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

    Uruk Khatun — daughter of Sarija, sister of emir Irinjin and a great-granddaughter of Ong Khan. Yesü Temür (born between 1271 and 1282, d. 18 May 1290) Öljaitü (b. 24 March 1282 - d. 16 December 1316)

    • Qaitmish Egec̆i
    • Borjigin
    • 11 August 1284 – 12 March 1291
    • Abaqa
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GaykhatuGaykhatu - Wikipedia

    Uruk Khatun, daughter of Saricha of Keraites, widow of Arghun Khan; Bulughan Khatun (m. 1292, died 5 January 1310), daughter of Otman, nephew of Abatai Noyan of Khongirad, and widow of Arghun; Nani Agachi Chin Pulad; Esan Khatun, daughter of Beglamish, brother of Ujan of Arulat; In popular culture

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  4. Sep 24, 2009 · 47 Reg Nich IV, nos. 6815–6 (in separate copies, both dated August 13, 1291), to “Anichohamini” (Uruk khatun) and “Dathanaticatum.” The text can be found in Chabot, “Relations,” pp. 623–4.

  5. Influenced by the priests of the court of Oljaitu, Uruk Khatun baptized him and named him Nicolo in honor of the pope of that time. As a child, he contracted a serious illness and changed his name to Kharbanda.

    • Uruk Khatun1
    • Uruk Khatun2
    • Uruk Khatun3
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    • Uruk Khatun5
  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ÖljaitüÖljaitü - Wikipedia

    Arghun. Mother. Uruk Khatun. Religion. Buddhism (until 1291) Christianity (until 1295) Sunni Islam (until 1310) Shia Islam (until his death) [3] Öljaitü, [a] also known as Mohammad-e Khodabande [b] (24 March 1282 – 16 December 1316), was the eighth Ilkhanid dynasty ruler from 1304 to 1316 in Tabriz, Iran.

    • 19 July 1304
    • Ghazan
    • 9 July 1304 – 16 December 1316
    • Abu Sa'id
  7. It was Ölziit (r. 1305–1316) who had moved the capital of the Ilkhanate from Tabriz to Sultaniyya, 175 miles to the southeast. At the insistence of his mother Uruk Khatun, a Nestorian Christian, he had been baptized as a Christian and given the name Nicholas.

  8. Arghun was born to Abaqa Khan and his Christian princess wife, Haimash Khatun. Arghun himself had multiple wives, and his mother-in-law Bulughan Khatun raised Arghun's two sons Ghazan (whose birth mother was Qutlugh) and Öljeitü (whose birth mother was Uruk Khatun ), both of whom later succeeded him and eventually converted to islam.

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