- citations] (lit. 'Kings of Armenia', Turkish: Ermenşahlar), also
known as
Ahlatshahs (lit. 'Rulers of Ahlat', Turkish: Ahlatşahlar) or Begtimurids, was a Turkoman...
-
founder of the Shah-i
Arman dynasty, also
known as the Shah-Armens or
Ahlatshahs. He was a
subordinate and
ghilman (slave commander) of
Seljukid prince...
- Lake Van. He took
Ahlat in 1207 and
brought to an end the rule of the
Ahlatshahs. One of the main
objects of al-Adil's
foreign policy was to
avoid provoking...
- Shah-Armens, also
known as Sökmenler,
ruled this area from 1085 to 1192. The
Ahlatshahs were
succeeded by the
Ayyubid dynasty.
Following the
disintegration of...
- of Dvin and
entered Ahlatshah possessions twice and
subdued the emir of Kars (v****al of the
Saltukids in Erzurum), the
Ahlatshahs, and the
emirs of Erzurum...
-
Duration of rule
Beylik of
Smyrna İzmir 1081–1098 Shah-Armens (also
called Ahlatshahs)
Ahlat 1110–1207
Artuqids (three branches) Hasankeyf, Mardin,
Harput 1102–1409...
-
under their control.
After them,
local Muslim rulers emerged, such as the
Ahlatshahs and the
Kurdish Ayyubids (1207). For a 20-year period, Van was held by...
- the 11th century, the town was
ruled by
Islamic dynasties such as the
Ahlatshahs, Ayyubids,
Ilkhanids and Kara Koyunlu. In the 10th-13th
centuries Mush...
- of Dvin and
entered Ahlatshah possessions twice and
subdued the emir of Kars (v****al of the
Saltukids in Erzurum), the
Ahlatshahs, and the
emirs of Erzurum...
-
Barquq Şêx Şemsedînê Exlatî (1588–1674),
Kurdish Sufi, poet and
Sheikh Ahlatshahs Cave
dwellings of
Ahlat The
Tombstones of
Ahlat the
Urartian and Ottoman...