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{{short description|Turco-Mongol conqueror (1320s–1405)}}
:''For the similar-sounding word Timor, see ].
{{pp|small=yes}}
], Uzbekistan]]
{{redirect-multi|2|Tamerlane|Tamerlan|the poem|Tamerlane (poem)|people named Tamerlan|Tamerlan (given name)|people named Timur or Temur|Timur (name)|other uses|Timur (disambiguation)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2023}}
{{Infobox royalty
| name = Timur
| full name = Shuja-ud-din Timur<ref>W. M. Thackston, ''A Century of Princes: Sources on Timurid History and Art'' (1989), p. 239</ref>
| title = {{ubl|]|]<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|publisher=Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland|year=1847|title=Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland|volume=9|page=377}}</ref>|]{{efn|To legitimize his rule, Timur claimed the title ''güregen'' ({{lit.}} 'royal son-in-law') to a princess of Chinggisid line.{{sfn|Manz|1999|p=14}}}}}}
| image = Timur reconstruction03.jpg
| caption = Facial reconstruction from Timur's skull, by ]
| reign = 9 April 1370{{snd}}<br />18 February 1405
| coronation = 9 April 1370, ]<ref name="Muntakhab-ul-Lubab, Khafi Khan Nizam-ul-Mulk p. 49">'']'', ], Vol I, p. 49. Printed in Lahore, 1985</ref>
| predecessor =
| successor = ]
| succession = ] of the ]
| spouse = ]
| spouse-type = Consort
| spouses = {{plainlist|
* Chulpan Mulk Agha
* Aljaz Turkhan Agha
* Tukal Khanum
* Dil Shad Agha
* Touman Agha
}}
| spouses-type = Wives
| issue = {{plainlist|
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
}}
| issue-link = #Descendants
| dynasty = ]
| father = Amir Taraghai
| mother = Tekina Khatun
| birth_date = 1320s
| birth_place = near ], ]
| death_date = 18 February 1405
| death_place = ], Timurid Empire
| place of burial = ], ], Uzbekistan
| religion = ]
}}


'''Timur''',{{efn|{{IPAc-en|t|ɪ|ˈ|m|ʊər}}; {{langx|chg|{{nq|تیمور}}}} ''Temür'', {{lit.}} 'Iron'{{indent}}{{*}}Sometimes spelled '''Taimur''' or '''Temur'''.{{indent}}{{*}}Historically best known as '''Amir Timur''' or as '''''Sahib-i-Qiran''''' ({{lit.}} 'Lord of the Auspicious Conjunction'), his ].<ref>{{cite book|title=The Shah Jahan Nama of 'Inayat Khan: An Abridged History of the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan, Compiled by His Royal Librarian: the Nineteenth-century Manuscript Translation of A.R. Fuller (British Library, Add. 30,777|author1=ʻInāyat Khān |author2=Muḥammad Ṭāhir Āšnā ʿInāyat Ḫān |publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1990|pages=11–17}}</ref>}} also known as '''Tamerlane'''{{efn|{{IPAc-en|ˈ|t|æ|m|ər|l|eɪ|n}}; {{langx|fa|{{nq|تيمور لنگ}}}} {{lang|fa-Latn|Temūr(-i) Lang}}; {{langx|chg|{{nq|اقساق تیمور}}|link=no}} ''Aqsaq Temür'',<ref>{{cite book |last=Johanson |first=Lars |title=The Turkic Languages |date=1998 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=0415082005 |page=27}}</ref> {{lit.}} 'Timur the Lame'}} (1320s{{spnd}}17–18 February 1405), was a ] conqueror who founded the ] in and around modern-day ], ], and ], becoming the first ruler of the ]. An undefeated commander, he is widely regarded as one of the greatest military leaders and tacticians in history, as well as one of the most brutal and deadly.{{sfn|Marozzi|2004|p={{page needed|date=October 2023}}}}<ref>{{cite book |author=Meri |first=Josef W. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=H-k9oc9xsuAC |title=Medieval Islamic Civilization |publisher=Routledge |year=2005 |isbn=978-0415966900 |page=812}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Timur {{!}} Biography, Conquests, Empire, & Facts {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Timur |access-date=28 September 2022 |website=www.britannica.com |archive-date=17 June 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150617233354/https://www.britannica.com/biography/Timur |url-status=live }}</ref> Timur is also considered a great patron of art and architecture, for he interacted with intellectuals such as ], ], and ] and his reign introduced the ].{{sfn|Marozzi|2004|pp=341–342}}
'''Tīmūr bin Tara<u>gh</u>ay Barlas''' (]: تیمور ''Tēmōr'', "'']''") (] &ndash; February ]) was a 14th century ] of ] descent<ref name="EI">B.F. Manz, ''"Tīmūr Lang"'', in ], Online Edition, 2006</ref><ref>The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, "Timur", 6th ed., Columbia University Press: ''"... Timur (timoor') or Tamerlane (tăm'urlān), c.1336–1405, <u>Mongol conqueror</u>, b. Kesh, near Samarkand. ..."'', ()</ref><ref>, in ]</ref>, conqueror of much of Western and central Asia, and founder of the ] (]–1405) in ] and of the ], which survived in some form until ]. He is also known as '''Timur-e Lang''' (]: تیمور لنگ , ]: तिमूर ऎ लंग) which translates to '''Timur the Lame''', as he was lame after sustaining an injury to the leg as a child.


Born into the ] ] confederation of the ] in ] (in modern-day ]) in the 1320s, Timur gained control of the western ] by 1370. From that base he led military campaigns across ], ], and Central Asia, the ], and ], defeating in the process the Khans of the ], the ], the emerging ], as well as the late ] of ], becoming the most powerful ruler in the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://scroll.in/article/825287/counterview-taimurs-actions-were-uniquely-horrific-in-indian-history|title=Counterview: Taimur's actions were uniquely horrific in Indian history|first=Girish|last=Shahane|date=28 December 2016|website=Scroll.in|access-date=28 December 2016|archive-date=9 November 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171109023347/https://scroll.in/article/825287/counterview-taimurs-actions-were-uniquely-horrific-in-indian-history|url-status=live}}</ref> From these conquests he founded the ], which fragmented shortly after his death. He spoke several languages, including ], an ancestor of modern ], as well as ] and ], in which he wrote diplomatic correspondence.
He ruled over an empire that extends in modern nations from south eastern ], ], ], ], ], through ] encompassing part of ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], even approaching ] in ].


Timur was the last of the great ] of the ], and his empire set the stage for the rise of the more structured and lasting ] in the 16th and 17th centuries.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Darwin |first=John |title=After Tamerlane: the rise and fall of global empires, 1400–2000 |publisher=Bloomsbury Press |year=2008 |isbn=978-1596917606 |pages=29, 92 |author-link=John Darwin (historian)}}</ref>{{sfn|Manz|1999|p=1}}<ref name="Marozzi2006">{{cite book |last=Marozzi |first=Justin |title=Tamerlane: Sword of Islam, Conqueror of the World |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780306814655 |url-access=registration |publisher=Da Capo Press |year=2006 |isbn=978-0306814655 |page=}}</ref> Timur was of both Turkic and Mongol descent, and, while probably not a ] on either side, he shared a common ancestor with ] on his father's side,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Seekins |first1=Donald M. |last2=Nyrop |first2=Richard F. |title=Afghanistan A Country Study |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FXzqn7XWdJkC&pg=PA11 |publisher=The Studies |date=1986 |page=11 |quote=Timur was of both Turkish and Mongol descent and claimed Genghis Khan as an ancestor |isbn=978-0160239298 |via=Google Books}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=International Association for Mongol Studies |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tZ2fAAAAMAAJ |title=Монгол Улсын Ерөнхийлөгч Н. Багабандийн ивээлд болж буй Олон Улсын Монголч Эрдэмтний VIII их хурал (Улаанбаатар хот 2002. VIII. 5–11): Илтгэлүүдийн товчлол |date=2002 |publisher=OUMSKh-ny Nariĭn bichgiĭn darga naryn gazar |isbn= |volume=III |pages=5–11 |language=Mongolian |trans-title=Eighth International Congress of Mongolists being convened under the patronage of N. Bagabandi, president of Mongolia (Ulaanbaatar city 2002): Summary of presentations |quote=First of all, Timur's genealogy gives him a common ancestor with Chinggis Khan in Tumbinai – sechen or Tumanay Khan. |via=Google Books}}</ref><ref name="woods"/> though some authors have suggested his mother may have been a descendant of the Khan.<ref>{{cite book |author=Lodge |first=Henry Cabot |title=The History of Nations |date=1916 |publisher=P. F. Collier & Son |volume=14 |location= |page=46 |language=English |quote=Timur the Lame, from the effects of an early wound, a name which some European writers have converted into Tamerlane, or Tamberlaine. He was of Mongol origin, and a direct descendant, by the mother's side, of Genghis Khan.}}</ref><ref name="Arabshah2017"/> He clearly sought to invoke the legacy of Genghis Khan's conquests during his lifetime.<ref>Richard C. Martin, ''Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World'' A–L, Macmillan Reference, 2004, {{ISBN|978-0028656045}}, p. 134.</ref> Timur envisioned the restoration of the ] and according to ], saw himself as Genghis Khan's heir.<ref name="Chaliand">Gérard Chaliand, ''Nomadic Empires: From Mongolia to the Danube'' translated by A. M. Berrett, Transaction Publishers, 2004. translated by A.M. Berrett. Transaction Publishers, p. 75. {{ISBN|076580204X}}. {{google books|xKVAbb6Tc4wC|Limited preview}}. , {{ISBN|076580204X}}, , "Timur Leng (Tamerlane) Timur, known as the lame (1336–1405) was a Muslim Turk. He aspired to recreate the empire of his ancestors. He was a military genius who loved to play chess in his spare time to improve his military tactics and skill. And although he wielded absolute power, he never called himself more than an emir.", "Timur Leng (Tamerlane) Timur, known as the lame (1336–1405) was a Muslim Turk from the Umus of Chagatai who saw himself as Genghis Khan's heir."</ref>
Timur's legacy is a mixed one, for while Central Asia blossomed, some say even peaked, under his reign, other places such as ], ], ] and other Arab, Persian, Indian and Turkic cities were sacked and destroyed, and many thousands of people were slaughtered. Thus, while Timur remains a hero of sorts in ], he is vilified by many in Arab, Persian and Indian societies. At the same time, many Western Asians still do name their children after him, while ] calls him "Teymour, Conqueror of the World" (تیمور جهانگشا).


To legitimize his conquests, Timur relied on Islamic symbols and language, referring to himself as the "Sword of Islam". He was a patron of educational and religious institutions. He styled himself as a '']'' in the last years of his life.<ref name=":3" /> By the end of his reign, Timur had gained complete control over all the remnants of the Chagatai Khanate, the ], and the Golden Horde, and had even attempted to restore the ] in China. Timur's armies were inclusively multi-ethnic and were feared throughout Asia, Africa, and Europe,{{sfn|Marozzi|2004|p={{page needed|date=October 2023}}}} sizable parts of which his campaigns laid waste.<ref>Matthew White: ''Atrocitology: Humanity's 100 Deadliest Achievements'', Canongate Books, 2011, {{ISBN|978-0857861252}}, section "Timur".</ref> Scholars estimate that his military campaigns caused the deaths of millions of people.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/1999/01/17/the-rehabilitation-of-tamerlane/ |work=Chicago Tribune |title=The Rehabilitation of Tamerlane |date=17 January 1999 |archive-date=27 July 2024 |access-date=11 September 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240727020849/https://www.chicagotribune.com/1999/01/17/the-rehabilitation-of-tamerlane/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>], (p. 174), Routledge & Kegan Paul Limited, 1971, {{ISBN|0812217667}}.</ref> Of all the areas he conquered, ] suffered the most from his expeditions, as it rose several times against him.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Barthold |first1=V. V. |title=Four studies on the History of Central Asia |date=1962 |publisher=E. J. Brill |edition=Second Printing |volume=1 |location=Leiden, Netherlands |page=61}}</ref> Timur's campaigns have been characterized as ].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Foss |first=Clive |editor1-last=Freedman-Apsel |editor1-first=Joyce |editor2-last=Fein |editor2-first=Helen |editor2-link=Helen Fein |encyclopedia=Teaching About Genocide: A Guidebook for College and University Teachers: Critical Essays, Syllabi, and Assignments |title=Genocide in History |url=https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED395853.pdf |year=1992 |publisher=] |location=Ottawa |access-date=29 November 2022 |isbn=189584200X |page=27 |archive-date=29 November 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221129085049/https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED395853.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref>
After his marriage into 13th century Mongol conqueror ]'s family, he took the name '''Timūr Gurkānī''' (]: تيمور گوركانى), ''Gurkān'' being the Persianized form of the original Mongolian word ''kürügän'', "son-in-law". Alternative spellings of his name are: '''Temur''', '''Taimur''', '''Timur Lenk''', '''Timur-i Leng''', '''Temur-e Lang''', '''Amir Timur''', '''Aqsaq Timur''', as well as the ]ized '''Tamerlane''' and '''Tamburlaine'''.


He was the grandfather of the Timurid sultan, astronomer and mathematician ], who ruled Central Asia from 1411 to 1449, and the great-great-great-grandfather of ] (1483–1530), founder of the ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://search.eb.com/eb/article-9072544 |title=Timur |publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica, Online Academic Edition |year=2007 |url-access=subscription |access-date=26 November 2007 |archive-date=25 March 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200325180324/https://academic.eb.com/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="EI">{{cite encyclopedia |year=2000 |title=Tīmūr Lang |encyclopedia=] |publisher=] |url=http://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopaedia-of-islam-2/ti-mu-r-lang-COM_1223 |access-date=24 April 2014 |last=Manz |first=Beatrice F. |edition=2nd |volume=10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150207013949/http://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopaedia-of-islam-2/ti-mu-r-lang-COM_1223 |archive-date=7 February 2015 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
==Early life==
Timur was born in ], near Kesh (an area now better known as ]), 'the green city,' situated some 50 miles south of ] in modern ].


==Ancestry==
Timur placed much of his early legitimacy on his genealogical roots to the great Mongol conqueror, Chingis Khan, or ]. What is known is that he was descended from the Mongol invaders who initially pushed westwards after the establishment of the Mongol empire.
]
Through his father, Timur claimed to be a descendant of ], a male-line ancestor he shared with ].<ref name="woods">{{cite book|last=Woods|first=John E.|author-link=John E. Woods (historian)|title=Timur and Chinggis Khan|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tZ2fAAAAMAAJ|series=Eighth International Congress of Mongolists being convened under the patronage of N. Bagabandi, president of Mongolia|year=2002|publisher=OUMSKh-ny Nariĭn bichgiĭn darga naryn gazar|location=Ulaanbaatar|page=377}}</ref> Tumanay's great-great-grandson ] was a minister for the emperor who later assisted the latter's son ] in the governorship of ].<ref name=DicksonP97>{{cite journal|first=John E.|last=Woods|author-link=John E. Woods (historian)|editor1=Martin Bernard Dickson|editor1-link=Martin B. Dickson|editor2=Michel M. Mazzaoui|editor3=Vera Basch Moreen|title=Timur's Genealogy|journal=Intellectual Studies on Islam: Essays Written in Honor of Martin B. Dickson |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yxmCAAAAIAAJ|year=1990|publisher=University of Utah Press|isbn=978-0874803426|page=97}}</ref><ref name="Mackenzie1963">{{cite book|last=Mackenzie|first=Franklin|title=The Ocean and the Steppe: The Life and Times of the Mongol Conqueror Genghis Khan, 1155–1227 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2iQKAQAAIAAJ|year=1963|publisher=Vantage Press|page=322}}</ref> Though there are not many mentions of Qarachar in 13th and 14th century records, later Timurid sources greatly emphasized his role in the early history of the ].{{sfn|Woods|1990|p=90}}<ref>{{cite book|first=John E.|last=Woods|author-link=John E. Woods (historian)|title=The Timurid dynasty |page=9|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0XcMAQAAMAAJ|year=1991|publisher=Indiana University, Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies}}</ref> These histories also state that Genghis Khan later established the "bond of fatherhood and sonship" by marrying Chagatai's daughter to Qarachar.<ref name="Haidar2004">{{cite book|last=Haidar|first=Mansura|title=Indo-Central Asian Relations: From Early Times to Medieval Period|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zSZuAAAAMAAJ|year=2004|publisher=Manohar |isbn=978-8173045080|page=126}}</ref> Through his alleged descent from this marriage, Timur claimed kinship with the ].<ref name="Keene2001">{{cite book |last=Keene |first=Henry George |author-link=Henry George Keene (1826–1915) |title=The Turks in India |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KYvjZN6pXYEC&pg=PA20 |publisher=University Press of the Pacific |location=Honolulu, HI |year=2001 |orig-year=1878 |page=20 |isbn=978-0898755343}}</ref>


The origins of Timur's mother, Tekina Khatun, are less clear. The '']'' merely states her name without giving any information regarding her background. Writing in 1403, ], ] of ], claimed that she was of lowly origin.<ref name=DicksonP97/> The ''Mu'izz al-Ansab'', written decades later, says that she was related to the ]i tribe, whose lands bordered that of the ].{{sfn|Manz|1999|pages=164–165}} ] recounted that Timur himself described to him his mother's descent from the legendary ] hero ].<ref name="Khaldūn">{{cite book |last=Fischel |first=Walter J.|title=Ibn Khaldun and Tamerlane |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fT5w5bk4ZLMC&pg=PA37|year=1952 |publisher=University of California Press |location=Berkeley, CA / Los Angeles|page=37}}</ref> ] suggested that she was a descendant of Genghis Khan.<ref name="Arabshah2017">{{cite book |author1=Ahmad ibn Arabshah |author-link1=Ahmad ibn Arabshah |last2=McChesney |first2=Robert D. |author-link2=Robert D. McChesney |translator=M. M. Khorramia |title=Tamerlane: The Life of the Great Amir |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mAOUrgEACAAJ |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |year=2017 |page=4 |isbn=978-1784531706}}</ref> The 18th century ''Books of Timur'' identify her as the daughter of 'Sadr al-Sharia', which is believed to refer to the ] scholar Ubayd Allah al-Mahbubi of ].<ref name="Sela2011">{{cite book |last=Sela |first=Ron |title=The Legendary Biographies of Tamerlane: Islam and Heroic Apocrypha in Central Asia |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1jphXQRPnpgC&pg=PA27 |publisher=] |year=2011 |page=27 |isbn=978-1139498340}}</ref>
His father ] was head of the tribe of ], a nomadic Turkic-speaking tribe of Mongol origin that traced its origin to the Mongol commander ]. Tara<u>gh</u>ay was the great-grandson of ] and, distinguished among his fellow-clansmen as the first convert to ], Tara<u>gh</u>ay might have assumed the high military rank which fell to him by right of inheritance; but like his father Burkul he preferred a life of retirement and study. Tara<u>gh</u>ay would eventually retire to a Muslim monastery, telling his son that "the world is a beautiful vase filled with ]s."


