Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. A letter from a distant land.In 1246 Güyük Khan came to power in a lavish ceremony attended by many foreign dignitaries - something unthinkable for a Khan bu...

    • 200.5K
    • Voices of the Past
  2. Güyük (also Güyug; c. March 19, 1206 – April 20, 1248) was the third Khagan-Emperor of the Mongol Empire, the eldest son of Ögedei Khan and a grandson of Genghis Khan. He reigned from 1246 to 1248.

  3. Oct 17, 2019 · Batu Khan avait refusé la nomination au poste de Grand Khan lui-même et préférait que n'importe qui, sauf un Ögedeï, gouverne l'empire. Batu soutint donc Möngke de la lignée Tolui. Batu était également reconnaissant à la mère de Möngke, Sorghaghtani Beki, de l'avoir averti de l'intention de Güyük de faire campagne contre lui.

  4. during Chinggis Khan's time and secondly developments during Ögödei's reign and that of his son, Güyük, as the Mongol Empire became just that, an empire. In the first section, evidence comes from the prime literary source, Tlte Secret History of the Mongols (SH), which concludes about the time that other evidence emerges for Ögödei.

  5. referenceworks.brillonline.com › entriesGÜYÜK KHAN — Brill

    Buy Access; Help; About; Contact Us; Cookies; Encyclopedias | Text editions

  6. Güyük Borjigin, Great Khan, was born 19 March 1206 to Ögedei Khan (c1186-1241) and Töregene and died 20 April 1248 of unspecified causes. He married Wuwuerheimishi . He married Naimanzhen . He married Oghul Qaimish Qinshu . Güyük (or Kuyuk; Mongolian: Гүюг хаан Template:Lang-xng, güyüg qaγan) (c. March 19, 1206 – April 20, 1248) was the third Great Khan of the Mongol Empire ...

  7. Jul 29, 2019 · Unbeknown to Innocent, Güyük had a Christian wife, Oghul Qaimish. ... By the time other missionaries arrived in eastern Asia in 1294, Kublai Khan’s interests had switched to Buddhism. The next ...

  1. People also search for