-
Great Khorasan Road Iran
portal Also
romanized as Basṭām; also
known as
Bisṭām and Busṭām
OpenStreetMap contributors (26
April 2023). "Bastam, Shahrud...
-
Vistahm or
Bistam (also
transliterated Wistaxm,
Middle Persian: 𐭥𐭮𐭲𐭧𐭬 wsthm), was a
Parthian dynasty of the
Ispahbudhan house, and
maternal uncle...
- Alju, who died in infancy. On 17
September 1303,
Ghazan betrothed Uljay to
Bistam, the
eldest son of Ghazan's
younger brother Öljaitü Khan. The
marriage took...
-
veils only four
years ago."
Bayazid died in 874 CE and is
likely buried in
Bistam.
There is also a
shrine in Kirikhan,
Turkey in the name of
Bayazid Bastami...
- Nishapur, Merv, Sarakhs, Tus. The
Ghurid forces expanded as far as
Gorgan and
Bistam. Kuhistan, a
stronghold of Isma'ilis, was also
campaigned against by Muhammad...
- Samnan, Damghan, al-Haddadah ("the Forge") or Mihman-Dust, and
Bistam. Near
Bistam, at the
village of Badhash, the road
entered Khurasan.
After entering...
-
invasion force was sent to
capture Sultaniyya and
Qazvin under the
command of
Bistam Beg. The same year, he
marched to
Anatolia and
deposed Salih Şihabeddin...
- 433; Crone, p. 168. Al-Tabari, v. 29: pp. 180, 193, however, says that
Bistam was
governor after the
death of Ma'bad ibn al-Khalil
until the
arrival of...
- Öljaitü. On 17
September 1303,
Ghazan betrothed his
daughter Öljei
Qutlugh to
Bistam, son of his
brother Öljaitü.
According to
Rashid al-Din,
Ghazan became depressed...
-
captured Nishapur, Merv,
Sarakhs and Tus,
reaching as far as
Gurgan and
Bistam. Kuhistan, a
stronghold of the Ismailis, was
plundered and all Khurasan...