Without losing a moment, or giving the enemy time to prepare for meeting him, Shah Ismāel put his army in motion, and advanced through Khorasān as far as Meshhad. The Sheibāni
retires to
Merv,
detachments of the Uzbek army all fell back and retired to Herāt. Sheibāni Khan, who had just returned from an expedition into the country of the Hazāras, on hearing of Shah Ismāel’s arrival at Meshhad, perceiving that he was too weak to meet his enemy in the field, left Jān Wafā Mirza in Herāt, and set off with such of his troops as he could collect, to Merv Shahjehān, a station where he could receive reinforcements from his northern dominions; or from which, if necessary, he could retire across the Amu. Jān Wafā was not long able to maintain himself in Herāt. He found it necessary, very speedily, to follow Sheibāni Khan. Shah Ismāel himself now advanced towards Merv, and sent on Dāneh Muhammed with a large force to clear the way. That officer was met by Jān Wafā Mirza near Takerābād of Merv: a desperate action ensued, in which the Persian general fell, but Jān Wafā was defeated. Sheibāni Khan, unable to oppose the Persians in the field, retired into the in which
he is be-
sieged.
fort of Merv. He sent messengers to call all his generals and chieftains from beyond the Amu, most of them having retired with their troops to their various governments, after the conquest of Khorasān. Many desperate actions took place under the walls of Merv Shahjehān. Shah Ismāel, seeing that the siege was likely to extend to great length, which would have exposed him to an attack from the whole force of Turkestān and Māweralnaher, pretended to be under the necessity of raising it. He sent to tell Sheibāni Khan that he had been rather more punctual to his engagements than that prince had been; that he had performed the pilgrimage of Meshhad as he had promised, while Sheibāni Khan had failed to keep his appointment; that he was now under the necessity of returning home to his own dominions, but would still be extremely happy to meet him on the road, whenever he set out on his intended pilgrimage to Mekka. He then retired with all his forces from before Merv, and appeared to be measuring back his way to Irāk. The feint Decisive
battle.
succeeded. Sheibāni Khan followed him with twenty-five thousand* men, but had scarcely passed a river about ten miles from Merv, when Shah Ismāel, who threw a body of horse into his rear, broke down the bridge, and fell upon him with seventeen thousand cavalry. The regulated valour of the Kizilbāshes, or red-bonnets, the name given to the Persian soldiers, speedily prevailed. Sheibāni
defeated??
Sheibāni Khan was defeated, and his retreat cut off. He was forced to fly, attended by about five hundred men, chiefly the sons of Sultans, the heads of tribes, and men of rank, into an enclosure which had been erected for accommo­dating the cattle of travellers, and of the neighbouring peasants. They were closely pursued, and hard pressed. The enclosure had only one issue, which was that attacked by the pursuers. The Khan leaped his horse over the wall and slain. of the enclosure, towards the river, but fell, and was soon overlaid, and smothered by the numbers who followed him. After the battle his dead body was sought for, and was disentangled from the heap of slain by which it was covered. His head was cut off, and presented to Shah Ismāel, who ordered his body to be dismembered, and his limbs to be sent to different kingdoms. The skin of the head was stripped off, stuffed with hay, and sent to Sultan Bayazīd,* the son of Sultan Muhammed Ghāzi, the Turkish Emperor of Constantinople. His skull, set in gold, the king used as a drinking-cup, and was proud of displaying it at great entertainments. An anecdote, illustrative of the barbarous manners of the Persians, is recorded by Mirza Sikander. The Prince of Mazenderān, who still held out against Shah Ismāel, had been accustomed often to repeat, that he was wholly in the interests of Sheibāni Khan, and, using an idiomatic expression, that his hand was on the skirts of the Khan’s garment; meaning, that he clung to him for assistance and protection. A messenger from Shah Ismāel, advancing into the presence of the prince while sitting in state in his court, addressed him, and said, that he never had been so fortunate as literally to have placed his hand on the hem of Sheibāni Khan’s garment, but that now Sheibāni’s hand was indeed on his; and, with these words, dashed the rigid hand of Sheibāni Khan on the hem of the prince’s robe, and rushing through the midst of the astonished courtiers, mounted and escaped uninjured. About a thousand* Uzbeks, with a number of women of rank, and children, fell into the hands of the Persians.*

