Kayqubad III explained

Type:monarch
Kayqubad III
Succession:Seljuq sultans of Rum
Reign:1298–1301/2
Predecessor:Kaykhusraw III
Successor:Mesud II
Full Name:ʿAlāʾ ad-Dīn Kayqubād bin Farāmurz
House:House of Seljuq
Issue:Gawhari Naima Khatun
Birth Date:ca. 1283
Death Date:1302

Kayqubad III (كَیقُباد سوم or ʿAlāʾ ad-Dīn Kayqubād bin Farāmurz; Persian: علاء الدین کیقباد بن فرامرز) was briefly sultan of the Sultanate of Rum between the years of 1298 and 1302. He was a nephew of the deposed Mesud II and had strong support among the Seljuks. As sultan he was a vassal of the Mongols and exercised no real power.

Reign

He first appears circa 1283 as a pretender to the Seljuk throne. He was recognized by the Turkish Karamanids, but he was defeated by vizier Fakhr al-Din Ali and Kaykhusraw III and sought refuge in Cilician Armenia.[1] Nothing is known of his movements again until 1298, when he was appointed to the sultanate by the Ilkhan Mahmud Ghazan upon the downfall of Masud II. He purged the Seljuq administration of his predecessor’s men with extreme violence and became deeply unpopular; as a result when he visited the Ilkhan in 1302, he was executed and replaced with his predecessor Mesud II in order to keep the peace.[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Claude Cahen, Pre-Ottoman Turkey: a general survey of the material and spiritual culture and history, trans. J. Jones-Williams, (New York: Taplinger, 1968) p. 294
  2. Cahen, Pre-Ottoman Turkey, pp. 300f