Of the wazír Ghiyáthu'd-Dín b. Rashídu'd-Dín the contemporary historian Ḥamdu'lláh Mustawfí of Qazwín speaks Ministry of Ghiyáthu'd-Dín b. Rashídu'd-Dín in enthusiastic terms in his Ta'ríkh-i-Guzída, or “Select History,” which is dedicated to him. “That minister of good repute,” he says, “like his illustrious father, made the most admirable efforts to secure the order of the world; and inasmuch as to pardon when one has power to injure is the extreme of human perfection, and all the greatest of former ages have followed this path, and thus obtained, by their virtuous conduct, the highest honour and an enduring name, so this minister of angelic temperament, inspired by the certainty of his convictions, did even more than this, for, instead of punishing those who had wrought towards his noble family ill deeds whereof the recapitulation would disgust the hearts of my hearers, he drew the pen of forgiveness through the record of their crimes, recompensed their evil actions with good, and made each one of them an exemplar of the prosperity of this Empire, raising them to the highest ranks, and entrusting to them the most important functions, so that each now beholds with his own eyes that which he did most ardently desire.”*
This complaisance of Ghiyáthu'd-Dín nearly caused his destruction when the rebellious Amír Nárín Búqá sought his intercession with Abú Sa'íd at the very moment when he was plotting the minister's assassination. On this occasion, however, the king, prompted by his wife Baghdád Khátún, who hated Nárín Búqá as the destroyer of her father and brothers, intervened, and caused the rebel and his confederate Tásh-Tímúr to be executed on October 5, 1327.
The last years of Abú Sa'íd's reign saw numerous changes in the Kurt kings of Herát. Ghiyáthu'd-Dín died in October,
Kurt rulers of Herát 1329, and was succeeded by his eldest son Shamsu'd-Dín, who was so much addicted to drink that it was said that during a reign of ten months he was only sober for ten days. He was succeeded by his younger brother Ḥáfiẓ, a gentle scholar, who was assassinated in 1332, and replaced by his infant brother Mu'izzu'd-Dín, whose election was approved by Abú Sa'íd. He enjoyed a long reign of forty years, and was followed by his son, Ghiyáthu'd-Dín Pír 'Alí, in whose time the dynasty, which had endured since 1245, was extinguished by Tamerlane. In August, 1335, Abú Sa'íd, having learned that Úzbek,
the Khán of the Golden Horde, intended an invasion of his
Death of
Abú Sa'íd
(A.D. 1335)
dominions, was preparing to take the field
against him when he fell ill, and died at Qará-
With Abú Sa'íd's death the dynasty of the Íl-kháns of Persia, founded by Húlágú Khán, practically came to an end, and a period of anarchy ensued which lasted until another great wave of conquest from the land of Túrán swept over Persia and Asia Minor thirty-five years later, led by the ruthless and irresistible conqueror Tímúr-i-Lang (“Limping Tímúr”), or, as he is commonly called in Europe, Tamerlane. By a strange coincidence, noticed in the Maṭla'u's-Sa'dayn, * the year of Tímúr's birth was the same as that of Abú Sa'íd's death, and the chronogram lawdh (<text in Arabic script omitted> = “refuge!”) * has been devised for it, since this word gives the date (A.H. 736) according to the Muhammadan computation, and men might well seek refuge with God from this double calamity—the death of Abú Sa'íd and the birth of Tímúr—which this year brought.
On the death of Abú Sa'íd, who left no sons, Arpa, or
Accession
of Arpa
Arpagá'ún, a descendant of Arik-búqá, the
brother of Húlágú, was, at the instance of
the minister Ghiyáthu'd-Dín b. Rashídu'd-Dín,
chosen as his successor. To strengthen his position, he
married Sátí Beg, the widow of Chúbán and sister of Abú
Sa'íd. He then marched against Úzbek and defeated him.
But meanwhile Amír 'Alí Pádisháh and other amírs, dis-
Músá set up as
a rival claimant
approving of Arpa's election, set up a rival
Íl-khán in the person of Músá, a descendant of
Húlágú. A battle took place between the two
rivals near Marágha on April 29, 1336. Arpa was defeated,
and both he and the wazír Ghiyáthu'd-Dín were put to
death shortly afterwards. Músá, however, was not suffered
to enjoy the fruits of victory for long: another rival,
Muḥammad Sháh, also descended from Húlágú, was set up
against him by Shaykh Ḥasan the Jalá'ir (called Buzurg,
“the Great”). Another battle was fought at Ala-Tágh near
the town of Naw-Shahr, in which, by the treachery of Shaykh
Ḥasan Buzurg, Músá was routed and 'Alí Pádisháh killed.
Yet another claimant was set up in the person of Túgháy-
It is hardly worth following these intrigues further.
Those who desire fuller information about them, and about
the tortuous policy of Shaykh Ḥasan “the Less,” will find
it in the pages of d'Ohsson and Howorth. Suffice it to say
that Tugháy-Tímúr was betrayed by the astute Shaykh
Ḥasan “the Less,” who then set up another puppet, Sulay-
<text in Arabic script omitted>
The Mongol ascendancy in Persia was now at an end,
and, until Tímúr's hordes swept over the country (1384-