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Tahmasp I (Persian: طهماسب یکم, romanized: Ṭahmāsb or تهماسب یکم Tahmâsb; 22
February 1514 – 14 May 1576) was the
second shah of
Safavid Iran from 1524...
-
Shahnameh of Shah
Tahmasp,
illustrated m****cript of the
Shahnameh Tahmasp II (reigned 1729–1732),
Safavid shah of
Persia Tahmasp's campaign of 1731,...
- shah,
Tahmasp executed him and made
Nader the
chief of his army instead.
Nader subsequently took on the
title Tahmasp Qoli (Servant of
Tahmasp). In late...
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Tahmasp II (Persian: شاه تهماسب دوم, romanized: Ṭahmāsb; 1704? – 11
February 1740) was the
penultimate Safavid shah of Iran,
ruling from 1722 to 1732...
-
victim to
Chuha Sultān of the Takkalu, who
turned Tahmāsp against his
first mentor. In 1527
Tahmāsp demonstrated his
desire by
shooting an
arrow at Div...
- The
Shahnameh of Shah
Tahmasp (Persian: شاهنامه شاهطهماسب) or
Houghton Shahnameh is one of the most
famous illustrated m****cripts of the Shahnameh,...
- The
Tahmasp I's
campaigns in
Kartli and
Kakheti was a
series of
campaigns of the
Safavid Iran
under the
leadership of Shah
Tahmasp I
against the Georgian...
- سوم, romanized: ʿAbbās;
January 1732 –
February 1740) was a son of Shah
Tahmasp II and
Shahpari Begum of the
Safavid dynasty and
reigned from 1732 to 1736...
- at Delhi,
resulted in Humayun's
exile for 15
years in the
court of Shah
Tahmasp I. The four
brothers were
united in La****, but
every day they were informed...
-
Iranian capital of
Isfahan by the Afghans, a
claimant to the
Safavid throne,
Tahmasp II,
accepted Nader (who was no more than a
petty warlord in Khorasan) into...