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  1. Shams al-Din Juvayni (Persian: شمس‌الدین جوینی; also spelled Joveyni) was a Persian statesman and member of the Juvayni family. He was an influential figure in early Ilkhanate politics, serving as sahib-i divan (vizier and minister of finance) under four Mongol Ilkhans – Hulagu, Abaqa, Tekuder and Arghun Khan.

  2. Shams al-din Muhammad Juvayni (Persian: شمس‌الدین محمد جوینی) was a Persian statesman and member of the Juvayni family. He served as the state treasurer (mustawfi) of the Khwarazmshah Ala al-Din Muhammad II (r. 1200–1220) and his son Jalal ad-Din Mingburnu (r. 1220–1231).

  3. Some Mongol Insha Collections. 1999, Charles Melville (ed.), Proceedings of the Third European Conference of Iranian Studies. Wiesbaden: Reichert. Published in 1999, this short paper is a brief discussion of three manuscripts containing letters written by the Juvayni brothers, Shams al-Din Muhammad and Ata Malik.

    • Juergen Paul
  4. 17 de abr. de 2012 · JOVAYNI, ṢĀḤEB DIVĀN ŠAMS-AL-DIN MOḤAMMAD b. Moḥammad (k. 4 Šaʿbān 683/16 October 1284), Persian statesman of the early Il-khanaid period and the younger brother of the historian ʿAlāʾ-al-Din ʿAṭā-Malek Jovayni (q.v.). He was known as ṣāḥeb (-e) divān (chief of secretariat, chief financial officer, vizier ...

  5. Juvayni has dedicated the concluding one-third of his history to this campaign, depicting it as the pinnacle of the Mongol conquest in the Muslim lands. His account contains inconsistencies and exaggerations and has been "corrected" based on other sources.

  6. Shams al-Din Juvaynii, the vizier and patron : mediation between ruler and ruled in the Ilkhanate / Esther Ravalde. The economic role of Mongol women : continuity and transformation from Mongolia to Iran / Bruno De Nicola. Faith and the law : religious beliefs and the death penalty in the Ilkhanate / Florence Hodous. Part 3. Culture and the arts.

  7. ʿAṭā Malek Joveynī (born 1226, Joveyn, Khorāsān—died 1283, Azerbaijan, Iran) was a Persian historian. Joveynī was the first of several brilliant representatives of Persian historiography who flourished during the period of Mongol domination in Iran (1220–1336).