== Early life ==
Under a paternal eye, the education of young Timur was such that at the age of twenty he had not only become an adept in manly outdoor exercises but had earned the reputation of being an attentive reader of the ]. Like his father, Timur was a Muslim and seems to have been influenced by ] ]. At this period, according to the ''Memoirs'' (''Malfu'at''), he exhibited proofs of a tender and sympathetic nature, though these claims are generally now held to be spurious. Later he had converted to be ] by Sayyed Barakah, a Nusairi leader from ] that had a strong influence on Timur.
]'' (1424–1428), 1467 edition]]
Timur was born in Transoxiana near the city of Kesh (modern ], ]), some {{convert|80|km}} south of ], part of what was then the ].<ref name="Tamerlane">{{cite web|title=Tamerlane |url=http://asianhistory.about.com/od/profilesofasianleaders/p/TimurProf.htm |publisher=AsianHistory |access-date=1 November 2013|archive-date=5 October 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111005015216/http://asianhistory.about.com/od/profilesofasianleaders/p/TimurProf.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref> His name ''Temur'' means "]" in the ], his mother-tongue (cf. ] ''Temir'', ] ''Demir'').<ref>Richard Peters, ''The Story of the Turks: From Empire to Democracy'' (1959), p. 24.</ref> It is cognate with ]'s birth name of ''Temüjin.''<ref>{{cite book |last=Glassé |first=Cyril |title=The new encyclopedia of Islam |date=2001 |publisher=AltaMira Press |isbn=0759101892 |edition=Revised |location=Walnut Creek, California |oclc=48553252}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Sinor|first=Denis |chapter=Introduction: The concept of Inner Asia |year=1990 |title=The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia |pages=1–18 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0521243049 |doi=10.1017/chol9780521243049.002}}</ref> Later Timurid dynastic histories claim that Timur was born on 8 April 1336, but most sources from his lifetime give ages that are consistent with a birthdate in the late 1320s. Multiple scholars suspect the 1336 date was designed to tie Timur to the legacy of ], the last ruler of the ] descended from ], who died in that year.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |title=Tīmūr Lang |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition |url=https://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopaedia-of-islam-2/timur-lang-COM_1223?lang=en |last=Manz |first=Beatrice F. |date=24 April 2012 |editor1=Bearman |editor-first=P. |quote=The birthdate commonly ascribed to Tīmūr, 25 S̲h̲aʿbān 736/8 April 1336, is probably an invention from the time of his successor S̲h̲āh Ruk̲h̲ , the day chosen for astrological meaning and the year to coincide with the death of the last Il-K̲h̲ān |section=Tīmūr Lang |editor2=Th. Bianquis |editor3=C. E. Bosworth |editor4=E. van Donzel |editor5=W. P. Heinrichs}}.</ref><ref name=":0">{{cite journal |last=Manz |first=Beatrice Forbes |title=Tamerlane and the Symbolism of Sovereignty |journal=] |volume=21 |issue=1–2 |pages=105–122 |date=1988 |issn=0021-0862 |jstor=4310596 |doi=10.1080/00210868808701711}}</ref> He was a member of the Barlas, a ] tribe<ref>"Central Asia, history of {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220531175615/http://search.eb.com/eb/article-73545 |date=31 May 2022 }}", in ], Online Edition, 2007. (Quotation: "Under his leadership, Timur united the Mongol tribes located in the basins of the two rivers.")</ref><ref>"", in ], Online Edition, 2007. Quotation: "Timur (Tamerlane) was of Mongol descent and he aimed to restore Mongol power."</ref> that had been ] in many aspects.<ref>Carter V. Findley, ''The Turks in World History'', Oxford University Press, 2005, {{ISBN|978-0195177268}}, p. 101.</ref><ref>G. R. Garthwaite, ''The Persians'', Malden, {{ISBN|978-1557868602}}, MA: Blackwell Pub., 2007. . Quotation: "Timur's tribe, the Barlas, had Mongol origins but had become Turkic-speaking ... However, the Barlus tribe is considered one of the original Mongol tribes and there are "Barlus Ovogton" people who belong to Barlus tribe in modern Mongolia."</ref><ref>M. S. Asimov & ], ''History of Civilizations of Central Asia'', ] Regional Office, 1998, {{ISBN|9231034677}}, p. 320. "One of his followers was Timur of the Barlas tribe. This Mongol tribe had settled in the valley of Kashka Darya, intermingling with the Turkic population, adopting their religion (Islam) and gradually giving up its own nomadic ways, like a number of other Mongol tribes in Transoxania ..."</ref><ref>{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2016 |title=ТИМУ́Р ТАМЕРЛАН |encyclopedia=] |publisher=Great Russian Encyclopedia |location=], Russia |url=https://old.bigenc.ru/military_science/text/4192231 |access-date=26 October 2023 |editor-last=Kravets |editor-first=S. L. |volume=32: Televizionnaya bashnya – Ulan-Bator |language=ru |trans-title=Timúr Tamerlan |isbn=978-5-85270-369-9 |quote=Сын бека Тарагая из тюркизированного монг. племени барлас |display-editors=etal |trans-quote=Son of Bek Taragai from the Turkified Mongol Barlas tribe |archive-date=26 October 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231026130520/https://old.bigenc.ru/military_science/text/4192231 |url-status=live }}.</ref><ref>{{Cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Timur|title=Timur|encyclopedia=]|date=5 September 2023|at=§ Life|quote=Timur was a member of the Turkicized Barlas tribe, a Mongol subgroup that had settled in Transoxania (now roughly corresponding to Uzbekistan) after taking part in Genghis Khan’s son Chagatai’s campaigns in that region.|access-date=26 October 2023|archive-date=17 June 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150617233354/https://www.britannica.com/biography/Timur|url-status=live}}</ref> His father, Taraghai was described as a minor noble of this tribe.<ref name="Tamerlane"/> However, Manz believes that Timur may have later understated the social position of his father, so as to make his own successes appear more remarkable. She states that though he is not believed to have been especially powerful, Taraghai was reasonably wealthy and influential.<ref name=":0"/>{{Rp|116}} This is shown in the ], which states that Timur later returning to his birthplace following the death of his father in 1360, suggesting concern over his estate.<ref>Sharaf ad-Din Ali Yazdi, ''Zafarnama'' (1424–1428), p. 35.</ref> Taraghai's social significance is further hinted at by ], who described him as a magnate in the court of Amir Husayn ].<ref name="Arabshah2017"/> In addition to this, the father of the great Amir Hamid Kereyid of ] is stated as a friend of Taraghai's.<ref>Sharaf ad-Din Ali Yazdi, ''Zafarnama'' (1424–1428), p. 75.</ref>


In his childhood, Timur and a small band of followers raided travelers for goods, especially animals such as sheep, horses, and cattle.<ref name=":0"/>{{Rp|116}} Around 1363, it is believed that Timur tried to steal a sheep from a shepherd but was shot by two arrows, one in his right leg and another in his right hand, where he lost two fingers. Both injuries disabled him for life. Some believe that these injuries occurred while serving as a mercenary to the khan of ] in what is today the ] in southwest ]. Timur's injuries and disability gave rise to the nickname "Timur the Lame" or ''Temūr(-i) Lang'' in ], which is the origin of Tamerlane, the name by which he is generally known in the West.{{sfn|Marozzi|2004|p=31}}
The question of Timur's religious beliefs has been a matter of controversy ever since he began his great conquests. His veneration of the house of the Prophet Mohammed, the spurious genealogy on his tombstone taking his descent back to Ali, and the presense of Shiites in his army led some observers and scholars to call him a Shiite. However, his official religious counselor was the Hanafite scholar Abd alJabbar Khwarazmi. Timur's religious practices with their admixture of Turco-Mongolian shamanistic elements belonged to the Sufi tradition. Timur avowed himself the disciple of Sayyid Baraka, the holy man of the commercial city of Tirmidh. He also constructed one of his finest buildings at the tomb of Ahmad Yaassawi, who was doing most to spread Folk Islam among the nomads.


==Military leader== == Military leader ==
{{Timur's conquests}}
By about 1360, Timur had gained prominence as a military leader whose troops were mostly Turkic tribesmen of the region.<ref name="Chaliand"/> He took part in campaigns in Transoxiana with the Khan of the Chagatai Khanate. Allying himself both in cause and by family connection with ], the dethroner and destroyer of ], he invaded ]<ref name="hannah">{{cite book |author=Hannah |first=Ian C. |url=https://archive.org/details/briefhistoryofea00hann |title=A brief history of eastern Asia |date=1900 |publisher=T. F. Unwin |page= |access-date=30 December 2015}}</ref> at the head of a thousand horsemen. This was the second military expedition that he led, and its success led to further operations, among them the subjugation of ] and ].{{sfn|Goldsmid|1911|p=994}}


Following Qazaghan's murder, disputes arose among the many claimants to ] power. ] of ], the Khan of the Eastern Chagatai Khanate, another descendant of Genghis Khan, invaded, interrupting this infighting. Timur was sent to negotiate with the invader but joined with him instead and was rewarded with Transoxania. At about this time, his father died and Timur also became chief of the Barlas. Tughlugh then attempted to set his son ] over Transoxania, but Timur repelled this invasion with a smaller force.<ref name=hannah/>
] in 1405 (''In Grey'')]]


== Rise to power ==
About ], however, he gained prominence as a military leader. Timur took part in campaigns in ] with ] of ], a descendant of ]. His career for the next ten or eleven years may be thus briefly summarized from the ''Memoirs''. Allying himself both in cause and by family connection with ], the dethroner and destroyer of ], he was to invade ] at the head of a thousand horsemen. This was the second military expedition which he led, and its success led to further operations, among them the subjection of ] and ].
]]]
]


In this period, Timur reduced the ] to the position of ]s while he ruled in their name. Also during this period, Timur and his brother-in-law Amir Husayn, who were at first fellow fugitives and wanderers, became rivals and antagonists.{{sfn|Goldsmid|1911|p=994}} The relationship between them became strained after Husayn abandoned efforts to carry out Timur's orders to finish off Ilya Khoja (former governor of Mawarannah) close to ].{{sfn|Marozzi|2004|p=40}}
After the murder of Kurgan the disputes which arose among the many claimants to sovereign power were halted by the invasion of ] of ], another descendant of ]. Timur was dispatched on a mission to the invader's camp, the result of which was his own appointment to the head of his own tribe, the ], in place of its former leader ].


Timur gained followers in Balkh, consisting of merchants, fellow tribesmen, Muslim clergy, aristocracy and agricultural workers, because of his kindness in sharing his belongings with them. This contrasted Timur's behavior with that of Husayn, who alienated these people, took many possessions from them via his heavy tax laws and selfishly spent the tax money building elaborate structures.{{sfn|Marozzi|2004|pp=41–42}} Around 1370, Husayn surrendered to Timur and was later assassinated, which allowed Timur to be formally proclaimed sovereign at ]. He married Husayn's wife ], a descendant of Genghis Khan, allowing him to become imperial ruler of the Chaghatay tribe.{{sfn|Marozzi|2004|p={{page needed|date=October 2023}}}}
The exigencies of Timur's quasi-sovereign position compelled him to have recourse to his formidable patron, whose reappearance on the banks of the ] created a consternation not easily allayed. The Barlas were taken from Timur and entrusted to a son of Tughluk, along with the rest of ]; but he was defeated in battle by the bold warrior he had replaced at the head of a numerically far inferior force.


== Legitimization of Timur's rule ==
==Rise to power==
Timur's Turco-Mongolian heritage provided opportunities and challenges as he sought to rule the Mongol Empire and the Muslim world.<ref name=":0"/> According to the Mongol traditions, Timur could not claim the title of ''khan'' or rule the Mongol Empire because he was not a descendant of ]. Therefore, Timur set up a puppet Chaghatayid Khan, ], as the nominal ruler of Balkh as he pretended to act as a "protector of the member of a Chinggisid line, that of Genghis Khan's eldest son, ]".<ref name="manz-2002-3">{{cite journal|last=Manz |first=Beatrice Forbes |title=Tamerlane's Career and Its Uses|journal=Journal of World History |year=2002|volume=13|page=3 |doi=10.1353/jwh.2002.0017|s2cid=143436772}}</ref> Timur instead used the title of ] meaning general, and acting in the name of the ] ruler of Transoxania.<ref name=":0"/>{{Rp|106}} To reinforce this position, Timur claimed the title ''güregen'' (royal son-in-law) to a princess of Chinggisid line.{{sfn|Manz|1999|p=14}}
] of Timur in ], ]]]


As with the title of Khan, Timur similarly could not claim the supreme title of the Islamic world, ], because the "office was limited to the ], the tribe of the ]". Therefore, Timur reacted to the challenge by creating a myth and image of himself as a "supernatural personal power" ordained by God.<ref name="manz-2002-3"/> Timur's most famous title was ''Sahib Qiran'' (<big>صَاحِبِ قِرَان</big>, 'Lord of Conjunction'), which is rooted in ]<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Moin |first=A. Azfar |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=luw_guiJGfgC |title=The Millennial Sovereign: Sacred Kingship and Sainthood in Islam |publisher=Columbia University Press |year=2012 |isbn=978-0231504713 |location=New York |pages=40–43 |oclc=967261884}}</ref> a title that was used before him to designate ], the paternal uncle of Muhammad<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal |last=Chann |first=Naindeep Singh |date=2009 |title=Lord of the Auspicious Conjunction: Origins of the Ṣāḥib-Qirān |journal=Iran & the Caucasus |volume=13 |issue=1 |pages=93–110 |doi=10.1163/160984909X12476379007927 |jstor=25597394 |issn=1609-8498}}</ref> and which was taken by the Mamluk Sultan ] and by various rulers of the ] to designate themselves.<ref name=":3" /> In that regard, he simply pursued an existing tradition in the ] to designate conquerors.<ref name=":3" />
Tughluk's death facilitated the work of reconquest, and a few years of perseverance and energy sufficed for its accomplishment, as well as for the addition of a vast extent of territory. During this period Timur and his brother-in-law Husayn, at first fellow fugitives and wanderers in joint adventures full of interest and romance, became rivals and antagonists. At the close of 1369 Husayn was assassinated and Timur, having been formally proclaimed sovereign at ], mounted the throne at Samarkand, the capital of his dominions.


The title was referring to the conjunction of the two "superior planets", Saturn and Jupiter, which was held to be an auspicious sign and the mark of a new era.<ref name=":1" /> According to A. Azfar Moin, ''Sahib Qiran'' was a messianic title, implying that Timur might potentially be the "awaited messiah descended from the prophetic line" who would "inaugurate a new era, possibly the last one before the end of time."<ref name=":1" /> Otherwise he depicted himself as a spiritual descendant of Ali, thus claiming the lineage of both Genghis Khan and the Quraysh.<ref name="Aigle 2014 p. 132">{{cite book |last=Aigle |first=Denise |title=The Mongol Empire between Myth and Reality : Studies in Anthropological History |publisher=Brill |publication-place=Leiden |year=2014 |isbn=978-90-04-27749-6 |oclc=994352727 |page=132}}</ref>
It is notable that Timur never claimed for himself the title of ], styling himself ] and acting in the name of the ] ruler of Transoxania. Timur was a military genius but lacking in political sense. He tended not to leave a government apparatus behind in lands he conquered, and was often faced with the need to conquer such lands again after inevitable rebellions.


==Period of expansion== == Period of expansion ==
].]]
The next 35 years, until his death, Timur spent in various wars and expeditions. Timur not only consolidated his rule at home by the subjugation of his foes, but sought extension of territory by encroachments upon the lands of foreign potentates. His conquests to the west and north-west led him among the Mongols of the ] and to the banks of the ] and the ]. Conquests in the south and south-West encompassed almost every province in ], including ], ] and ].
Timur spent the next 35 years in various wars and expeditions. He not only consolidated his rule at home by the subjugation of his foes, but sought extension of territory by encroachments upon the lands of foreign potentates. His conquests to the west and northwest led him to the lands near the ] and to the banks of the ] and the ]. Conquests in the south and south-West encompassed almost every province in ], including ], ] and Northern Iraq.{{sfn|Goldsmid|1911|p=994}}


One of the most formidable of his opponents was ] who, after having been a refugee at the court of Timur, became ruler both of the eastern ] and the ] and quarrelled with Timur over the possession of ]. Timur supported Tokhtamysh against Russians and Tokhtamysh, with armed support by Timur, invaded Russia and in ] captured ]. After the death of One of the most formidable of Timur's opponents was another Mongol ruler, a descendant of Genghis Khan named ]. After having been a refugee in Timur's court, Tokhtamysh became ruler both of the eastern ] and the ]. After his accession, he quarreled with Timur over the possession of ] and ].{{sfn|Goldsmid|1911|p=994}} However, Timur still supported him against the Russians, and in 1382, Tokhtamysh invaded the Muscovite dominion and ].{{sfn|Riasanovsky|Steinberg|2005|page=93}}
] (]), ruler of the ], there was a power vacuum in the ]. In ] Timur started the military conquest of Persia. Timur captured ], Khorasan and all eastern Persia to ].


] tradition states that later, in 1395, having reached the frontier of the ], Timur had taken ] and started advancing towards Moscow. ] went with an army to ] and halted at the banks of the ]. The clergy brought the famed ] icon from ] to Moscow. Along the way people prayed kneeling: "O Mother of God, save the land of Russia!".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Tradigo |first1=Alfredo |title=Icons and Saints of the Eastern Orthodox Church |date=2006 |publisher=Getty Publications |isbn=978-0-89236-845-7 |page=177 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uODOkMgUZKYC |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Moscow Church Herald |date=1989 |publisher=Moscow Patriarchate |page=3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=a5ZAAQAAIAAJ |language=en}}</ref> Suddenly, Timur's armies retreated. In memory of this miraculous deliverance of the Russian land from Timur on 26 August, the all-Russian celebration in honor of the Meeting of the Vladimir Icon of the Most Holy Mother of God was established.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://oca.org/saints/lives/2016/08/26/102402-commemoration-of-the-vladimir-icon-of-the-mother-of-god-and-the|title=Commemoration of the Vladimir Icon of the Mother of God and the deliverance of Moscow from the Invasion of Tamerlane|website=oca.org|access-date=5 February 2019|archive-date=10 August 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200810124316/https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2016/08/26/102402-commemoration-of-the-vladimir-icon-of-the-mother-of-god-and-the|url-status=live}}</ref>
In the meantime, Tokhtamysh, now khan of the ], turned against Timur and invaded ] in ]. It was not until ], in the ], that the power of Tokhtamysh was finally broken, after a titanic struggle between the two monarchs. In this war, Timur led an army of over 100,000 men north for about 500 miles into the uninhabited steppe, then west about 1000 miles, advancing in a front more than 10 miles wide. Tokhtamysh's army finally was cornered against the Volga River near ] and destroyed. During this march, Timur's army got far enough north to be in a region of ], causing complaints by his Muslim soldiers about keeping a long schedule of ] in such northern regions. Timur led a second campaign against Tokhtamysh via an easier route through the ], and Timur destroyed ] and ], and wrecked the Golden Horde's economy based on ] trade.


