- Tür:
- Kitap Bölümü
- Yayın yılı:
- 2019
- Yayıncı:
- Cambridge University Press
At the end of the tenth century and during the early eleventh century, the Turkish Muslim dynasty of the Ghaznavids, founded in 977 by Subuktigīn, son-in-law of a Samanid governor of Balkh, reigned in Afghanistan and later on in the Iranian Khorasan, where the Samanids were defeated. The decline of the Gurjara-Pratihāra from Kanauj was an accomplished fact following invasions by Maḥmūd from Ghazni (999–1030), who looted the regions between Gujarat and Vārānasī (Benares) between 1001 and 1027; these regions were primarily ruled by the Chāhamāna and the Chandelā. The Gurjara-Pratihāra disappeared and the Rajput Gahādavala dynasty (1046–1202) then dominated Kanauj and Benares, while the Paramāra reigned in Malwa. The Ghaznavids annexed Punjāb, founding the city of Lahore in 1022.
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Bu kitabın anlattığı tarih
Medeniyetler: Chola İmparatorluğu
Künye/erişim: kaynak bağlantısı
Sıkça sorulan sorular
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- At the end of the tenth century and during the early eleventh century, the Turkish Muslim dynasty of the Ghaznavids, founded in 977 by Subuktigīn, son-in-law of a Samanid governor of Balkh, reigned in Afghanistan and later on in the Iranian Khorasan, where the Samanids were defeated.