Jump to content

Category:Temür Qutlugh

From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository
<nowiki>Temür Qutlugh; Temür Qutlugh; Тимур Кутлуг; Temür Kutlug kán; Timur Kutlugh; 帖木兒·忽格魯特; Temür Qutlugh; Temür Qutlugh; Цімур Кутлуг; Timur Kutlug; 帖木儿·忽格鲁特; Тимур Кутлуг-кан; Timur Kutlug; ティムール・クトルグ; Kutlug Timur; Tímúr Kutluk; تيمور قتلج; Temür Kutług; Тимур-Кутлук; Temür Qutlugh; 帖木兒·忽格魯特; Timer Qotlığ; Төмөрхүтлүг; Qutlugʻ temur; Темір Құтлық; تيمور قتلغ; 帖木儿·忽格鲁特; Timur Qutluq xan; Khan de la Horde d'Or; Khan of the Golden Horde; chan Złotej Ordy; 金帳汗的汗; az Arany Horda kánja; Temur Qutlugh; Temur Qutlugh; Temür Kutlugh; Temür Qutlugh; Kutluk; Темир кутлуг; Тимур-Кутлуг; Тимур-Кутлук; Тимур Кутлуг-хан; Тимур Кутлук</nowiki>
Temür Qutlugh 
Khan of the Golden Horde
Yadgar Oghlan (Temür Qutlugh), at the court of Khalil Sultan in Samarkand in 1405-1406
Upload media
Date of birth1370 (statement with Gregorian date earlier than 1584)
Date of death1399, 1400
Sarai Berke
Occupation
Position held
  • khan
Family
  • Tuqatimurids
Father
  • Timur-Malik
Child
  • Temur Khan ibn Temur Qutlugh
  • Shadi Beg
Authority file
Edit infobox data on Wikidata

Temür Qutlugh

  • "Clearly, the presence of Chinggisid dependants at Timur's court contributed to his enormous prestige; and they duly enjoyed the place of greatest honour at his headquarters. When he received Toqtamish's emissary at Aqsulat in 807/1404-5, the Ögödeyid Taīzi Oghlan and the Jochids Chekire (Schiltberger's 'Zegre', a future contestant for the throne of the Qipchaq khanate) and Bash Temür (see above) were seated on his right; Timurid princes had the lowlier position on his left. A miniature in the Diez Album in Berlin, probably dating from the reign of Khalil Sultan and within two or three years of Timur's death, depicts an enthroned monarch, with a number of (named) princes and amirs below him. Again in the place of greatest honour, on Khalil Sultan's right, are four Chinggisids: Täīzī Oghlan (alias Öljei Temür); Chinggis Oghlan (alias Chekire); another Jochid, Yadgar Oghlan (a son of the late khan Temür Qutlugh); and Ajashirin, one of the eastern branch of the Chaghadayids resident in Gansu that governed the principality of Hami. It is striking that the two last-named princes do not even appear in the Timurid narrative sources. In all likelihood, the number of Chinggisids who looked to Timur to enhance or redress their fortunes was greater than those sources indicate." in From Genghis Khan to Tamerlane: The Reawakening of Mongol Asia, Peter Jackson, Yale University Press, 2024, p.351

Media in category "Temür Qutlugh"

This category contains only the following file.