== Conquest of Persia ==
==India==
In ] Timur, informed about civil war in ] (started in ]), began war against the ] ] in ]. He crossed the ] at ] on ]. The capture of ]s and ]s was very often accompanied by their destruction and the massacre of their inhabitants. On his way to ] he met fierce resistance put up by the ] of ], Qilladar (Qilla means Fort; Qill-dar means Fort Commander) Ilyaas ] Alvi, who engaged him in an intense battle which lasted nearly two months inflicting heavy losses on both sides. After the honourable and couragous death in battle of Ilaas ], Timur (though very much impressed by Ilyaas ]'s bravery) approached ] to meet with the armies of the ], ] Nasir-u-Din Mehmud of ] ], who was already weak due to a fight for power in the ] ]. The ]'s army was easily defeated and destroyed on ] ]. Timur entered Delhi and the city was sacked, destroyed, and left in a mass of ruins. Before the battle for Delhi, Timur executed more than 50,000 captives, and after the sack of Delhi almost all inhabitants who were not killed were captured and deported. It is said that the devastation of Delhi was not Timur's intent, but that his horde could simply not be controlled after entering the city gates.{{fact}} However, some historians have stated that he told his armies they could have free reign over Delhi.{{cn}}


]
Timur left Delhi in approximately January 1399. In April 1399 he was back in his own capital beyond the ] (Amu Darya). An immense quantity of spoil was conveyed from India. According to ], ninety captured ]s were employed merely to carry ] from certain quarries to enable the conqueror to erect a ] at Samarkand, probably the enormous ].


After the death of ], ruler of the ], in 1335, there was a power vacuum in Persia. In the end, Persia was split amongst the ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. In 1383, Timur started his lengthy military conquest of Persia, though he already ruled over much of Persian ] by 1381, after Khwaja Mas'ud, of the ] dynasty surrendered. Timur began his Persian campaign with ], capital of the ]. When Herat did not surrender he reduced the city to rubble and massacred most of its citizens; it remained in ruins until ] ordered its reconstruction around 1415.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=96ec98LieGsC&q=siege+of+herat+timur&pg=PA39 |title=Mughal Gardens|via=google.ca|isbn=978-0884022350 |last1=Wescoat|first1=James L. |last2=Wolschke-Bulmahn|first2=Joachim|year=1996 |publisher=Dumbarton Oaks}}</ref> Timur then sent a general to capture rebellious ]. With the capture of Herat the Kartid kingdom surrendered and became vassals of Timur; it would later be annexed outright less than a decade later in 1389 by Timur's son ].{{Sfn|Melville|2020|p=32}}
==Last campaigns and death==
Timur went to ] from Delhi and forced hundreds to embrace Islam. Due to this, today, the partly Muslim state is claimed fanatically by the strictly Muslim ].
Before the end of 1399 Timur started a war with ], sultan of the ], and the ] sultan of ]. Bayezid began annexing the territory of Turkmen and Muslim rulers in ]. As Timur claimed suzerainity over the ] rulers, they took refuge behind him. Timur invaded Syria, sacked ], and captured ] after defeating the Mamluk's army. The city's inhabitants were massacred, except for the artisans who were deported to Samarkand. This led to Tamarlane's being publicly declared an enemy of Islam.


Timur then headed west to capture the ], passing through ]. During his travel through the north of Persia, he captured the then town of ], which surrendered and was thus treated mercifully. He laid siege to ] in 1384. ] revolted one year later, so Timur destroyed Isfizar, and the prisoners were cemented into the walls alive. The next year the kingdom of Sistan, under the ], was ravaged, and its capital at ] was destroyed. Timur then returned to his capital of ], where he began planning for his ] and ] invasion. In 1386, Timur passed through ] as he had when trying to capture the Zagros. He went near the city of ], which he had previously captured but instead turned north and captured ] with little resistance, along with ].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Timur |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iG9GfiknnZQC|title=The Mulfuzat Timury, Or, Autobiographical Memoirs of the Moghul Emperor Timur: Written in the Jagtay Turky Language |year=2013|publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1108056021|pages=vii–xxxvii |language=en}}</ref> He ordered heavy taxation of the people, which was collected by Adil Aqa, who was also given control over Soltaniyeh. Adil was later executed because Timur suspected him of corruption.{{Sfn|Melville|2020|p=56}}
He invaded ] in June 1401. After the capture of the city, 20,000 of its citizens were massacred. Timur ordered that every soldier should return with at least two severed human heads to show him (many warriors were so scared they killed prisoners captured earlier in the campaign just to ensure they had heads to present to Timur). In ], Timur invaded Anatolia and defeated Bayezid in the ] on ]. Bayezid was captured in battle and subsequently died in captivity, initiating the twelve year ] period. Timur's stated motivation for attacking Bayezid and the Ottoman Empire was the restoration of ] authority. Timur saw the Seljuks as the rightful rulers of ] as they had been granted rule by Mongol conquerors, illustrating again Timur's interest with Genghizid legitimacy.
]
Timur then went north to begin his Georgian and Golden Horde campaigns, pausing his full-scale invasion of Persia. When he returned, he found his generals had done well in protecting the cities and lands he had conquered in Persia.{{Sfn|Manz|1999|pp=67–71}} Though many rebelled, and his son ], who may have been ], was forced to annex rebellious vassal dynasties, his holdings remained. So he proceeded to capture the rest of Persia, specifically the two major southern cities of ] and ]. When he arrived with his army at ] in 1387, the city ]; he treated it with relative mercy as he normally did with cities that surrendered (unlike Herat).{{Sfn|Melville|2020|pp=97–100}} However, after Isfahan revolted against Timur's taxes by killing the tax collectors and some of Timur's soldiers, he ordered the massacre of the city's citizens; the death toll is reckoned at between 100,000 and 200,000.<ref name="Chaliand 2007 87">{{cite book |last1=Chaliand |first1=Gerard |url=https://archive.org/details/historyofterrori00grar |title=The History of Terrorism: From Antiquity to Al Qaeda |last2=Blin |first2=Arnaud |publisher=University of California Press |year=2007 |isbn=978-0520247093 |page= |quote=isfahan Timur. |url-access=registration}}</ref> An eye-witness counted more than 28 towers constructed of about 1,500 heads each.<ref>Fisher, W. B.; Jackson, P.; Lockhart, L.; Boyle, J. A.: ''The Cambridge History of Iran'', p. 55.</ref> This has been described as a "systematic use of terror against towns...an integral element of Tamerlane's strategic element", which he viewed as preventing bloodshed by discouraging resistance. His massacres were selective and he spared the artistic and educated.<ref name="Chaliand 2007 87"/> This would later influence the next great Persian conqueror: ].{{Sfn|Strange|1905|pp=267–287}}


Timur then began a five-year campaign to the west in 1392, attacking ].{{Sfn|Manz|1999|pp=123–125}}{{Sfn|Melville|2020|p=109}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Shterenshis |first=Michael |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vJZm9amnoAoC|title=Tamerlane and the Jews|date=2002 |publisher=Psychology Press|isbn=978-0700716968|pages=144–189|language=en}}</ref> In 1393, Shiraz was captured after surrendering, and the Muzaffarids became vassals of Timur, though prince ] rebelled but was defeated, and the ] were annexed. Shortly after Georgia was devastated so that the Golden Horde could not use it to threaten northern Iran.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Strange|first=Guy Le|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-vOf7uE1APYC|title=The Lands of the Eastern Caliphate: Mesopotamia, Persia, and Central Asia, from the Moslem Conquest to the Time of Timur |date=1905|publisher=University Press|page=235|isbn=978-1107600140 |language=en}}</ref> In the same year, Timur caught Baghdad by surprise in August by marching there in only eight days from Shiraz. Sultan ] fled to Syria, where the Mamluk Sultan ] protected him and killed Timur's envoys. Timur left the ] prince Khwaja Mas'ud to govern ], but he was driven out when ] returned. Ahmad was unpopular but got help from ] of the ]; he fled again in 1399, this time to the Ottomans.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Morgan|first=David |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=X6iQBAAAQBAJ|title=Medieval Persia 1040–1797|year= 2014 |publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1317871408|pages=167–184|language=en}}</ref>
By 1368, the Ming had driven the Mongols out of China. The first ] Emperor ] demanded, and got, many Central Asian states to pay homage to China as the political heirs to the former House of ]. Timur more than once sent to the Ming Government gifts which could have passed as tribute, at first not daring to defy the economic and military might of the ].


== Tokhtamysh–Timur war ==
Timur wished to restore the Mongol Empire, and eventually planned to conquer China. In December ], Timur started military expeditions against the ] of ], but the old warrior was attacked by fever and plague when encamped on the farther side of the Sihon (]) and died at Atrar (]) in mid-February ]. His scouts explored Mongolia before his death, and the writing they carved on trees in Mongolia's mountains could still be seen even in the twentieth century.
{{see also|Karsakpay inscription}}
], ] ].]]
In the meantime, Tokhtamysh, now khan of the ], turned against his patron and in 1385 invaded ]. The inevitable response by Timur resulted in the ]. In the initial stage of the war, Timur won a victory at the ]. After the battle Tokhtamysh and some of his army were allowed to escape. After Tokhtamysh's initial defeat, Timur invaded Muscovy to the north of Tokhtamysh's holdings. Timur's army burned ] and advanced on Moscow. He was pulled away before reaching the Oka River by Tokhtamysh's renewed campaign in the south.{{sfn|Riasanovsky|Steinberg|2005|page=94}}


In the first phase of the conflict with Tokhtamysh, Timur led an army of over 100,000 men north for more than 700 miles into the steppe. He then rode west about 1,000 miles advancing in a front more than 10 miles wide. During this advance, Timur's army got far enough north to be in a region of ] causing complaints by his Muslim soldiers about keeping a long schedule of ]. It was then that Tokhtamysh's army was boxed in against the east bank of the Volga River in the ] region and destroyed at the ], in 1391.
Of Timur's four sons, two (Jahangir and Umar Shaykh) predeceased him. His third son, ], died soon after Timur, leaving the youngest son, ]. Although his designated successor was his grandson ] b. Jahangir, Timur was ultimately succeeded in power by his son Shah Rukh. His most illustrious descendant ] founded the ] and ruled over most of ]. Babur's descendants, ], ], ] and ], expanded the Mughal Empire to most of the ] along with parts of ].


In the second phase of the conflict, Timur took a different route against the enemy by invading the realm of Tokhtamysh via the ] region. In 1395, Timur defeated Tokhtamysh in the ], concluding the struggle between the two monarchs. Tokhtamysh was unable to restore his power or prestige, and he was killed about a decade later in the area of present-day ]. During the course of Timur's campaigns, his army destroyed ], the capital of the Golden Horde, and ], subsequently disrupting the Golden Horde's ]. The Golden Horde no longer held power after their losses to Timur.
Markham, in his introduction to the narrative of Clavijo's embassy, states that his body "was embalmed with musk and rose water, wrapped in linen, laid in an ebony coffin and sent to ], where it was buried." His tomb, the ], still stands in Samarkand. Timur had carried his victorious arms on one side from the ] and the ] to the ] and on the other from the ] to the ].


=== Ismailis ===
==Contributions to the arts==
In May 1393, Timur's army invaded the ], crippling the ] village only a year after his assault on the Ismailis in ]. The village was prepared for the attack, evidenced by its fortress and system of tunnels. Undeterred, Timur's soldiers flooded the tunnels by cutting into a channel overhead. Timur's reasons for attacking this village are not yet well understood. However, it has been suggested that his ] and view of himself as an ] may have contributed to his motivations.<ref name="Virani, Shafique N 2007, p. 116">Virani, Shafique N. ''The Ismailis in the Middle Ages: A History of Survival, A Search for Salvation'' (New York: Oxford University Press), 2007, p. 116.</ref> The Persian historian ] explains that an Ismaili presence was growing more politically powerful in Persian ]. A group of locals in the region was dissatisfied with this and, Khwandamir writes, these locals assembled and brought up their complaint with Timur, possibly provoking his attack on the Ismailis there.<ref name="Virani, Shafique N 2007, p. 116"/>
Timur became widely known as a patron to the arts. Much of the architecture he commissioned still stands in ], now in present-day ].


== Campaign against the Delhi Sultanate ==
According to legend, ], Timur's court ], transcribed the ] using letters so small that the entire text of the book fit on a ]. Omar also is said to have created a Qur'an so large that a ] was required to transport it. ]s of what is probably this larger Qur'an have been found, written in gold lettering on huge pages.
{{multiple image|perrow=2|total_width=450|caption_align=center
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In the late 14th century, the ] which had been ruling over ] since 1320 had declined. Most of the provincial governors had asserted their independence, and the Sultanate was reduced to only a part of its former extent.<ref name=rene/> This anarchy drew the attention of Timur, who in 1398 invaded ] during the reign of Sultan ]. After crossing the ] on 30 September 1398 with a force of 90,000, he sacked ] and massacred its inhabitants.<ref name=rene/> He sent an advance guard under his grandson ] who ] ] after a siege of six months.<ref name=rene/> His invasion was unopposed as most of the nobility surrendered without a fight, however he did encounter resistance by a force of 2,000 under Malik ] at ] river between Tulamba and ]. Jasrat was defeated and taken away as captive.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Singh |first=Surinder |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=99YZ0AEACAAJ |title=The Making of Medieval Panjab: Politics, Society and Culture, c.1000–c.1500 |date=2023 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=978-1-032-65440-9 |language=en|pages=374, 390}}</ref><ref name=rene>{{Cite book |last=Grousset |first=René |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CHzGvqRbV_IC&pg=PA444 |title=The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia |date=1970 |publisher=Rutgers University Press |isbn=978-0-8135-1304-1 |language=en|author-link=René Grousset|page=444}}</ref> Next he captured the fort of ] which was being defended by ] chief Rai Dul Chand and demolished it.<ref name="RD">{{cite book |title=The History of India |publisher=The Rosen Publishing Group |year=2010 |isbn=978-1615301225 |editor=Pletcher |editor-first=Kenneth |page=}}</ref>


While on his march towards Delhi, Timur was opposed by the ] peasantry, who would loot caravans and then disappear in the forests. He had thousands of Jats killed and many taken captive.<ref name="DIZ">{{cite book |author=Elliot |first=Henry Miers |title=History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians: The Muhammadan Period |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2013 |isbn=978-1108055857 |pages=489–}}</ref><ref name=ZXC>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kwiADwAAQBAJ&pg=PT437|title=Ganga: The Many Pasts of a River |first=Sudipta|last=Sen |year=2019|publisher=Penguin Random House India |isbn=978-9353054489 |via=Google Books}}</ref> But the Sultanate at Delhi did nothing to stop his advance.<ref>{{cite book |first=Raj Pal |last=Singh |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TKhuAAAAMAAJ&q=ahirs+and+jats |title=Rise of the Jat power |access-date=22 May 2012|isbn=978-8185151052 |year=1988 |publisher=Harman Publishing House}}</ref>{{Unreliable source?|date=May 2020}}
==References==
<!-- Unsourced image removed: ] -->


=== Capture of Delhi (1398) ===
Timur's generally recognized biographers are Ali Yazdi, commonly called Sharaf ud-Din, author of the Persian ''Zafarnāma'', translated by ] in ], and from ] into ] by J. Darby in the following year; and Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn Abdallah, al-Dimashiqi, al-Ajami, commonly called Ahmad Ibn Arabshah, author of the Arabic Aja'ib al-Maqdur, translated by the Dutch Orientalist Colitis in ]. In the work of the former, as ] remarks, "the Tatarian conqueror is represented as a liberal, benevolent and illustrious prince", in that of the latter he is "deformed and impious, of a low birth and detestable principles." But the favourable account was written under the personal supervision of Timur's grandson, Ibrahim, while the other was the production of his direst enemy.
{{Main|Sack of Delhi (1398)}}
The battle took place on 17 December 1398. Before the battle, Timur slaughtered some 100,000 slaves who had been captured previously in the Indian campaign. This was done out of fear that they might revolt.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.britannica.com/event/Battle-of-Delhi-1398 |title=Battle of Delhi |website=www.britannica.com |last=Phillips |first=Charles |date=10 December 2023 |access-date=19 October 2022 |archive-date=19 October 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221019182133/https://www.britannica.com/event/Battle-of-Delhi-1398 |url-status=live }}</ref>


Sultan Nasir-ud-Din Mahmud Shah Tughluq and the army of Mallu Iqbal had war elephants armored with chain mail and poison on their tusks.{{sfn|Marozzi|2004|p=267}} As his Tatar forces were afraid of the elephants, Timur ordered his men to dig a trench in front of their positions. Timur then loaded his camels with as much wood and hay as they could carry. When the war elephants charged, Timur set the hay on fire and prodded the camels with iron sticks, causing them to charge at the elephants, howling in pain: Timur had understood that elephants were easily panicked. Faced with the strange spectacle of camels flying straight at them with flames leaping from their backs, the elephants turned around and stampeded back toward their own lines. Timur capitalized on the subsequent disruption in the forces of Nasir-ud-Din Mahmud Shah Tughluq, securing an easy victory. Nasir-ud-Din Mahmud Shah Tughluq fled with remnants of his forces.<ref>Ibn Arabşah, 1986: 164–166.{{Missing long citation|date=October 2023}}</ref><ref>Ibn Hacer, 1994, pp. II: 9–10.{{Missing long citation|date=October 2023}}</ref><ref>Ibn Tagrîbirdi, 1956, XII: 262–263.{{Missing long citation|date=October 2023}}</ref>
Among less reputed biographies or materials for biography may be mentioned a second ''Zafarnāma'', by ], stated to be the earliest known history of Timur, and the only one written in his lifetime. Timur's purported autobiography, the ''Tuzuk-i Temur'' ("Institutes of Temur") is a later fabrication although most of the historical facts are accurate<ref name="EI" />.


