TIMURIDS

tĭmoorˈĭdz, dynasty founded by Timur (or Tamerlane). After the death of Timur (1405) there was a struggle for power over his empire, which then extended from the Euphrates River to the Jaxartes (Syr Darya) and Indus rivers. The western empire, which included Tabriz and Baghdad, lasted only a few years because of internal wars. The so-called Black Sheep Turkmen horde brought it to an end when they took (1410) Baghdad. Shah Rukh, Timur's son, ruled (1409–46) the eastern empire, including Khorasan and Transoxiana (region E of the Amu Darya, or Oxus, River). He fought the Black Sheep and succeeded in recapturing Tabriz and much of W Persia. His domain was the focal point of trade between the East and the West, and it attained a spectacular prosperity. Because all the Persian cities were desolated by previous wars, the seat of Persian culture was now in Samarkand and Herat; these cities became the center of the Timurid renaissance. This cultural rebirth had a double character; on one hand, there was a renewal of Persian civilization and art (distinguished by extensive adaptations from the Chinese), and on the other, an original national literature in the Turk-Jagatai language, which borrowed from Persian sources. Shah Rukh was succeeded by his son, Ulugh Beg (ruled 1447–49). He had earlier been (1409–47) viceroy of Transoxiana. He constructed many public buildings and was a patron of Persian art and literature; he made Samarkand a center of Muslim civilization. After his succession (ruled 1447–49) to the throne the Timurid empire fell into anarchy; the Turkmen horde known as the White Sheep conquered much territory, while the Uzbeks looted Samarkand. Petty princes took over the rule, and local dynasties sprang up. One of these princes, and the last of the Timurids, was Babur.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Timurids
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books on: Timurids  - 99 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...Davidovich and Chekhovich. Regarding the Timurids in particu- lar, I have been educated...Samarkandi, the court historian of the later Timurids acts.... In these pages Abdarazzak gives...of Slllbanl Khan, the scourge of the Timurids and the founder of Uzbek power. Two...
...Chaghatayids 117 9. Timur and the Timurids 123 10. The last Timurids and the first Uzbeks 144 11...contrast to Transoxania and Khurasan ruled by the Timurids. The area of Moghulistan was not quite identical...
...empire. Herat was established under the Timurids as capital of the dynasty and became...whilst the Mughals descendants of the Timurids retained control of Kandahar in the...Herat, Iran, Lashkari Bazar, Mughals, Timurids Further reading: F.R. Allcin...
...Abu Said 460 The Last Timurids 463 III. THE LAST MONGOLS...Tamerlane 454 - 455 16. The Timurids Fifteenth Century 474...
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journal articles on: Timurids  - 9 results

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...appanages of Mawarannahr and Balkh and the Timurids of central and eastern Afghanistan.(6...cities, and Balkh in northern Afghanistan. Timurids, Baburs sons Humayun and Kamran, had...northern India. Both Uzbek rulers and Timurids had reasons to encourage the issuance...
...right moment and to not hesitate in killing disbelievers.75 The Timurids were Hurufis natural enemies, since Timur had given the order...other human faces, did not have seven clear hairlines.76 The Timurids were equated with the hordes of Gog, who are to flood the earth...
...as an Uighur or Uzbek; on the contrary, the Uzbeks deposed the Timurids, to whom he was connected; however, today it is clear that the Turks to which Nawaii and the Timurids belonged were forefathers to both the Uzbek Genghisid descendants...
...dealing with the Islamic Republic of Iran, Iranian art has dominated the dynastic scene, and exhibitions on the arts of the Timurids in fifteenth-century Iran and Central Asia and on the Qajars in nineteenth-century Iran have been followed by one on the art...
...preferred to take the Ilkhans, and especially Ghazan, as their heroes. (102) Later, when the Chinggisid Uzbeks had defeated the Timurids and took over Transoxiana (1501), they turned to their ancestors--Jochids and not Chaghadaids--when creating their own identity...
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magazine articles on: Timurids  - 5 results

