- of his
reign Shah
Tahmasp was advised, in succession, by a
Rumlu regent (Div
Sultan Rumlu); a
Triumvirate including a
Takkalu (Chuha
Soltan Takkalu) and...
-
Hasan Beg
Rumlu (Persian: حسن بیگ روملو, 1530 or 1531 – c. 1578) was a 16th-century
Safavid historian and
military officer. A
cavalryman of the qurchi...
-
Dengiz Beg
Rumlu (died 1613) was an
Iranian courtier, who
served as merchant-envoy to
Habsburg Spain during the
reign of
Safavid king (shah)
Abbas I (r...
- Div
Sultan Rumlu (Persian: دیو سلطان روملو) was a
Turkmen military commander and
politician from the
Rumlu clan, one of the
seven chief Qizilbash tribes...
- were
originally composed of
seven Turkic, all Azerbaijani-speaking tribes:
Rumlu, Shamlu, Ustajlu, Afshar, Qajar, Tekelu, and Zulkadar.
Connections between...
- also
known as Nur-Ali
Khalifa Rumlu, was an
early 16th-century
Iranian military leader and
official from the
Turkoman Rumlu tribe. He
served as the governor...
-
under the
guardianship of Div
Sultan Rumlu, his lala, the de
facto ruler of the realm. Rule by a
member of the
Rumlu tribe was
unacceptable to the other...
-
powerful Qizilbash amir Ali Beg
Rūmlū (titled "Div Soltān
Rumlu") who saw
himself as the de
facto ruler of the state.
Rūmlū and
Kopek Sultān
Ustajlu (who...
- göde due to his
short height.
According to the
Safavid historian Hasan Beg
Rumlu: Indeed, as
mentioned earlier, he was
killed in the
winter of that year...
- in the 15th and 16th centuries. The
Persian Safavid chronicler Hasan Beg
Rumlu describes Vardzia as a "wonder", "impregnable as the wall of
Alexander the...