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Tamerlane

Page 45

by Justin Marozzi


  women in 102

  Arzinjan 149

  Ashpara 236

  Asia Minor 149; map 330

  astrologers 95–6, 266, 396–7

  Atilmish 102, 311, 341

  Avicenna (Ibn Sina) 371

  Ayubid dynasty 111

  Azerbaijan 15, 159

  Babur 125–6, 130–1, 204, 213, 257–8, 260–1, 262n, 408

  Babur’s Gardens (Kabul) 257, 258–60, 262n

  Bachman 72

  Baghdad 2, 113, 312–16, 362

  rebuilding of 362

  retaking of by Tamerlane and massacre ordered (1401) 92, 96, 314–16

  sacking of by Mongols (1258) 15, 110–11, 312

  seizure of by Tamerlane (1393) 192, 281

  Baghi Dilkusha (Samarkand) 211

  Bagrat, King 92, 146–7

  Baines, Richard 57

  Bakhauddin Nakhshbandi, Khazreti Mohammed 367

  Balkh 10, 41, 247

  conquest of by Genghis Khan (1220) 14, 45–6n

  history 45–6n

  Tamerlane defeats Husayn at (1370) 2, 43, 98, 247

  today 46n

  Balkhi, Maulana Jalaluddin 45n, 46n

  Bamiyan 14

  Baqi, Professor Abdul 257

  Baraka of Andkhoi, Imam Sayid 42, 93, 95, 188–9, 363

  Barlas clan 7–8, 23, 29

  Barquq, Sultan 192, 281, 289

  Battutah, Ibn 9, 46, 67, 75, 109–10, 140–1, 250, 261–2, 312, 313–14

  Batu (grandson of Genghis Khan) 14, 71–2, 73, 74, 75

  Bayazid I, Sultan 149, 238, 284, 288, 291

  army of 327–8

  conquests 320

  death 336, 357–8

  defeats Crusaders at battle of Nicopolis (1396) 321–4

  defeated by Tamerlane at battle of Ankara (1402) 1–7, 70, 98, 331–3

  preparations for battle against Tamerlane 327–8, 329–31

  put into captivity by Tamerlane 333–7

  and Tamerlane 284–6, 319, 325–6

  Baybars, Sultan 15, 105, 290

  Baylaqan 362

  Benedict XIII, Pope 320

  Bhatnir 263–4

  Bibi Khanum 224n

  Bihzad 130

  Black Death 51–2, 75

  Blochet, Edgard 353n

  Boniface VIII, Pope 52

  Boniface IX, Pope 320

  Boriyev, Professor Omonullo 172n

  Bridge of Friendship 252

  Browne, Edward G.: A Literary History of Persia 84

  Brusa 337

  Buchan Telfer, John 337

  Bukhara 10, 155, 363–76

  destruction of by Soviets 372–3

  fall of to Tokhtamish 159, 161

  Kalon Minaret 364, 365–6

  Kalon Mosque 368–9

  Mongol conquest of 13

  and Tamerlane 370–1

  today 364, 368–70, 372–7

  al Bukhari, Imam 366–7

  Bulgaria 320

  Bulgars 72

  Bursa 52

  Byron, Robert 119–20, 129n, 298

  Byzantine empire 52, 320

  Cairo 289, 290, 311

  Cathedral Mosque (Samarkand) 224–30, 273, 276–7, 379–80

  Celestial Mountains (Tien Shan) 22

  Central Asia map 26

  Chaghatay (Genghis Khan’s son) 13, 14, 64

  Chaghatay ulus 22

  Chandos, Sir John 51

  Charles VI, King of France 6, 319, 340

  Chelebi, Isa 345

  Chelebi, Prince Sulayman 4–5, 286, 332, 336, 337, 345

  Cheng Tsu, Emperor 352

  Chin empire 12, 14

  China 236, 237, 347–51

  civil war 349

  Mongol campaign against and rule of 12, 347–9

  rebellions against Mongol rule 76, 348–9

  Tamerlane starts campaign against 394–400

  Tamerlane’s preparations for campaign against 346, 350–7, 380, 392, 396

  Christendom 49, 52

  Chu Yuan-chang, Emperor 289, 349

  Clavijo, Ruy Gonzalez de 31, 103–4, 141, 194–5, 339

  portrait of Saray Mulk-khanum 386–9

  return to Spain 391–2

  on Shakhrisabz 25, 33–4, 35, 37–8

  on Sultaniya 136, 137

  on Tabriz 144

  on Tatars 20–1

  travels to Samarkand and stays in 210–12, 213–17, 226–7, 277, 278, 352, 377–9, 380–90

  visits Termez 250

  Clement VI, Pope 53

  Coleridge, Samuel Taylor 348

  composite bow 100

  Constantinople 52, 319, 320, 327

  Crécy, battle of (1346) 49

  Croatia 73

  Crusades/Crusaders 49, 91, 290, 320–1

  defeat at battle of Nicopolis (1396) 217, 286, 321–4

  Curzon, George 222, 373n

  Damascus 93, 297–301

  conquest of by Tamerlane and destruction of (1401) 2, 9, 85, 297–301, 306–10, 316

