Shah Turkan

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Shah Turkan
شاہ ترکاں
Queen–Mother of the Sultan
TenureMay 1236 – November 1236
SuccessorTurkan Khatun (mother of Razia Sultan)
PartnerIltutmish
Born1195
Died9 November 1236/1237
Delhi, Mamluk Sultanate
IssueRuknuddin Firuz
ReligionIslam

Shah Turkan (Persian: شاه ترکان), (Urdu: شاہ ترکاں) was the mother of 13th-century Mamluk ruler of the Delhi Sultanate, Ruknuddin Firuz. She became queen mother after her son ascended to the throne in 1236.

After the death of Iltutmish, Ruknuddin indulged himself in the pursuit of pleasure and left his mother to handle the affairs of the state. Turkan had been a Turkic (enslaved) hand-maid and had risen to take control of the Sultan's harem. She took this opportunity to wreak vengeance against all those who had slighted her in the past. Consequently, Ruknuddin's rule turned unpopular and paved the way for the ascension of Razia Sultana.[1]

Biography[edit]

Shah Turkan was a slave concubine of Iltutmish, the Mamluk ruler of the Delhi Sultanate. She gave birth to Iltutmish's son Ruknuddin Firuz. After the death of Iltutmish, her son succeeded him.

Queen Mother of Ruknuddin[edit]

While Ruknuddin spend his time and the state funds in pursuing pleasure, Ruknuddin left the control of administration to his mother Shah Turkan.[2]

Shah Turkan was originally reputed for charitable and religious donations, but her nature changed after she gained control of the administration. She mistreated ladies in Iltutmish's harem, and according to Minhaj, "destroyed" several of them. She and Ruknuddin ordered the blinding and killing of Qutubuddin, a young and popular son of Iltutmish, which triggered several rebellions.[3]

Her son's death and her downfall[edit]

Ruknuddin marched towards Kuhram to fight the rebels.[3] Meanwhile, in Delhi, his half-sister Razia - whom his mother Shah Turkan had planned to execute - instigated the general public against Shah Turkan at a congregational prayer. A mob then attacked the royal palace and detained Shah Turkan. Several nobles and the army pledged allegiance to Razia, and placed her on the throne. Ruknuddin marched back to Delhi, but Razia sent a force to arrest him: he was imprisoned and probably executed on 19 November 1236, having ruled for 6 months and 28 days.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Chandra, Satish (2004). Medieval India : from Sultanat to the Mughals (Revised ed.). New Delhi: Har-Anand Publications. p. 48. ISBN 9788124110645. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
  2. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, pp. 234–235.
  3. ^ a b K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 235.
  4. ^ K. A. Nizami 1992, p. 236.

Source[edit]