 
 
...under the fourteen-fifteenth centuries Timurids, but by the eighteenth century Bukhara...hurled to their deaths below. It was the Timurids, however, who left the most indelible...occupied Bukhara and Samarkand, ousting the Timurids. Undeterred, however, Timurs great-great-great-grandson...
...r.1256-65), who began to lay the basis of modern Iran; the Timurids, 1370-1506, the descendants of the last mighty Mongol conqueror...display. Art, of course, was harnessed to dynastic purpose. The Timurids produced finely illustrated copies of Sharaf al-Din Yazdis...
...traveller Ibn Battuta (see Turkey through the eyes of a 14th-century tourist) is Seljuk sovereignty embodied in stone. And the Timurids learnt from their predecessors--as is clear from a 15th-century scroll detailing an array of vaults and decorations used by...
...which Ottoman art ultimately diverged. In his catalog essay, Filiz Cagman--the director of the Topkapi Museum--notes that the Timurids, Turcomans, and Safavids of fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Iran favored horror vacui designs of tiny and densely packed motifs...
...would not become its official name until 1928). The Ottomans were great patrons of the arts, like their contemporaries the Timurids, and the Great Seljuks before them. They commissioned works of art and literature of exceptional quality and beauty, with extravagant...


 

newspaper articles on: Timurids  - 5 results

 
 
...muttering: Sorry, who were the Seljuks again? Why are we suddenly in Afghanistan? What does Christological mean? Were the Timurids Turks and the Turkmen anything to do with Timur? Whats going on? Whos that? Is it still Tuesday? Frankly, it was just like...
...empires that rose and fell in Turkey, the Middle East and central Asia between 600 and 1600, including the Uigurs, Seljuks, Timurids and Ottomans. A huge array of fearsome weaponry - including the steel, crystal and turquoise dagger of Sultan Selim I - will...
...Middle East and central Asia, including the Uigurs, Seljuks, Timurids and Ottomans. The Seljuk, nomads from central Asia, were...until the 20th century. In the 14th and 15th centuries, the Timurids, led by Tamerlane, took control of lands from what is now the...
...structured around the rise and fall of empires in Turkey, the Middle East and central Asia, including the Uigurs, Seljuks, Timurids and Ottomans. The Seljuk people, nomadic warriors from central Asia, conquered the Byzantines in battle and established themselves...
...west Silk Road. As the historic phases succeed each other - the Uyghurs (7th century), the Seljuks (c 1040-1194) and the Timurids (c 1370-1506) - we see a civilisation becoming increasingly militaristic and assertive. Consequently, the arts of Turkey...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Timurids  - 8 results

       More encyclopedia Results: 1-8 >>  
 
TIMURIDS timoor idz, dynasty founded by Timur (or Tamerlane). After the death of Timur (1405) there was a struggle for power...looted Samarkand. Petty princes took over the rule, and local dynasties sprang up. One of these princes, and the last of the Timurids, was Babur . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University...
...along with its vast irrigation system, was destroyed by Timur (Tamerlane). A century of struggle over Khwarazm between the Timurids , the descendants of Timur, and the Golden Horde was followed by the Uzbek conquest in the early 16th cent. Khwarazm became...
...in the late 14th cent., pushing the Mongols into the steppes of Kazakhstan. After Timurs death (1405), his successors, the Timurids , controlled much of the territory for about a century. The later internal history of Turkistan is mainly one of prolonged...
...the 14th cent. by the Mongols under Jenghiz Khan. The valley later belonged to the empire of Timur and his successors, the Timurids. Early in the 16th cent., it was overrun by the Uzbeks, who established the khanate of Kokand. The opening of the sea route...
...that his vast conquests would remain intact, and before his death he arranged for them to be divided among his sons. The Timurids are the line of rulers descended from him. Christopher Marlowes play Tamburlaine luridly recounts his conquests. See biographies...
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