  Umayyad Mosque 225, 298, 309, 309–10n

  Damurdash (governor of Aleppo) 293–4, 295

  Daoud, Khoja Mahmud 225

  Daoud, Shaykh 185

  Delhi 242

  civil war 236–7, 243, 289

  conquest of by Tamerlane and massacre in (1398) 2, 3, 93, 96, 224, 267–72

  mounting of campaign against by Tamerlane 263–6

  Dilshad-agha 44

  Dina 82

  Djezeri 89

  Dost Mohammed, Amir 126, 129

  Drake, Sir Francis 58

  Dunbar, Sir George 243

  Dupree, Nancy Hatch 259

  Durrani, Ahmed Shah 126

  Edward III, King 49, 50, 51

  Edward, Prince of Wales (Black Prince) 48–9, 50, 53

  Egypt 289–91; history 289–90

  turmoil in after death of Barquq 289, 291

  El Khalidi 292

  elephants: use of by armies 265–6, 267–8, 294, 327

  Elizabeth I, Queen 58

  England 50, 58

  Erzerum 149

  Europe 50–3

  Black Death 51–2

  fear of Tamerlane 338–9, 345–6

  Fadl, Maulana 401

  Faraj, Sultan 281–2, 289, 291–2, 294, 299, 300, 311, 341

  Fertile Crescent 15

  Finney, Albert 55

  Firuz Shah, Sultan 243, 273

  Flecker, James Elroy 219

  Florence 51

  Forbes Manz, Beatrice 7n, 67, 204, 205

  France 50

  Frederick II, Emperor 73

  Frescobaldi, Leonardo 290

  Fushanj 115

  Gawhar Shad, Queen 118, 120n, 128, 407

  Genghis Khan 8, 10, 20, 64, 113, 168, 207, 238, 364–5

  campaign against China 12, 347

  comparisons with Tamerlane 104–7

  death 14

  military campaigns and conquests 8n, 12–13, 45–6, 106

  organisation of army 17

  Georgia: Mongol campaign against 13, 15, 59

  Tamerlane’s campaigns against 92, 145–8, 360–2, 283–4, 192, 202

  Gerasimov, Professor Mikhail 31n

  Ghiyas ad-din Pir Ali 113, 114, 115, 117, 122

  Ghiyath ad-din Ali 269, 271

  Gibbon, Edward 6, 17, 19, 54, 110, 275

  Gibbons, Herbert 288n

  Giorgi VII of Georgia, King 147, 283, 284, 360, 361

  Gok Sarai (Blue Palace) (Samarkand) 209

  Golden Horde 14, 15, 27, 72, 74–6, 158n, 159, 192, 280

  decline and fragmentation 75–6, 200

  land and populations 159; map 160

  Tamerlane’s campaign against (1395) 197–200, 202, 204

  Grasso, Agnolo di Tura del 52

  Great Game 176, 219, 250

  Great Schism 53

  Greek-fire 101

  Greene, Robert 57

