- to Turkmenistan.
Khwarazm has been
known also as Chorasmia, Khaurism,
Khwarezm, Khwarezmia, Khwarizm, Khwarazm, K****zm, K****sm, Khorasam, Kharazm, Harezm...
- Mu'izz, however,
managed to
repel him from
Herat and then
pursued him to
Khwarezm,
besieging Gurganj, his capital.
Muhammad desperately requested aid from...
- The Aral Sea (/ˈærəl/ ARR-əl) was an
endorheic lake
lying between Kazakhstan to its
north and
Uzbekistan to its
south which began shrinking in the 1960s...
- History,
Cambridge University Press, 2005, 44. Encyclopædia Britannica, "
Khwarezm-Shah-Dynasty", (LINK) "Metropolitan
Museum of Art". www.metmuseum.org....
-
Khwarazmshah was an
ancient title used
regularly by the
rulers of the
Central Asian region of
Khwarazm starting from the Late
Antiquity until the advent...
-
their power was
shattered in 1211
through the
combined actions of the
Khwārezm-Shah ʿAlāʾ ad-Dīn Muḥammad (1200–20), and Küchlüg, a
fugitive Naiman prince...
-
later members continued to rule
Khwarezm intermittently as
governors of the
Timurid Empire until the
takeover of
Khwarezm by the
Shaybanid Uzbeks in 1505...
-
Mahmud invaded and
occupied the
region of
Khwarezm,
which included Nasa and the
ribat of Farawa. As a result,
Khwarezm became a
province of the
Ghaznavid Empire...
- Jalal-ud-Din Sultan-Shah,
known as Sultan-Shah (died 1193) was a
claimant to the
title of
Khwarazmshah from 1172
until his death. He was the son of Il-Arslan...
- Abu'l-Harith
Muhammad was
ruler of
Khwarazm for a
period in 1017. The son of Abu al-Hasan Ali, he was the last
member of the
Iranian Ma'munid
dynasty to...