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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Arghun_AqaArghun Aqa - Wikipedia

    Arghun Agha, also Arghun Aqa or Arghun the Elder (Persian: ارغون آقا; Mongolian: ᠠᠷᠭᠤᠨ; fl. 1220 - 1275) was a Mongol noble of the Oirat clan in the 13th century. He was a governor in the Mongol-controlled area of Persia from 1243 to 1255, before the Ilkhanate was created by Hulagu.

  2. The purpose here is to examine the administrative career of Arghun Aqa and attempt to account in some fashion for its extraordinary longevity. Arghun's Career: From Slave to Il-Khanid Commander The story of Arghun Aqa's origins has two striking and apparently incompatible variants. According to one of his factotums, the chronicler Ata Malik ...

  3. Arghun Aqa: Mongol Bureaucrat. Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022. George Lane. Article. Metrics. Get access. Cite. Rights & Permissions. Extract. The question of who ran the Mongol Empire has long challenged historians, and various theories have emerged and retreated in answer to this problem.

  4. 12 de ago. de 2011 · ARḠŪN ĀQĀ (Turkish arḡun “half breed” and Mongol aqa “elder brother”), Mongol administrator in Iran (d. 673/1275). He belonged to the Oirat tribe, and his father, Taiču, according to Jovaynī, was a commander of a thousand.

  5. The Jami` al-tawarikh (Collected histories ) of Rashid al-Din Tabib (d. 1318) has long been considered the single richest witness to the history of the early Mongol Empire in general and its Middle Eastern branch, the Ilkhanate, in particular.

    • George Lane
  6. Arghun Aqas Family1 ISHAYAHU LANDA Abstract The paper discusses the questions of the alleged conversion of Arghun Aqa, the powerful Mongol governor of great parts of Western Asia in the mid-13th century, to Islam, claimed by the famous Armenian historian Kirakos. While in the end dismissing the historicity of this claim, the paper uses a

  7. 1 de sept. de 1999 · Abstract The paper discusses the questions of the alleged conversion of Arghun Aqa, the powerful Mongol governor of great parts of Western Asia in the mid-13th century, to Islam, claimed by the … Expand