  Gregory IX, Pope 73

  Gur Amir mausoleum (Samarkand) 408–13

  Guthrie, Tyrone 55

  Hafi
z-i-Abru 122–3, 154, 155

  Haji Beg 29–30

  Al Hakim 248

  Hall, Joseph 57

  Hall, Peter 55

  Halys river (Kizil Irmak) 328, 328–9n

  Hands, Terry 55

  Hanifa, Imam Abu 96

  Hartog, Leo de 59, 104

  Hawkwood, Sir John 51

  Hayy, Abdul 214

  Heath, Ian 332n

  Henry III of Castile, King 6, 21, 211, 212, 339

  Henry IV, King 6, 50, 340

  Herat 108–10, 112–13

  conquest of by Mongols (1221) 14, 125

  conquest of by Tamerlane (1381) 2, 114–18, 122, 125, 137

  history and disasters suffered by 125–6

  Musalla complex and destruction of 118–21, 127

  Qala-i-Ikhtiyaruddin 121–2

  rebellion against Tamerlane (1383) 117n, 125

  taking of treasure by Tamerlane 116–17

  and Taliban 126

  today 118–19, 121–5, 126–7, 128–9

  Hindu Kush mountains (India) 242, 253

  Hookham, Hilda 95, 224

  houris 162

  Houston, Arthur 59

  Howorth, Henry: History of the Mongols 71

  Hui Ti, Emperor 350

  Hulagu (grandson of Genghis Khan) 15, 110–11, 312, 362

  Hundred Years’ War 50

  Hungary: Mongol conquest of 73

  Hunger Steppe 10, 177

  Husayn, Amir 39–40, 41–2, 65

  alliance with Tamerlane 30

  defeated at Balkh (1370) 43, 98, 247

  execution 43

  rivalry with Tamerlane 40, 41

  Husayn Baiqara, Sultan 121

  Husayn Mirza, Sultan 130

  Husayn Sufi (leader of Khorezm) 68

  Husayn, Sultan (Tamerlane’s grandson) 3, 5, 294, 296, 299, 406

  al Husayni, Abu Talib 28n

  Ibrahim Sultan (Tamerlane’s grandson) 274

  Idigu, Prince 254

  Ilkhanid dynasty 15, 110, 111, 112, 113

  Ilyas Khoja 30, 40, 65

  Indian campaign (1398–9) 241–4, 253–6, 262–74

  conquest of Delhi 2, 93, 96, 224, 267–72

  conquest of Multan 263

  defeat of Kafir tribes 254, 256

  further conquests after Delhi 273

  killing of prisoners 264

  map 255

  obstacles and dangers faced 242–3, 245, 254, 263

  preparations for 237–9

  route 244–7

  Indus, battle of (1221) 14

  International Security Assistance Force 262n

  Isfahan 150–2

  oconquest of by Tamerlane and massacre in retaliation to rebellion (1387) 2, 92, 150–4

