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  1. Arghun Aqa
    13th century Mongol noble

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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Arghun_AqaArghun Aqa - Wikipedia

    Arghun Agha, also Arghun Aqa or Arghun the Elder (Persian: ارغون آقا; Mongolian: ᠠᠷᠭᠤᠨ; fl. 1220 - 1275) was a Mongol noble of the Oirat clan in the 13th century. He was a governor in the Mongol-controlled area of Persia from 1243 to 1255, before the Ilkhanate was created by Hulagu . [3]

    • c. 1210
    • Korguz
    • Prince Tubshin
    • Buqa
  2. Arghun Aqa 461 The rise of Arghun Aqa After Korguz's death, Toregene Khatun placed all the territories previously held by him from the Oxus to Fars, as well as Georgia, Rum and Mosul," under the command of Arghun Aqa with the title 'ulugh manqul ulus bek' or "Governor of the Empire of the Great Mongols."'2 She also named the despised Sharaf al-Din

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  4. 14 Two versions about Arghun Aqa's childhood exist. According to Juvaynī, he was a son of a commander of thousand, while according to Rashīd al-Dīn, Arghun Aqa's family was very poor and he had been sold during a famine for a “flank of beef” (Juvaynī, Genghis Khan, p. 505; JT, vol. 1, p. 57). Both versions are possible, but Juvaynī’s ...

  5. New York University, 1992), 194–95 Google Scholar. Kirakos, 205. According to Juvaini, Buqa was appointed basqāq along with Juvaini's father as ṣāḥib-dīwān by Arghun Aqa over the lands of Azerbaijan, Georgia, Rum etc. Juvaini/Boyle, 508, Qazvini, ii, 245. Kirakos, 260-1.

  6. 14Two versions about Arghun Aqa’s childhood exist. According to Juvayn¯ı, he was a son of a commander of thousand, while according to Rash¯ıd al-D ¯ın, Arghun Aqa’s family was very poor and he had been sold during a famine for a “flank of beef” (Juvayn¯ı, Genghis Khan,p.505;JT,vol.1,p.57). Both versions are possible, but

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ArghunArghun - Wikipedia

    Arghun Khan ( Mongolian Cyrillic: Аргун; Traditional Mongolian: ᠠᠷᠭᠤᠨ; c. 1258 – 10 March 1291) was the fourth ruler of the Mongol empire's Ilkhanate, from 1284 to 1291. He was the son of Abaqa Khan, and like his father, was a devout Buddhist (although pro-Christian).

  8. THE QUESTION OF WHO RAN THE MONGOL EMPIRE HAS LONG CHALLENGED historians, and various theories have emerged and retreated in answer to this proW lem.' As far as the question of who ran the Persian part of the empire the answer has been made more elusive by the nature of the sources. Though excellent primary source material for this period abounds, for the most part it is written by the ...