Negudar

In today's world, Negudar has become a topic of great relevance and interest to a wide spectrum of audiences. Whether due to its historical impact, its relevance in contemporary society or its influence in different areas, Negudar has captured the attention of academics, professionals and amateurs alike. In this article, we will thoroughly explore its importance, its evolution over time and its relevance in the current context. From its origins to its role in the modern world, Negudar is a topic that deserves to be analyzed in detail and critically to understand its true scope and implications.

Negudar (Nikudar, Neguder) was a Mongol general under Berke, and a Golden Horde Noyan. With many other Golden Horde generals, he embraced Islam in the late 13th century. He subsequently took the Muslim name of Ahmad Khan.

Before the conflicts between Berke and Hulagu, Negudar fostered peace in Eastern Khorasan and its surrounding areas in Central Asia. Neguder with other generals of the Mongol Empire raided the northwest parts of the Delhi Sultanate in the 1230s. When war hostilities broke out between Berke and Hulagu in 1260, Negudar assumed control over a sizeable portion of Berke's forces primarily in Ghazni and eastern Afghanistan.

Negudar and his forces ultimately settled in various parts of modern-day Afghanistan including Kabul and Herat. Mongols in Afghanistan adopted his name later as they merged into Chagatai Khanate during the reign of Alghu. Today, Nikudari, an archaic form of the Mongolian language extinct in Mongolia, is preserved in Afghanistan and named after Negudar.

References

  1. ^ HISTORY OF THE WORLD FROM THE EARLIEST PERIOD TO THE PRESENT TIME by EVERT A. DUYCKINCK, pg. 128
  2. ^ Early Mongol Rule in Thirteenth-Century Iran: A Persian Renaissance by George Lane, pg 77
  3. ^ Shiraz in the Age of Hafez: The Glory of a Medieval Persian City by John W. Limbert, pg.145
  4. ^ India as Seen by Babur, AD 1504–1530 by R. Nath, pg. 23