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  1. Muḥammad ibn Tughluq (Delhi, 1290-Sind, 20 de marzo de 1351) fue el segundo sultán (13251351) de la dinastía tughlaq, quien brevemente extendió el dominio del sultanato de Delhi desde el norte de la India hasta casi la mayoría del subcontinente.

  2. Muhammad bin Tughluq (Persian pronunciation: [mohæmmæd bon tuɡluq]; 1290 – 20 March 1351), also named Jauna Khan as Crown Prince, also known by his epithets, The Eccentric Prince, or The Mad Sultan, or The Wisest Fool was the eighteenth Sultan of Delhi.

  3. Muḥammad ibn Tughluq (born c. 1290, Delhi, India—died March 20, 1351, Sonda, Sindh [now in Pakistan]) was the second sultan of the Tughluq dynasty (reigned 132551), who briefly extended the rule of the Delhi sultanate of northern India over most of the subcontinent.

  4. Ibn Battuta met Muhammad bin Tughluq, presenting him with gifts of arrows, camels, thirty horses, slaves and other goods. Muhammad bin Tughlaq responded by giving Ibn Battuta with a welcoming gift of 2,000 silver dinars, a furnished house and the job of a judge with an annual salary of 5,000 silver dinars that Ibn Battuta had the ...

  5. Muḥammad ibn Tughluq fue el segundo sultán (1325–1351) de la dinastía tughlaq, quien brevemente extendió el dominio del sultanato de Delhi desde el norte de la India hasta casi la mayoría del subcontinente.

  6. 22 de nov. de 2022 · Ghiyasuddin Tughluq (aka Ghiyath al-Din Tughluq, r. 1320-1325) was the founder of the Tughluq dynasty. He was governor of the northwest provinces at the time of Nasiruddin Khusrav Shah (r. 1320), a Hindu convert. The Turk tribes did not reconcile to the rule of a converted Muslim as they believed in the superiority of the Turkish race.

  7. The son and successor of the Turk Ghiyas-ud-din (reigned 1321-1325), the founder of the Tughluq dynasty that replaced Khilji rule in Delhi, Muhammad bin Tughluq displayed an extraordinary capacity for classical learning and military leadership.