The capture of the ] was one of Timur's largest and most devastating victories as at that time, Delhi was one of the richest cities in the world. The city of Delhi was sacked and reduced to ruins, with the population enslaved.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Battle of Delhi {{!}} 17 December 1398 |url=https://historyonthisday.com/events/mongolian-empire/timur-battle-of-delhi/ |access-date=28 September 2022 |website=History on this day |language=en-US |archive-date=19 October 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221019182135/https://historyonthisday.com/events/mongolian-empire/timur-battle-of-delhi/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> After the fall of the city, uprisings by its citizens against the Turkic-Mongols began to occur, causing a retaliatory bloody massacre within the city walls. After three days of citizens uprising within Delhi, it was said that the city reeked of the decomposing bodies of its citizens with their heads being erected like structures and the bodies left as food for the birds by Timur's soldiers. Timur's invasion and destruction of Delhi continued the chaos that was still consuming India, and the city would not be able to recover from the great loss it suffered for almost a century.{{sfn|Marozzi|2004|pp=269–274}}
More recent biographies include Justin Marozzi's ''Tamerlane: Sword of Islam, Conqueror of the World'' (Da Capo Press ]), and Roy Stier's ''Tamerlane: The Ultimate Warrior'' (Bookpartners ]).


== Exhumation == == Campaigns in the Levant ==
] ] ] of ]]]
Timur's body was ] from his tomb in ] by the Russian anthropologist ]. He found that Timur's facial characteristics conformed to that of Mongoloid features, which he believed, in some part, supported Timur's notion that he was descended from ]. He also confirmed Timur's lameness. Gerasimov was able to reconstruct the likeness of Timur from his skull.


Before the end of 1399, Timur started a war with ], sultan of the Ottoman Empire, and the ] sultan of Egypt ]. Bayezid began annexing the territory of Turkmen and Muslim rulers in ]. As Timur claimed sovereignty over the ], they took refuge behind him.
Famously, a curse has been attached to opening Timur's tomb.<ref>S. Z. Ahmed. ''Twilight on the Silk Road''. Infinity Publishing, 2002. ISBN 0741411121. Page 23.</ref> In the year of Timur's death, a sign was carved in Timur's tomb warning that whoever would dare disturb the tomb would bring demons of war onto his land. Gerasimov's expedition opened the tomb on June 19, ]. ], which claimed more lives than any other war in history, began three days later on June 22, 1941. The legend of Tamerlane's curse features prominently in the 2006 Russian blockbuster '']''.


In 1400, Timur ] ] and ]. Of the surviving population, more than 60,000 ] were captured as slaves, and many districts were depopulated.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://rbedrosian.com/atmi4.htm |title=The Turco-Mongol Invasions |publisher=Rbedrosian.com |access-date=22 May 2012 |archive-date=22 July 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120722083934/http://rbedrosian.com/atmi4.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> He also sacked ] in Asia Minor.{{sfn|Nicol|1993|p=314}}
==Fiction==


Then Timur turned his attention to Syria, sacking ],<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|title=Aleppo:the Ottoman Empire's caravan city |first1=Bruce |last1=Masters | encyclopedia=The Ottoman City Between East and West: Aleppo, Izmir, and Istanbul | editor-first1=Edhem |editor-last1=Eldem|editor-first2=Daniel |editor-last2=Goffman| editor-first3=Bruce |editor-last3=Master | publisher=Cambridge University Press | year=1999|page=20}}</ref> and ].<ref>Margaret Meserve, ''Empires of Islam in Renaissance Historical Thought'', (Harvard University Press, 2008), p. 207.</ref> The city's inhabitants were massacred, except for the artisans, who were deported to Samarkand.
* There is a popular ] entitled ''Timour the Tartar''.


Timur invaded ] in June 1401. After the capture of the city, 20,000 of its citizens were massacred. Timur ordered that every soldier should return with at least two severed human heads to show him. When they ran out of men to kill, many warriors killed prisoners captured earlier in the campaign, and when they ran out of prisoners to kill, many resorted to beheading their own wives.<ref>{{Cite book |last=ʻArabshāh |first=Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad Ibn |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uh9tAAAAMAAJ |title=Tamerlane: Or, Timur, the Great Amir |date=1976 |publisher=Progressive Books |language=en|page=168}}</ref> British historian ], in his "The Mongol Warlords", quotes an anonymous contemporary historian who compared Timur's army to "ants and locusts covering the whole countryside, plundering and ravaging."<ref>{{cite book |last1=Nicolle |first1=David |last2=Hook |first2=Richard |title=The Mongol Warlords Genghis Khan, Kublai Khan, Hulegu, Tamerlane |date=1998 |publisher=Brockhampton Press |isbn=1860194079 |page=161}}</ref>
* Timur Lenk was the subject of two plays ('']'') by English playwright ].


== Invasion of Anatolia ==
* ] portrayed Tamerlane in an episode of ].
{{main|Battle of Ankara|Ottoman Interregnum}}
In the meantime, years of insulting letters had passed between Timur and Bayezid. Both rulers insulted each other in their own way while Timur preferred to undermine Bayezid's position as a ruler and play down the significance of his military successes.


This is the excerpt from one of Timur's letters addressed to Ottoman sultan:
* ] made Timur Lenk the title character of his ''Tamerlano'' (HWV 18), an ] ] based on the ] play ''Tamerlan ou la mort de Bajazet'' by ].


{{blockquote|Believe me, you are but pismire ant: don't seek to fight the elephants for they'll crush you under their feet. Shall a petty prince such as you are contend with us? But your rodomontades (braggadocio) are not extraordinary; for a ] never spake with judgement. If you don't follow our counsels you will regret it<ref>Rhoads Murphey, ''Exploring Ottoman Sovereignty: Tradition, Image and Practice in the Ottoman Imperial Household 1400–1800''; published by Continium, 2008; p. 58</ref>}}
* ]'s first published work was a poem entitled "Tamerlaine".


], 1878.]]
* German-Jewish writer and social critic ], under the pen name of ], wrote the lyrics to a cabaret song about Timur in 1922, with the lines
Finally, Timur invaded Anatolia and defeated Bayezid in the ] on 20 July 1402. Bayezid was captured in battle and subsequently died in captivity, initiating the twelve-year ] period. Timur's stated motivation for attacking Bayezid and the Ottoman Empire was the restoration of ] authority. Timur saw the Seljuks as the rightful rulers of ] as they had been granted rule by Mongol conquerors, illustrating again Timur's interest with Genghizid legitimacy.{{citation needed|date=December 2020}}


In December 1402, Timur ] the city of ], a stronghold of the Christian ], thus he referred to himself as '']'' or "Warrior of Islam". A mass beheading was carried out in Smyrna by Timur's soldiers.<ref name="Reilly2012">{{cite book|author=Kevin Reilly|title=The Human Journey: A Concise Introduction to World History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=v12nkhHzD7UC&pg=PA164|year=2012|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-1442213845|pages=164–}}</ref><ref name="Lodge1913">{{cite book |author=Lodge |first=Henry Cabot |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M6Q-AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA51 |title=The History of Nations |publisher=P. F. Collier |year=1913 |pages=51–}}</ref><ref name="Belozerskaya2012">{{cite book |author=Belozerskaya |first=Marina |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ykRpAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA88 |title=Medusas Gaze: The Extraordinary Journey of the Tazza Farnese |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2012 |isbn=978-0199876426 |pages=88–}}</ref><ref name="de1856">{{cite book |author=Vertot (abbé de) |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3u9EAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA104 |title=The History of the Knights Hospitallers of St. John of Jerusalem: Styled Afterwards, the Knights of Rhodes, and at Present, the Knights of Malta |publisher=J. W. Leonard & Company |year=1856 |pages=104–}}</ref>
:: Mir ist heut so nach Tamerlan zu Mut —
:: ein kleines bisschen Tamerlan wär gut


With the ] in February 1402, Timur was furious with the ] and ], as their ships ferried the Ottoman army to safety in ]. As ] reported in ''The Ottoman Centuries'', the Italians preferred the enemy they could handle to the one they could not.{{citation needed|date=December 2020}}
which roughly translates as "I feel like Tamerlan today, a little bit of Tamerlane would be nice." The song was an allegory about German militarism, as well as a wry commentary on German fears of "Bolshevism" and the "Asiatic hordes from the East."


During the early interregnum, Bayezid I's son {{lang|tr|]}} acted as Timur's vassal. Unlike other princes, Mehmed minted coins that had Timur's name stamped as "Demur han Gürgân" ({{lang|tr-Arab|تيمور خان كركان}}), alongside his own as "Mehmed bin Bayezid han" ({{lang|tr-Arab|محمد بن بايزيد خان}}).<ref name="ottomancivilwar">{{cite book |author=Kastritsis |first=Dimitris J. |title=The Sons of Bayezid: Empire Building and Representation in the Ottoman Civil War of 1402–1413 |publisher=Brill |year=2007 |page=49}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Pere |first=Nuri |title=Osmanlılarda madenî paralar: Yapı ve Kredi Bankasının Osmanlı madenî paraları kolleksiyonu |publisher=Yapı ve Kredi Bankası |year=1968 |page=64}}</ref> This was probably an attempt on Mehmed's part to justify to Timur his conquest of ] after the ]. After Mehmed established himself in ''Rum'', Timur had already begun preparations for his return to Central Asia, and took no further steps to interfere with the ''status quo'' in Anatolia.<ref name=ottomancivilwar/>
* He is referred to in the poem "The City of Orange Trees" by Dick Davis. The poem is about an opulent society and the cyclic nature of zeal, prosperity and demise in civilisation.


While Timur was still in Anatolia, ] assaulted Baghdad and captured it in 1402. Timur returned to Persia and sent his grandson Abu Bakr ibn Miran Shah to reconquer Baghdad, which he proceeded to do. Timur then spent some time in ], where he gave ], leader of the ], a number of captives. Subsequently, he marched to Khorasan and then to Samarkhand, where he spent nine months celebrating and preparing to invade Mongolia and China.<ref>Stevens, John. ''The history of Persia. Containing, the lives and memorable actions of its kings from the first erecting of that monarchy to this time; an exact Description of all its Dominions; a curious Account of India, China, Tartary, Kermon, Arabia, Nixabur, and the Islands of Ceylon and Timor; as also of all Cities occasionally mention'd, as Schiras, Samarkand, Bokara, &c. Manners and Customs of those People, Persian Worshippers of Fire; Plants, Beasts, Product, and Trade. With many instructive and pleasant digressions, being remarkable Stories or Passages, occasionally occurring, as Strange Burials; Burning of the Dead; Liquors of several Countries; Hunting; Fishing; Practice of Physick; famous Physicians in the East; Actions of Tamerlan, &c. To which is added, an abridgment of the lives of the kings of Harmuz, or Ormuz. The Persian history written in Arabick, by Mirkond, a famous Eastern Author that of Ormuz, by Torunxa, King of that Island, both of them translated into Spanish, by Antony Teixeira, who liv'd several Years in Persia and India; and now render'd into English.''</ref>
* Tamerlane features prominently in the short story ''Lord of Samarcand'' by ] which features a completely fictional account of his last campaign and death.


== Attempts to attack the Ming dynasty ==
* In the ] ] video game ], ] recites a speech echoing Tamerlane's actual speech after sacking ], implying that Tamerlane was the masked warlord.
] was strengthened due to fear of an invasion by Timur.<ref name="Turnbull">{{Cite book |title=The Great Wall of China 221 BC–1644 AD |last=Turnbull |first=Stephen |author-link=Stephen Turnbull (historian) |year=2007 |publisher=] |isbn=978-1846030048 |page=23 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=umbyD8fIYTAC&pg=PA23 |access-date=26 March 2010}}</ref>]]


In 1368, the ] collapsed and was succeeded by the ]. The Ming dynasty during the reigns of its founder, the ], and his son, the ], produced tributary states of many Central Asian countries. In 1394, the Hongwu Emperor's ambassadors eventually presented Timur with a letter addressing him as a subject. Timur had the ambassadors ], Guo Ji, and Liu Wei detained.{{sfn |Tsai |2002 |pp=}} Neither the Hongwu Emperor's next ambassador, Chen Dewen (1397), nor the delegation announcing the accession of the Yongle Emperor fared any better.{{sfn |Tsai |2002 |pp=}}
* The ] novel '']'' by ] portrays a Timur whose last campaign is significantly different from the historical truth.


Timur eventually planned to invade China. To this end, Timur made an alliance with surviving Mongol tribes in the ] and prepared all the way to ]. ] sent his grandson ], also known as "Buyanshir Khan" after he converted to Islam while at the court of Timur in Samarkand.<ref>C. P. Atwood. ''Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire'', see: "Northern Yuan Dynasty".</ref>
{{succession|office=]<br>]&ndash;]|preceded=-|succeeded=]<br>]<br>]}}


==References== == Death ==
]
{{1911}}
Timur preferred to fight his battles in the spring. However, he moved east via ] and died en route during an uncharacteristic winter campaign. In December 1404, Timur began military campaigns against Ming China and detained a Ming envoy. He became ill while encamped on the farther side of the Syr Daria and died at ] on 17–18 February 1405,<ref name="silk">{{cite web |author=Lee |first=Adela C. Y. |title=Tamerlane (1336–1405) – ''The Last Great Nomad Power'' |url=http://www.silk-road.com/artl/timur.shtml |access-date=22 May 2012 |publisher=Silkroad Foundation |archive-date=24 December 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181224201216/http://www.silk-road.com/artl/timur.shtml |url-status=live }}</ref> before ever reaching the Chinese border.{{sfn |Tsai |2002 |p=}} After his death, the Ming envoys such as ] and the remaining entourage were released{{sfn |Tsai |2002 |pp=}} by his grandson ].
<references />


Geographer ], in his introduction to the narrative of Clavijo's embassy, states that, after Timur died, his body "was ] with ] and ], wrapped in ], laid in an ] coffin and sent to Samarkand, where it was buried".<ref>James Louis Garvin, Franklin Henry Hooper, Warren E. Cox, ''Encyclopædia Britannica'', Vol. 22 (1929), p. 233.</ref> His tomb, the ], still stands in Samarkand, though it has been heavily restored in recent years.<ref>Abdulla Vakhabov, ''Muslims in the USSR'' (1980), pp. 63–64.{{ISBN?}}</ref>
==External links==
{{commonscat|Timur}}


== Succession ==
*
{{Main|Timurid Empire}}
*
] is located in ], ].]]
*
Timur had twice previously appointed an heir apparent to succeed him, both of whom he had outlived. The first, his son ], died of illness in 1376.<ref>Roya Marefat, ''Beyond the Architecture of Death:&nbsp;Shrine of the Shah-i Zinda in Samarqand'' (1991), p. 238.</ref><ref name="Barthold 1959">Vasilii Vladimirovitch Barthold, ''Four Studies on the History of Central Asia, Vol. 2'' (1959).</ref>{{rp|51}} The second, his grandson ], had died from battle wounds in 1403.<ref>Marthe Bernus-Taylor, ''Tombs of Paradise: The Shah-e Zende in Samarkand and Architectural Ceramics of Central Asia'' (2003), p. 27.</ref> After the latter's death, Timur did nothing to replace him. It was only when he was on his own death-bed that he appointed Muhammad Sultan's younger brother, ] as his successor.<ref>Beatrice Forbes Manz, ''Power, Politics and Religion in Timurid Iran'' (2007), p. 16.</ref>
*
* Timur's memoirs on his invasion of india
*
* For alternative information about Timur


Pir Muhammad was unable to gain sufficient support from his relatives and a bitter civil war erupted amongst Timur's descendants, with multiple princes pursuing their claims. It was not until 1409 that Timur's youngest son, ] was able to overcome his rivals and take the throne as Timur's successor.<ref>William Bayne Fisher, Peter Jackson, Peter Avery, Lawrence Lockhart, John Andrew Boyle, Ilya Gershevitch, Richard Nelson Frye, Charles Melville, Gavin Hambly, ''The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume VI'' (1986), pp. 99–101.</ref>
]
]
]
]
]
]


== Wives and concubines ==
]
]
]
Timur had forty-three wives and concubines, all of these women were also his consorts. Timur made dozens of women his wives and concubines as he conquered their fathers' or erstwhile husbands' lands.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Szczepanski|first=Kallie|date=21 July 2019|url=https://www.thoughtco.com/timur-or-tamerlane-195675|title=Biography of Tamerlane, 14th Century Conqueror of Asia|website=ThoughtCo|access-date=20 February 2020|archive-date=8 March 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170308025237/https://www.thoughtco.com/timur-or-tamerlane-195675|url-status=live}}</ref>
]
].]]
]
* Turmish Agha, mother of ], Jahanshah Mirza and Aka Begi;
]
* Oljay Turkhan Agha (m. 1357/58), daughter of Amir Mashlah and granddaughter of ];
]
* ] (m. 1367), widow of Amir Husain, and daughter of ];
]
* Islam Agha (m. 1367), widow of Amir Husain, and daughter of Amir Bayan Salduz;
]
* Ulus Agha (m. 1367), widow of Amir Husain, and daughter of Amir Khizr Yasuri;
]
* Dilshad Agha (m. 1374), daughter of Shams ed-Din and his wife Bujan Agha;
]
* Touman Agha (m. 1377), daughter of Amir Musa and his wife Arzu Mulk Agha, daughter of Amir Bayezid Jalayir;
]
* Chulpan Mulk Agha, daughter of Haji Beg of Jetah;
]
* Tukal Khanum (m. 1397), daughter of Mongol Khan ];<ref name="Barthold 1959"/>{{rp|24–25}}
]
* Tolun Agha, concubine, and mother of ];
]
* Mengli Agha, concubine, and mother of ];
]
* Toghay Turkhan Agha, lady from the Kara Khitai, widow of Amir Husain, and mother of ];
]
* Tughdi Bey Agha, daughter of ];
]
* Sultan Aray Agha, a Nukuz lady;
]
* Malikanshah Agha, a Filuni lady;
]
* Khand Malik Agha, mother of Ibrahim Mirza;
]
* Sultan Agha, mother of a son who died in infancy;
]

]
His other wives and concubines included:
]
Dawlat Tarkan Agha, Burhan Agha, Jani Beg Agha, Tini Beg Agha, Durr Sultan Agha, Munduz Agha, Bakht Sultan Agha, Nowruz Agha, Jahan Bakht Agha, Nigar Agha, Ruhparwar Agha, Dil Beg Agha, Dilshad Agha, Murad Beg Agha, Piruzbakht Agha, Khoshkeldi Agha, Dilkhosh Agha, Barat Bey Agha, Sevinch Malik Agha, Arzu Bey Agha, Yadgar Sultan Agha, Khudadad Agha, Bakht Nigar Agha, Qutlu Bey Agha, and another Nigar Agha.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Nogueira |first=Adeilson |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tLDtDwAAQBAJ&q=Dawlat+Tarkan+Agha,+Burhan+Agha,+Jani+Beg+Agha,+Tini+Beg+Agha,+Durr+Sultan+Agha,+Munduz+Agha,+Bakht+Sultan+Agha,+Nowruz+Agha |title=Timur |date=28 March 2020 |publisher=Clube de Autores |language=en|pages=9–10}}</ref>
]

