- Khalil Sultan
Khalil Sultan (خلیل سلطان), (b. 1384, d.
November 4 ,1411 ) was the Timurid ruler ofTransoxiana from 1405 to 1409. He was a son ofMiran Shah and a grandson ofTimur .Biography
During Timur's lifetime, Khalil Sultan gained the conqueror's particular favor. He distinguished himself during the campaign in
India and in 1402 was given rule ofFerghana . Upon Timur's death in 1405 Khalil viewed himself as his successor. Timur's appointed successorPir Muhammad was quickly cast aside, and Khalil gained control ofSamarkand . Khalil gained Timur's treasury and bestowed the puppet title of Chagatai Khan (which before had always been granted by Timur to a descendant ofGenghis Khan to legitimize his rule) to a Timurid prince. Khalil also gained an ally, Sultan Husain, who had previously also made claims to the throne as a grandson of Timur. [Roemer, p. 100]Meanwhile,
Shah Rukh , who was ruling inHerat , also decided to press his claims. He advanced to theOxus River against Khalil but turned back when Khalil's father Miran Shah, as well as his brotherAba Bakr , marched fromAzerbaijan in support. Nevertheless, Khalil's position began to weaken. He was unpopular in Samarkand, where the nobility despised his wife Shad Mulk. The latter had considerable influence over Khalil, convincing him to appoint people of low birth to high positions at the expense of the nobility. A famine caused him to be even more despised. He decided to return to Ferghana with his former mentor, Khudaidid Husain, who went toMoghulistan (the realm of the eastern Chagatai Khans) in an attempt to win their support. [Roemer, pp. 100-1]Khalil's rule in Samarkand finally ended when Shah Rukh entered the city unopposed on
May 13 , 1409. Transoxiana was then given to Shah Rukh's sonUlugh Beg . Khalil decided to surrender to Shah Rukh, who had captured Shad Mulk. He received his wife back, and was appointed governor of Ray. He died there in 1411. His wife committed suicide shortly after his death. [Roemer, p. 101]Notes
References
* Roemer, H. R. "The Successors of Timur." "The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 6: The Timurid and Safavid Periods." Edited by Peter Jackson. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986. ISBN 0521200946
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.