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  1. Gaikhatu. 24 de marzo de 1295 jul. Gaikhatu († 1295) fue el quinto gobernante del Ilkanato de Persia, de 1291 a 1295. Fungía de gobernador de Anatolia, hasta que fue nominado al trono por un influyente militar mongol, Taghachar, quien había asesinado a Arghun, hermano de Gaikhatu, e intentaba poner en su lugar a Baydu.

    • ᠭᠠᠶᠢᠬᠠᠯᠳᠤ
    • c. 1259
  2. www.wikiwand.com › es › GaikhatuGaikhatu - Wikiwand

    Gaikhatu fue el quinto gobernante del Ilkanato de Persia, de 1291 a 1295. For faster navigation, this Iframe is preloading the Wikiwand page for Gaikhatu . Home

  3. Gaikhatu († 1295) fue el quinto gobernante del Ilkanato de Persia, de 1291 a 1295. Fungía de gobernador de Anatolia , hasta que fue nominado al trono por un influyente militar mongol , Taghachar , quien había asesinado a Arghun , hermano de Gaikhatu, e intentaba poner en su lugar a Baydu .

  4. referenceworks.brillonline.comgaikhatu-SIM_2407Gaik̲h̲ātū — Brill

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    • Foundation by Hulegu
    • Rivalries with The Khanates
    • Muslim-Christian Relations
    • A Waning Economy
    • A Muslim State
    • Disintegration

    The name Ilkhanate derives from ilkhan, meaning viceroy or 'ruler of a pacified area' which was the title given to Hulegu (aka Huleu) by the then Great Khan or 'universal ruler' of the Mongol Empire, Mongke Khan (r. 1251-1259 CE). Hulegu was an able general and the son of Tolui, the grandson of Genghis Khan (r. 1206-1227 CE), and the younger brothe...

    The Ilkhanate was involved in several battles over the next century against its three chief neighbouring states: the Chagatai Khanate to the east, the Golden Horde to the north, and Mamluk Egypt to the west. There were other, more occasional threats, too, such as the unruly Afghans and the emerging Ottomans. The Ilkhanate sometimes won and sometime...

    Abaqa may have favoured Nestorian Christianity in his realm, although the general populace, especially in Iran, was largely Muslim. Certainly, the ilkhan's coins carried both a cross and a Christian formula. There were also a sizeable number of Monophysite and GreekOrthodox Christians in the Ilkhanate's mixed population that included minorities of ...

    The stability of the state was endangered following the dynastic wrangles between the Ilkhans Baidu and Gaikhatu from 1291 CE following the death of Arghun, with each taking a turn and each being overthrown. The period saw vast overspending by the state caused by ill-advised handouts to favoured aristocrats and the disastrous introduction of paper ...

    The next ilkhan was Ghazan (r. 1295-1304 CE), eldest son of Arghun, who took power thanks to a wave of unpopularity regarding Baidu. The new ilkhan sorted out the economy by issuing a new and centrally-controlled coinage. Significantly, considering the failure of paper money, Ghazan's coins sometimes carried the legend 'real money.' Ghazan converte...

    In 1322 CE a peace treaty was finally drawn up with the Mamluks, and the state seemed as healthy as it had ever been. However, in 1335 CE, the death of Ghazan's son and successor, Abu Said (r. 1316-1335 CE), brought another series of dynastic squabbles - not helped by the young ilkhanrequiring a regent in the early part of his reign, the overly amb...

    • Mark Cartwright
  5. Gaikhatu, who had been governor of Anatolia and was well aware of the perennial instability of the frontier region, became Ilkhan in 1291. Determined to restore order, he arrived in Kayseri with a huge army in October 1291.

  6. Bar Hebraeus’ continuator depicts Gaikhatu as reluctant to accept the throne and as preferring to remain in Rūm, where he had been governor for the previous six years, an assertion seemingly borne out by the new sovereign’s swift return to Anatolia and the delay in his enthronement until Rajab 691/June 1292. 79 Close Gaikhatu’s ...