]
== Descendants ==
]
{{See also|Timurid family tree}}
]

]
] === Sons of Timur ===
* ] – with Tolun Agha
]
* ] – with Turmish Agha
]
* ] – with Mengli Agha
]
* ] – with Toghay Turkhan Agha
]

=== Daughters of Timur ===
* Aka Begi (died 1382) – by Turmish Agha. Married to Muhammad Beg, son of Amir Musa ]
** ]
* Sultan Bakht Begum (died 1429/30) – by Oljay Turkhan Agha. Married first Muhammad Mirke Apardi, married second, 1389/90, Sulayman Shah ]
* Sa'adat Sultan – by Dilshad Agha
* Bikijan – by Mengli Agha
* Qutlugh Sultan Agha – by Toghay Turkhan Agha{{sfn|Woods|1991|pp=17–19}}<ref>Vasilii Vladimirovitch Barthold, ''Four Studies on the History of Central Asia, Vol. 2'' (1963), p. 31.</ref>

=== Sons of Umar Shaikh Mirza I ===
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
** Mansur
*** ]
**** ]
***** Muhammed Mu'min
***** ]
**** Muzaffar Hussein
**** Ibrahim Hussein

=== Sons of Jahangir ===
* ]
* ]

=== Sons of Miran Shah ===
* ]
* Abu Bakr
* ]
** ]
*** ]
**** ]
***** the ]
**** Jahangir Mirza II

=== Sons of Shah Rukh Mirza ===
* ] – better known as ''Ulugh Beg''
** ]
* ]
** ]
*** ]
** ]
*** ]
** ]
* ]
** ]
* Mirza Soyurghatmïsh Khan
* ]

==Religious views==
Timur was a practising Sunni ], possibly belonging to the ] school, which was influential in Transoxiana.{{sfn|Manz|1999|page=}} His chief official religious counsellor and adviser was the ] scholar 'Abdu 'l-Jabbar Khwarazmi. In ], he had come under the influence of his spiritual mentor ], a leader from ] who is buried alongside Timur in ].<ref>Devin DeWeese. "The Descendants of Sayyid Ata and the Rank of Naqīb in Central Asia", ''Journal of the American Oriental Society'', Vol. 115, No. 4 (October–December 1995), pp. 612–634.</ref><ref>Vasilij Vladimirovič Bartold. ''Four studies on the history of Central Asia'', Vol. 1, p. 19.</ref><ref>Barbara Brend. ''Islamic art'', p. 130.</ref>

Timur was known to hold ] and the ] in high regard and has been noted by various scholars for his "pro-]" stance. However, he also punished Shias for desecrating the memories of the ].<ref>Michael Shterenshis. ''Tamerlane and the Jews.'' Routledge. {{ISBN|978-1136873669}}. p. 38.</ref> Timur was also noted for attacking the Shia with Sunni apologism, while at other times he attacked Sunnis on religious grounds as well.<ref name="Virani114">Virani, Shafique N. ''The Ismailis in the Middle Ages: A History of Survival, A Search for Salvation'' (New York: Oxford University Press), 2007, p. 114.</ref> In contrast, Timur held the ] Sultan ] in high regard for attacking the ] at ], and Timur's own attack on Ismailis at ] was equally brutal.<ref name="Virani114"/>

== Personality ==
], commissioned by his grandson ] in 1424–28. Published in 1435–36.]]
Timur is regarded as a military genius and as a brilliant tactician with an uncanny ability to work within a highly fluid political structure to win and maintain a loyal following of nomads during his rule in Central Asia. He was also considered extraordinarily intelligent{{snd}}not only intuitively but also intellectually.{{sfn|Manz|1999|p=16}} In Samarkand and his many travels, Timur, under the guidance of distinguished scholars, was able to learn the ], ], and ] languages{{sfn|Marozzi|2004|p=9}} (according to ], Timur could not speak ]).<ref name="Fischel">Walter Joseph Fischel, ''Ibn Khaldūn in Egypt: His Public Functions and His Historical Research, 1382–1406; a Study in Islamic Historiography'', University of California Press, 1967, p. 51, footnote.</ref> However, it was Persian which was held in distinction by Timur as it was the language not only of his court, but also that of his chancellery.<ref>Roemer, H. R. "Timur in Iran." The Cambridge History of Iran, edited by Peter Jackson and Lawrence Lockhart, vol. 6, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1986, pp. 86–87.</ref>

According to ], Timur was "the product of an Islamized and Iranized society", and not steppe nomadic.<ref name="Saunders2001">{{Cite book|last=Saunders |first=J. J. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nFx3OlrBMpQC&pg=PA173|title=The History of the Mongol Conquests |year=2001 |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |isbn=978-0812217667|pages=173–|author-link=John Joseph Saunders}}</ref> More importantly, Timur was characterized as an opportunist. Taking advantage of his Turco-Mongolian heritage, Timur frequently used either the Islamic religion or the ], ], and traditions of the Mongol Empire to achieve his military goals or domestic political aims.{{sfn|Marozzi|2004|p={{page needed|date=October 2023}}}} Timur was a learned king, and enjoyed the company of scholars; he was tolerant and generous to them. He was a contemporary of the Persian poet ], and a story of their meeting explains that Timur summoned Hafiz, who had written a ] with the following verse:

:For the black mole on thy cheek
:I would give the cities of Samarkand and Bukhara.

Timur upbraided him for this verse and said, "By the blows of my well tempered sword I have conquered the greater part of the world to enlarge ] and ], my capitals and residences; and you, pitiful creature, would exchange these two cities for a mole." Hafez, undaunted, replied, "It is by similar generosity that I have been reduced, as you see, to my present state of poverty." It is reported that the King was pleased by the witty answer and the poet departed with magnificent gifts.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Mogul Emperors of Hindustan (1398–1707 A.D)|last=Holden|first=Edward S.|publisher=Westminster, Archibald Constable and Co.|orig-year=1895 |year=2004|isbn=978-8120618831|location=New Delhi|pages=47–48}}</ref><ref>Cowell, Professor (first name not given). (via Google Books). London, England: MacMillan & Company, 1874, p. 252.</ref>

There is a shared view that Timur's real motive for his campaigns was his imperialistic ambition, as expressed by his statement: "The whole expanse of the inhabited part of the world is not large enough to have two kings." However, besides Iran, Timur simply plundered the states he invaded with a purpose of enriching his native Samarqand and neglected the conquered areas, which may have resulted in a relatively quick disintegration of his Empire after his death.<ref name="barthold">{{cite book |last1=Barthold |first1=V. V. |title=Four studies on the History of Central Asia, vol. 1 |date=1962 |publisher=E. J. Brill |edition=Second Printing, 1962 |location=Leiden, Netherlands |pages=59–60}}</ref>

Timur used Persian expressions in his conversations often, and his motto was the Persian phrase ''rāstī rustī'' ({{lang|fa|راستی رستی}}, meaning "truth is safety" or ''"veritas salus"'').<ref name=Fischel/> He is credited with the invention of the ] variant, played on a 10×11 board.<ref name="C&K">Cazaux, Jean-Louis and Knowlton, Rick (2017). ''A World of Chess'', p. 31. McFarland. {{ISBN|978-0786494279}}. "Often known as Tamerlane chess, is traditionally attributed to the conqueror himself."</ref>

== Exchanges with Europe ==
{{Main|Timurid relations with Europe}}
], 1402, a witness to ]. ], Paris.]]

Timur had numerous {{Linktext|epistolary}} and diplomatic exchanges with various European states, especially Spain and France. Relations between the court of ] and that of Timur played an important part in medieval ] diplomacy. In 1402, the time of the ], two Spanish ambassadors were already with Timur: Pelayo de Sotomayor and Fernando de Palazuelos. Later, Timur sent to the court of the ] a Chagatai ambassador named Hajji Muhammad al-Qazi with letters and gifts.

In return, Henry III of Castile sent a famous embassy to Timur's court in Samarkand in 1403–06, led by ], with two other ambassadors, Alfonso Paez and Gomez de Salazar. On their return, Timur affirmed that he regarded the king of Castile "as his very own son".

According to Clavijo, Timur's good treatment of the Spanish delegation contrasted with the disdain shown by his host toward the envoys of the "lord of ]" (i.e., the Yongle Emperor), the Chinese ruler. Clavijo's visit to Samarkand allowed him to report to the European audience on the news from ] (China), which few Europeans had been able to visit directly in the century that had passed since the travels of ].

The French archives preserve:
* A 30 July 1402 letter from Timur to ], suggesting that he send traders to Asia. It is written in ].<ref>Document preserved at Le Musée de l'Histoire de France, code AE III 204. Mentioned {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070926112102/http://www.archivesnationales.culture.gouv.fr/chan/chan/fonds/EGF/SA/InvSAPDF/SA_index_J/J_suppl_pdf/J0932-0940.pdf |date=26 September 2007 }}.</ref>
* A May 1403 letter. This is a Latin transcription of a letter from Timur to Charles VI, and another from ], his son, to the Christian princes, announcing their victory over ] at ].<ref>Mentioned .</ref>

A copy has been kept of the answer of Charles VI to Timur, dated 15 June 1403.<ref>Mentioned .</ref>

In addition, Byzantine ] who was a regent during his uncle's absence in the West, sent a ] in August 1401 to Timur, to pay his respect and propose paying tribute to him instead of the Turks, once he managed to defeat them.{{sfn|Nicol|1993|p=314}}

== Legacy ==
]
Timur's legacy is a mixed one. While Central Asia blossomed under his reign, other places, such as ], ], ] and other ], ], ], and ] cities were sacked and destroyed and their populations massacred. Thus, while Timur still retains a positive image in ] ], he is vilified by many in ], ], ], and ], where some of his greatest atrocities were carried out. However, ] praises Timur for having unified much of the Muslim world when other conquerors of the time could not.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Gies |first=Frances Carney |date=September–October 1978 |title=The Man Who Met Tamerlane |url=http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/197805/the.man.who.met.tamerlane.htm |url-status=dead |journal=Saudi Aramco World |volume=29 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708131655/http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/197805/the.man.who.met.tamerlane.htm |archive-date=8 July 2011 |access-date=26 July 2011 |number=5}}</ref> The next great conqueror of the ], ], was greatly influenced by Timur and almost re-enacted Timur's conquests and battle strategies in his ]. Like Timur, Nader Shah conquered most of ], ], and ] along with also ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Axworthy |first1=Michael |author1-link=Michael Axworthy |title=The Sword of Persia: Nader Shah, from Tribal Warrior to Conquering Tyrant |date=2006 |publisher=I. B.Tauris |isbn=978-1850437062}}</ref>

Timur's short-lived empire also melded the ] in ], and, in most of the territories that he incorporated into his ], ] became the primary ] of administration and literary culture ('']''), regardless of ].{{sfn|Manz|1999|p=|ps= "In Temür's government, as in those of most nomad dynasties, it is impossible to find a clear distinction between civil and military affairs, or to identify the Persian bureaucracy as solely civil or the Turko-Mongolian solely with military government. In fact, it is difficult to define the sphere of either side of the administration and we find Persians and Chaghatays sharing many tasks. (In discussing the settled bureaucracy and the people who worked within it I use the word Persian in a cultural rather than ethnological sense. In almost all the territories which Temür incorporated into his realm Persian was the primary language of administration and literary culture. Thus the language of the settled 'diwan' was Persian and its scribes had to be thoroughly adept in Persian culture, whatever their ethnic origin.) Temür's Chaghatay emirs were often involved in civil and provincial administration and even in financial affairs, traditionally the province of Persian bureaucracy."}} In addition, during his reign, some contributions to Turkic literature were penned, with Turkic cultural influence expanding and flourishing as a result. A literary form of ] came into use alongside Persian as both a cultural and an ].<ref>{{cite book |last=Roy |first=Olivier |title=The new Central Asia |publisher=I.B. Tauris |year=2007 |page=7 |isbn=978-1845115524}}</ref>

Tamerlane virtually exterminated the ], which had previously been a major branch of ] but afterwards became largely confined to a small area now known as the ].<ref name="nestoriangenocide">{{cite web |title=Nestorianism &#124; Definition, History, & Churches &#124; Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Nestorianism |website=www.britannica.com |date=2 June 2023 |access-date=21 November 2022 |archive-date=4 May 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150504222852/http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/409819/Nestorian |url-status=live }}</ref>

].]]

Timur is officially recognized as a national hero in ]. His monument in ] now occupies the place where ]'s statue once stood. The ] in ] focuses on his genealogy and life.

In 1794, ] published his travel book, ''The Travels of Dean Mahomet''. The book begins with the praise of ], Timur, and particularly the first ], ]. He also gives important details on the then incumbent ] ].

The poem "]" by ] follows a fictionalized version of Timur's life.

=== Historical sources ===
]'s work on the ''Life of Timur'']]

The earliest known history of his reign was ]'s '']'', which was written during Timur's lifetime. Between 1424 and 1428, ] wrote a second '']'' drawing heavily on Shami's earlier work. ] wrote a much less favorable history in Arabic. Arabshah's history was translated into ] by the ] ] ] in 1636.

As Timurid-sponsored histories, the two ''Zafarnama''s present a dramatically different picture from Arabshah's chronicle. ] remarked that the former presented Timur as a "liberal, benevolent and illustrious prince" while the latter painted him as "deformed and impious, of a low birth and detestable principles".{{sfn|Goldsmid|1911|p=994}}

==== ''Malfuzat-i Timuri'' ====
The ''Malfuzat-i Timurī'' and the appended ''Tuzūk-i Tīmūrī'', supposedly Timur's own autobiography, are almost certainly 17th-century fabrications.<ref name="EI"/><ref name="iranica-hosayni">{{cite encyclopedia |year=2011 |title=Abū Ṭāleb Ḥosaynī |encyclopedia=] |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/abo-taleb-hosaym-arizi |access-date=17 September 2014 |last=ud-Din |first=Hameed |archive-date=18 September 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140918005902/http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/abo-taleb-hosaym-arizi |url-status=live }}</ref> The scholar Abu Taleb Hosayni presented the texts to the ] emperor ], a distant descendant of Timur, in 1637–1638, supposedly after discovering the ] originals in the library of a ]i ruler. Due to the distance between Yemen and Timur's base in Transoxiana and the lack of any other evidence of the originals, most historians consider the story highly implausible, and suspect Hosayni of inventing both the text and its origin story.<ref name="iranica-hosayni"/>

=== European views ===
Timur arguably had a significant impact on the ] culture and early modern Europe.<ref name="milwright">{{cite journal |last=Milwright |first=Marcus |title=So Despicable a Vessel: Representations of Tamerlane in Printed Books of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries |journal=Muqarnas |volume=23 |page=317 |year=2006 |doi=10.1163/22118993-90000105 |doi-access=free}}</ref> His achievements both fascinated and horrified Europeans from the fifteenth century to the early nineteenth century.

European views of Timur were mixed throughout the fifteenth century, with some European countries calling him an ally and others seeing him as a threat to Europe because of his rapid expansion and brutality.<ref name="knobler-1995">{{cite journal |last=Knobler |first=Adam|title=The Rise of Timur and Western Diplomatic Response, 1390–1405 |journal=Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society|date=November 1995 |volume=5|series=Third Series |issue=3|pages=341–349|doi=10.1017/s135618630000660x|s2cid=162421202 }}</ref>{{rp|341}}

When Timur captured the Ottoman Sultan ] at ], he was often praised and seen as a trusted ally by European rulers, such as ] and ], because they believed he was saving Christianity from the Turkic Empire in the Middle East. Those two kings also praised him because his victory at Ankara allowed Christian merchants to remain in the Middle East and allowed for their safe return home to both ] and ]. Timur was also praised because it was believed that he helped restore the right of passage for ] to the ].<ref name="knobler-1995"/>{{rp|341–344}}

Other Europeans viewed Timur as a barbaric enemy who presented a threat to both European culture and the religion of Christianity. His rise to power moved many leaders, such as ], to send embassies to ] to scout out Timur, learn about his people, make alliances with him, and try to convince him to convert to Christianity in order to avoid war.<ref name="knobler-1995"/>{{rp|348–349}}

In the introduction to a 1723 translation of Yazdi's ''Zafarnama'', the translator wrote:<ref>{{Cite book|title = The History of Timur-Bec|year = 1723|pages = xii–ix|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=5e5WAAAAcAAJ&q=editions%3AbiiMjtRlZFEC&pg=PR8|volume = 1|last1 = ad-DīnʿAlī Yazdī|first1 = Sharaf}} Punctuation and spelling modernized.</ref>

{{Blockquote|text = <nowiki>]<nowiki>]</nowiki> tells us, that there are calumnies and impostures, which have been published by authors of romances, and Turkish writers who were his enemies, and envious at his glory: among whom is ] ... As Timur-Bec had conquered the Turks and Arabians of Syria, and had even taken the ] prisoner, it is no wonder that he has been misrepresented by the historians of those nations, who, in despite of truth, and against the dignity of history, have fallen into great excesses on this subject.|source = }}

=== Exhumation and alleged curse ===
{{main|Curse of Timur}}
], ]]]
Timur's body was ] from his tomb on 19 June 1941 and his remains examined by the ] ]s ], ] and V. Ia. Zezenkova. Gerasimov reconstructed the likeness of Timur from his skull and found that his facial characteristics displayed "typical ] features", i.e. ] in modern terms.<ref name="oshanin">{{cite book |author=Oshanin |first=Lev Vasil'evich |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=guxKAAAAYAAJ |title=Anthropological composition of the population of Central Asia: and the ethnogenesis of its peoples |publisher=Peabody Museum |year=1964 |volume=2 |page=39}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |first=Gül |last= Berna Özcan |title=Diverging Paths of Development in Central Asia |date=2018 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1351739429 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OuZ3DwAAQBAJ&pg=PT48}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Yah|first=Lim Chong|title=Southeast Asia: The Long Road Ahead|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EYFIDQAAQBAJ&pg=PA3|year=2001|publisher=World Scientific Publishing Company|location=Singapore|isbn=978-9813105843|page=3}}</ref> An anthropologic study of Timur's cranium shows that he belonged predominately to the "South Siberian Mongoloid type".<ref>{{cite book|title=Russian Translation Series of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology |date=1964 |publisher=Harvard University |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=f5ZAAQAAIAAJ&q=cranium+}}</ref> At {{convert|5|ft|8|in|cm|abbr=off|sp=us}}, Timur was tall for his era. The examinations confirmed that Timur was ] and had a withered right arm due to his injuries. His right thighbone had knitted together with his kneecap, and the configuration of the knee joint suggests that he kept his leg bent at all times and therefore would have had a pronounced limp.<ref>{{cite book |author=Gerasimov |first=Mikhail Mikhailovich |title=The face finder |publisher=Hutchinson |year=1971 |isbn=978-0091055103 |page=135}}</ref> He appears to have been broad-chested and his hair and beard were red.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Congress |first1=United States |title=Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the United States Congress |publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office |page=A7238 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PKDGIuJg16YC&pg=SL1-PA7238}}</ref>

