Muzaffar al-Din Hajjaj

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Reign1257 – 1267
SuccessorKutlugh Turkan (as sole ruler)
Muzaffar al-Din Hajjaj
Co-ruler of Kirman
Reign1257 – 1267
PredecessorQutb al-Din Mohammad
SuccessorKutlugh Turkan (as sole ruler)
Co-rulerKutlugh Turkan
Bornc. 1247
Kerman
DiedJuly 1291 (aged 4344)
Names
Muzaffar al-Din Hajjaj Sultan
FatherQutb al-Din Mohammad
MotherKutlugh Turkan

Muzaffar al-Din Hajjaj was a nominal Qutlughkhanid prince of Kerman, a son of Qutb al-Din Mohammad and Kutlugh Turkan.

Muzaffar al-Din Hajjaj was a minor when his father Qutb al-Din Mohammad died in 1257.[1] Kerman nobles assembled and asked Hulegu for Kutlugh Turkan's appointment as the ruler of the principality. Hulegu confirmed Hajjaj as the new ruler of Kerman, while Kutlugh Turkan was assigned only the civil affairs. Hajjaj's brother-in-law Azad al-Din Hajji was confirmed as the supreme commander, much to Turkan's displeasure, who later obtained full sovereign rights.

Hajjaj married Arghun Aqa's daughter Begi Khatun - a woman his father wanted to marry - in 1264. This was the year when Turkan was acknowledged by Hulegu as a ruler in her own right, putting Hajjaj under her shadow. Once he reached adulthood, Hajjaj began to fight at the front of the Ilkhanid army ranks, Chagataid where he achieved fame. This was confirmed when he was honored by Abaqa in 1270. According to "History of Qara-Khitai Shahs" (Tāriḵ-e šāhi-e Qarāḵtāʾiān), he grew ambitious and asked Turkan to dance in front of her while his followers chanted "The sky and the stars are old. Your fortuitous lot is young. It would be better if the old would give its turn to the young!". Tarkan hastily left for Padishah Khatun's headquarters in order to quell Hajjaj's upcoming uprising.

Exile and death

Family

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI