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  1. History of the Arghuns and Tarkhans of Sind, 1507-1593: An Annotated Translation of the Relevant Parts of Mir Maʻsum's Taʼrikh-i-Sind, with an Introduction & Appendices Mahmudul Hasan Siddiqi Institute of Sindhology, University of Sind , 1972 - Arghun dynasty - 298 pages

  2. www.pakpedia.pk › sibiSibi - Pakpedia

    Dec 24, 2016 · Sewa Dynasty ruled this region before the 7th century. During their reign, this town was called Savi, named after a Hindu princess of the Sewa Dynasty. Until the end of the 15th century, the district had been part of the Ghaznavid Empire governed by a chief called Nasiruddin Kubacha. Arghun Dynasty

  3. 27. According to the source, in the mid-14 th century the family of Arghun Shāh controlled the area of the Atak and a number of cities, including Nisa, Yazir, Ṭus and Mashhad Cinq opuscules, p. 28; DJTR, p. 161; Smith, The History of the Sarbadār Dynasty, pp. 94, 165, as well as Nīshāpūr (Cinq opuscules, p. 19).

  4. 1526. Preceded by. Succeeded by. Sayyid dynasty. Mughal Empire. Today part of. Pakistan. The Langah Sultanate, also known as the Sultanate of Multan, was a late-medieval kingdom established and ruled by the Langāh clan in South Punjab from 1445 to 1526. [2] [3] Their capital was the city of Multan .

  5. Battle of Fatehpur (1519) /  24.7461167°N 67.9243361°E  / 24.7461167; 67.9243361. The Battle of Fatehpur was a key episode in the dissolution of the Samma dynasty of Sindh and its replacement by the Arghun dynasty [1] in 1519. The conflict between the Samma dynasty of Sindh and the Arghuns lead to the Battle of Fatehpur.

  6. H. W. Bellew [7] writes about Arghun as under: Nikodar Oglan "Master Nicholas," the youthful son of the Mughal Emperor, Hulagu Khan, held the Kandahar and Ghor country as his provincial government before he ascended the throne of Persia, 1282 A.D., as ninth emperor of the Changiz Khan dynasty. He was the first of the Mughal sovereigns (as D ...

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

    The Ilkhanate or Il-khanate, also known as the Ilkhanids ( Persian: ایلخانان, romanized : Īlkhānān ), and known to the Mongols as Hülegü Ulus ( lit. 'people or state of Hülegü'), [8] was a Mongol khanate established from the southwestern sector of the Mongol Empire.

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