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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Möge_KhatunMöge Khatun - Wikipedia

    Möge Khatun (died 1242), was a princess of the Bakrin tribe and concubine of Genghis Khan. After the Khan’s death, Möge became a wife of Genghis' son, Ögedei Khan. She was briefly regent in 1241. According to the historian Juvayni, "she was given to Genghis Khan by a chief of the Bakrin tribe, and he loved her very much."

    • 1190s
    • 1229 – 1241
    • Karakorum
    • 1242, Karakorum, Mongol Empire
  2. Möge Khatun was a concubine of Genghis Khan and she later became a wife of his son Ögedei Khan. The Persian historian Ata-Malik Juvayni records that Möge Khatun "was given to Chinggis Khan by a chief of the Bakrin tribe, and he loved her very much." Ögedei favored her as well and she accompanied him on his hunting expeditions.

  3. Möge Khatun era una princesa de la tribu Bakrin y concubina de Genghis Khan y, después de su muerte, esposa del hijo de Genghis, Ögedei Khan . [1] Según el historiador Juvayni , "un jefe de la tribu Bakrin la entregó a Genghis Khan, y él la amaba mucho". Ögedei también la favorecía y ella lo acompañaba en sus expediciones de caza. [2 ...

  4. Töregene Khatun (also Turakina, Mongolian: Дөргэнэ, ᠲᠦᠷᠭᠡᠨ ᠡ) (d. 1246) was the Great Khatun and regent of the Mongol Empire from the death of her husband Ögedei Khan in 1241 until the election of her eldest son Güyük Khan in 1246.

    • 1242–1246
    • Ögedei
    • 1241–1246
    • Güyük
  5. reign of Ögetei Khan’s wife, Töregene Khatun (r. 1241–6), first empress regent of the Mongols. Second, the role of Sorghaghtani Beki (d. 1251/2), wife of Tolui and arguably the power behind the throne, is considered vis-à-vis the reign of the second Mongol regent Oghul Qaimish (r. 1248–50).

  6. Commercial Queens: Mongolian Khatuns and the Silk Road. Road1. TIMOTHY MAY. Abstract. Three women dominated the politics and government of the Mongol Empire in the decade of the 1240s. Töregene and Oghul-Qaimish ruled as regents and are credited with corruption and petty politics.

  7. 2 de oct. de 2019 · Historians note that immediately after the Great Khan’s death, some indeed looked to Möge for leadership: “…the dispatch of orders and the assembling of the people took place at the door of the ordu or palace of his wife, Möge Khatun” (Rashīd al-Dīn 1998, 239).