It is alleged that Timur's tomb was inscribed with the words, "When I rise from the dead, the world shall tremble". It is also said that when Gerasimov exhumed the body, an additional inscription inside the casket was found, which read, "Whomsoever{{sic|expected=should be "whosoever", because it is the subject of "opens", not the object}} opens my tomb shall unleash an invader more terrible than I."<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/asia/uzbekistan-on-the-bloody-trail-of-tamerlane-407300.html |access-date=17 April 2016 |work=The Independent |location=London |title=Uzbekistan: On the bloody trail of Tamerlane |date=9 July 2006 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131220050634/http://www.independent.co.uk/travel/asia/uzbekistan-on-the-bloody-trail-of-tamerlane-407300.html |archive-date=20 December 2013 }}</ref> Even though people close to Gerasimov claim that this story is a fabrication, the legend, which became known as the ], persists.<ref>{{cite web |title=Facial Reconstruction, Nazis, and Siberia: The story of Mikhail Gerasimov |url=https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/facial-reconstruction-nazis-and-siberia-the-story-of-mikhail-gerasimov |access-date=9 November 2020 |date=25 January 2011 |archive-date=10 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210310134846/https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/facial-reconstruction-nazis-and-siberia-the-story-of-mikhail-gerasimov |url-status=live }}</ref>{{Better source needed|reason=The current source is insufficiently reliable (]). |date=April 2023}} In any case, three days after Gerasimov began the exhumation, ] ].<ref>{{cite web |author=Dickens |first1=Mark |last2=Dickens |first2=Ruth |name-list-style=and |title=Timurid Architecture in Samarkand |url=http://www.oxuscom.com/timursam.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130702182557/http://www.oxuscom.com/timursam.htm |archive-date=2 July 2013 |access-date=22 May 2012 |publisher=Oxuscom.com}}</ref> Timur was re-buried with full Islamic ritual in November 1942 just before the Soviet victory at the ].{{sfn|Marozzi|2004|p={{page needed|date=October 2023}}}}

=== In the arts ===
* ''] the Great, Parts I and II'' (English, 1563–1594): play by ]
* ''Tamerlan ou la mort de Bajazet'' (1675): play by ]
* '']'' (1701): play by ] (English)
* '']'' (1724): ] by ], in Italian, based on the 1675 Pradon play
* '']'' (1735): opera by ], portrays the capture of Bayezid I by Timur
* '']'' (1772): opera by ] which also portrays the capture of Bayezid I by Timur
* '']'' (1811): equestrian drama by ]
* '']'' (published 1827): first published poem of ]
* '']'' (1924): opera by ] (libretto by ] and ]) in which Timur is the deposed, blind former King of Tartary and father of the protagonist Calaf
* ''Lord of Samarkand'' (The Lame Man; published 1932): story by ] in which Timour appears
* '']'' (1973): Azerbaijani film in which Timur was portrayed by ].<ref>{{cite web |title=''Näsimi'' (1973) |url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1710431 |publisher=] |access-date=31 August 2020}}</ref>
* '']'' (2003): ] novel by Colombian writer ]<ref>{{cite book |author=Serrano |first=Enrique |title=Tamerlan (Biblioteca Breve) |date=2 January 2011 |publisher=Planeta Colombiana Editorial |isbn=978-9584205407 |edition=Spanish}}</ref>
* '']'' (2006): Russian film in which Tamerlane in his youth is portrayed by ], and in maturity by ]<ref>{{cite web |title=''Day Watch''{{snd}}Full Cast & Crew |url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0409904/fullcredits |publisher=] |access-date=31 August 2020 |archive-date=31 July 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210731041227/https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0409904/fullcredits |url-status=live }}</ref>
* '']'' (2019): a video game containing a six-chapter campaign titled "Tamerlane"<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.pcgamer.com/age-of-empires-2-definitive-edition-review/|title=Age of Empires 2: Definitive Edition review|magazine=PC Gamer|date=12 November 2019|access-date=11 June 2020|archive-date=20 May 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200520014355/https://www.pcgamer.com/age-of-empires-2-definitive-edition-review/|url-status=live}}</ref>

== See also ==
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]

== References ==
=== Explanatory notes ===
{{Notelist}}

=== Citations ===
{{Reflist}}

== Sources ==
{{Refbegin|30em}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Knobler |first=Adam |title=The Rise of Tīmūr and Western Diplomatic Response, 1390–1405 |journal=Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society |series=Third Series |volume=5 |issue=3 |pages=341–349 |year=1995 |doi=10.1017/S135618630000660X |s2cid=162421202}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Knobler |first=Adam |title=Timur the (Terrible/Tartar) Trope: a Case of Repositioning in Popular Literature and History |journal=Medieval Encounters |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=101–112 |year=2001 |doi=10.1163/157006701X00102}}
* {{Cite book |last=Manz |first=Beatrice Forbes |title=The Rise and Rule of Tamerlane |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1999 |isbn=978-0521633840 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1Nzh_9DZ5DYC }}
* {{Cite book |last=Marozzi |first=Justin |title=Tamerlane: Sword of Islam, Conqueror of the World |place=London, England |publisher=HarperCollins |year=2004 |isbn=9780306815430}}
* {{cite journal |last=May |first=Timothy |title=Timur ("the Lame") (1336–1405) |journal=The Encyclopedia of War}}
* {{cite book |last=Melville |first=Charles |editor-first1=Charles |editor-last1=Melville |title=The Timurid Century: The Idea of Iran, Volume IX |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=czDaDwAAQBAJ |publisher=] |year=2020 |isbn=978-1838606152 |doi=10.5040/9781838606169 |location=], Cambridge, England |s2cid=242682831 }}
* {{cite book |last=Nicol |first=Donald M. |title=The Last Centuries of Byzantium, 1261–1453 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1993 |isbn=978-0521439916}}
* {{cite book |last1=Riasanovsky |first1=Nicholas Valentine |last2=Steinberg |first2=Mark D. |title=A History of Russia |date=2005 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-515394-1 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NobuRAAACAAJ |archive-date=7 September 2024 |access-date=5 September 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240907150339/https://books.google.com/books?id=NobuRAAACAAJ |url-status=live }}
* {{cite book |last=Tsai |first=Shih-Shan Henry |title=Perpetual Happiness: the Ming Emperor Yongle |publisher=University of Washington Press |location=Seattle, Washington |year=2002 |isbn=978-0295981246 |oclc=870409962}}
* {{EB1911 |wstitle=Timūr |volume=26 |pages=994–995 |first=Frederic John |last=Goldsmid |author-link=Frederic John Goldsmid}}
{{Refend}}

== Further reading ==
* {{Cite book |last=Abazov |first=Rafis |title=The Palgrave Concise Historical Atlas of Central Asia |year=2008 |pages=56–57 |chapter=Timur (Tamerlane) and the Timurid Empire in Central Asia |doi=10.1057/9780230610903 |isbn=978-1-4039-7542-3 |chapter-url=https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230610903_25}}
* Forbes, Andrew, & Henley, David: "" (CPA Media).
* González de Clavijo, Ruy; ''Embassy to Tamerlane, 1403–1406'', translated by Guy Le Strange, with a new Introduction by Caroline Stone (Hardinge Simpole, 2009). {{ISBN|978-1843821984}}.
** {{snd}}Full text at ].
* {{cite book |last=Lamb |first=Harold |title=Tamerlane: The Earth Shaker |location=London, England |publisher=Thorndon Butterworth |date=1929 |type=Hardback |url=https://www.fadedpage.com/showbook.php?pid=20200628}}
* Marlowe, Christopher. ''Tamburlaine the Great''. Ed. J. S. Cunningham. Manchester University Press, Manchester 1981.
* {{Cite journal |last=Manz |first=Beatrice Forbes |date=1998 |title=Temür and the Problem of a Conqueror's Legacy |jstor=25183464 |journal=Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society |volume=8 |issue=1 |pages=21–41 |doi=10.1017/S1356186300016412 |s2cid=154734091 |issn=1356-1863}}
* Marozzi, Justin. "Tamerlane", in: ''The Art of War: great commanders of the ancient and medieval world'', Andrew Roberts (editor), London, England: Quercus Military History, 2008. {{ISBN|978-1847242594}}.
* {{Cite journal |last=Novosel'tsev |first=A. P. |date=1973 |title=On the Historical Evaluation of Tamerlane |journal=Soviet Studies in History |volume=12 |issue=3 |pages=37–70 |doi=10.2753/RSH1061-1983120337 |issn=0038-5867}}
* Paksoy, H. B. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210226233733/http://vlib.iue.it/carrie/texts/carrie_books/paksoy-6/cae02.html |date=26 February 2021 }}.
* Shterenshis, Michael V. "Approach to Tamerlane: Tradition and Innovation." Central Asia and the Caucasus 2 (2000).
* {{Cite journal |last=Sykes |first=P. M. |date=1915 |title=Tamerlane |url= |journal=Journal of the Royal Central Asian Society |volume=2 |issue=1 |pages=17–33 |doi=10.1080/03068371508724717 |issn=0035-8789}}
* Yüksel, Musa Şamil. "Timur'un Yükselişi ve Batı'nın Diplomatik Cevabı, 1390–1405." ''Selçuk Üniversitesi Türkiyat Araştırmaları Dergisi'' 1.18 (2005): 231–243.

== External links ==
* {{Commons category-inline|Timur}}

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Latest revision as of 10:37, 10 January 2025

Turco-Mongol conqueror (1320s–1405)

"Tamerlane" and "Tamerlan" redirect here. For the poem, see Tamerlane (poem). For people named Tamerlan, see Tamerlan (given name). For people named Timur or Temur, see Timur (name). For other uses, see Timur (disambiguation).

Timur
Facial reconstruction from Timur's skull, by Mikhail Mikhaylovich Gerasimov
Amir of the Timurid Empire
Reign9 April 1370 –
18 February 1405
Coronation9 April 1370, Balkh
SuccessorKhalil Sultan
Born1320s
near Kesh, Chagatai Khanate
Died18 February 1405
Farab, Timurid Empire
BurialGur-e-Amir, Samarkand, Uzbekistan
ConsortSaray Mulk Khanum
Wives
  • Chulpan Mulk Agha
  • Aljaz Turkhan Agha
  • Tukal Khanum
  • Dil Shad Agha
  • Touman Agha
Issue
Detail
Names
Shuja-ud-din Timur
DynastyTimurid
FatherAmir Taraghai
MotherTekina Khatun
ReligionSunni Islam

Timur, also known as Tamerlane (1320s – 17–18 February 1405), was a Turco-Mongol conqueror who founded the Timurid Empire in and around modern-day Afghanistan, Iran, and Central Asia, becoming the first ruler of the Timurid dynasty. An undefeated commander, he is widely regarded as one of the greatest military leaders and tacticians in history, as well as one of the most brutal and deadly. Timur is also considered a great patron of art and architecture, for he interacted with intellectuals such as Ibn Khaldun, Hafez, and Hafiz-i Abru and his reign introduced the Timurid Renaissance.

Born into the Turkicized Mongol confederation of the Barlas in Transoxiana (in modern-day Uzbekistan) in the 1320s, Timur gained control of the western Chagatai Khanate by 1370. From that base he led military campaigns across Western, South, and Central Asia, the Caucasus, and Southern Russia, defeating in the process the Khans of the Golden Horde, the Mamluks of Egypt and Syria, the emerging Ottoman Empire, as well as the late Delhi Sultanate of India, becoming the most powerful ruler in the Muslim world. From these conquests he founded the Timurid Empire, which fragmented shortly after his death. He spoke several languages, including Chagatai, an ancestor of modern Uzbek, as well as Mongolic and Persian, in which he wrote diplomatic correspondence.

Timur was the last of the great nomadic conquerors of the Eurasian Steppe, and his empire set the stage for the rise of the more structured and lasting Islamic gunpowder empires in the 16th and 17th centuries. Timur was of both Turkic and Mongol descent, and, while probably not a direct descendant on either side, he shared a common ancestor with Genghis Khan on his father's side, though some authors have suggested his mother may have been a descendant of the Khan. He clearly sought to invoke the legacy of Genghis Khan's conquests during his lifetime. Timur envisioned the restoration of the Mongol Empire and according to Gérard Chaliand, saw himself as Genghis Khan's heir.

To legitimize his conquests, Timur relied on Islamic symbols and language, referring to himself as the "Sword of Islam". He was a patron of educational and religious institutions. He styled himself as a ghazi in the last years of his life. By the end of his reign, Timur had gained complete control over all the remnants of the Chagatai Khanate, the Ilkhanate, and the Golden Horde, and had even attempted to restore the Yuan dynasty in China. Timur's armies were inclusively multi-ethnic and were feared throughout Asia, Africa, and Europe, sizable parts of which his campaigns laid waste. Scholars estimate that his military campaigns caused the deaths of millions of people. Of all the areas he conquered, Khwarazm suffered the most from his expeditions, as it rose several times against him. Timur's campaigns have been characterized as genocidal.

He was the grandfather of the Timurid sultan, astronomer and mathematician Ulugh Beg, who ruled Central Asia from 1411 to 1449, and the great-great-great-grandfather of Babur (1483–1530), founder of the Mughal Empire.

Ancestry

Genealogical relationship between Timur and Genghis Khan

Through his father, Timur claimed to be a descendant of Tumbinai Khan, a male-line ancestor he shared with Genghis Khan. Tumanay's great-great-grandson Qarachar Noyan was a minister for the emperor who later assisted the latter's son Chagatai in the governorship of Transoxiana. Though there are not many mentions of Qarachar in 13th and 14th century records, later Timurid sources greatly emphasized his role in the early history of the Mongol Empire. These histories also state that Genghis Khan later established the "bond of fatherhood and sonship" by marrying Chagatai's daughter to Qarachar. Through his alleged descent from this marriage, Timur claimed kinship with the Chagatai Khans.

The origins of Timur's mother, Tekina Khatun, are less clear. The Zafarnama merely states her name without giving any information regarding her background. Writing in 1403, John III, Archbishop of Sultaniyya, claimed that she was of lowly origin. The Mu'izz al-Ansab, written decades later, says that she was related to the Yasa'uri tribe, whose lands bordered that of the Barlas. Ibn Khaldun recounted that Timur himself described to him his mother's descent from the legendary Persian hero Manuchehr. Ibn Arabshah suggested that she was a descendant of Genghis Khan. The 18th century Books of Timur identify her as the daughter of 'Sadr al-Sharia', which is believed to refer to the Hanafi scholar Ubayd Allah al-Mahbubi of Bukhara.

Early life

Depiction of Timur granting audience on the occasion of his accession, in the near-contemporary Zafarnama (1424–1428), 1467 edition

Timur was born in Transoxiana near the city of Kesh (modern Shahrisabz, Uzbekistan), some 80 kilometres (50 mi) south of Samarkand, part of what was then the Chagatai Khanate. His name Temur means "Iron" in the Chagatai language, his mother-tongue (cf. Uzbek Temir, Turkish Demir). It is cognate with Genghis Khan's birth name of Temüjin. Later Timurid dynastic histories claim that Timur was born on 8 April 1336, but most sources from his lifetime give ages that are consistent with a birthdate in the late 1320s. Multiple scholars suspect the 1336 date was designed to tie Timur to the legacy of Abu Sa'id Bahadur Khan, the last ruler of the Ilkhanate descended from Hulagu Khan, who died in that year. He was a member of the Barlas, a Mongolian tribe that had been turkified in many aspects. His father, Taraghai was described as a minor noble of this tribe. However, Manz believes that Timur may have later understated the social position of his father, so as to make his own successes appear more remarkable. She states that though he is not believed to have been especially powerful, Taraghai was reasonably wealthy and influential. This is shown in the Zafarnama, which states that Timur later returning to his birthplace following the death of his father in 1360, suggesting concern over his estate. Taraghai's social significance is further hinted at by Arabshah, who described him as a magnate in the court of Amir Husayn Qara'unas. In addition to this, the father of the great Amir Hamid Kereyid of Moghulistan is stated as a friend of Taraghai's.

In his childhood, Timur and a small band of followers raided travelers for goods, especially animals such as sheep, horses, and cattle. Around 1363, it is believed that Timur tried to steal a sheep from a shepherd but was shot by two arrows, one in his right leg and another in his right hand, where he lost two fingers. Both injuries disabled him for life. Some believe that these injuries occurred while serving as a mercenary to the khan of Sistan in what is today the Dashti Margo in southwest Afghanistan. Timur's injuries and disability gave rise to the nickname "Timur the Lame" or Temūr(-i) Lang in Persian, which is the origin of Tamerlane, the name by which he is generally known in the West.

Military leader

Timurid conquests and invasions
Central Asia

Persia

Tokhtamysh–Timur war

Georgia

North Caucasia

India

Levant

Anatolia

By about 1360, Timur had gained prominence as a military leader whose troops were mostly Turkic tribesmen of the region. He took part in campaigns in Transoxiana with the Khan of the Chagatai Khanate. Allying himself both in cause and by family connection with Qazaghan, the dethroner and destroyer of Volga Bulgaria, he invaded Khorasan at the head of a thousand horsemen. This was the second military expedition that he led, and its success led to further operations, among them the subjugation of Khwarazm and Urgench.

Following Qazaghan's murder, disputes arose among the many claimants to sovereign power. Tughlugh Timur of Kashgar, the Khan of the Eastern Chagatai Khanate, another descendant of Genghis Khan, invaded, interrupting this infighting. Timur was sent to negotiate with the invader but joined with him instead and was rewarded with Transoxania. At about this time, his father died and Timur also became chief of the Barlas. Tughlugh then attempted to set his son Ilyas Khoja over Transoxania, but Timur repelled this invasion with a smaller force.

Rise to power

Timur commanding the Siege of Balkh
Timur enthroned at Balkh

In this period, Timur reduced the Chagatai khans to the position of figureheads while he ruled in their name. Also during this period, Timur and his brother-in-law Amir Husayn, who were at first fellow fugitives and wanderers, became rivals and antagonists. The relationship between them became strained after Husayn abandoned efforts to carry out Timur's orders to finish off Ilya Khoja (former governor of Mawarannah) close to Tashkent.

