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Sultan Giyasuddin Muhammad Uzbek Khan (Turki/Kypchak and Persian: غیاث الدین محمد اوزبیک خان, Ğiyāsuddin Muḥammad Özbäk Khān), better known as Uzbeg, Uzbek or Ozbeg (1282–1341), was the longest-reigning khan of the Golden Horde (1313–1341), under whose rule the state reached its zenith.
Apr 1, 2024 · Öz Beg was a Mongol leader and khan of the Golden Horde, or Kipchak empire, of southern Russia, under whom it attained its greatest power. He reigned from 1312 to 1341. Öz Beg was a convert to Islām, but he also welcomed Christian missionaries from western Europe into his realm.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Öz Beg Khan. Sultan Giyasuddin Muhammad Uzbek Khan (Turki/Kypchak and Persian: غیاث الدین محمد اوزبیک خان, Ğiyāsuddin Muḥammad Özbäk Khān), better known as Uzbeg, Uzbek or Ozbeg (1282–1341), was the longest-reigning khan of the Golden Horde (1313–1341), under whose rule the state reached its zenith.
A large-scale hand-coloured lubok by I.G. Blinov (ink, tempera, gold), 1890s. By the 1380s, the Shaybanids and Qashan attempted to break free of the Khan's power. [citation needed] Mamai hired Genoese, Circassian, and Alan mercenaries for another attack on Moscow in 1380.
Shaybani’s direct descendants (the Shaybanids) ruled in Bukhara until 1599 and were succeeded by other Turko-Mongol tribes from other genealogical lines, the Janids or Ashtarkhanids (1599–1747), and the Manghits (1756–1920). The Manghits, however, could not claim to be part of the Golden Kin, and so their rulers were called emirs rather ...
Sultan Mohammed Öz Beg, better known as Uzbeg or Ozbeg (1282–1341, reign 1313–1341), was the longest-reigning khan of the Golden Horde, under whose rule the state reached its zenith. [1] He was succeeded by his son Jani Beg. He was the son of Toghrilcha and grandson of Mengu-Timur, who had been...
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Taydula Khatun (Tay-Dūla Ḫātūn; died 1360) was a queen consort of the Mongol Golden Horde as the wife of Öz Beg Khan (r. 1313–1341) and possibly Nawruz Beg Khan (r. 1360). She was also the mother of the khans Tini Beg (r. 1341–1342) and Jani Beg (r. 1342–1357), and the grandmother of Berdi Beg (r. 1357–1359). The favorite of her ...