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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Abaqa_KhanAbaqa Khan - Wikipedia

    Abaqa Khan (27 February 1234 – 4 April 1282, Mongolian: Абаха/Абага хан ( Khalkha Cyrillic), ᠠᠪᠠᠭ ᠠ. ᠬᠠᠨ ( Traditional script), "paternal uncle", also transliterated Abaġa ), was the second Mongol ruler ( Ilkhan) of the Ilkhanate. The son of Hulagu Khan and Lady Yesünčin and the grandson of Tolui, he reigned ...

    • Yesuncin Khatun
    • Borjigin
  2. Mar 5, 2024 · Lead isotope analysis of over 100 precisely dated silver coins has revealed a fascinating geochemical perspective on the origins of Islamic silver, challenging existing narratives and uncovering multiple new sources stretching from Morocco to the Tien Shen. Published in the journal Antiquity, the study examines a boom in silver minting taking ...

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  4. Jul 31, 2019 · His father, Abaqa, Kublai Khan’s nephew, had died in 1282, the final years of his reign and life consumed with an ultimately unsuccessful campaign against the Mamluks in Syria. Arghun’s uncle had been Abaqa’s successor, and had sought to deal with the Mamluks in a different way, reaching out to their Sultan as one Muslim ruler to another ...

  5. Abaqa was born in Mongolia on 27 February 1234, son of Ilkhanate founder Hulagu Khan. Abaqa was a Buddhist. A favoured son of Hulagu, he was made governor of Turkestan . Hulagu died from illness in 1265. Before his death, he had been negotiating with the Byzantine Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos to add a daughter of the Byzantine imperial ...

  6. Jul 13, 2011 · ABAQA. ABAQA (or ABAḠA, “paternal uncle” in Mongolian; ABĀQĀ in Persian and Arabic), eldest son and first successor of the Il-khan Hülegü (Hūlāgū). He was born of Yesüṇčin Ḵātūn in Jomādā I, 631/February, 1234 in Mongolia, and accompanied his father on his great expedition to the west. At the outbreak of war with Berke of ...

  7. Silver dirham of Abish/Abaqa, Shiraz, 683 H. 1994.152.1. View on contributor website. Holding institution: American Numismatic Society Data provider:

  8. Abaqa Khan (1265-1282 AD) -. Reverse center in hexafoil and nakshi calligraphy very similar to coins of Kaykhusraw III. Also struck in a few other mints of the Jibal and Azerbaijan, notably Kashan and Hamadan, only Tabriz is relatively common, but rare with legible date & mint.