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  1. The Arghun dynasty (Sindhi: ارغونن جي سلطنت) ruled over the area adjoining Southern Afghanistan and then the Sindh Sultanate from the late 15th century to the early 16th century. Arghun rule can be divided into two branches: the Arghun branch of Dhu'l-Nun Beg Arghun that ruled until 1554, and the Tarkhan branch of Muhammad Isa ...

    • Monarchy
    • Islam
  2. 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).

    • Qaitmish Egec̆i
    • Borjigin
    • 11 August 1284 – 12 March 1291
    • Abaqa
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  4. Known locally as the Jami al Ghanshah, undoubtedly the mosque is named for Amir Arghun Shah, governor of Tripoli from 1394 to 1398. It does not carry a founding inscription, but does have, carved on the lintel above the door, a decree of A.H. 880/A.D. 1475 concerning the waqf of agricultural land.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Togha_TemürTogha Temür - Wikipedia

    Togha Temür was not helped by the death of Arghun Shah, who died in 1345 or 1346, after which the Jauni Kurban ceased to support him against the Sarbadars. Fighting between the two sides continued until Yahya Karawi took control of the Sarbadars in around 1352.

    • ?
    • 1338-1353
    • Abu Sa'id Bahadur
    • Luqman
  6. The viceroy Arghun Shah ordered a crier to proclaim through Damascus that all the people should fast for three days and that no one should cook anything eatable in the market during the daytime. For most of the people there eat no food but what has been prepared in the market.

  7. The short lived Arghun dynasty of the 16th Century was established by Shah Beg Arghun, a descendant of Changez Khan, who vanquished the last Samma ruler Jam Feroz. It was Mirza Isa Khan...

  8. This gateway seems to have influenced that of the nearby Mosque of Arghun Shah, which was built some twenty-five years later in an even simpler version. Such entrances with two areas instead of one, often two semidomes framed by an arch, were popular in fifteenth-century Cairo64 at a time when breaking up the unity of the facade was common ...

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