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  1. The vizier Taj al-Mulk and Malik-shah's widow, Terken Khatun, patronized the building of a madrasa to compete with Nazim's Nizamiya. [110] Control over the Abassids in Iraq (1055-1135) [ edit ]

    • 3,900,000 km² (1,500,000 sq mi)
  2. 1055. 1) Terken Khatun. (daughter of Ibrahim Tamghach-Khan, Khagan of the Western Kara-Khanids) (2) Zubaida Khatun. (daughter of Yaquti ibn Chaghri-Beg) (3) Tajuddin Safariyya Khatun. 19 November 1092. Nasir ad-Dunya wa ad-Din. ناصر الدنیا والدین.

    Laqab
    Given Name
    Regnal Name
    Rukn ad-Dunya wa ad-Din رکن الدنیا ...
    Muhammad
    Toghrul-Beg (1037–1063)
    Diya ad-Din Adud ad-Dawlah ضياء الدين عضد ...
    Muhammad
    Alp Arslan (1063–1072)
    Muizz ad-Din Jalal ad-Dawlah معز الدین ...
    Hasan
    Malik-Shah I (1072–1092)
    Nasir ad-Dunya wa ad-Din ناصر الدنیا ...
    Mahmud I (1092–1094) [2]
    1087 or 1088 [3]
  3. Seljuki Khatun ( Arabic: سلجوقي خاتون) or Saljuqi Khatun was a Seljuk [2] Turkish princess of Rum, daughter of sultan Kilij Arslan II and wife of Abbasid caliph al-Nasir .

    • Baghdad
    • 1186 – 1188
    • Seljuk Empire: Fast Facts
    • The Seljuk Dynasty
    • Sultans of The Seljuk Empire
    • How Sultan Alp Arslan Expanded The Seljuk Empire
    • The Golden Age of Great Seljuk
    • Onset of Chaos and Divisions in The Empire
    • Ultimate Collapse
    • More Seljuk Empire Facts

    Period: High Middle Ages (1000-1250 AD) Languages: Persian, Oghuz Turkic, Arabic First Sultan: Toghrul I Last Sultan: Toghrul III Religion: Sunni Muslim Founders: Tughril and Chagri Area: 3,850,000 km2(1,480,000 sq m)

    In the 10th century, a warlord from the Oghuz Turkic tribes known as Seljuk established the Seljuq dynasty. Seljuk is believed to have hailed from the Qiniq tribe, one of the numerous tribes that made up Oghuz Turkic people. That same century, the descendants of Seljuk migrated to Khwarezm (Chorasmia) in western Cenral Asia, where many of them beca...

    The rulers of the Seljuk dynasty were known as the Great Seljuk. The first ruler of the Seljuk Empire was Tughril (c. 993-1063), who was born Abu Talib Muhammad Tughril ibn Mika’il. Tughril is regarded as the founder of the Seljuk Empire. Tughril, who co-ruled with his brother Chagri, was a powerful military leader who brought many Turkmen warriors...

    After Tughril’s death in 1063, his nephew Alp Arslan (son of Tughril’s brother Chaghri Beg) succeeded him to the throne. Alp Arslan continued in the footsteps of his father and uncle by expanding the boundaries of the Seljuk Empire into Armenia and Georgia in 1064. In the latter part of the 1060s, Arslan conquered the remaining part of Anatolia. In...

    Sultan Malik-Shah I (8 August 1055 – 19 November 1092) is credited with ushering in the golden age of Great Seljuk, a period that saw tremendous growth in the social and economic fortunes of the Seljuk Empire, as well territorial gains. Such was Malik-Shah I’s fame that the Abbasid Caliph described him as “The Sultan of the East and West” in 1087. ...

    The Seljuk Empire had its first major internal strife following the death of Sultan Malik-Shah I in 1092. In Anatolia, Kilij Arslan I succeeded the Sultan. In Syria, Malik’s brother Tutush I became sultan, and in Persia, his son Mahmud I took the reins of power. However, Mahmud I’s claim to the throne was contested by three other children of Malik ...

    After the death of Sultan Ahmad Sanjar (ruler of Khorasan – 1097-1118; Seljuk Emperor – 1118-1157), bigger divisions and fractures appeared in the Seljuk Empire. During the reign of Sultan Togrul III (reign – 1176 to 1194), the Abbasid caliph an-Nasir formed an alliance with the Khwarezmshah Takash. The Seljuk sultan suffered a humiliated defeat at...

    As the Seljuk Empire increased in size, Sultan Alp Arslan and his viziers came up with a governance system of Atabek/Atabey/Atabeg (i.e. governor) to steer the affair of the various principalities in the empire. The gains made by the Seljuk Empire in eastern Anatolia likely triggered the First Crusade (1095-1099). Examples of rulers to hold the tit...

  4. 30 de mar. de 2020 · Terken Khatun (Persian: ترکان خاتون‎) (c. 1055 – September–October 1094) also known as Turkan Khatun ("the Queen of the Turks") was the Empress of the Seljuk Empire as the first wife and chief consort of Malik Shah I, Sultan of the Seljuk Empire from 1072, until his death in 1092.

  5. Seljuki Khatun or Saljuqi Khatun was a Seljuk Turkish princess of Rum, daughter of sultan Kilij Arslan II and wife of Abbasid caliph al-Nasir.

  6. 9 de feb. de 2024 · Biography. Seljuki Khatun was a daughter of sultan of Rum, Kilij Arslan II. She had eleven brothers,including future sultan Kaykhusraw I, and two older sisters. She spent her childhood at her father's court in Konya . She married caliph al-Nasir ( r. 1180–1225) in 1186.