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  1. Pari Khan Khanum (Persian: پریخان خانم, also spelled Parikhan Khanum; 1548–12 February 1578, aged 29) was a Safavid princess, the daughter of the Safavid king Tahmasp I (r. 1524 – 1576) and his Circassian consort, Sultan-Agha Khanum .

  2. A majority of Safavid sources give the credit for the ingenious scheme that brought him to power to a Safavid princess, Pan Khan Khanum. Pari Khan Khanum's adventurous life, especially after the death of Tahmasb, is an illustration of the significant, though largely behind-the-scenes, role of women in the Safavid court.

  3. Pari Khan Khanum: A Masterful Safavid Princess | Iranian Studies | Cambridge Core. Home. > Journals. > Iranian Studies. > Volume 28 Issue 3-4. > Pari Khan Khanum: A Masterful Safavid Princess. English. Français. Pari Khan Khanum: A Masterful Safavid Princess. Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022. Shohreh Gholsorkhi.

  4. Pari Khan Khanum was born in August 1548 in Ahar, Iran to Safavid Shah Tahmasp & Sultan-Agha Khanum, a Safavid Queen and the second wife of Tahmasp. Growing up, she was involved in court and bureaucratic life but as her fathers rule came to an end, he gave her more authority and the legal status that allow her to acquire more power. Near the ...

  5. Pari Khan Khanum, who virtually ruled Iran during the last years of her father’s reign and played a key role in the rise to power of her brother Isma’il Mirza, left a strong impression on the minds of chroniclers.

  6. 23 de abr. de 2009 · 56 Some of the Safavid chronicles point to Makhdum Sharifi's amicable relations with Pari Khan Khanum, the powerful sister of Ismail II. According to Munshi, after the death of Ismail, it was Pari Khan Khanum who ordered the release of Makhdum Sharifi from jail. A similar account is given by Qummi.

  7. The writers repeatedly granted these princesses, particularly Mahin Banu (1519–1562), Pari Khan Khanum (d. 1578), and Zaynab Begum (d. /1640), titles ordinarily reserved for the Safavid kings.