Ismah Khatun

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Tenure1109 – 1118
Diedafter 1119
Isfahan
Burial
Barracks Market of Isfahan
Ismah Khatun
اسماعه خاتون
Wife of the Abbasid caliph
Tenure1109 – 1118
BornIsfahan
Diedafter 1119
Isfahan
Burial
Barracks Market of Isfahan
SpouseAl-Mustazhir
ChildrenAbu Ishaq Ibrahim ibn Ahmad al-Mustazhir
Names
Ismah Khatun Malik Shah.
Era name and dates
Later Abbasid era: 12th century
DynastySeljuk
FatherMalik Shah
ReligionSunni Islam

Ismah Khatun (Persian: اسماعه خاتون) (Arabic: عصمة خاتون) was a Seljuk princess, daughter of sultan Malik Shah (r. 1072–1092) and principal wife of Abbasid caliph al-Mustazhir (r. 1094–1118).

Marriage

Ismah Khatun was one of the youngest daughters of Seljuk sultan Malik Shah. She was very young when her father died in 1092; he was succeeded by his underage son Mahmud I under the regency of Terken Khatun, who was the regent during his minority in 1092–1094.[1]

Later, her other brothers, Berkyaruq, Malik-Shah II and Muhammad Tapar also became Sultans.

She was one of Al-Mustazhir's wives. She was the daughter of Seljuk Sultan Malik-Shah I. Al-Mustazhir married her in Isfahan in 1109.[2] She later came to Baghdad and took up residence in the Caliphal palace. On 3 February 1112, she gave birth to prince Abu Ishaq Ibrahim, who died of smallpox in October 1114, and was buried in the mausoleum of al-Muqtadir in Rusafah Cemetery, beside his uncle-cousin Ja'far, son of the caliph al-Muqtadi (father of Mustazhir) and Mah-i Mulk Khatun (half-sister of Ismah). Upon the death of Al-Mustazhir, Ismah returned to Isfahan, where she died, and was buried within the law college that she had founded there on Barracks Market Street.[3]

Her husband died in 1118. In the same year her half-brother sultan Muhammad Tapar also died.

After the death of her husband, he was succeeded by al-Mustarshid. He was Al-Mustazhir's son from a concubine Lubanah. She was from Baghdad.[4]

See also

References

Sources

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