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Shahrukh Mirza

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Name
  
Shahrukh Mirza

Role
  
Timur's son


Died
  
March 13, 1447, Ray, Iran

Spouse
  
Goharshad Begum

Shahrukh Mirza

Children
  
Ulugh Beg, Baysonqor, Ibrahim Sultan ibn Shahrukh, Mirza Soyurghatmish Khan, Mirza Muhammad Juki

Parents
  
Toghay Turkhan Agha, Timur

Grandchildren
  
Abdal-Latif Mirza, Abul-Qasim Babur Mirza

Similar People
  
Timur, Ulugh Beg, Goharshad Begum

Shahrukh mirza grave afghanistan


Shāhrukh Mīrzā (Persian: شاهرخ میرزا‎‎ Šāhrokh Mīrzā) (August 20, 1377 – March 13, 1447) son of Timur was the Timurid ruler of the eastern portion of the empire established by his father, Central Asian conqueror Timur (Tamerlane) who founded the Timurid dynasty, governing most of Persia and Transoxiana between 1405 and 1447. Shāhrukh was the fourth and youngest son of Timur and child of one of his concubines.

Contents

After Timur's death in 1405, his empire fell apart with various tribes and warlords competing for dominance. The Kara Koyunlu Turkmen destroyed the western empire in 1410 when they captured Baghdad, but in Persia and Transoxiana Shāhrukh was able to secure effective control from about 1409. His empire controlled the main trade routes between East and West, including the legendary Silk Road, and became immensely wealthy as a result.

The devastation of Persia's main cities led to the cultural centre of the empire shifting to Samarqand in modern Uzbekistan and Herat in modern Afghanistan. Shāhrukh chose to have his capital not in Samarqand, but in Herat. This was to become the political centre of the Timurid empire, and residence of his principal successors, though both cities benefited from the wealth and privilege of Shāhrukh's court, which was a great patron of the arts and sciences.

Shahrukh mirza parchayaan


Culture

Shāhrukh's wife, Gowwhar Shād, funded the construction of two outstanding mosques and theological colleges in Mashhad and Herāt. The Gowwhar-Shād-Mosque was finished in 1418. The mixed ethnic origins of the ruling dynasty led to a distinctive character in its cultural outlook, which was a combination of Persian civilization and art, with borrowings from China, and literature written in Persian as well as Chagatay and Arabic.

Shāhrukh commissioned the production of a number of historical and geographic works by Hafiz-i Abru. Among them is Tāriḵ-e Šāhroḵ(i), the history of Shāhrukh's reign through AH 816 (AD 1413-14). It was later incorporated by its author into larger "universal history" compilations, Majmuʿa-ye Ḥāfeẓ-e Abru (a universal history work) and Majmaʿ al-tawāriḵ [al-solṭāni(ya)] (section Zobdat al-tawāriḵ-e Bāysonḡori).

Foreign relations

During Shāhrukh's rule, relations between the Timurid state and Ming China under the rule of the Yongle Emperor and his descendants normalized, as compared to the era of Timur and the Hongwu Emperor (the first emperor of Ming China), who almost started a war (which was averted only due to the death of Timur). Chinese embassies, led by Chen Cheng, visited Samarqand and Herat several times in 1414-1420, while a large embassy sent by Shāhrukh (and immortalized by its diarist, Ghiyāth al-dīn Naqqāsh) traveled to China in 1419-1422.

Marriages

  • Gawhar Shad Agha, daughter of Giyas-al-ddin Terkhan;
  • Malikat Agha, daughter of Khizar Ughlan Chaghatay;
  • Tuti Agha, a Narin Mughal lady;
  • Aq Sultan Agha, daughter of Charkas bin Timan Ilchigiday;
  • Mihr Nigar Agha, an Uzbek Bisut lady;
  • La'l Takin Agha;
  • Death and succession

    Shāhrukh died during a journey in Rey in Persia and was succeeded by his son, Mohammad Taragae Uluğ Bēg, who had been viceroy of Transoxiana during his father's lifetime.

    In total, Shāhrukh had five sons.

  • Ulugh Beg, viceroy of Transoxiana, was the oldest.
  • Sultan Ibrahim Mirza, viceroy of Persia, was second oldest but predeceased Shāhrukh.
  • Baysonqor (1397–1433), Shāhrukh's artistic third son never had a vice-royal position, but played an important part in his father's government in Samarqand, also pre-deceased his father, perhaps due to over consumption of alcohol.
  • His fourth son, Mirza Soyurghatmïsh Khan, was viceroy of India and Ghazni but also died before Shāhrukh, as did
  • His fifth son Mirza Muhammad Juki.
  • Thus, only Ulugh Beg, who was an excellent mathematician but an incapable ruler, was left to succeed his father.

    Facial reconstruction

    Soviet anthropologist Mikhail Mikhaylovich Gerasimov reconstructed the facial features of Timur, his son Shāhrukh and grandson Ulug Beg. Relative to the others, Timur appears to have been phenotypically East Asian, while Shāhrukh, the son of a Tajik woman, had more Europoid features. Shāhrukh appeared more similar to brachycephalic Europoids. Shāhrukh's son Ulugh Beg however, had predominantly mongloid features, and no obvious caucasoid feature.

    References

    Shahrukh Mirza Wikipedia