She was his favourite wife.

  6. Khawand Toghay Era conocida por tener un corazón bondadoso y atender todas las necesidades de sus esclavos después de ser liberada. Ella dio a luz al Príncipe Anook .

  7. Khawand Toghay (m. 1321, d. December 1348 – January 1349, buried in her own mausoleum in the Northern Cemetery, City of the Dead. ) — was a Turkish slave-girl he bought from Tankiz al-Husami, his governor in Syria. She had a brother named Amir Aqbugha. She was his favourite wife. Sayf al-Din Anuk (b. 8 April 1323, d. 31 August 1340)