Timur gained followers in Balkh, consisting of merchants, fellow tribesmen, Muslim clergy, aristocracy and agricultural workers, because of his kindness in sharing his belongings with them. This contrasted Timur's behavior with that of Husayn, who alienated these people, took many possessions from them via his heavy tax laws and selfishly spent the tax money building elaborate structures. Around 1370, Husayn surrendered to Timur and was later assassinated, which allowed Timur to be formally proclaimed sovereign at Balkh. He married Husayn's wife Saray Mulk Khanum, a descendant of Genghis Khan, allowing him to become imperial ruler of the Chaghatay tribe.

Legitimization of Timur's rule

Timur's Turco-Mongolian heritage provided opportunities and challenges as he sought to rule the Mongol Empire and the Muslim world. According to the Mongol traditions, Timur could not claim the title of khan or rule the Mongol Empire because he was not a descendant of Genghis Khan. Therefore, Timur set up a puppet Chaghatayid Khan, Suyurghatmish, as the nominal ruler of Balkh as he pretended to act as a "protector of the member of a Chinggisid line, that of Genghis Khan's eldest son, Jochi". Timur instead used the title of Amir meaning general, and acting in the name of the Chagatai ruler of Transoxania. To reinforce this position, Timur claimed the title güregen (royal son-in-law) to a princess of Chinggisid line.

As with the title of Khan, Timur similarly could not claim the supreme title of the Islamic world, Caliph, because the "office was limited to the Quraysh, the tribe of the Prophet Muhammad". Therefore, Timur reacted to the challenge by creating a myth and image of himself as a "supernatural personal power" ordained by God. Timur's most famous title was Sahib Qiran (صَاحِبِ قِرَان, 'Lord of Conjunction'), which is rooted in astrology a title that was used before him to designate Hamza ibn Abd al-Muttalib, the paternal uncle of Muhammad and which was taken by the Mamluk Sultan Baybars and by various rulers of the Ilkhanate to designate themselves. In that regard, he simply pursued an existing tradition in the Muslim world to designate conquerors.

The title was referring to the conjunction of the two "superior planets", Saturn and Jupiter, which was held to be an auspicious sign and the mark of a new era. According to A. Azfar Moin, Sahib Qiran was a messianic title, implying that Timur might potentially be the "awaited messiah descended from the prophetic line" who would "inaugurate a new era, possibly the last one before the end of time." Otherwise he depicted himself as a spiritual descendant of Ali, thus claiming the lineage of both Genghis Khan and the Quraysh.

Period of expansion

Timur besieges the historic city of Urganj.

Timur spent the next 35 years in various wars and expeditions. He not only consolidated his rule at home by the subjugation of his foes, but sought extension of territory by encroachments upon the lands of foreign potentates. His conquests to the west and northwest led him to the lands near the Caspian Sea and to the banks of the Ural and the Volga. Conquests in the south and south-West encompassed almost every province in Persia, including Baghdad, Karbala and Northern Iraq.

One of the most formidable of Timur's opponents was another Mongol ruler, a descendant of Genghis Khan named Tokhtamysh. After having been a refugee in Timur's court, Tokhtamysh became ruler both of the eastern Kipchak and the Golden Horde. After his accession, he quarreled with Timur over the possession of Khwarizm and Azerbaijan. However, Timur still supported him against the Russians, and in 1382, Tokhtamysh invaded the Muscovite dominion and burned Moscow.

Russian Orthodox tradition states that later, in 1395, having reached the frontier of the Principality of Ryazan, Timur had taken Yelets and started advancing towards Moscow. Vasily I of Moscow went with an army to Kolomna and halted at the banks of the Oka River. The clergy brought the famed Theotokos of Vladimir icon from Vladimir to Moscow. Along the way people prayed kneeling: "O Mother of God, save the land of Russia!". Suddenly, Timur's armies retreated. In memory of this miraculous deliverance of the Russian land from Timur on 26 August, the all-Russian celebration in honor of the Meeting of the Vladimir Icon of the Most Holy Mother of God was established.

Conquest of Persia

Emir Timur's army attacks the survivors of the town of Nerges, in Georgia, in the spring of 1396.

After the death of Abu Sa'id, ruler of the Ilkhanate, in 1335, there was a power vacuum in Persia. In the end, Persia was split amongst the Muzaffarids, Kartids, Eretnids, Chobanids, Injuids, Jalayirids, and Sarbadars. In 1383, Timur started his lengthy military conquest of Persia, though he already ruled over much of Persian Khorasan by 1381, after Khwaja Mas'ud, of the Sarbadar dynasty surrendered. Timur began his Persian campaign with Herat, capital of the Kartid dynasty. When Herat did not surrender he reduced the city to rubble and massacred most of its citizens; it remained in ruins until Shah Rukh ordered its reconstruction around 1415. Timur then sent a general to capture rebellious Kandahar. With the capture of Herat the Kartid kingdom surrendered and became vassals of Timur; it would later be annexed outright less than a decade later in 1389 by Timur's son Miran Shah.

Timur then headed west to capture the Zagros Mountains, passing through Mazandaran. During his travel through the north of Persia, he captured the then town of Tehran, which surrendered and was thus treated mercifully. He laid siege to Soltaniyeh in 1384. Khorasan revolted one year later, so Timur destroyed Isfizar, and the prisoners were cemented into the walls alive. The next year the kingdom of Sistan, under the Mihrabanid dynasty, was ravaged, and its capital at Zaranj was destroyed. Timur then returned to his capital of Samarkand, where he began planning for his Georgian campaign and Golden Horde invasion. In 1386, Timur passed through Mazandaran as he had when trying to capture the Zagros. He went near the city of Soltaniyeh, which he had previously captured but instead turned north and captured Tabriz with little resistance, along with Maragha. He ordered heavy taxation of the people, which was collected by Adil Aqa, who was also given control over Soltaniyeh. Adil was later executed because Timur suspected him of corruption.

Timur's empire and his military campaigns

Timur then went north to begin his Georgian and Golden Horde campaigns, pausing his full-scale invasion of Persia. When he returned, he found his generals had done well in protecting the cities and lands he had conquered in Persia. Though many rebelled, and his son Miran Shah, who may have been regent, was forced to annex rebellious vassal dynasties, his holdings remained. So he proceeded to capture the rest of Persia, specifically the two major southern cities of Isfahan and Shiraz. When he arrived with his army at Isfahan in 1387, the city immediately surrendered; he treated it with relative mercy as he normally did with cities that surrendered (unlike Herat). However, after Isfahan revolted against Timur's taxes by killing the tax collectors and some of Timur's soldiers, he ordered the massacre of the city's citizens; the death toll is reckoned at between 100,000 and 200,000. An eye-witness counted more than 28 towers constructed of about 1,500 heads each. This has been described as a "systematic use of terror against towns...an integral element of Tamerlane's strategic element", which he viewed as preventing bloodshed by discouraging resistance. His massacres were selective and he spared the artistic and educated. This would later influence the next great Persian conqueror: Nader Shah.

Timur then began a five-year campaign to the west in 1392, attacking Persian Kurdistan. In 1393, Shiraz was captured after surrendering, and the Muzaffarids became vassals of Timur, though prince Shah Mansur rebelled but was defeated, and the Muzafarids were annexed. Shortly after Georgia was devastated so that the Golden Horde could not use it to threaten northern Iran. In the same year, Timur caught Baghdad by surprise in August by marching there in only eight days from Shiraz. Sultan Ahmad Jalayir fled to Syria, where the Mamluk Sultan Barquq protected him and killed Timur's envoys. Timur left the Sarbadar prince Khwaja Mas'ud to govern Baghdad, but he was driven out when Ahmad Jalayir returned. Ahmad was unpopular but got help from Qara Yusuf of the Kara Koyunlu; he fled again in 1399, this time to the Ottomans.

Tokhtamysh–Timur war

See also: Karsakpay inscription
Emir Timur and his forces advance against the Golden Horde, Khan Tokhtamysh.

In the meantime, Tokhtamysh, now khan of the Golden Horde, turned against his patron and in 1385 invaded Azerbaijan. The inevitable response by Timur resulted in the Tokhtamysh–Timur war. In the initial stage of the war, Timur won a victory at the Battle of the Kondurcha River. After the battle Tokhtamysh and some of his army were allowed to escape. After Tokhtamysh's initial defeat, Timur invaded Muscovy to the north of Tokhtamysh's holdings. Timur's army burned Ryazan and advanced on Moscow. He was pulled away before reaching the Oka River by Tokhtamysh's renewed campaign in the south.

In the first phase of the conflict with Tokhtamysh, Timur led an army of over 100,000 men north for more than 700 miles into the steppe. He then rode west about 1,000 miles advancing in a front more than 10 miles wide. During this advance, Timur's army got far enough north to be in a region of very long summer days causing complaints by his Muslim soldiers about keeping a long schedule of prayers. It was then that Tokhtamysh's army was boxed in against the east bank of the Volga River in the Orenburg region and destroyed at the Battle of the Kondurcha River, in 1391.

In the second phase of the conflict, Timur took a different route against the enemy by invading the realm of Tokhtamysh via the Caucasus region. In 1395, Timur defeated Tokhtamysh in the Battle of the Terek River, concluding the struggle between the two monarchs. Tokhtamysh was unable to restore his power or prestige, and he was killed about a decade later in the area of present-day Tyumen. During the course of Timur's campaigns, his army destroyed Sarai, the capital of the Golden Horde, and Astrakhan, subsequently disrupting the Golden Horde's Silk Road. The Golden Horde no longer held power after their losses to Timur.

Ismailis

In May 1393, Timur's army invaded the Anjudan, crippling the Ismaili village only a year after his assault on the Ismailis in Mazandaran. The village was prepared for the attack, evidenced by its fortress and system of tunnels. Undeterred, Timur's soldiers flooded the tunnels by cutting into a channel overhead. Timur's reasons for attacking this village are not yet well understood. However, it has been suggested that his religious persuasions and view of himself as an executor of divine will may have contributed to his motivations. The Persian historian Khwandamir explains that an Ismaili presence was growing more politically powerful in Persian Iraq. A group of locals in the region was dissatisfied with this and, Khwandamir writes, these locals assembled and brought up their complaint with Timur, possibly provoking his attack on the Ismailis there.

Campaign against the Delhi Sultanate

Map of Timur's invasion of India in 1398-1399, and painting of Timur defeating the Sultan of Delhi, Nasir Al-Din Mahmud Tughluq, in the winter of 1397–1398 (painting dated 1595–1600).

In the late 14th century, the Tughlaq dynasty which had been ruling over Delhi Sultanate since 1320 had declined. Most of the provincial governors had asserted their independence, and the Sultanate was reduced to only a part of its former extent. This anarchy drew the attention of Timur, who in 1398 invaded Indian subcontinent during the reign of Sultan Nasir-ud-Din Mahmud Shah Tughluq. After crossing the Indus River on 30 September 1398 with a force of 90,000, he sacked Tulamba and massacred its inhabitants. He sent an advance guard under his grandson Pir Muhammad who captured Multan after a siege of six months. His invasion was unopposed as most of the nobility surrendered without a fight, however he did encounter resistance by a force of 2,000 under Malik Jasrat at Sutlej river between Tulamba and Dipalpur. Jasrat was defeated and taken away as captive. Next he captured the fort of Bhatner which was being defended by Rajput chief Rai Dul Chand and demolished it.

While on his march towards Delhi, Timur was opposed by the Jat peasantry, who would loot caravans and then disappear in the forests. He had thousands of Jats killed and many taken captive. But the Sultanate at Delhi did nothing to stop his advance.

Capture of Delhi (1398)

Main article: Sack of Delhi (1398)

The battle took place on 17 December 1398. Before the battle, Timur slaughtered some 100,000 slaves who had been captured previously in the Indian campaign. This was done out of fear that they might revolt.

Sultan Nasir-ud-Din Mahmud Shah Tughluq and the army of Mallu Iqbal had war elephants armored with chain mail and poison on their tusks. As his Tatar forces were afraid of the elephants, Timur ordered his men to dig a trench in front of their positions. Timur then loaded his camels with as much wood and hay as they could carry. When the war elephants charged, Timur set the hay on fire and prodded the camels with iron sticks, causing them to charge at the elephants, howling in pain: Timur had understood that elephants were easily panicked. Faced with the strange spectacle of camels flying straight at them with flames leaping from their backs, the elephants turned around and stampeded back toward their own lines. Timur capitalized on the subsequent disruption in the forces of Nasir-ud-Din Mahmud Shah Tughluq, securing an easy victory. Nasir-ud-Din Mahmud Shah Tughluq fled with remnants of his forces.

The capture of the Delhi Sultanate was one of Timur's largest and most devastating victories as at that time, Delhi was one of the richest cities in the world. The city of Delhi was sacked and reduced to ruins, with the population enslaved. After the fall of the city, uprisings by its citizens against the Turkic-Mongols began to occur, causing a retaliatory bloody massacre within the city walls. After three days of citizens uprising within Delhi, it was said that the city reeked of the decomposing bodies of its citizens with their heads being erected like structures and the bodies left as food for the birds by Timur's soldiers. Timur's invasion and destruction of Delhi continued the chaos that was still consuming India, and the city would not be able to recover from the great loss it suffered for almost a century.

Campaigns in the Levant

Timur defeating the Mamluk Sultan Nasir-ad-Din Faraj of Egypt

Before the end of 1399, Timur started a war with Bayezid I, sultan of the Ottoman Empire, and the Mamluk sultan of Egypt Nasir-ad-Din Faraj. Bayezid began annexing the territory of Turkmen and Muslim rulers in Anatolia. As Timur claimed sovereignty over the Turkoman rulers, they took refuge behind him.

In 1400, Timur invaded Armenia and Georgia. Of the surviving population, more than 60,000 of the local people were captured as slaves, and many districts were depopulated. He also sacked Sivas in Asia Minor.

Then Timur turned his attention to Syria, sacking Aleppo, and Damascus. The city's inhabitants were massacred, except for the artisans, who were deported to Samarkand.

Timur invaded Baghdad in June 1401. After the capture of the city, 20,000 of its citizens were massacred. Timur ordered that every soldier should return with at least two severed human heads to show him. When they ran out of men to kill, many warriors killed prisoners captured earlier in the campaign, and when they ran out of prisoners to kill, many resorted to beheading their own wives. British historian David Nicolle, in his "The Mongol Warlords", quotes an anonymous contemporary historian who compared Timur's army to "ants and locusts covering the whole countryside, plundering and ravaging."

Invasion of Anatolia

Main articles: Battle of Ankara and Ottoman Interregnum

In the meantime, years of insulting letters had passed between Timur and Bayezid. Both rulers insulted each other in their own way while Timur preferred to undermine Bayezid's position as a ruler and play down the significance of his military successes.

This is the excerpt from one of Timur's letters addressed to Ottoman sultan:

Believe me, you are but pismire ant: don't seek to fight the elephants for they'll crush you under their feet. Shall a petty prince such as you are contend with us? But your rodomontades (braggadocio) are not extraordinary; for a Turcoman never spake with judgement. If you don't follow our counsels you will regret it

Painting depicting Bayezid I being held captive by Timur, by Stanisław Chlebowski, 1878.

Finally, Timur invaded Anatolia and defeated Bayezid in the Battle of Ankara on 20 July 1402. Bayezid was captured in battle and subsequently died in captivity, initiating the twelve-year Ottoman Interregnum period. Timur's stated motivation for attacking Bayezid and the Ottoman Empire was the restoration of Seljuq authority. Timur saw the Seljuks as the rightful rulers of Anatolia as they had been granted rule by Mongol conquerors, illustrating again Timur's interest with Genghizid legitimacy.

In December 1402, Timur besieged and took the city of Smyrna, a stronghold of the Christian Knights Hospitalers, thus he referred to himself as ghazi or "Warrior of Islam". A mass beheading was carried out in Smyrna by Timur's soldiers.

With the Treaty of Gallipoli in February 1402, Timur was furious with the Genoese and Venetians, as their ships ferried the Ottoman army to safety in Thrace. As Lord Kinross reported in The Ottoman Centuries, the Italians preferred the enemy they could handle to the one they could not.

During the early interregnum, Bayezid I's son Mehmed Çelebi acted as Timur's vassal. Unlike other princes, Mehmed minted coins that had Timur's name stamped as "Demur han Gürgân" (تيمور خان كركان), alongside his own as "Mehmed bin Bayezid han" (محمد بن بايزيد خان). This was probably an attempt on Mehmed's part to justify to Timur his conquest of Bursa after the Battle of Ulubad. After Mehmed established himself in Rum, Timur had already begun preparations for his return to Central Asia, and took no further steps to interfere with the status quo in Anatolia.

While Timur was still in Anatolia, Qara Yusuf assaulted Baghdad and captured it in 1402. Timur returned to Persia and sent his grandson Abu Bakr ibn Miran Shah to reconquer Baghdad, which he proceeded to do. Timur then spent some time in Ardabil, where he gave Ali Safavi, leader of the Safaviyya, a number of captives. Subsequently, he marched to Khorasan and then to Samarkhand, where he spent nine months celebrating and preparing to invade Mongolia and China.

Attempts to attack the Ming dynasty

The fortress at Jiayu Pass was strengthened due to fear of an invasion by Timur.

In 1368, the Yuan dynasty collapsed and was succeeded by the Ming dynasty. The Ming dynasty during the reigns of its founder, the Hongwu Emperor, and his son, the Yongle Emperor, produced tributary states of many Central Asian countries. In 1394, the Hongwu Emperor's ambassadors eventually presented Timur with a letter addressing him as a subject. Timur had the ambassadors Fu An, Guo Ji, and Liu Wei detained. Neither the Hongwu Emperor's next ambassador, Chen Dewen (1397), nor the delegation announcing the accession of the Yongle Emperor fared any better.

Timur eventually planned to invade China. To this end, Timur made an alliance with surviving Mongol tribes in the Mongolian Plateau and prepared all the way to Bukhara. Engke Khan sent his grandson Öljei Temür Khan, also known as "Buyanshir Khan" after he converted to Islam while at the court of Timur in Samarkand.

Death

Timurid Empire at Timur's death in 1405

Timur preferred to fight his battles in the spring. However, he moved east via Timur's Gates and died en route during an uncharacteristic winter campaign. In December 1404, Timur began military campaigns against Ming China and detained a Ming envoy. He became ill while encamped on the farther side of the Syr Daria and died at Farab on 17–18 February 1405, before ever reaching the Chinese border. After his death, the Ming envoys such as Fu An and the remaining entourage were released by his grandson Khalil Sultan.

Geographer Clements Markham, in his introduction to the narrative of Clavijo's embassy, states that, after Timur died, his body "was embalmed with musk and rose water, wrapped in linen, laid in an ebony coffin and sent to Samarkand, where it was buried". His tomb, the Gur-e-Amir, still stands in Samarkand, though it has been heavily restored in recent years.

Succession

Main article: Timurid Empire
Timur's mausoleum is located in Samarkand, Uzbekistan.

