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  1. Tampoco las tuvo con Baydu, quien destronó a su primo Gaikhatu y usurpó el trono. A razón de esto, Ghazan y Baydu emprendieron una guerra abierta, y luego de un primer encuentro, al que siguió una tregua, Ghazan pasó el verano de 1295 en las montañas al norte de la actual Teherán , donde se convirtió al islam, ejemplo que siguieron las tropas que estaban a su mando.

  2. 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 munificence, which for Waṣṣāf exceeded that of any ...

  3. 20 de mar. de 2021 · About Geikhatu Ilkhan Hulaguid, Grand Khan of Persia. Gaykhatu (Mongolian: Gaikhalt; Mongolian Cyrillic: Гайхалт, died 1295) was the fifth Ilkhanate ruler in Iran. He reigned from 1291 to 1295. During his reign, Gaykhatu was a noted dissolute who was addicted to wine, women, and sodomy, according to Mirkhond. [1]

  4. 28 de dic. de 2023 · Daihatsu compartió en su sitio web una lista de los 64 modelos afectados en el escándalo de seguridad de diciembre. Entre esos modelos, hay varios que se enviaron fuera de Japón, por ejemplo, a ...

  5. Gaykhatu. Gaykhatu (Mongolian: Gaikhalt; Mongolian Cyrillic: Гайхалт, died 1295) was the fifth Ilkhanate ruler in Iran. He reigned from 1291 to 1295. During his reign, Gaykhatu was a noted dissolute who was addicted to wine, women, and sodomy, according to Mirkhond. His Buddhist baghshi gave him the Tibetan name Rinchindorj.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BayduBaydu - Wikipedia

    Baydu ( Mongolian script: ᠪᠠᠶᠢᠳᠤ; Mongolian: Байду) (died 1295) was the sixth ruler of the Mongol empire's Ilkhanate division in Iran. He was the son of Taraqai, who was in turn the fifth son of Hulagu Khan. [3] He succeeded his cousin Gaykhatu as khan of the Ilkhanate state in 1295.

  7. 1291–1295)—also supported the Dharma. 51 Gaikhatu’s investiture ceremony, for example, included a tantric initiation, and Arghun held debates at his court that pitted Indian, Tibetan, and Uygur Buddhists against local Muslim scholars such as “Ala” ad-Dawla as-Simnani. 52 Arghun, moreover, wanted his son, the future Ghazan Khan, to be trained in the faith. 53 Yet this period of Mongol ...