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Who were the first Ashtarkhānid rulers of Bukhara?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 December 2009
Extract
The dynasty which ruled the khānate of Bukhara during the greater part of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries claimed descent from Chingiz Khān's son Jochi, as did the Shaybānids of the preceding dynasty. It is known as Ashtarkhānid, to recall the place of origin of the family, viz. Astrakhan. More often it is referred to as Jānid, after Jānāī Muḥammad Khān, who is considered by some as the first ruler of the dynasty. But it will be seen that there is no clear basis for such an assumption, and that in fact his father and his eldest son were between them the founders of the dynasty
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- Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies , Volume 51 , Issue 3 , October 1988 , pp. 482 - 488
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- Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1988
References
1 Mac Chesney, R. D., ‘The “reforms” of Bāqī Muḥammad Khān’ Central Asiatic Journal, xxiv, 1980, 69Google Scholar, calls the dynasty Tuqāy Timūrid after an ancestor who was Chinghiz Khān's grandson. See Maḥmūdb, Wālī (hereafter MBW), Bahr al-asrār fī manāqib al-akhyār, India Office Library, Ethé 575, fols. 2b–4aGoogle Scholar, for the full genealogy. Muhammad Yūsuf Munshī b. Khwajah Baqa (hereafter MYM), Tadkhkira-i Muqīm khānī, BL Or. 6478, fol. 242b, does not mention Tuqāy Timūr, and gives as their ancestor a certain Arsh Khān, son of Jochi. Hiājjī Mīr Muhammad Salīm, Sihilat al-salāfin, Bodleian Ethé/Sachau 169/Ouseley 269, fol. 156b, gives the name of Jochi's son as Urūs.
2 Dickson, M. B., Shāh Tahmásb and the Uzbeks (the duel for Khurásán with Vbayd Khan 930– 946\1524–1540) (Princeton University Ph.D. thesis, 1958, unpublished), 161, 166, 228Google Scholar. When ‘Ubaydallah lost the support of the Khan for his campaign in Khurasan, his troops dwindled and he was forced to give up and return to the khanate.
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8 MBW, fols. 61a–b, 72b.
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10 MBW, fols. 65a–b, 42a. Hājjī Mir, fols. 127a, 160b, 161a, 156b–157a. ‘Abbās Sultān and Rahmān Sultān were the sons of Tursūn (Muhammad) Sultān. Iskandar Beg, 591, says mistakenly that Tursūn Muhammad was Bāqī Muhammad's brother.
11 MBW, fols. 62a, 65a–b, 64b. ‘Abbās Sultān governed Shiburghan, Rahman Qulī governed Sakharj (?), and Pīr Muhammad was given the governorship of Ūrā Tepeh. Wālī Muhammad was apparently proclaimed ruler of Balkh at the beginning of Rabī I 1009(?)/10 September 1600.
12 Hājjī Mir, fols. 156b, 157a, 163a–164a, 161b. de Zambaur, E., Manuel de généalogie el de chronologie pour I'histoire de I'Islam (Hanover, 1927), 270Google Scholar, gives the length of JanI Muhammad's reign as a few months in 1009.
13 MBW, fols. 58b, 51a–52b, 56a–57b.
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16 Lane-Poole, cited in n. 6 above. Lowick, N. M., ‘Shaybanid silver coins’, Numismatic Chronicle, 1966, 311Google Scholar. Davidovich, , ‘Serebryanye monety’.art. cit. 72–81Google Scholar.
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18 ibid., 45, 48–9, 248–51, about Muhammad Ibrāhīm.
19 Davidovich, , Istoriya, 14Google Scholar.
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