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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: THE-TOO |
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TIMOR (Timur i Leng, the lame Timur) , commonly known as, TAMERLANE, the renowned Oriental conqueror, was born in 1336 at Kesh, better known as Shahr-i-Sabz, " the green city," situated some so m. south of Samarkand in Transoxiana. His father Teragai was head of the tribe of Berlas. Great-grandson of Karachar Nevian (minister of Jagatai, son of Jenghiz Khan, and commander
chief
a life of retirement and study. Under the paternal eye the education of young Timur was such that at the age of twenty he had not only become an adept in manly outdoor exercises but had earned the reputation of being an attentive reader of the Koran. At this period, if we may credit the Memoirs (Malfufat), he exhibited proofs of a tender and sympathetic nature. About 1358, however, he came before the world as a leader of armies. His career for the next ten or eleven years may be thus briefly summarized from the Memoirs. Allying himself both in cause and by family connexion with Kurgan, the dethroner and destroyer of Kazan, chief
interest
proclaimed sovereign at Balkh, mounted the throne at Samarkand, the capital of his dominions.The next thirty years or so were spent in various wars and expeditions. Timur not only consolidated his rule at home by the subjection of intestine foes, but sought extension of territory by encroachments upon the lands of foreign potentates. His conquests to the west and north-west led him among the Mongols of the Caspian and to the banks of the Ural and the Volga ;1 The pastorals in this aspect are closer to Clemens Romanus than to Ignatius.those to the south and south-west comprehended almost every province in Persia, including Bagdad,.. Kerbela and Kurdistan. One of the most formidable of his opponents was Toktarnish, who after having been a refugee at the court of Timor became ruler both of the eastern Kipchak and the Golden Horde, and quarrelled with Timor over the possession of Khwarizm. It was not until 1395 that the power of Toktaxnish was finally broken (see MONGOLS; GOLDEN HORDE). In 1398, when Timor was more than sixty years of age, Farishta tells us that, " informed of the commotions and civil wars of India," he began his expedition into that country," and on the 12th of September " arrived on the banks of the Indus." His passage of the river and upward march along the left bank, the reinforcement he provided for his grandson Pir Mahommed (who was invested in Multan), the capture of towns or villages accompanied, it might be, with destruction of the houses and the massacre of the inhabitants, the battle before Delhi and the easy victory, the triumphal entry into the doomed city, with its outcome of horrorsall these circumstance$ belong to the annals of India. In April 1399, some three months after quitting the capital of Mahmud Toghluk, Timur was back in his own capital beyond the Oxus. It need scarcely be added that an immense quantity of spoil was conveyed away. According to Clavijo, ninety captured elephants were employed merely to carry stones from certain quarries to enable the conqueror to erect a mosque at Samarkand. The war with the Turks and Egyptians which succeeded the return from India was rendered notable by the capture of Aleppo and Damascus, and especially by the defeat and imprisonment of Sultan Bayezid I. (see TURKEY: History, and E:,vPT History, Mahommedan period), This, was Timor's last campaign. Another was projected against China, but the old warrior was attacked by, fever and ague when encamped on the farther side of the Sihon (Syr-Daria) and died at Atrar (Otrar) on the 17th of February 14.05. Mark-ham, in his introduction to the narrative of Clavijo's embassy, states that his body " was embalmed with musk and rose water, wrapped in linen, laid in an ebony coffin and sent to Samarkand, where it was buried." Timur had carried his victorious arms on one side from the Irtish and the Volga to the Persian Gulf and on the other from the Hellespont to the Ganges.Timor's generally recognized biographers are'Ali 'Yazdi, commonly called Sharifu d-Din, author of the Persian Zafar. Hama, translated by Petis de la Croix in 1722, and from French into English by J. Darby in the following year; and Ahmad ibn Mohammed ibn Abdallah, al Dimashki, al 'Ajmi, commonly called Ibn 'Arabshah, author of the Arabic 'AJaibu Makklnkt t, translated by the Dutch Orientalist Golitis In 1636. In the work of the former, as Sir' William Jones remarks, " the Tartarianconqueror is represented as a liberal, benevolent and illustrious prince '; in that of the latter he is ' deformed and impious, of a low birth and detestable principles." But the favourable account was written under the personal supervision of TimiUr's grandson, Ibrahim, while the other was the production of his direst enemy. Few in-deed, if any, original
Hammer
Malcolm
drawn
Reference may be made to two more sources of information. (1) Supposed likenesses of Timar are to be found in books and in the splendid collection of Oriental manuscripts and drawings in the British Museum. One contained in the Shah Jahan Mama a gorgeous specimen of illuminated Persian manuscript and exquisite calligraphyrepresents a most ordinary, middle-aged Oriental, with narrow black whisker fringing the cheek and meeting the tip of the chin in a scanty, pointed beard; a thin moustache sweeps in a semicircle from above the upper lip; the eyebrow over the almond-shaped eye is marked but not bushy. But it were vain to seek for an expression of genius in the countenance. Another portrait is included in a set of sketches by native artists, some of which, taken probably from life, show great care and cleverness. Timar is here displayed as a stoutish, long-bodied man, below the middle-height, in age and feature not unlike the first portrait, but with thicker and more straggling hair, and distincter, though not more agreeable character in the facial expression, yet not a sign of power, genius, or any elements of grandeur or celebrity. The uncomfortable figure in the Bodleian Library does not give much help. Sir John Malcolm
bear old Atlas's burden," pale of complexion, and with " amber hair wrapp'd in curls." The outline of this description might be from Sharifu 'd-Din, while the colours are the poet's own. A Latin memoir of Tamerlane by Perondinus, printed in 1600, entitled Magni Tamerlanis scytharum imperatorss vita, describes Timar as tall and bearded, broad-chested and broad-shouldered, well-built but lame, of a fierce countenance and with receding eyes, which express cruelty and strike terror into the lookers-on. But Jean du Bec's account of Timar's appearance is quite different. Now Tamburlaine was written in 1586. The first English translation of Jean du Bec is dated in 1595, the Life by Perondinus in 1600, and Petis de la Croix did not introduce Sharifu 'd-Din or 'Ali Yazdi to European readers till 1722. The dramatist must have heard of Timar in other quarters, equally reliable it may be with those available in the present stage of Oriental research. At the beginning of the 18th century Tinian was represented in Rowe's Tamerlane as a model of valour and virtue. The plot, however, has little to do with history, and is improbable and void of interest
Apart from modern European savants and historians, and the more strictly Oriental chroniclers who have written in Persian, Turkish or Arabic, the following authorities may be citedLaonicus Chalcondylas, Joannes Leunclavius, Joachimus Camerarius, Petrus Perondinus, Lazaro Soranzo, Simon Mairlus, Matthew Michiovius. A score or so of other names are given by Samuel Purchas. See also Sir Clements Markham's Clavijo, in the Hakluyt Society's publications; White's edition of Davy's translation of the Institutes (1783); Stewart's translation of the MalfuTat; Malcolm's History of Persia; and Trans. Roy. Soc. (1885) ; Horn, " Gesch. Ians in islam. Zeit," in Geiger and Kuhn, Grundr. der iranisch. Philol. (1904); works quoted, s.v. MONGOLS. (F. J. G.) End of Article: TIMOR (Timur i Leng, the lame Timur) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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