  Isfizar: conquest of and cementing alive of prisoners (1383) 92, 132

  Islam 23, 90, 91–2, 93–5

  Ismailis (Assassins) 110

  Italy 51

  Jahan, Shah 260

  Jahangir (Tamerlane’s son) 38, 68, 144

  death 69–70, 358–9

  Jalad, Mohammed 225, 226

  Jalal ad-din 14, 263

  Jalayirid clan 113

  Jami, Abdur Rahman 127, 128

  Janibeg 75

  Janissaries 4, 5

  Jats 156, 164

  Jawhar-agha 44, 388

  Jayhun river 248–9

  Jenghizkhan 90

  jihad 92, 344

  Jochi (son of Genghis Khan) 14, 71

  John II, King 49

  John of Nevers, Count 321

  John, Regent 319, 320, 324

  John of Sultaniya, Archbishop 195–6, 319, 340

  John XXII, Pope 136

  Jonson, Ben 57

  Juvayni, Ata-Malik 20, 112

  Kabul 2, 254–62

  and Babur 257–9

  Babur’s Gardens 257, 258–60, 262n

  Babur’s tomb 260–1

  today 256–7, 259–61, 262n

  Kafir tribes 242, 253, 254, 256

  Kahajani, Masaud 102

  Kamakh 286, 325

  Kandahar: conquest of by Tamerlane (1384) 133, 137

  Kani-gil festival (1404) 380–91

  Kanishka, King 249

  Karakorum 12, 73

  Karimov, President Islam 169–70, 172n

  Kart dynasty 113

  al Kashani, Abdul Qasim 136

  Kashmir 273

  Kaufmann, General von 176

  Kay-Khusrau Khuttalani 43, 68n

  Kebek Khan 24

  Kesh see Shakhrisabz

  Khaldun, Ibn 89, 301–6, 309, 342

  Khalil Sultan, Prince (Tamerlane’s grandson) 3, 212, 268, 362, 406

  and Chinese campaign 396

  marriage 398

  poisoning of 307

  seizes power after grandfather’s death 406–7

  Khan-zada 68–9, 69, 277, 359, 384

  Khiva 10

  Khizr Khan 272

  Khizr Khoja 65, 66, 164, 180, 236, 254, 289

  Khoja Abdullah Ansari 129

  Khorasan 15, 108–9, 164, 418; see also Herat

  Khorezm 64, 66, 67–8, 76, 77, 159, 162

  conquests of by Tamerlane 68–9, 78–80

  rebellion by Yusif Sufi 77

  today 80–1

  see also Urganch

  Khudad, Maulana 127, 129–30

  Khusrau, Amir 21–2

  Khwandamir 265, 268

  Kipchaks 72, 159, 190–1, 192

  Knights Hospitallers 7n, 343, 344

  Kok Gumbaz Mosque (Shakhrisabz) 36, 37–8

  Koran 174–5: Othman 174–6, 229

  Kosovo, battle of (1389) 52, 320

  Krist, Gustav 374

  Kubilay 15, 347–8

  Kunduzcha, battle of (1391) 188–91

  Kushan dynasty 249

  Kussam ibn Abbas 230–1, 234

  Kutluk-oghlan, Prince 254

  Kyd, Thomas 57

  Lahore 273

  Lamb, Harold 144, 185, 207

  lapis lazuli 390

  Lazarovic of Serbia 4

  Lazarus, King of Serbia 52

  Lewis, Bernard 53

  Lewis, C.S. 54

  longbow 100n, 101n

  Lurs 143

  Maclean, Fitzroy 250–1, 251n

  Mahmud, Sultan 91, 187, 262, 267, 294, 359

  Makhmudov, Mamadali 172–3n

  Malcolm, Sir John 106

  Malik, Shah 402, 406

  Mallu Khan 264, 267, 268

  Mamay 76

  Mamluk dynasty 15, 289–90, 290n

  Manuel II, Emperor 319, 320, 341, 345

  Manzandaran 131

  Marco Polo 140, 348

  Marlowe, Christopher 48, 333

  description of Samarkand 208–9

  Tamburlaine the Great 48, 54–63, 208, 310n, 333–5

  Mas’ud, Sa’d ad-din 88

  Maulana Mohammed of Quhistan 282

  Maulavi Said 128

  Mawarannahr 9–10, 11, 12, 14, 23

  assassination of Amir Qazaghan and collapse of central control 25, 29

