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  1. Celâliye Terken Khatun (Persian: ترکان خاتون; also Turkan Khatun or Tarkhan Khatun; c. 1053 – September–October 1094) was the first wife and chief consort of Malik Shah I, Sultan of the Seljuk Empire from 1072, until his death in 1092.

  2. Issue. Muhammad II. House. Khwarazmian (by marriage) Father. Kipchak Khan. Religion. Islam. Terken Khatun ( Persian: ترکان خاتون) was the Empress of the Khwarazmian Empire by marriage to Shah Ala al-Din Tekish, and the mother and de facto co-ruler of Muhammad II of the Khwarazmian Empire.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › IltutmishIltutmish - Wikipedia

    Turkan Khatun (died after 1236; also known as Turkman Khatun or Qutub Begum), was the chief consort of Iltutmish and daughter of Qutb ud-Din Aibak. She was the mother of Nasiruddin Mahmud, Razia Sultana, Ghiyasuddin Muhammad Shah, Shihabuddin Muhammad, Shazia Begum and Qutbuddin Muhammad.

  4. Broadening to explore female rule in pre-Mongol Central Asia, Iran and the Middle East, de Nicola uses the examples of powerful women such as the Saljuq Terken Khatun, the Ayyubid Dayfa Khatun and Sultana of Egypt Shajar al-Durr, the Qarakhitai empresses Kan-t’ien and Ch’eng t’ien, and the Khwarazmian Terken Khatun.

    • Aziza Shanazarova
  5. 7 de ago. de 2020 · #TerkenHatun also known as #TurkanKhatun ("the Queen of the Turks") shown in #MendirmanJaloliddin was the Empress of the Khwarazmian Empire as the wife of Sh...

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  6. 6 de mar. de 2009 · Terken Ḵātun (cf. Bosworth, “Terken Kh ātūn”) belonged to the Qanğlı group of Turks, apparently part of the Qıpčaq confederation that at this time controlled the steppes to the north of Khwarazm (see CHORASMIA) and the Aral Sea. More precisely, Nasavi claims that she came from the Bayaʾut clan of the Yemek, the earlier Kimek, (p.

  7. 5 de sept. de 2023 · Jahan Malik Khatun (b. after 1324 CE, d. after 1382 CE), was an Injuid princess and Persian poet. The Injuid dynasty, which ruled in an area that at the hight of their political power largely overlaps with the modern-day Iranian province of Fars, was at times volatile, as they were in conflict with many neighboring rulers.