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  1. According to Juvaini, Buqa was appointed basq&qalong with Juvaini's father as sdhib-diwan by Arghun Aqa over the lands of Azerbaijan, Georgia, Rum etc. Juvaini/Boyle, 508, Qazvini, ii, 245. fArghunAqa 469 them. The chiefs of the tax collectors were severe and rapacious men. One was named Arghun and was leaderof all the rest, while the other ...

  2. Arghūn (born c. 1258—died March 10, 1291, Bāghcha, Arrān, Iran) was the fourth Mongol Il-Khan (subordinate khan) of Iran (reigned 1284–91). He was the father of the great Maḥmūd Ghāzān ( q.v. ). Upon the death of his father, Il-Khan Abagha (reigned 1265–82), Prince Arghūn was a candidate for the throne but was forced to yield to ...

  3. The Arghun dynasty (Sindhi: ارغونن جي سلطنت) was a dynasty of either Mongol, Turkic or Turco-Mongol ethnicity, who ruled over the area between Southern Afghanistan and Sindh from the late 15th century to the early 16th century. The Arghuns claimed their descent and name from Ilkhanid-Mongol Arghun Khan. Arghun rule can be divided into two branches: the Arghun branch of Dhu'l-Nun ...

  4. Though he also appears in military roles, Arghun Aqa is chiefly. remembered for his work as a bureaucrat establishing a Mongol fiscal administra-. tion in pre-II-Khanid Iran. The purpose here is to examine the administrative career of Arghun Aqa and attempt to account in some fashion for its extraordinary longevity.

  5. Arghun is the eldest son of the khagan of the Southern Continent, Urus. Arghun became a true politician during his life, ingratiating himself into the viziers' company and becoming beloved amongst the merchants and power-brokers of the Southern Continent. He accumulated a ring of spies to gather information for him, as knowledge is what he values the most. Arghun chose to oversee his father's ...

  6. 5 oct. 2014 · Arghoun mourut l'année suivante et son successeur embrassa en 1296 l'Islam, qui demeure la religion des souverains persans. Les contacts se poursuivirent néanmoins, comme en témoignent une lettre de 1305, de l'ilkhan Odjaïtou à Philippe le Bel, et une autre de 1402, de Timour Leng (Tamerlan) à Charles VI, toutes deux conservées aux Archives nationales.