Shah Ismāel, immediately after the battle, marched to Shah Is-
māel occu-
pies Kho-
rasān.
Herāt, the gates of which were opened to him. He com­manded the divine service in the Mosques to be celebrated according to the Shīa rites, which he had introduced into Persia, but met with great opposition from the principal men of the place. Enraged at this, he put to death the chief preacher of the Great Mosque, the Sheikh-ul-Islam, who was the chief Musulman doctor and judge, with several of the most eminent divines, as a punishment for the obstinacy and contumacy with which they adhered to the old doctrines and ceremonies; and in the end found that it was a far easier matter to conquer a kingdom than to change the most insignificant religious opinions or usages of its inhabitants.

Subsequent
events.

The transactions of the Uzbeks for some time after the death of Sheibāni Khan are not very distinctly detailed. Jāni Beg* appears to have succeeded to the immediate command of the Uzbek army, and, with him, Shah Ismāel soon after concluded an agreement, by which it was stipu­lated that the Uzbeks should all retire beyond the Amu, which was to form the boundary between them and the Persians. Abdallah Khan appears to have held Bokhāra, while Taimūr Khan,* the son of Sheibāni Khan, reigned in Samarkand.

Bābur
marches
against
Hissār.

The defeat and death of Bābur’s most inveterate foe, from whom all his misfortunes had originated, and by whom he had been driven from the dominions of his forefathers, now opened to him the fairest hopes of recovering the kingdoms of his father and uncles. Khan Mirza, his cousin, immediately on hearing of the death of Sheibāni Khan, wrote to congratulate him on the event, and invited him Shawāl,
A. H. 916.
Jan. A. D.
1511.
into Badakhshān; and Bābur having, without delay, crossed the mountains from Kābul, united his forces with those of the Mirza.* He was in hopes that he might have carried the important fort of Hissār by a sudden attack, and for that purpose advanced across the Amu up to the walls of the place. But the Uzbeks had already had leisure to recover from the first effects of the consternation into which they had been thrown by their defeat; and the Governor of Hissār, aware that it was likely to be one of the first objects of attack, had collected a body of men, and put the town in a posture of defence. Though the loss of the Uzbeks in the battle had been great, their power was by no means broken. There was no force left in Māweralnaher from which they had anything to apprehend. It is probable that they were speedily joined by numbers of volunteers, and by some wandering tribes* from the deserts beyond the Sirr. The provinces between that river and the Amu were too rich a prey to be easily abandoned by brave and needy Tartars; But fails in
the enter-
prise.
so that Bābur, after advancing into the vicinity of Hissār, finding that his strength was not adequate to the attempt, was compelled to abandon the enterprise, to re-cross the Amu, and retire towards Kunduz.

Shah Is-
māel sends
back Bā-
bur’s sister.

About this time Shah Ismāel, who appears to have been disposed to cultivate the friendship of Bābur, sent back, with an honourable retinue, that prince’s sister, Khanzādeh Begum, who had fallen into his hands along with the other prisoners, after the defeat of Sheibāni Khan at Merv. The Begum had been left behind in Samarkand, when Bābur, about ten years before, had been forced to abandon the town after defending it for five months. She had been conveyed into the haram* of Sheibāni Khan, who had by her one son, to whom he gave the kingdom of Badakhshān, but who died young, two years after this time. Sheibāni Khan afterwards gave her in marriage to a man of no family, and much below her station.* She was now sent back by Shah Ismāel with a conciliatory message, and Bābur, who had been preparing to send an embassy of congratulation to that prince, embraced this opportunity of dispatching Khan Mirza with rich presents, to thank him for this proof of his friendship, to congratulate him on his victory, and, at the same time, to dispose him to lend him some support in recovering his former dominions.*

Bābur
again at-
tacks His-
sār.