Timur had twice previously appointed an heir apparent to succeed him, both of whom he had outlived. The first, his son Jahangir, died of illness in 1376. The second, his grandson Muhammad Sultan, had died from battle wounds in 1403. After the latter's death, Timur did nothing to replace him. It was only when he was on his own death-bed that he appointed Muhammad Sultan's younger brother, Pir Muhammad as his successor.

Pir Muhammad was unable to gain sufficient support from his relatives and a bitter civil war erupted amongst Timur's descendants, with multiple princes pursuing their claims. It was not until 1409 that Timur's youngest son, Shah Rukh was able to overcome his rivals and take the throne as Timur's successor.

Wives and concubines

Lady travelling. Samarkand or Central Asian painting, circa 1400. Possibly depicting the wedding of Timur with Dilshad Aqa in 1375.

Timur had forty-three wives and concubines, all of these women were also his consorts. Timur made dozens of women his wives and concubines as he conquered their fathers' or erstwhile husbands' lands.

Emir Timur feasts in the gardens of Samarkand.
  • Turmish Agha, mother of Jahangir Mirza, Jahanshah Mirza and Aka Begi;
  • Oljay Turkhan Agha (m. 1357/58), daughter of Amir Mashlah and granddaughter of Amir Qazaghan;
  • Saray Mulk Khanum (m. 1367), widow of Amir Husain, and daughter of Qazan Khan;
  • Islam Agha (m. 1367), widow of Amir Husain, and daughter of Amir Bayan Salduz;
  • Ulus Agha (m. 1367), widow of Amir Husain, and daughter of Amir Khizr Yasuri;
  • Dilshad Agha (m. 1374), daughter of Shams ed-Din and his wife Bujan Agha;
  • Touman Agha (m. 1377), daughter of Amir Musa and his wife Arzu Mulk Agha, daughter of Amir Bayezid Jalayir;
  • Chulpan Mulk Agha, daughter of Haji Beg of Jetah;
  • Tukal Khanum (m. 1397), daughter of Mongol Khan Khizr Khawaja Oglan;
  • Tolun Agha, concubine, and mother of Umar Shaikh Mirza I;
  • Mengli Agha, concubine, and mother of Miran Shah;
  • Toghay Turkhan Agha, lady from the Kara Khitai, widow of Amir Husain, and mother of Shah Rukh;
  • Tughdi Bey Agha, daughter of Aq Sufi Qongirat;
  • Sultan Aray Agha, a Nukuz lady;
  • Malikanshah Agha, a Filuni lady;
  • Khand Malik Agha, mother of Ibrahim Mirza;
  • Sultan Agha, mother of a son who died in infancy;

His other wives and concubines included: Dawlat Tarkan Agha, Burhan Agha, Jani Beg Agha, Tini Beg Agha, Durr Sultan Agha, Munduz Agha, Bakht Sultan Agha, Nowruz Agha, Jahan Bakht Agha, Nigar Agha, Ruhparwar Agha, Dil Beg Agha, Dilshad Agha, Murad Beg Agha, Piruzbakht Agha, Khoshkeldi Agha, Dilkhosh Agha, Barat Bey Agha, Sevinch Malik Agha, Arzu Bey Agha, Yadgar Sultan Agha, Khudadad Agha, Bakht Nigar Agha, Qutlu Bey Agha, and another Nigar Agha.

Descendants

See also: Timurid family tree

Sons of Timur

Daughters of Timur

  • Aka Begi (died 1382) – by Turmish Agha. Married to Muhammad Beg, son of Amir Musa Tayichiud
  • Sultan Bakht Begum (died 1429/30) – by Oljay Turkhan Agha. Married first Muhammad Mirke Apardi, married second, 1389/90, Sulayman Shah Dughlat
  • Sa'adat Sultan – by Dilshad Agha
  • Bikijan – by Mengli Agha
  • Qutlugh Sultan Agha – by Toghay Turkhan Agha

Sons of Umar Shaikh Mirza I

Sons of Jahangir

Sons of Miran Shah

Sons of Shah Rukh Mirza

Religious views

Timur was a practising Sunni Muslim, possibly belonging to the Naqshbandi school, which was influential in Transoxiana. His chief official religious counsellor and adviser was the Hanafi scholar 'Abdu 'l-Jabbar Khwarazmi. In Tirmidh, he had come under the influence of his spiritual mentor Sayyid Baraka, a leader from Balkh who is buried alongside Timur in Gur-e-Amir.

Timur was known to hold Ali and the Ahl al-Bayt in high regard and has been noted by various scholars for his "pro-Shia" stance. However, he also punished Shias for desecrating the memories of the Sahaba. Timur was also noted for attacking the Shia with Sunni apologism, while at other times he attacked Sunnis on religious grounds as well. In contrast, Timur held the Seljuk Sultan Ahmad Sanjar in high regard for attacking the Ismailis at Alamut, and Timur's own attack on Ismailis at Anjudan was equally brutal.

Personality

Timur leading his troops at the 1393 Conquest of Baghdad. Near-contemporary portrait in Zafarnama, commissioned by his grandson Ibrahim Sultan in 1424–28. Published in 1435–36.

Timur is regarded as a military genius and as a brilliant tactician with an uncanny ability to work within a highly fluid political structure to win and maintain a loyal following of nomads during his rule in Central Asia. He was also considered extraordinarily intelligent – not only intuitively but also intellectually. In Samarkand and his many travels, Timur, under the guidance of distinguished scholars, was able to learn the Persian, Mongolian, and Turkish languages (according to Ahmad ibn Arabshah, Timur could not speak Arabic). However, it was Persian which was held in distinction by Timur as it was the language not only of his court, but also that of his chancellery.

According to John Joseph Saunders, Timur was "the product of an Islamized and Iranized society", and not steppe nomadic. More importantly, Timur was characterized as an opportunist. Taking advantage of his Turco-Mongolian heritage, Timur frequently used either the Islamic religion or the sharia law, fiqh, and traditions of the Mongol Empire to achieve his military goals or domestic political aims. Timur was a learned king, and enjoyed the company of scholars; he was tolerant and generous to them. He was a contemporary of the Persian poet Hafez, and a story of their meeting explains that Timur summoned Hafiz, who had written a ghazal with the following verse:

For the black mole on thy cheek
I would give the cities of Samarkand and Bukhara.

Timur upbraided him for this verse and said, "By the blows of my well tempered sword I have conquered the greater part of the world to enlarge Samarkand and Bukhara, my capitals and residences; and you, pitiful creature, would exchange these two cities for a mole." Hafez, undaunted, replied, "It is by similar generosity that I have been reduced, as you see, to my present state of poverty." It is reported that the King was pleased by the witty answer and the poet departed with magnificent gifts.

There is a shared view that Timur's real motive for his campaigns was his imperialistic ambition, as expressed by his statement: "The whole expanse of the inhabited part of the world is not large enough to have two kings." However, besides Iran, Timur simply plundered the states he invaded with a purpose of enriching his native Samarqand and neglected the conquered areas, which may have resulted in a relatively quick disintegration of his Empire after his death.

Timur used Persian expressions in his conversations often, and his motto was the Persian phrase rāstī rustī (راستی رستی, meaning "truth is safety" or "veritas salus"). He is credited with the invention of the Tamerlane chess variant, played on a 10×11 board.

Exchanges with Europe

Main article: Timurid relations with Europe
Letter of Timur to Charles VI of France, 1402, a witness to Timurid relations with Europe. Archives Nationales, Paris.

Timur had numerous epistolary and diplomatic exchanges with various European states, especially Spain and France. Relations between the court of Henry III of Castile and that of Timur played an important part in medieval Castilian diplomacy. In 1402, the time of the Battle of Ankara, two Spanish ambassadors were already with Timur: Pelayo de Sotomayor and Fernando de Palazuelos. Later, Timur sent to the court of the Kingdom of León and Castile a Chagatai ambassador named Hajji Muhammad al-Qazi with letters and gifts.

In return, Henry III of Castile sent a famous embassy to Timur's court in Samarkand in 1403–06, led by Ruy González de Clavijo, with two other ambassadors, Alfonso Paez and Gomez de Salazar. On their return, Timur affirmed that he regarded the king of Castile "as his very own son".

According to Clavijo, Timur's good treatment of the Spanish delegation contrasted with the disdain shown by his host toward the envoys of the "lord of Cathay" (i.e., the Yongle Emperor), the Chinese ruler. Clavijo's visit to Samarkand allowed him to report to the European audience on the news from Cathay (China), which few Europeans had been able to visit directly in the century that had passed since the travels of Marco Polo.

The French archives preserve:

  • A 30 July 1402 letter from Timur to Charles VI of France, suggesting that he send traders to Asia. It is written in Persian.
  • A May 1403 letter. This is a Latin transcription of a letter from Timur to Charles VI, and another from Miran Shah, his son, to the Christian princes, announcing their victory over Bayezid I at Smyrna.

A copy has been kept of the answer of Charles VI to Timur, dated 15 June 1403.

In addition, Byzantine John VII Palaiologos who was a regent during his uncle's absence in the West, sent a Dominican friar in August 1401 to Timur, to pay his respect and propose paying tribute to him instead of the Turks, once he managed to defeat them.

Legacy

Amir Timur Museum in Uzbekistan

Timur's legacy is a mixed one. While Central Asia blossomed under his reign, other places, such as Baghdad, Damascus, Delhi and other Arab, Georgian, Persian, and Indian cities were sacked and destroyed and their populations massacred. Thus, while Timur still retains a positive image in Muslim Central Asia, he is vilified by many in Arabia, Iraq, Persia, and India, where some of his greatest atrocities were carried out. However, Ibn Khaldun praises Timur for having unified much of the Muslim world when other conquerors of the time could not. The next great conqueror of the Middle East, Nader Shah, was greatly influenced by Timur and almost re-enacted Timur's conquests and battle strategies in his own campaigns. Like Timur, Nader Shah conquered most of Caucasia, Persia, and Central Asia along with also sacking Delhi.

Timur's short-lived empire also melded the Turko-Persian tradition in Transoxiana, and, in most of the territories that he incorporated into his fiefdom, Persian became the primary language of administration and literary culture (diwan), regardless of ethnicity. In addition, during his reign, some contributions to Turkic literature were penned, with Turkic cultural influence expanding and flourishing as a result. A literary form of Chagatai Turkic came into use alongside Persian as both a cultural and an official language.

Tamerlane virtually exterminated the Church of the East, which had previously been a major branch of Christianity but afterwards became largely confined to a small area now known as the Assyrian Triangle.

Statue of Tamerlane in Uzbekistan. In the background are the ruins of his summer palace in Shahrisabz.

Timur is officially recognized as a national hero in Uzbekistan. His monument in Tashkent now occupies the place where Karl Marx's statue once stood. The Amir Timur Museum in Tashkent focuses on his genealogy and life.

In 1794, Sake Dean Mahomed published his travel book, The Travels of Dean Mahomet. The book begins with the praise of Genghis Khan, Timur, and particularly the first Mughal emperor, Babur. He also gives important details on the then incumbent Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II.

The poem "Tamerlane" by Edgar Allan Poe follows a fictionalized version of Timur's life.

Historical sources

Ahmad ibn Arabshah's work on the Life of Timur

The earliest known history of his reign was Nizam al-Din Shami's Zafarnama, which was written during Timur's lifetime. Between 1424 and 1428, Sharaf ad-Din Ali Yazdi wrote a second Zafarnama drawing heavily on Shami's earlier work. Ahmad ibn Arabshah wrote a much less favorable history in Arabic. Arabshah's history was translated into Latin by the Dutch Orientalist Jacobus Golius in 1636.

As Timurid-sponsored histories, the two Zafarnamas present a dramatically different picture from Arabshah's chronicle. William Jones remarked that the former presented Timur as a "liberal, benevolent and illustrious prince" while the latter painted him as "deformed and impious, of a low birth and detestable principles".

Malfuzat-i Timuri

The Malfuzat-i Timurī and the appended Tuzūk-i Tīmūrī, supposedly Timur's own autobiography, are almost certainly 17th-century fabrications. The scholar Abu Taleb Hosayni presented the texts to the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan, a distant descendant of Timur, in 1637–1638, supposedly after discovering the Chagatai language originals in the library of a Yemeni ruler. Due to the distance between Yemen and Timur's base in Transoxiana and the lack of any other evidence of the originals, most historians consider the story highly implausible, and suspect Hosayni of inventing both the text and its origin story.

European views

Timur arguably had a significant impact on the Renaissance culture and early modern Europe. His achievements both fascinated and horrified Europeans from the fifteenth century to the early nineteenth century.

European views of Timur were mixed throughout the fifteenth century, with some European countries calling him an ally and others seeing him as a threat to Europe because of his rapid expansion and brutality.

When Timur captured the Ottoman Sultan Bayezid at Ankara, he was often praised and seen as a trusted ally by European rulers, such as Charles VI of France and Henry IV of England, because they believed he was saving Christianity from the Turkic Empire in the Middle East. Those two kings also praised him because his victory at Ankara allowed Christian merchants to remain in the Middle East and allowed for their safe return home to both France and England. Timur was also praised because it was believed that he helped restore the right of passage for Christian pilgrims to the Holy Land.

Other Europeans viewed Timur as a barbaric enemy who presented a threat to both European culture and the religion of Christianity. His rise to power moved many leaders, such as Henry III of Castile, to send embassies to Samarkand to scout out Timur, learn about his people, make alliances with him, and try to convince him to convert to Christianity in order to avoid war.

In the introduction to a 1723 translation of Yazdi's Zafarnama, the translator wrote:

tells us, that there are calumnies and impostures, which have been published by authors of romances, and Turkish writers who were his enemies, and envious at his glory: among whom is Ahmed Bin Arabschah ... As Timur-Bec had conquered the Turks and Arabians of Syria, and had even taken the Sultan Bajazet prisoner, it is no wonder that he has been misrepresented by the historians of those nations, who, in despite of truth, and against the dignity of history, have fallen into great excesses on this subject.

Exhumation and alleged curse

Main article: Curse of Timur
Tomb of Timur in Gur-e-Amir, Samarkand

Timur's body was exhumed from his tomb on 19 June 1941 and his remains examined by the Soviet anthropologists Mikhail M. Gerasimov, Lev V. Oshanin and V. Ia. Zezenkova. Gerasimov reconstructed the likeness of Timur from his skull and found that his facial characteristics displayed "typical Mongoloid features", i.e. East Asian in modern terms. An anthropologic study of Timur's cranium shows that he belonged predominately to the "South Siberian Mongoloid type". At 5 feet 8 inches (173 centimeters), Timur was tall for his era. The examinations confirmed that Timur was lame and had a withered right arm due to his injuries. His right thighbone had knitted together with his kneecap, and the configuration of the knee joint suggests that he kept his leg bent at all times and therefore would have had a pronounced limp. He appears to have been broad-chested and his hair and beard were red.

It is alleged that Timur's tomb was inscribed with the words, "When I rise from the dead, the world shall tremble". It is also said that when Gerasimov exhumed the body, an additional inscription inside the casket was found, which read, "Whomsoever [sic] opens my tomb shall unleash an invader more terrible than I." Even though people close to Gerasimov claim that this story is a fabrication, the legend, which became known as the Curse of Timur, persists. In any case, three days after Gerasimov began the exhumation, Germany invaded the Soviet Union. Timur was re-buried with full Islamic ritual in November 1942 just before the Soviet victory at the Battle of Stalingrad.

In the arts

See also

References

Explanatory notes

  1. To legitimize his rule, Timur claimed the title güregen (lit. 'royal son-in-law') to a princess of Chinggisid line.
  2. /tɪˈmʊər/; Chagatay: تیمور Temür, lit. 'Iron'
     • Sometimes spelled Taimur or Temur.
     • Historically best known as Amir Timur or as Sahib-i-Qiran (lit. 'Lord of the Auspicious Conjunction'), his epithet.
  3. /ˈtæmərleɪn/; Persian: تيمور لنگ Temūr(-i) Lang; Chagatay: اقساق تیمور Aqsaq Temür, lit. 'Timur the Lame'

Citations

  1. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Vol. 9. Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 1847. p. 377.
  2. ^ Manz 1999, p. 14.
  3. Muntakhab-al Lubab, Khafi Khan Nizam-ul-Mulki, Vol I, p. 49. Printed in Lahore, 1985
  4. W. M. Thackston, A Century of Princes: Sources on Timurid History and Art (1989), p. 239
  5. ʻInāyat Khān; Muḥammad Ṭāhir Āšnā ʿInāyat Ḫān (1990). The Shah Jahan Nama of 'Inayat Khan: An Abridged History of the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan, Compiled by His Royal Librarian: the Nineteenth-century Manuscript Translation of A.R. Fuller (British Library, Add. 30,777. Oxford University Press. pp. 11–17.
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  7. ^ Marozzi 2004, p. .
  8. Meri, Josef W. (2005). Medieval Islamic Civilization. Routledge. p. 812. ISBN 978-0415966900.
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  16. International Association for Mongol Studies (2002). Монгол Улсын Ерөнхийлөгч Н. Багабандийн ивээлд болж буй Олон Улсын Монголч Эрдэмтний VIII их хурал (Улаанбаатар хот 2002. VIII. 5–11): Илтгэлүүдийн товчлол [Eighth International Congress of Mongolists being convened under the patronage of N. Bagabandi, president of Mongolia (Ulaanbaatar city 2002): Summary of presentations] (in Mongolian). Vol. III. OUMSKh-ny Nariĭn bichgiĭn darga naryn gazar. pp. 5–11 – via Google Books. First of all, Timur's genealogy gives him a common ancestor with Chinggis Khan in Tumbinai – sechen or Tumanay Khan.
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  49. M. S. Asimov & Clifford Edmund Bosworth, History of Civilizations of Central Asia, UNESCO Regional Office, 1998, ISBN 9231034677, p. 320. "One of his followers was Timur of the Barlas tribe. This Mongol tribe had settled in the valley of Kashka Darya, intermingling with the Turkic population, adopting their religion (Islam) and gradually giving up its own nomadic ways, like a number of other Mongol tribes in Transoxania ..."
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  52. Sharaf ad-Din Ali Yazdi, Zafarnama (1424–1428), p. 35.
  53. Sharaf ad-Din Ali Yazdi, Zafarnama (1424–1428), p. 75.
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Sources

Further reading

External links

  • Media related to Timur at Wikimedia Commons
Timur Timurid dynasty
Preceded byNone Timurid Empire
1370–1405
Succeeded byPir Muhammad ibn Jahangir
and Khalil Sultan
Timurid Empire
Emperors
Battles and conflicts
Architecture
See also
Ottoman Interregnum
Background
Events
Ottoman princes and leaders
Neighbouring rulers and leaders
Categories: