Padishah Khatun Explained

Padishah Khatun
Full Name:Safwat al-Din Padishah Khatun
Reign:1292 – 1295
Succession:Ruler of Kirman
Spouse:Abaqa Khan
Gaykhatu
Predecessor:Suyurghatmish
Successor:Kurdujin Khatun
Birth Date:1256
Birth Place:Kerman
Death Place:Kushk Sar, Ilkhanate
Burial Place:Gubba-i Sabz Mausoleum, Kerman
Father:Qutb al-Din Mohammad
Mother:Kutlugh Turkan

Safwat al-Din Khatun (1256–1295,), otherwise known as Padishah Khatun, was the ruler of Kirman from 1292 until 1295 as a member of the Qutlugh-Khanid dynasty in Persia and a poet in Persian language.[1] [2] [3] [4]

Life

She was born in 1256, as the youngest daughter of Qutb al-Din (d. 1257) and Kutlugh Turkan of Kirman.[5] She already had her own fiefdom in Sirjan thanks to her mother Kutlugh Turkan's visit to coronation ceremony of Abaqa in 1265.[6]

Her first spouse was Abaqa Khan to whom she was married on 22 May 1272. The marriage was arranged by her mother to secure Mongolian support for her rule. She was granted Abaqa's late mother's Yesunjin's household. She was instrumental in strengthening rule of her mother Kutlugh Turkan and was her supporter against her siblings Muzaffar al-Din Hajjaj (1276) and Suyurghatmish (1280).

After Abaqa's death

She did not leave for Kerman after Abaqa's death in 1282, and instead, she choose to stay in court and live with her mother until her death in 1283. She sent her sister Bibi Khatun to protect her interests in Kerman during her stay in court, ceding Sirjan to her. She obtained to co-rule Kerman due to her influence on Arghun in 1284. However, powerful vizier Buqa ruled in favor of Suyurghatmish, hastily married her to Gaykhatu and thus obtained her removal to Anatolia in 1286. She regained Sirjan in 1289 from Arghun.

Reign

Upon Gaykhatu's election in 1291, Padishah again found herself in position of power. She demanded to be given the rule of Kirman as her personal fief, which her spouse agreed. She imprisoned her half-brother Suyurghatmish in October 1292. However he managed to escape thanks to his wife Kurdujin Khatun, only to be imprisoned again. He was finally strangled to death on 21 August 1294. She was soon granted the rule of Yazd and Shabankara. She even meddled in Ormus politics, replacing Rukn al-Din Masud with Sayf al-Din Ayaz as the prince.[7]

Death

When her husband Gaykhatu was assassinated on 21 March 1295, Padishah was thrown into a difficult position. She was immediately imprisoned on orders of Kurdujin Khatun and Shah Alam - Suyurghatmish's widow and daughter. She was strangled to death on her way to Baydu's court in Kushk-e Zar in June/July 1295. She was buried in Gubba-i Sabz Mausoleum as her mother during reign of Muzaffar al-Din Mohammad.

Legacy

Padishah earned mention in the travel diary of Venetian traveler, Marco Polo, a contemporary of Padishah.He described her as “an ambitious and clever woman, who put her own brother Siyurgutmish to death as a rival.” She had both silver and gold coins struck in her name. She left handful amount of Persian poetry under the pseudonym Lala Khatun and Hasanshah. She described herself as "the child of a mighty Sultan and the fruit of the garden that is the heart of the Turks" in of her poems.[8] She was also skilled at calligraphy.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: Women and Islam . . 2012-06-23. June 22, 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100622060604/http://www.oxfordislamicstudies.com/article/opr/t125/e2510. dead. No woman held religious titles in Islam, but many women held political power, some jointly with their husbands, others independently. The best-known women rulers in the premodern era include ... six Mongol queens, including Kutlugh Khatun (thirteenth century) and her daughter Padishah Khatun of the Kutlugh-Khanid dynasty; .
  2. Book: Women Rulers Throughout the Ages: An Illustrated Guide. registration. Padishah Khatun.. 9781576070918. ABC-CLIO. Guida Myrl Jackson-Laufer. 1999. 319. 2012-06-23.
  3. Book: Continuity and Change in Medieval Persia: Aspects of Administrative, Economic, and Social History, 11th-14th Century. 9780887061332. SUNY Press. Ann K. S. Lambton. 1988. 2012-06-23.
  4. News: Padishah Khatun (Safwat al-Din Khatun): 13th Century. Women in World History. 2012-06-23.
  5. Mernissi, Fatima; Mary Jo Lakeland (2003). The forgotten queens of Islam. Oxford University Press. .
  6. Web site: QOTLOḠ TARKĀN ḴĀTUN – Encyclopaedia Iranica. www.iranicaonline.org. 2019-10-04.
  7. Web site: PĀDŠĀH ḴĀTUN – Encyclopaedia Iranica. www.iranicaonline.org. 2019-10-04.
  8. Book: Lane, George, 1952-. Early Mongol rule in thirteenth-century Iran : a Persian renaissance. September 2003. 9781134431038. London. 890796255.