Baysunghur (Aq Qoyunlu)

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Reign1490–1493
PredecessorYa'qub Beg
SuccessorRustam Beg
Died1493
Baysunghur
Padishah
Gold coin of Baysunghur, Tabriz mint
Sultan of the Aq Qoyunlu
Reign1490–1493
PredecessorYa'qub Beg
SuccessorRustam Beg
Died1493
FatherYa'qub Beg
MotherGawhar-Sultan Khanum
ReligionSunni Islam

Baysunghur (Persian: سلطان بایسنقر) was the ruler of the Aq Qoyunlu from 1490 to 1493. He was the son and successor of Ya'qub Beg (r.1478–1490). He had little power during his short reign, serving as a figurehead, while real power was in possession of his tutor and commander Sufi Khalil Beg Mawsilu in 1490–1492, and then under another commander, Sulayman Beg Bijan in 1492–1493. Baysunghur was killed in 1493 by his cousin Rustam Beg, who succeeded him.

Baysunghur was the eldest son of the Aq Qoyunlu ruler Ya'qub Beg (r.1478–1490) and Gawhar-Sultan Khanum, the daughter of the Shirvanshah Farrukh Yasar (r.1465–1500).[1] During the reign of his father, Baysunghur was allocated the funds of the southern Iranian province of Fars, which had received a special status under the Aq Qoyunlu.[2] Furthermore, he was also put under the guardianship of the Turkoman military officer Sufi Khalil Beg Mawsilu, who had been given the governorship of Fars in 1478.[3] Ya'qub became severely ill and died in December 24, 1490 in Qarabagh. A number of scholars believe that he was poisoned by his wife. His death marked the start of the decline of the Aq Qoyunlu.[4]

Reign

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