-
Gurgin Khan
found out and sent
Mirwais to Isfahan.
While there, he saw the
weakness of the
Safavid court and
complained about the
brutality of
Gurgin...
- (Georgian: გიორგი XI, romanized:
giorgi XI; 1651 – 21
April 1709),
known as
Gurgin Khan in Iran, was a
Georgian monarch (mepe) who
ruled the
Kingdom of Kartli...
-
Khoja Gregory (died
August 1763),
better known as
Gurgin Khan, was an
Armenian merchant and
military leader who
served Mir Qasim, the
Nawab of
Bengal from...
-
tribal leader,
successfully rebelled against the Safavids. He
defeated Gurgin Khan, the
Georgian governor of
Kandahar under the Safavids, and established...
- George.
Hotak was
ready to rebel, but he had one
obstacle in his way: When
Gurgin Khan
allowed the
Persians to
return to Persia, he kept the
Georgians of...
- Company's good side. In
December 1762, he sent
around 3,500
troops under Gurgin Khan (also
known as
Khoja Gregory), an
Armenian man who had
helped train...
-
dispatched a
military force under the
command of his
general Gurgin Khan to
invade Nepal.
Gurgin was
swiftly defeated by Shah's army, and retreated.[citation...
- was held as a
political prisoner by the
Safavid governor of the region,
Gurgin Khan, and sent to the Safavids'
court at Isfahan. He was
later released...
- by
Gurgin Khan's
eagerness to test the
strength and
skill of the
troops who he had
disciplined and of the
artillery which he had trained.
Gurgin Khan's...
-
quell a
rebellion by the
Ghilzai Afghans in Kandahar, the
governor he sent (
Gurgin Khan) was killed.
Under their leader Mahmud Hotaki, the
rebellious Afghans...