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  1. Jorge VI el Menor (en georgiano: გიორგი VI მცირე, Giorgi VI Mtsire) (1308-1313), de los Bagrationi fue el 19º Rey de Georgia en 1311–1313. Hijo de David VIII, fue nombrado rey de Georgia (de hecho, sólo de la parte oriental del país) por el Ilkan Öljeitü a la muerte de su padre en 1311. Reinó bajo la regencia de su ...

  2. Il Khanid ruler of Iran Muslim name Moḥammad Khudābanda born 1280 died Dec. 16, 1316, Solṭānīyeh, near Kazvin, Iran eighth Il Khan ruler of Iran, during whose reign the Shīʿite branch of Islām was first proclaimed the state religion of

  3. According to the XIII c. Armenian historian Kirakos Gandzakecʻi, in 703 of the Armenian chronology (1254),4 Öljeitü Khan sent Arghun to Armenia and Georgia and Ałuank to collect tribute despite rigid measures for collecting taxes from all of the people, ‘from clergy did not collect any taxes because there was no order from the khan [Öljeitü].’5 This message of Gandzakecʻi is ...

  4. 71/150 Öljeitü - Mitos Y Leyendas - Hordas. $ 500 – $ 3.000. La Imagen es referencial – si necesita foto real de la carta o producto la puede solicitar a nuestro whatsapp. Escribenos al whatsapp.

  5. In Kitāb al-Sulṭāniyya, for example, the Ilkhanid vizier deploys a slightly altered version of the mujaddid tradition to cast Öljeitü as a prophesized, centennially designated reformer king whose reign ends a century of infidel revival. 36 Several accounts indicate, moreover, that the start of Öljeitü’s reign was marked by an immediate and tangible worsening in the conditions of ...

  6. 11 de abr. de 2024 · Temür (born 1265, China—died 1307, China) was the grandson and successor of the great Kublai Khan; he ruled (1295–1307) as emperor of the Yuan (Mongol) dynasty (1206–1368) of China and as great khan of the Mongol Empire. He was the last Yuan ruler to maintain firm control over China, but he never exercised real power over Mongol ...

  7. 33 She was the seventh wife of Öljeitü and a granddaughter of Arghun Aqa (Qāshāni, 1968), vol. 1, pp. 26, 51; Ch. Melville, “Bologan Khatun”, Encyclopedia Iranica IV (1989), p. 339. On the other hand, Muʿizz al-Ansāb calls the fourth wife “Taghai, from Khurasan, daughter of Amir Yisu, son of Arghun Aqa, former wife of the son of Ghazan Khan” ( MA , p. 97).