  attacks on by Tokhtamish 155–6, 158, 161, 162–3, 179, 199

  ending of power of Chaghatay khans by nomadic warlords 24

  invasion of by Moghul khan (Tughluk Temur) (1360) 29–30

  overthrow of Chaghatay khan by Amir Qazaghan 24–5

  prosperity under Kebek Khan 23–4

  strains between sedentary and nomadic populations 24

  tensions within Chaghatay ulus 22, 23

  Mazandaran 93, 131, 192

  Mecca 91

  Meerut 273

  Merv 14

  Metsobets’i, T’ovma 147

  Ming dynasty 349

  Miranshah, Prince (Tamerlane’s son) 3, 68, 89, 117n, 125, 184, 187, 205–6, 294, 378, 411

  debauchery of and plotting to seize Tamerlane’s throne 277–9

  deposition of by Tamerlane 282

  lack of military talent 279–80

  Mire, battle of the (1365) 39–40, 41

  Moghuli
stan 23, 64, 65, 164

  Moghuls 23, 164

  Tamerlane’s campaigns against 64, 65, 66

  Mohammed, Ali ibn 89

  Mohammed I, Sultan 9

  Mohammed Sultan, Prince (Tamerlane’s grandson) 3, 5, 70, 144, 162, 184, 186, 187, 196, 236, 238–9, 280, 311, 337, 356, 358–60, 411

  Mongols 8n, 16–20, 110, 290

  army of and military techniques 17, 19

  Chinese campaign and conquest 12, 347–9

  conquests of 8, 12–15, 71–3, 74, 110–12, 312

  contribution to culture 20

  crushing of the Ismailis 110

  defeat by Mamluks at battle of Ain Jalut 15, 111, 290

  disputes within army 73

  ending of conquests 15

  infighting and conflict between khanates of Genghis’s successors 15, 22–3, 24

  masters of the art of war 74

  parallels with Tatars 20–1

  rebellions against in China and expulsion from 75, 348–9

  and religion 19–20

  and yasa 20

  see also Genghis Khan

  Mönke, Great Khan 15, 110, 111

  Morgan, David 112

  Moscow 198

  Mubarak 22–3, 24

  Mughal dynasty 204

  Mukaddasi 67

  Mulfuzast (Memoirs) 28–9n

  Mulk-khanum, Queen Saray 43–4, 64, 91, 148, 225, 274, 287, 337, 342, 384, 387–8, 398

  Multan 239, 263

  Muminov, Ibrahim 172n

  Muynak 81–3

  Muzaffarid princes 113, 192

  Nadir Shah, King 261, 411

  Nanda, Ratish 262n

  Naples 51

  Naqshbandi order 93

  Nasir ud-din Mohammed Tughluk 237

  New Saray 75

  Nicaea 52

  Nicopolis 340; battle of (1396) 4, 217, 286, 321–2

  Nishapur 14

  Nishapuri, Lutfallah 89

  Nizam ad-din, Shami 88

  nomadism 16, 17

  Nur ad-din, Shaykh 196, 233, 254, 315, 402, 406

  Ogedey, Great Khan 13, 14, 72, 73, 74, 111, 347

  Oljeytu Khudabanda, Mohammed 133, 135, 137, 278

  Omar Shaykh, Prince (Tamerlane’s son) 68n, 155, 161, 162, 183, 187, 190, 203, 205

  onbashi 99

  Orda 71

  Othman Koran 174–6, 229

  Otrar (Kazakhstan) 13, 400

  Ottoman Empire 52

  see also Bayazid I, Sultan

  Oxus 252, 253, 274

  papacy 53

  Peasants Revolt (1381) (England) 50

  Peking 12, 347, 350, 354–5, 395

  Perondini, Pietro: Life of Temur 60

  Persia 15, 111–13, 134, 191–2, 202

  Mongol rule 111–12

  Tamerlane’s campaigns against 131, 137, 143, 149

  Pir Mohammed (grandson of Tamerlane, son of Jahangir) 70, 162, 203, 205, 239, 263, 268, 362, 386, 406

 

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