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  1. Hülegü Chan, auch Hülägü, war ein mongolischer Khan und Enkel Dschingis Khans.

  2. Hülegü konnte nach der Zerstörung mehrerer Festungen am 20. Dezember 1256 Alamut erobern. Das Reich der Ilchane in seiner größten Ausdehnung. Von den bereits mongolischen Gebieten im Mittleren Osten drang Hülegü als nächstes in Richtung Bagdad vor, wo die zweite Kalifendynastie, jene der Abbasiden, seit 751 herrschte.

  3. 24. Nov. 2022 · Hülegü et son armée.jpeg 1,415 × 1,181; 340 KB Persian drawing of Hülegü taking a drink. Although he is leaning on a mace, holding his bow, with arrows scattered about, still, the artist conveys a very peaceful moment.jpg 750 × 562; 111 KB

  4. As is well known, Hülegü, Chinggis Khan's grandson and the founder of the Ilkhanate (r. 658–664/1260-65), never converted to Islam. Moreover, as the man who annihilated the Abbasid Caliphate (750-1258), that had led the Islamic umma for more than half a millennium, Hülegü was often portrayed—albeit mainly outside his realm—as one of the great destroyers of Islam.

  5. Hulegu o Hülegü Khan (?, 1217 - Maragha, l' Iran, 8 de febrer de 1265) fou el primer il-kan de Pèrsia ( 1256 - 1265 ). Net de Genguis Kan i fill de Tului, el seu germà Mongke, kagan dels mongols, li encomanà el govern de Pèrsia i la lluita contra els ismaïlites i el Califat Abbàssida . El domini d'Hulegu es va estendre de l' Oxus fins a ...

  6. 11. März 2022 · Hülegü came to Iran in 1256, subdued the Ismāʿīlīs in 1257 and extinguished the time-honoured caliphate in 1258. When his mission was accomplished he did not return to Mongolia where by now his brothers Ariq Böke and Qubilai were struggling for succession to the position of Great Khan. Instead, he took the title of Ilkhan and became the first ruler of a de facto autonomous polity of his ...

  7. Hülegü Khan (1256 – 1265), grandson of Genghis Khan and son of Tolui, served his brother Möngke (1251 – 1259), the great khan, and campaigned through the Middle East, where he whipped out the Assassins, a secret order of schismatic Shia entrenched in the mountains of Gilan province in 1256. He also destroyed the Abbasid capital of Baghdad in 1258, putting an end to the Caliphate. By ...